The
data is not ambiguous—it is directional and disruptive. According to FMI – The
Food Industry Association, the percentage of consumers replacing restaurant
meals with deli-prepared foods jumped from 12% in 2017 to 28% in 2025.
At the same time, 53% of consumers are assembling hybrid meals, blending
prepared foods with items already at home.
That
is not incremental change. That is a behavioral reset around time, value,
and immediacy according to Steven
Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.
Yet,
as grocers attempt to reposition around foodservice and “fresh,” they continue
to operate with legacy economics—most notably, slotting fees and shelf
monetization models—that are fundamentally misaligned with how consumers
actually eat today.
What
follows is a sharper, more direct assessment of where grocers are getting it
wrong—and why slotting fees may be the single biggest structural impediment
to relevance.
1. Slotting Fees: The Grocery Industry’s Structural
Achilles’ Heel
Let’s
be precise: slotting fees are not just a line item—they are a strategic
constraint.
Grocers
have built a business model where:
·
Manufacturers pay for access to
shelf space
·
Category resets are influenced by trade
funding, not consumption velocity
·
Center store economics are optimized
for margin per linear foot, not meals solved per trip
That
creates a dangerous distortion:
Grocers
are incentivized to stock what manufacturers fund—not what consumers need
tonight.
Meanwhile,
the consumer has shifted to a completely different decision framework:
·
“What can I eat in the next 30
minutes?”
·
“How do I minimize effort but still
feel good about the meal?”
·
“Can I mix this with what I already
have at home?”
Slotting
fees push assortment toward:
·
Shelf-stable
·
Packaged
·
Brand-funded items
Consumers
are pulling demand toward:
·
Fresh
·
Prepared
·
Immediate-use meal components
That
gap is widening.
Bluntly
stated:
Grocers are drifting toward a shelf rental model, while consumers are
demanding a meal solutions platform.
Until
that economic engine changes, execution will remain compromised—no matter how
much capital is poured into deli remodels or fresh perimeter expansions.
2. They Say “Foodservice,” But Operate Like Merchandisers
Grocers
talk about competing with restaurants. Operationally, they still behave like
inventory managers.
Foodservice
is not about expanding a deli footprint—it is about:
·
Hospitality
·
Throughput
·
Menu engineering
·
Daypart optimization
Most
grocery environments still prioritize:
·
Planograms over people
·
Inventory turns over customer
engagement
·
Back-of-house efficiency over
front-of-house experience
Even
NielsenIQ data shows:
·
66% of consumers cite quality as a top
driver
·
56% cite ingredients
·
Only 37% trust brands, and 72%
will switch when trust erodes
That
means every interaction matters. Every meal must “prove itself.”
Insight:
You cannot buy foodservice credibility with shelf resets. It is earned through
execution.
3. Assortment Bloat Is Undermining Deli Effectiveness
Grocers
continue to expand deli SKUs under the assumption that more choice equals more
sales.
In
reality:
·
Consumers are time-starved
·
Decision fatigue is a real barrier to
purchase
·
Shoppers want confidence, not
complexity
Industry
data shows rising traction in:
·
Signature items (now in ~40% of
stores)
·
Focused, repeatable meal solutions
·
Daypart-specific offerings
Yet
many delis remain:
·
Overbuilt
·
Operationally strained
·
Inconsistent in execution
Insight:
A smaller, sharper menu that solves dinner tonight will outperform a broad,
unfocused assortment every time.
4. Speed of Service Is the New Customer Acquisition Cost
Grocers
underestimate how quickly they lose a customer.
If
a shopper:
·
Waits too long at the deli
·
Cannot quickly identify a meal
solution
·
Encounters friction at checkout
They
defect—to:
·
Quick-service restaurants
·
Convenience stores
·
Delivery platforms
This
is not a marketing problem. It is an operational latency problem.
In
today’s environment:
Speed
is not a convenience—it is a competitive weapon.
Every
minute of delay is equivalent to spending marketing dollars to drive a customer
away.
5. Grocers Think in Bundles—Consumers Think in Meal
Components
Grocers
continue to push bundled offers:
·
Rotisserie chicken + two sides
·
Pre-configured family meals
But
the data shows something more nuanced:
·
53% of consumers are mixing prepared
items with home ingredients
·
Growth is strongest in modular
categories:
o Salads
(+6.6%)
o Prepared
meats (+5.7%)
o Appetizers
(+4.2%)
This
is not traditional meal bundling. This is modular consumption behavior.
Consumers
want:
·
A protein
·
A side
·
A fresh add-on
·
The flexibility to integrate with what
they already have
Insight:
The winning model is not bundling—it is curated interoperability.
The Underlying Issue: Misaligned Incentives
At
its core, the grocery industry is dealing with conflicting economic signals:
·
Slotting fees reward shelf space
monetization
·
Consumers reward immediacy and
relevance
·
Labor is treated as a cost, while
foodservice demands it as an investment
These
are not small gaps—they are structural contradictions.
You
cannot simultaneously:
·
Maximize slotting income
·
Minimize labor
·
Expand fresh foodservice
·
Deliver restaurant-quality experiences
Something
has to give.
Think About This from the Grocerant Guru®
Grocers
are closer than ever to owning the “dinner tonight” occasion—but they are being
held back by their own legacy business model.
If
you strip it down to its essence:
·
The industry is optimized to sell
shelf space
·
The consumer is trying to buy time
and solutions
That
is the disconnect.
Three
Forward-Looking Insights:
1. Slotting
fees will become increasingly incompatible with fresh food growth
The more a store leans into prepared foods, the less relevant shelf
monetization becomes.
2. Deli
will either become a true foodservice engine—or remain an underperforming
hybrid
There is no middle ground.
3. The
winners will reallocate space from packaged goods to meal solutions
Not incrementally—but decisively.
Bottom
line:
The future of grocery is not on the shelf.
It is on the plate—tonight.
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
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