Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Frozen Food Court: Why $87 Billion in Branded Frozen Sales Signals the New “What’s for Dinner?” Battleground



Frozen food is no longer the backup plan. It is now the strategic center of the modern American meal solution according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

According to the “2026 Power of Frozen in Retail” report from the American Frozen Food Institute (AFFI) in partnership with FMI – The Food Industry Association, annual frozen food sales have reached $87 billion, up $27.4 billion versus 2019, with 2.0% year-over-year growth driven by both inflation and volume expansion. Unit sales are up 4.5% versus 2019, confirming that this is not merely price-driven growth — it is behavioral.

To understand this resurgence, we must step back.

 


From TV Dinners to Meal Architecture

Frozen food has long mirrored American lifestyles. In the 1950s, the TV dinner symbolized convenience and postwar optimism. In the 1980s and 1990s, branded frozen entrées became synonymous with time compression as dual-income households surged.

After the 2008 recession, frozen became a value anchor. During the 2020 pandemic, it became a pantry hedge against supply chain uncertainty. Today, in a period defined by inflationary pressure and heightened food waste awareness, frozen has re-emerged as a meal-planning essential.

Nearly 99% of U.S. households purchased frozen food in the past year. Even more telling:

·       40% of consumers use frozen foods every few days or daily, up from 35% in 2019.

·       77% purchase frozen with a specific meal or day in mind, up from 71% in 2023.

·       Three in four consumers (76%) combine fresh and frozen ingredients within a single meal.

That data signals integration, not impulse.

Frozen is no longer a silo category — it is embedded in dinner architecture.

 


The Economic Recalibration of Dinner

Consumers are recalibrating around three pressures:

1.       Price sensitivity

2.       Food waste reduction

3.       Time scarcity

Price, ease, and taste now dominate purchase decisions, with shoppers actively comparing promotions across supermarkets, club, mass, and online outlets. Supermarkets are losing frozen dollar share to alternative formats — particularly club and mass retailers — reinforcing that value optics matter.

Importantly, shoppers are making more trips but buying slightly smaller baskets, reflecting cross-channel purchasing habits and disciplined consumption management.

Frozen processed meat/poultry and frozen fruits/vegetables drove most new dollars and units — categories that act as meal components, not just center-of-plate entrĂ©es. Consumers are rebuilding meals modularly.

That modularity is critical.

 


Why Branded Frozen Foods Are Resurgent

Branded frozen foods are benefiting from four structural shifts:

1. Trust in Quality and Nutrition

Perception has improved significantly. Four in ten consumers are highly interested in frozen foods with:

·       Real ingredients

·       Minimal processing

·       High protein

·       No artificial ingredients

Nutrition confidence is strongest among Gen Z and Millennials — cohorts historically skeptical of legacy frozen brands.


2. Restaurant-Quality Expectations at Home

Parents and younger households increasingly seek restaurant-quality experiences without restaurant prices. Seven in ten shoppers actively look for new frozen items. Global cuisines — Italian, Mexican, Mediterranean, Asian — are leading flavor exploration.

3. Food Waste Awareness

Frozen offers portion control, resealability, and extended shelf life — structural advantages in an era where food waste prevention is a financial strategy.

4. Integrated Merchandising

Seasonal displays, high-protein lifestyle sets, fresh/frozen adjacency, and packaging innovations like resealable pouches are improving engagement.

Frozen is no longer parked in the back aisle. It is curated.

 


The Strategic Imperative for Restaurant Brands

Here is the pivotal insight:

Consumers make the decision “What’s for Dinner?” at retail — not in the drive-thru.

If restaurant brands are absent from the frozen aisle, they surrender influence at the moment of meal intent formation.

Historically, restaurant brands protected in-store dining exclusivity. Today, that logic is obsolete. Branded frozen SKUs allow restaurants to:

·       Extend brand presence into weekly meal planning

·       Capture share during inflationary trading-down cycles

·       Participate in hybrid cooking (fresh + frozen assembly)

·       Influence pantry stocking behavior

The freezer has become a decision theater.

Consumers are not choosing between frozen and restaurants; they are blending them. Restaurant-branded frozen items allow operators to stay in the consideration set even on nights when consumers stay home.

Failure to compete in the frozen food court means forfeiting frequency.

 


Format Disruption: Where the Dollars Are Shifting

Supermarkets are losing frozen share to club, mass, and online retailers. That shift underscores:

·       The power of bulk pricing optics

·       Subscription and digital replenishment models

·       Cross-channel price transparency

Retailers that treat frozen as static inventory will lose momentum. Those who treat it as a dynamic meal-planning hub will gain loyalty.

 


The Wellness and Sustainability Overlay

Consumers are increasingly aligning frozen purchases with:

·       Cleaner labels

·       Ingredient simplicity

·       Energy efficiency

·       Perceived sustainability

Frozen food’s long shelf life supports lower household waste — an under-leveraged marketing narrative.

 


Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       The Frozen Aisle Will Become a Branded Restaurant Portfolio Platform.
Expect accelerated licensing deals between national restaurant brands and frozen manufacturers. The freezer will function as a distributed extension of restaurant menus.

2.       Meal Components Will Outpace Full EntrĂ©es.
Consumers are assembling meals modularly. High-protein vegetables, seasoned proteins, global sauces, and side dishes will outperform traditional single-tray dinners.

3.       Cross-Merchandising Will Redefine Store Layout Strategy.
Fresh and frozen adjacency will become standard practice, integrating frozen into perimeter planning rather than isolating it in center-store silos.

4.       Smaller Freezer Footprints Will Drive Packaging Innovation.
Urbanization and smaller living spaces will force compact, stackable, resealable formats optimized for limited freezer capacity.

5.       “What’s for Dinner?” Data Will Become the Core Competitive Asset.
Retailers and restaurant brands that leverage loyalty data to anticipate weekly meal intent — then target frozen solutions accordingly — will win disproportionate share.

 


The $87 billion frozen category is not nostalgia. It is structural adaptation.

The freezer is no longer cold storage. It is the new food court — and it sits inside the home.

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.

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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.

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Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Operational Clarity Meets Consumer Relevance: Why Schlotzsky’s Deli Is Engineering Margin Through Brand Focus

 


From the Grocerant Guru® perspective, this is not simply a rebrand. It is a case study in operational discipline aligned with consumer-recognition research — and that alignment is where sustainable growth lives.

Under the leadership of parent company GoTo Foods, Schlotzsky’s Deli is returning to its core competency: abundant, differentiated deli sandwiches delivered with digital precision and unit-level economic discipline.

Let’s be clear. When two-thirds of surveyed guests already call you a “deli,” but your brand name fails to communicate that clearly, you don’t have a menu problem — you have a positioning inefficiency. That inefficiency costs traffic.

The correction is strategic: clarify the offer, streamline the box, digitize the journey, and unlock franchise margin.

 


Shrinking the Box, Expanding the Margin

The previous prototype reached 3,600 square feet. The new format caps at 2,100 square feet — a nearly 42% reduction in footprint.

That reduction translates into:

·       20–25% lower operating costs

·       Reduced build-out expenses

·       Renegotiated equipment packages

·       Improved back-of-house flow

·       Modular front-of-house design

·       Labor reduction (two employees during slow dayparts)

In today’s foodservice environment, where average restaurant labor runs 28–33% of sales and occupancy costs continue climbing, this prototype is engineered for margin resilience.

This is not cosmetic design. It is economic design.

The modularity developed at Schlotzsky’s Deli extends across GoTo Foods’ portfolio, including:

·       Auntie Anne’s

·       Carvel

·       Cinnabon

·       Jamba

·       McAlister’s Deli

·       Moe’s Southwest Grill

Shared design language equals shared cost intelligence.

That is portfolio leverage.

 


Consumer-Focused Research: Solving the Recognition Gap

Chief Brand Officer Donna Varner was candid: consumers didn’t clearly understand what Schlotzsky’s was.

In food marketing, ambiguity suppresses frequency.

The new positioning — “Life Needs Lotz” — reframes the brand as multi-occasion capable, not just lunch-driven. That matters because:

·       Consumers now snack 3+ times per day on average.

·       Lunch traffic industry-wide has softened relative to pre-2020 levels.

·       Digital ordering shifts occasions earlier and later in the day.

If you want traffic growth, you must expand occasions — not just promote discounts.

Clarity at the front counter mirrors clarity in brand identity. The new prototype deliberately separates:

·       Pickup

·       Kiosk ordering

·       Cashier interaction

Reduced friction increases throughput.
Reduced confusion increases conversion.

In high-frequency QSR and fast-casual environments, seconds matter. Layout psychology influences perceived wait time and guest satisfaction.

This is operational choreography designed to drive revenue per square foot.

 


Digital Is Not Optional — It Is the Front Door

In 2025, more than 60% of first-time guests entered GoTo Foods brands via digital channels. The company added 4 million loyalty members in a single year.

That is not incremental growth. That is structural change in consumer behavior.

Digital ordering:

·       Lowers labor cost per transaction

·       Improves order accuracy

·       Increases average check through upsell prompts

·       Captures customer data

·       Enhances retention via loyalty ecosystems

With leadership experience rooted in digital ecosystems like Amazon and Albertsons, CEO Omer Gajial understands that technology must serve both franchisee margin and guest convenience.

The kiosk and pickup zones are not design trends. They are data capture engines.

 


The Real Objective: Unit Growth Through Franchise Confidence

Technomic Ignite data shows Schlotzsky’s unit count declined 2.8% in 2024, ending at 308 locations — primarily concentrated in Texas.

When unit count contracts, it signals hesitation from operators.

The new prototype is not about aesthetics — it is about convincing franchisees to build again.

When existing franchisees sign development agreements, that is the clearest validation metric in franchising. Growth does not come from optimism; it comes from predictable returns on invested capital.

Unlocking unit-level economics unlocks expansion.

 


What This Means for the Food Industry

Schlotzsky’s Deli is demonstrating three critical food-industry realities:

1.       Brand clarity drives traffic more efficiently than promotion.

2.       Smaller, smarter boxes outperform oversized legacy footprints.

3.       Digital-first infrastructure is now the baseline, not the advantage.

Operational efficiency and consumer research are no longer separate disciplines. They must integrate.

If you confuse the guest, you lose the guest.
If you overbuild the box, you shrink the margin.
If you underinvest in digital, you surrender data.

 


Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Recognition Precedes Frequency.
If customers cannot instantly articulate what you sell, you will never achieve habitual visitation. Brand clarity is a revenue multiplier.

2. Margin Is Designed, Not Hoped For.
Square footage, equipment packages, labor modeling, and layout psychology determine profitability long before the first sandwich is sold.

3. Digital Is the New Storefront.
The first interaction increasingly happens on a screen, not at the counter. Brands that treat digital as infrastructure — not marketing — will win share.

Schlotzsky’s Deli is not simply returning to its roots.

It is engineering its future through operational discipline, consumer insight, and economic precision — and that is how modern food brands scale intelligently.

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