Thursday, March 12, 2026

Can Fast Food Restaurants Keep Pace with the Fresh Food Success of Convenience Stores?

 


When Wawa committed more than $650 million to enter and expand across Florida, the strategy was not centered on gasoline. The real focus was fresh prepared food designed to drive customer frequency. That bet has paid off. Wawa has evolved into one of the most successful food-forward convenience retailers in the United States, generating billions annually in foodservice sales while attracting customers away from traditional quick-service restaurants (QSRs) and grocery stores.

Across the East Coast, Wawa locations sell thousands of made-to-order hoagies, breakfast sandwiches, bowls, pizzas, and specialty beverages each week. Coffee remains a powerful traffic driver, but fresh prepared food now sits at the center of the company’s growth engine.

The bigger story is that Wawa is not alone. A powerful shift is underway across the U.S. food retail landscape, and convenience stores are rapidly becoming one of the most disruptive forces in foodservice.

 


The Numbers Tell the Story

The convenience store industry has quietly become one of the largest foodservice platforms in America.

According to the National Association of Convenience Stores, the U.S. convenience industry generated more than $837 billion in total sales in 2024, with over $335 billion coming from in-store purchases excluding fuel.

Foodservice is the primary driver of that growth.

Key industry data points include:

·       Prepared food and dispensed beverage sales exceed $80 billion annually in U.S. convenience stores

·       Foodservice represents roughly 28% of in-store sales but nearly 40% of gross profit

·       Prepared foods account for about two-thirds of foodservice revenue

·       Approximately 80% of convenience store purchases are consumed within the hour

In other words, convenience stores have become immediate meal providers, directly competing with quick-service restaurants for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snack occasions.

Meanwhile, the U.S. restaurant industry—while enormous—is seeing slower traffic growth. The National Restaurant Association estimates total U.S. restaurant industry sales reached $1.1 trillion in 2025, yet many QSR chains continue to face traffic declines and margin pressure due to labor, food inflation, and operational complexity.

As a result, the competitive battlefield is shifting.

 


Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling Is Driving the “Grocerant” Model

A key driver behind convenience store foodservice success is mix-and-match meal component bundling, a strategy long championed by the Foodservice Solutions® Grocerant Guru®.

Instead of rigid combo meals, leading retailers allow consumers to build customized meals from modular food components:

·       Sandwiches or wraps

·       Pizza slices

·       Fresh bowls or salads

·       Snacks and sides

·       Beverages and specialty drinks

·       Desserts or indulgent treats

This flexible bundling strategy increases both average ticket size and purchase frequency.

Consumers today want personalized meal solutions rather than fixed menu structures, and convenience retailers have embraced that reality faster than many restaurant chains.

Retailers leading this transformation include:

·       Casey's General Stores

·       QuikTrip

·       Sheetz

All three companies have invested heavily in Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat programs designed to capture multiple meal occasions throughout the day.

 


QT Kitchens: A Convenience Store That Looks Like a Restaurant

Under the leadership of CEO Chet Cadieux, QuikTrip has aggressively repositioned its stores through the rollout of QT Kitchens, a program specifically designed to compete with quick-service restaurants.

Hundreds of stores have been remodeled to include full kitchen operations offering:

·       Breakfast sandwiches and burritos

·       Flatbreads and toasted sandwiches

·       Made-to-order personal pizzas

·       Pizza-by-the-slice

·       Specialty coffee drinks

·       Frozen lemonades and smoothies

·       Ice-cream treats and indulgent snacks

The result is a retail environment that blends restaurant food quality with convenience store speed and accessibility.

QuikTrip is a 75-year-old company, yet it continues to reinvent itself. Similarly, Wawa—whose corporate roots date back to the early 1800s—has consistently evolved to remain consumer relevant.

Both companies understand something critical:

Consumers evolve faster than business models.

 


Casey’s General Stores: The Pizza Giant Many Restaurants Ignore

Another powerful example of convenience foodservice success is Casey's General Stores.

With more than 2,500 stores across the Midwest, Casey’s has quietly become one of the largest pizza chains in America.

Prepared food and beverage sales remain a major driver of growth. Recent company reports show same-store prepared food sales increasing roughly 4–5% annually, while total company revenue has approached $15 billion.

Pizza alone generates over one billion dollars annually for Casey’s, making it a dominant player in markets where traditional restaurant competition may be limited.

More importantly, prepared food drives customer traffic.

Many customers visit Casey’s specifically for:

·       Fresh pizza

·       Breakfast sandwiches

·       Made-to-order subs

·       Hot snacks and sides

Once in the store, those same customers often purchase fuel, packaged beverages, or grocery items, boosting overall profitability.

Convenience stores have learned an important lesson:

Foodservice creates the trip. Everything else becomes incremental sales.

 


The Consumer Has Moved—Has the QSR Model?

For decades the QSR sector operated successfully using a relatively stable business model:

·       Standardized combo meals

·       Limited menu customization

·       Fixed dayparts

·       Physical restaurant dining rooms or drive-thrus

But consumer expectations have changed dramatically.

Today’s customer prioritizes:

·       Speed and convenience

·       Customization

·       Portable food formats

·       Digital ordering

·       Multiple daypart flexibility

Convenience retailers are uniquely positioned to deliver these benefits because they operate closer to consumers’ daily routines.

Americans visit convenience stores more than 160 million times per day, according to industry data. That level of traffic creates enormous opportunities for foodservice expansion.

Meanwhile, digital ordering continues to reshape restaurant operations. Chains like Starbucks now generate over 30% of transactions through mobile ordering and loyalty platforms, demonstrating how technology is redefining convenience in foodservice.

Yet convenience retailers may have an advantage: they combine location density, immediate access, and fast checkout—all attributes consumers value.

 


The Era of Food Retail Convergence

The modern food marketplace is no longer divided into neat categories such as grocery, restaurant, or convenience store.

Instead, the industry is entering an era of food retail convergence, where all retailers selling fresh prepared food compete within the same ecosystem.

Today’s competition for a meal might include:

·       A convenience store pizza slice

·       A grocery store hot food bar

·       A QSR drive-thru meal

·       A specialty coffee beverage and sandwich

·       A mobile-ordered pickup bowl

Consumers do not think in channels.

They think in meal solutions.

The companies that win will be those that deliver fresh food faster, more conveniently, and with greater customization.

 


Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. The Next Foodservice Disruption Will Be the “Five-Minute Meal Economy.”

Consumers increasingly want a complete meal assembled in under five minutes. Retailers that integrate fresh prepared foods, AI-driven menu recommendations, frictionless checkout, and bundled meal solutions will dominate future foodservice growth. Convenience retailers are already structurally designed for this rapid meal model.

 

2. The Future Restaurant Leader May Not Look Like a Restaurant

The next generation of foodservice leaders will likely be hybrid retail food platforms that combine elements of grocery, convenience retail, and restaurant kitchens. Companies such as Wawa, QuikTrip, and Casey’s demonstrate that location density, fresh food, and operational speed can outperform traditional restaurant formats.

The truth is simple:

Consumers are not choosing between grocery stores, restaurants, or convenience stores—they are choosing the fastest path to the meal they want right now.

Tap into the Foodservice Solutions® team for greater understanding of New Electricity or for a Grocerant Program Assessment, Grocerant ScoreCard, or for product positioning or placement assistance, or call our Grocerant Guru®.  Since 1991 www.FoodserviceSolutions.us  of Tacoma, WA has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche. Contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or 253-759-7869



Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Portability, Platforms, and Prepared Foods: Where Foodservice Success Is Being Redefined

 


The food industry in 2025–2026 is undergoing one of the largest structural shifts in decades. Consumers are eating differently, ordering differently, and discovering meals through digital platforms, convenience retail, and ready-to-eat formats.

The biggest change is simple but powerful:

Foodservice success today is driven by portability.

Portable meals—food that can be ordered digitally, picked up quickly, delivered efficiently, or eaten on the go—are reshaping competition across restaurants, grocery stores, and convenience retailers.

From the perspective of the Grocerant Guru®, the brands capturing the most growth today are those that understand one fundamental principle:

The future of foodservice exists beyond the four walls of the restaurant.

 


The Money Is Following Food Technology

A decade ago, when the food delivery startup Caviar sold to Square for roughly $100 million, it was a signal that venture capital was beginning to migrate toward food technology platforms rather than restaurants themselves.

That trend has only accelerated.

Today, delivery platforms such as:

·       DoorDash

·       Uber Eats

·       Grubhub

control the digital gateway between restaurants and consumers. For many chains, 30–40% of transactions now originate through digital ordering channels, including mobile apps, delivery aggregators, and kiosk ordering.

This shift reflects the rise of the omnichannel food shopper—a consumer who may buy breakfast from a convenience store, lunch through a delivery app, and dinner from grocery prepared foods.

The competitive battlefield for foodservice is no longer simply restaurant versus restaurant.

It is platform versus platform.

 

Breaking the “Four Walls” Mentality

For decades, restaurant strategy centered on dining rooms, seating capacity, and traffic through the front door.

But today’s consumer eats meals while:

·       commuting

·       working remotely

·       gaming

·       streaming entertainment

·       traveling between activities

The Grocerant Guru calls this behavior the “65-Inch HDTV Syndrome.”

Consumers increasingly prefer meals that are:

·       ready-to-eat

·       easy to transport

·       customized

·       digitally ordered

·       consumed anywhere

Restaurant operators who cling to an “inside the four walls” mindset risk becoming footprint-trapped brands—companies designed for yesterday’s dining habits rather than tomorrow’s.

 


The Rise of Non-Traditional Fresh Food Retailers

One of the biggest threats to traditional restaurants is the rapid expansion of fresh prepared food programs inside convenience stores.

Chains like:

·       Wawa

·       Sheetz

·       RaceTrac

have transformed the convenience store into a serious foodservice competitor.

According to the National Association of Convenience Stores, foodservice is now the primary growth engine for the industry.

Key numbers highlight the transformation:

·       U.S. convenience stores generated $837.4 billion in total sales in 2024.

·       In-store sales alone reached $335.5 billion, a record high.

·       Foodservice now represents about 28.7% of inside sales and nearly 40% of in-store profits.

·       Prepared foods account for roughly 68–72% of those foodservice sales.

In other words, convenience stores are increasingly foodservice retailers that happen to sell fuel.

For example:

·       Casey's General Stores has become one of the largest pizza sellers in America.

·       Wawa generates more than half of store revenue from its food program.

·       Sheetz uses digital kiosks and mobile ordering to customize thousands of menu combinations.

These companies are capturing breakfast, late-night, and impulse meal occasions that once belonged almost exclusively to quick-service restaurants.

 


The Quiet Giant: 7-Eleven’s Food Strategy

Another powerful competitor is 7‑Eleven, the world’s largest food retailer by store count with more than 85,000 locations globally.

While historically known for packaged snacks and beverages, the company has aggressively expanded its food offerings to include:

·       fresh sandwiches

·       hot meals

·       bakery items

·       grab-and-go prepared meals

·       delivery partnerships

7-Eleven’s strategy combines high-traffic real estate, digital loyalty programs, and rapid menu innovation, allowing it to compete directly with quick-service restaurants.

 


Amazon and the Logistics War

No company has challenged traditional retail models more aggressively than Amazon.

Through initiatives such as:

·       Amazon Fresh

·       Whole Foods Market

Amazon has built a logistics-first food strategy focused on speed, automation, and delivery infrastructure.

Even early experimental concepts—like drone delivery or ultra-fast fulfillment centers—demonstrate the company’s willingness to rethink the fundamentals of food distribution.

For restaurants and retailers alike, Amazon’s playbook is clear:

Control the supply chain, control the customer.

 


The Boom—and Bust—of Early Food Delivery Startups

Many early delivery startups attempted to disrupt restaurants through technology.

Some succeeded. Many disappeared.

Among the pioneering companies were:

·       Postmates

·       Bite Squad

·       Munchery

·       Sprig

While several of these companies ultimately failed due to unsustainable logistics costs, their innovations paved the way for today’s dominant platforms.

The market lesson was simple:

Consumer demand for convenient meals never disappeared—only the business models evolved.

 


Portability Is the New Menu Strategy

Across the industry, menus are being redesigned for portability and off-premise consumption.

Winning formats today include:

·       handheld breakfast sandwiches

·       protein bowls

·       portable snack wraps

·       meal kits

·       grab-and-go fresh meals

Retailers and restaurants are also investing heavily in Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared foods, allowing consumers to choose between immediate consumption or quick home preparation.

The future of foodservice is not just about cooking—it is about facilitating meal participation anywhere.

 


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Convenience stores are becoming the fastest-growing restaurant chains in America.
With nearly 28% of in-store sales now coming from foodservice, c-stores are leveraging prepared foods to drive traffic and profits while traditional snack categories decline.

2. Portability is the most important menu innovation of the decade.
Meals that travel well through delivery, drive-thru, and grab-and-go formats will outperform plated dine-in meals designed for traditional restaurants.

3. The real competition is no longer across the street—it’s across channels.
Restaurants now compete simultaneously with delivery platforms, grocery prepared foods, convenience stores, and logistics-driven retailers for the same share of stomach.

Gain a Competitive Edge with a Grocerant ScoreCard

Unlock new opportunities with a Grocerant ScoreCard, designed to optimize product positioning, placement, and consumer engagement.

Since 1991, Foodservice Solutions® has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche—helping brands identify high-growth strategies that resonate with modern consumers.

Call 253-759-7869 or Email Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us