For decades the restaurant industry operated under a simple formula: standardize the menu, control costs, replicate the model, and scale the brand. It worked beautifully for nearly half a century.
But
today the restaurant business is no longer competing only against restaurants.
Restaurants
now compete with grocery stores, convenience stores, meal kit companies,
ghost kitchens, delivery apps, and even liquor stores selling chef-quality
prepared meals.
In
this new competitive food ecosystem, there is one marketing advantage that
separates winners from losers:
Braggability.
Foodservice
Solutions® Grocerant Guru® Steven Johnson has long argued that
differentiation is often misunderstood in food retailing.
“Differentiation
does not mean different—it means familiar with a twist. Today that twist must
be clearly defined and noticeable.”
The
question for restaurant operators today is simple:
Do
you give customers something worth bragging about?
From the Assembly Line to Personalization
In
his 1922 autobiography My Life and Work, industrial pioneer Henry Ford
famously wrote:
“Any
customer can have a car painted any color that he wants so long as it is
black.”
Ford
understood that standardization was the key to lowering production costs and
achieving mass adoption.
The
restaurant industry embraced the same principle. Large chains grew rapidly by
creating highly repeatable menus and store formats.
Throughout
the 1970s, 80s, and 90s American dining districts became filled with:
·
Look-a-like steakhouses
·
Look-a-like fern bars
·
Look-a-like grills
·
Look-a-like quick service restaurants
Consumers
accepted this sameness because consistency meant reliability.
But
the consumer changed.
The Consumer Is Dynamic, Not Static
Foodservice
Solutions® Grocerant Guru™ continually reminds food executives:
“The
consumer is dynamic, not static.”
Today’s
diners want food experiences that reflect their identity, lifestyle, and
convenience needs.
Several
powerful consumer trends have reshaped the industry:
·
Eating-out while eating-at-home
·
Take-out and delivery becoming default
meal formats
·
Meal component bundling
·
Customization and personalization
·
Discovery-driven food exploration
This
shift has created massive growth in the grocerant sector—where grocery
retailing and foodservice converge.
Prepared
foods in supermarkets now represent one of the fastest-growing segments in
food retail, while convenience stores have become legitimate competitors to
restaurants.
The Grocerant Revolution
Brands
outside the traditional restaurant industry are winning meal occasions by
combining fresh prepared food, convenience, and novelty.
Consider
the rise of prepared-food leaders:
·
Wawa – generating billions annually
from hoagies, bowls, coffee, and breakfast sandwiches
·
Sheetz – pioneering touchscreen
ordering and made-to-order kitchens
·
HelloFresh – delivering personalized
dinner solutions to millions of homes
·
Trader Joe's – turning private label
innovation into a cult food discovery experience
These
companies have transformed the idea of where meals come from.
Consumers
no longer think:
“Where
should we go to eat?”
Instead
they ask:
“Where
should we get food?”
That
subtle shift has profound implications for restaurant brands.
Restaurants That Mastered Braggability
Several
restaurant chains have thrived by giving customers something worth talking
about.
Customization and Ingredient Transparency
Chipotle
Mexican Grill
Built an empire around build-your-own meals, fresh ingredients, and
supply-chain transparency. It transformed burritos into a personalized food
experience.
Simplicity as a Brand
Raising
Cane's
A minimal menu built around chicken fingers, Texas toast, and a signature sauce
created a cult following—and remarkable unit volumes.
Health Meets Technology
Sweetgreen
Reinvented salads as lifestyle food while integrating mobile ordering, loyalty
programs, and data-driven menu development.
Innovation as Marketing
Taco
Bell
Few brands create more social buzz with limited-time menu innovation. Viral
items like Doritos-based tacos and the return of the Mexican Pizza turned menu
launches into cultural events.
These
brands demonstrate that menu innovation can double as marketing.
When
customers share the experience, advertising becomes organic.
Chains That Lost the Conversation
Not
every restaurant brand has successfully navigated this shift.
Several
legacy casual dining chains struggled because they remained trapped in look-a-like,
menu-a-like positioning.
Industry
examples frequently cited include:
·
Red Lobster — financial restructuring
amid declining traffic and rising costs
·
Ruby Tuesday — shrinking dramatically
from its once-dominant mall presence
·
Boston Market — operational turmoil
and widespread closures
These
chains once dominated because of predictable comfort food and consistent
formats.
But
when every brand offers the same thing, none of them stand out.
The New Competitive Battlefield
The
modern food marketplace is no longer defined by restaurants alone.
Today’s
competition includes:
·
Grocery store prepared foods
·
Convenience store kitchens
·
Meal kits
·
delivery platforms
·
ghost kitchens
·
hybrid retail-foodservice formats
The
global prepared food and ready-to-eat market is expanding rapidly as consumers
seek time savings, convenience, and simplicity.
Consumers
are also seeking something emotional:
Food
discovery.
People
want meals that are interesting enough to share with friends, post online, or
recommend to colleagues.
That’s
where braggability enters the equation.
What Creates Braggability?
Braggability
comes from several factors working together:
1. Novelty
A
menu item that surprises or delights customers.
2. Storytelling
Ingredients,
sourcing, or preparation methods that give food authenticity.
3. Experience
Unusual
store formats, design, or service models.
4. Convenience
Solutions
that simplify the consumer’s daily routine.
Non-traditional
retailers often excel here because they serve great food in unexpected
places.
A
convenience store taco that rivals a restaurant.
A grocery store sushi counter staffed by trained chefs.
A meal kit that recreates a restaurant experience at home.
Each
one creates a conversation.
The Braggability Test
Restaurant
operators should periodically ask themselves a simple set of questions:
·
What do customers talk about after
visiting our restaurant?
·
What menu item do guests recommend to
friends?
·
What makes our brand distinct from
competitors nearby?
·
Has our menu evolved in the past
decade?
If
the answer is “not much,” your brand may be operating more like yesterday than
tomorrow.
Braggability
isn’t about gimmicks.
It’s
about delivering recognizable food with a distinctive twist.
Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®
1.
Social Currency Is the New Marketing Currency
Consumers promote brands they feel proud to share. Braggability turns customers
into brand ambassadors.
2.
The Meal Occasion Has Been Democratized
Restaurants no longer own lunch or dinner. Grocery stores, convenience
retailers, and meal kit companies now compete aggressively for those same meal
occasions.
3.
Familiar Food with a Noticeable Twist Wins
Consumers still crave comfort foods—but they want something new about them.
Brands that deliver recognizable meals with creative innovation will capture
the next generation of diners.
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.


















