The
growth algorithm across all sectors of food retail—restaurants, convenience
stores, and grocery service delis—has converged on one immutable truth
according to Steven Johnson
Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®: frequency of visits is the most reliable
driver of incremental revenue and long-term profitability.
What
was once a convenience-store insight is now a cross-channel mandate.
A
recent study from Vontier found that
just 24% of customers (“Super-Users”) account for a disproportionate share of
visits and revenue, driven not by discounts, but by habit, familiarity, and
emotional connection. That behavioral pattern is not isolated—it is replicating
across restaurant chains and grocery foodservice operations.
The Cross-Sector Frequency Flywheel
Whether
the platform is a convenience store, quick-service restaurant, fast casual
concept, or grocery deli, the economic model is identical:
·
More visits = more occasions
·
More occasions = more attachment
opportunities
·
More attachment = higher lifetime
value
The
question is no longer “How do we increase ticket?”
The question is “How do we earn the next visit—tomorrow?”
Convenience Stores: From Transactional to Habitual
The
Vontier data highlights five drivers of
repeat visits—familiarity, safety, food relevance, bundling, and dwell time—all
of which are now baseline expectations.
Operators
like 7-Eleven and Wawa have proven that digital ecosystems combined with
strong food offerings drive higher visit frequency. Meanwhile, Sheetz
continues to win with younger consumers by delivering customized,
daypart-driven food experiences, not just fuel stops.
Restaurant Sector: Engineering Daily Relevance
Restaurants
have been highly effective at engineering frequency into daily routines.
At
Starbucks, more than half of U.S. transactions are tied to its loyalty
platform, but the real driver is ritual behavior—morning coffee,
afternoon recharge, and mobile order convenience. Frequency is built into the
customer’s day.
McDonald's
has focused on value platforms and digital ordering, increasing visit
frequency through expanded dayparts such as breakfast, snacks, and late night.
Fast
casual leaders like Chipotle Mexican Grill report that digital customers
visit more often than non-digital users, driven by ease of use and
customization.
Subscription
models are also reshaping behavior. Panera Bread has shown that beverage
subscriptions significantly increase visit frequency, even when individual
transactions are low in value, because they create consistent habits.
Grocery Service Deli: A Big Battleground
The
most underappreciated—and fastest evolving—frequency driver is inside the
grocery store: the service deli and prepared foods department.
Retailers
are shifting from selling ingredients to providing ready-to-eat meal
solutions for immediate consumption.
At
Kroger, prepared foods and meal solutions are designed to capture multiple
visits per week, especially around dinner. The goal is to replace
restaurant visits with in-store foodservice occasions.
Whole
Foods Market has positioned its prepared foods section as a restaurant
alternative, offering chef-driven meals and grab-and-go options that drive
frequent visits, particularly in urban markets.
Regional
leaders like H-E-B have gone further by integrating restaurant-quality meals
and in-store dining, blurring the line between grocery and foodservice.
Even
traditional operators like Albertsons are investing in upgraded deli and
prepared food programs, recognizing that fresh and ready-to-eat foods drive
more trips than center-store products.
Food as the Universal Frequency Anchor
Across
all sectors, one insight stands out:
Food
is the primary driver of repeat visits.
·
In convenience stores, food drives a
majority of visits among younger consumers
·
In restaurants, food is the core of
daily routines
·
In grocery, prepared foods create
reasons to visit beyond weekly stock-up trips
The
strategic implication is clear:
Retailers that fail to build compelling ready-to-eat food programs will lose
visit share, regardless of pricing strategy.
The New Competitive Set: Everyone Competes with Everyone
The
“grocerant” reality is this:
·
Grocery stores compete with
restaurants for dinner
·
Restaurants compete with convenience
stores for convenience
·
Convenience stores compete with
grocery for value and speed
Consumers
are not loyal to channels—they are loyal to solutions that meet their
immediate needs.
Data-Driven Patterns Across Sectors
·
Starbucks: High-frequency users drive
disproportionate revenue through habit-based visits
·
McDonald's: Digital engagement
increases repeat visits and expands dayparts
·
Kroger: Prepared foods increase weekly
trip frequency
·
7-Eleven: Loyalty and mobile ordering
increase visit cadence
·
Panera Bread: Subscription programs
turn occasional users into frequent visitors
The Grocerant Guru® Perspective: Frequency Is the Only
Scalable Growth Lever
From
Tacoma, Washington to markets across the country, the pattern is consistent:
You
do not win by being cheaper.
You win by being chosen more often.
That
requires building what I call Frequency Infrastructure:
1. Daypart
relevance – breakfast, lunch, snacks, dinner,
late night
2. Meal
solutions – convenient, portable, and appealing
3. Digital
enablement – easy ordering, payment, and rewards
4. Emotional
connection – familiarity, trust, and consistency
Three Grocerant Guru® Insights
1.
Frequency is channel-agnostic
Success is not about format. It is about becoming part of the customer’s
routine.
2.
The service deli is the new restaurant
Grocery growth will come from fresh, prepared, ready-to-eat foods—not packaged
goods.
3.
Habit beats promotion every time
Discounts may drive a single visit. Habits drive long-term behavior and higher
lifetime value.
Think About This
The
food industry is no longer segmented—it is fully converged.
And
in this environment, reoccurring customer visits are the fastest way to
drive incremental revenue.
Because
the most valuable customer is not the one who spends the most today—
It
is the one who comes back tomorrow.
Elevate Your Brand with Expert Insights
For
corporate presentations, regional chain strategies, educational forums, or
keynote speaking, Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, delivers
actionable insights that fuel success.
With
deep experience in restaurant operations, brand positioning, and strategic
consulting, Steven provides valuable takeaways that inspire and drive
results.
Visit
GrocerantGuru.com
or FoodserviceSolutions.US
Call 1-253-759-7869












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