Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Menu Pricing and the Three-Legged Stool: Why the Economics of Foodservice Are Being Reset

 


For decades menu pricing in foodservice looked deceptively simple. Add up food cost, labor, occupancy, and apply a margin. Yet today that model is broken.

The reality is that menu pricing now sits on a fragile three-legged stool. Remove or weaken any one of the legs and the entire system wobbles.

The three legs are clear:

1.       A shrinking employee pool

2.       Higher food and energy costs

3.       An expanding competitive food footprint

At the intersection of these forces, restaurants, grocery stores, and convenience stores are all competing for the same meal occasion—and the same consumer dollar.

The result: menu prices are rising, margins remain thin, and competition is more intense than at any time in modern foodservice history.

 


The First Leg: The Shrinking Employee Pool

Labor remains the most difficult variable in menu pricing.

Across U.S. foodservice, labor accounts for 28% to 35% of restaurant operating costs, depending on concept. Limited-service restaurants historically ran closer to 25%, but many are now pushing past 30%.

The challenge is simple:

·       The U.S. restaurant industry employs roughly 15.7 million workers.

·       Yet operators still report hundreds of thousands of open positions annually.

·       Hourly wages in foodservice have risen 30%+ since 2019 in many markets.

Operators have responded with:

·       smaller menus

·       more automation

·       kiosks and mobile ordering

·       simplified kitchen systems

However, those efficiencies rarely offset wage pressure completely.

Which means menu prices rise.

 


The Second Leg: Higher Food and Energy Costs

Food costs historically ran about 28% to 32% of menu price for most restaurants.

But the past several years have reset the cost structure.

Examples across key food categories:

Category

Price Change Since 2020

Beef

+30% to +40%

Poultry

+25% to +35%

Eggs

Highly volatile, spikes over 100% in some periods

Cooking oil

+40%+ at peak

Cheese

+20%+

Energy adds another layer.

Fuel costs impact:

·       food distribution

·       supplier delivery

·       consumer travel

·       restaurant utilities

Even small changes matter. A $0.50 increase in gasoline per gallon can ripple through the entire food distribution network.

When food, freight, and utilities increase simultaneously, operators must adjust pricing simply to protect operating margins.

 


The Third Leg: The Expanding Competitive Food Footprint

The most under-reported change in the food industry is this:

Everyone now sells food.

Restaurants are no longer competing only with other restaurants.

Today the competitive set includes:

Grocery Stores

U.S. grocery stores generate over $40 billion annually in prepared foods and deli sales, and the number continues to grow.

Many supermarkets now operate:

·       full hot food bars

·       sushi counters

·       pizza programs

·       fried chicken programs

·       chef-driven prepared meal stations

For busy consumers, grocery store prepared foods often deliver:

·       lower prices

·       quick grab-and-go options

·       take-home family meals

 


Convenience Stores

Convenience stores have quietly become one of the fastest growing foodservice sectors.

The U.S. c-store industry sells more than $70 billion in foodservice annually, driven by:

·       breakfast sandwiches

·       pizza programs

·       roller grill items

·       fried chicken

·       handheld snacks

Chains like major regional operators have proven that high-quality fresh food can thrive inside a fuel station.

 


Quick Service Restaurants (QSR)

Quick service restaurants remain the dominant foodservice force, generating over $400 billion in annual sales.

However, the operating model has changed dramatically.

·       Drive-thru and takeout now represent roughly 70% or more of sales for many QSR brands.

·       Dining rooms are no longer the center of the business.

In fact, in many markets drive-thru and takeout volume equals or exceeds dine-in sales across the industry.

 


The Rise of the Handheld Economy

If menu pricing is the stool, handheld foods are the fuel driving the system.

Handheld foods dominate modern meal occasions because they offer:

·       portability

·       speed

·       value

·       convenience

Examples of top-selling handheld foods include:

·       burgers

·       chicken sandwiches

·       tacos

·       pizza slices

·       breakfast sandwiches

·       burritos

·       wraps

Consider these industry realities:

·       Americans eat over 50 billion burgers annually.

·       Pizza generates over $50 billion in U.S. sales each year.

·       Chicken sandwiches remain the fastest growing QSR menu segment.

·       Breakfast sandwiches have become a multi-billion-dollar category across QSR and convenience stores.

Consumers want food they can eat in the car, at their desk, or while walking.

That demand continues to reshape menus—and pricing strategies.

 


The Pricing Pressure Point

When the three legs of the stool collide—labor pressure, higher ingredient costs, and expanded competition—menu pricing becomes strategic rather than mathematical.

Operators must ask:

·       Which menu items drive traffic?

·       Which items drive margin?

·       Which items can be simplified operationally?

Increasingly, restaurants are using menu engineering to balance these variables.

Examples include:

·       premium limited-time offers

·       combo meal bundling

·       smaller portion options

·       tiered pricing structures

This approach allows operators to protect profitability without scaring away value-sensitive consumers.

 


The Grocerant Guru® Perspective

The modern food marketplace is no longer separated into grocery, restaurant, or convenience store silos.

Instead, it is a single unified food ecosystem competing for 21 daily meal and snack occasions.

Menu pricing is no longer determined only by food cost.

It is determined by consumer behavior, mobility, convenience, and competitive proximity.

The operators who understand this reality will win.

Those who cling to traditional pricing models will struggle.

Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®


1. The New Pricing Battlefield Is Portability

Consumers increasingly value food that travels well. Portable menu items allow operators to reduce labor, speed service, and increase throughput—making them critical to profitable pricing.

 

2. Grocery Stores and C-Stores Are Now Full-Scale Foodservice Competitors

Prepared foods in grocery stores and convenience stores are expanding faster than many restaurant segments. Operators who ignore them are ignoring two of the fastest growing meal providers in America.

 

3. The Future Menu Is Built for the Car

Drive-thru, takeout, and delivery now dominate foodservice consumption. Menu items that fit in one hand and travel well in a vehicle will continue gaining share.

The three-legged stool of menu pricing will remain unstable.

But the operators who adapt their menus, pricing, and operations to the portable food economy will be the ones still standing.

Success Leaves Clues—Are You Ready to Find Yours?

One key insight that continues to drive success is this: "The consumer is dynamic, not static." This principle is the foundation of our work at Foodservice Solutions®, where Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, has been helping brands stay relevant in an ever-evolving market.

Want to strengthen your brand’s connection with today’s consumers? Let’s talk. Call 253-759-7869 for more information.

Stay Ahead of the Competition with Fresh Ideas

Is your food marketing keeping up with tomorrow’s trends—or stuck in yesterday’s playbook? If you're ready for fresh ideations that set your brand apart, we’re here to help.

At Foodservice Solutions®, we specialize in consumer-driven retail food strategies that enhance convenience, differentiation, and individualization—key factors in driving growth.

Email us at Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Connect with us on social media: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter



Monday, March 16, 2026

Amazon’s Grocery Gambit: Tech, Fresh Food, and the Cost of Ignoring the Consumer



Amazon’s two-decade quest to dominate grocery has become one of the most expensive and publicly scrutinized case studies in modern food retail. The pattern is unmistakable: every time Amazon tries to drag grocery into its comfort zone—automation, algorithmic efficiency, and frictionless checkout—it stumbles. Every time it leans into what consumers actually want—fresh food, prepared meals, human-centered service—Whole Foods carries the weight. In 2026, the gap between Amazon’s tech-driven instincts and the realities of fresh food retail has never been clearer.

 


Amazon’s Grocery Journey: Pivots, Pauses, and Pain Points

The 2026 Reset: Fresh & Go Shut Down, Whole Foods Expands

Amazon recently announced it will close all remaining Amazon Fresh supermarkets and Amazon Go convenience stores, converting select locations into Whole Foods stores. In a rare public admission, the company conceded it “hasn’t yet created a truly distinctive customer experience with the right economic model needed for large-scale expansion.”

This isn’t a minor tweak—it’s a full strategic retreat. Amazon is effectively conceding that its own grocery formats failed to resonate with consumers. Analysts estimate that Amazon has poured over $30 billion into grocery experiments since 2017, making this pivot one of the costliest strategic retreats in retail history.

 


Whole Foods: Amazon’s Default Brick-and-Mortar Strategy

Meanwhile, Whole Foods continues to thrive. Since the 2017 acquisition, Whole Foods sales have increased more than 40%, and the chain now operates over 550 stores nationwide. Prepared foods alone account for nearly 25% of in-store sales, with some locations reporting margins up to 30% higher than the grocery average on these categories.

In other words: the only part of Amazon’s grocery empire that consistently works is the part Amazon didn’t invent.

 


Online Grocery: Amazon’s Real Engine

Amazon’s online grocery business now generates $150+ billion annually and serves over 150 million active customers. Household essentials make up one in three units sold on Amazon.com, underscoring the company’s dominance in non-perishable, repeat-purchase categories.

This is where Amazon thrives—logistics, delivery, replenishment—not fresh food retailing. In contrast, U.S. online fresh grocery penetration remains under 10%, highlighting the operational complexity and consumer hesitation surrounding fresh food delivery.

 


2026 Pivot: Echoes of Past Missteps

The Fresh and Go closures mirror earlier Amazon experiments—Amazon Books, 4-Star, Pop-Up, and Amazon Style—that launched with fanfare and folded quietly. The pattern is consistent: tech-first retail concepts meet human-led markets, fail to engage consumers, and shutter.

 


Why Amazon Keeps Stumbling: A Billionaire’s Comfort Zone Meets a Dynamic Consumer

Several structural blind spots continue to hobble Amazon’s grocery ambitions:

1. Legacy Thinking in a Dynamic Market
Amazon relied on category management models rooted in 1970s–1990s grocery retail, optimized for static shelves, slow turnover, and predictable behavior. Today’s consumer is dynamic, digital, and participatory. Fresh & Go stores felt engineered for efficiency—not relevance.

2. Tech-Led Solutions to Human-Led Problems
“Just Walk Out” technology solved a friction point consumers weren’t asking to be solved. What shoppers want—fresh prepared meals, culinary theater, personalization—was never central to Amazon Fresh or Go.

3. Fresh Food Is Not a Software Problem
Fresh food requires:

·       Sensory experience

·       Culinary credibility

·       Local relevance

·       Operational nuance

·       Human interaction

Amazon tried to automate around these truths. Fresh food refused to cooperate.

4. Whole Foods Is the Anti-Amazon—and That’s Why It Works
Whole Foods thrives because it:

·       Celebrates food culture

·       Invests in people

·       Curates rather than commoditizes

·       Leads with Ready 2 Eat and Heat N Eat foods, which now represent over $2 billion in annual category sales

·       Understands the emotional side of grocery

Amazon optimized for efficiency; Whole Foods optimized for experience. Experience wins every time.

 


The Core Confusion: Amazon Still Doesn’t Know What Grocery Is

Amazon oscillates between three incompatible visions:

1.       Mass-market supermarket (Amazon Fresh)

2.       Frictionless convenience store (Amazon Go)

3.       Premium natural foods retailer (Whole Foods)

Each requires different: supply chains, labor models, brand promises, customer expectations, and margin structures. Amazon wants one unified grocery strategy. Grocery refuses to be unified.

 


What Amazon Still Doesn’t Understand

·       Grocery is not e-commerce.

·       You can’t A/B test your way to a great rotisserie chicken.

·       Fresh food is a culinary, cultural, and community problem, not a tech problem.

·       Consumers don’t want frictionless grocery—they want friction that adds value.

·       Prepared food is the profit engine. Amazon Fresh never built a compelling Ready 2 Eat or Heat N Eat platform. Whole Foods did.

 


Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Fresh Prepared Food Is the New Center Store
Consumers assemble meals from components, not recipes. Retailers who fail to lead with Ready 2 Eat and Heat N Eat will lose relevance—and store traffic.

2. Portability Is the New Price Point
The value equation has shifted from cost to convenience. If it’s not easy to eat on the go, in the car, at the desk, or at home, it’s not competitive.

3. Consumer Relevance Beats Operational Efficiency
Amazon optimized for efficiency. Whole Foods optimized for experience. In food retail, experience wins every time—measured not in algorithms, but in trips, basket size, and loyalty.

 


Market Reality Check

·       Total U.S. grocery sales in 2025: $1.3 trillion

·       Fresh prepared foods: $95 billion, growing 8–10% annually

·       Average prepared food margin: 25–35%, vs 2–5% for packaged groceries

·       70% of consumers say ready-to-eat options influence where they shop weekly

Amazon’s pivot highlights a critical lesson for all food retailers: technology alone does not drive grocery success. Consumer-centric grocerants, powered by fresh prepared foods, portability, and experience, are where the growth—and profits—live.

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