For
more than two decades, food industry executives have debated “channel
blurring.” The assumption is that grocery, convenience, and restaurant channels
are collapsing into one another, eroding brand clarity and creating competitive
risk. Yet after spending an entire career embedded in foodservice strategy, one
conclusion remains clear: industry channel blurring is largely a
myth—consumer behavior blurring is not.
The
distinction matters.
Consumer Blurring vs. Industry Blurring
Consumers
blur channels; industries do not.
Consumers
no longer organize food decisions by channel labels such as grocery,
restaurant, or convenience. Instead, they organize by need state:
What can I eat now? What can I take with me? What can I heat later? What
fits my schedule, budget, and dietary preference today?
According
to recent industry research, over 70% of consumers now source meals from three
or more food channels each week, and more than half expect
restaurant-quality food to be available wherever they shop for food. That is
not channel confusion—it is rational consumer efficiency.
Industries,
however, remain structurally distinct. Grocery stores still operate on
inventory turns and margin management. Restaurants still rely on throughput and
labor optimization. Convenience stores still win on proximity and speed. What
has changed is where and how branded food shows up, not the operational
foundations behind it.
Calling
this “channel blurring” incorrectly frames the challenge and leads brands
toward defensive strategies instead of growth strategies.
The Fallacy of Brand Protectionism
Brand
protectionism—once the cornerstone of 1980s and 1990s brand management—assumed
scarcity created value. If a consumer wanted your brand, they had to visit your
location.
That
assumption no longer holds.
Today’s
consumer is dynamic, mobile, digitally informed, and time-constrained. Brands
that restrict availability in the name of protection often create what
Foodservice Solutions® calls the Brand Experience Gap—the growing
distance between when a customer craves a brand and when they can actually
access it.
Every
day a customer cannot choose your brand because it is unavailable in their
current food channel is a day deferred buying turns into brand substitution.
Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat: The Real Growth Engine
The
fastest-growing food segment across grocery, convenience, and non-traditional
retail is fresh prepared Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat food. This is not
accidental. It directly mirrors restaurant menu logic while fitting modern
retail behavior.
Key
industry facts:
·
Fresh prepared foods now generate higher
gross margins than center-store grocery categories.
·
More than 60% of grocery shoppers
purchase prepared food monthly, with Gen Z and Millennials leading adoption.
·
Convenience stores with expanded fresh
food programs see higher visit frequency and basket size.
For
restaurants, this is not cannibalization—it is brand extension.
Reintroducing legacy menu items as portable, packaged, or reheatable products
keeps the brand present between visits and reinforces preference rather than
diluting it.
The Strategic Question Brands Must Ask
The
right question is no longer:
“How
do we protect our brand from other channels?”
The
right question is:
“How
do we meet the consumer wherever they are—without breaking brand trust?”
Brands
that win do not isolate; they bridge. They revisit, revive, and renew
products for new consumption moments while maintaining quality, taste, and
brand promise.
This
is not channel blurring. This is consumer-centric distribution strategy.
Why the Myth Persists
The
myth of channel blurring persists because it is easier to blame structural
change than to confront deferred buying, declining visit frequency, and
evolving meal definitions. Yet brands that fail to adapt do not lose relevance
overnight—they slowly capitulate demand until recovery becomes impossible.
Understanding
how branded Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat food can edify your customer base,
increase top-line sales, and strengthen bottom-line profitability often begins
with a Grocerant Opportunity Assessment.
Foodservice
Solutions®, based in Tacoma, Washington, remains the global leader in the
Grocerant niche, providing proprietary Grocerant ScoreCards® that help brands
close the Brand Experience Gap and reclaim consumer relevance.
Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®
1. Consumers
blur occasions, not brands
Winning brands respect how consumers eat today without abandoning who they are.
Availability strengthens brands when execution is disciplined.
2. Deferred
buying is the silent brand killer
If your brand is not present when the consumer is ready to eat, another brand
will be—often permanently.
3. Fresh
prepared food is not a trend—it is infrastructure
Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat food is now a core growth platform across grocery,
convenience, and foodservice, not a side experiment.
4.
Success Leaves Clues—Are You Ready to
Find Yours?
5.
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.
6.
Want to strengthen your brand’s
connection with today’s consumers? Let’s talk. Call 253-759-7869
for more information.
7.
Stay Ahead of the Competition with
Fresh Ideas
8.
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.
9.
At Foodservice Solutions®, we
specialize in consumer-driven retail food strategies that enhance convenience,
differentiation, and individualization—key factors in driving growth.
10.
👉
Email us at Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us
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