Thursday, June 18, 2026

Church’s Texas Chicken Scores a Golazo with Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling That Drives Customer Migration

For more than three decades, the Grocerant Guru® has tracked, identified, quantified, and qualified the power of Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling as one of the most effective tools for increasing customer frequency, transaction size, and brand migration. Today, what was once viewed as a simple family meal deal has evolved into one of the most powerful consumer engagement platforms in foodservice.

Church's Texas Chicken's new Golazo Meal is a textbook example of how successful brands are leveraging food, occasion-based marketing, collectibles, and social engagement to create consumer value beyond price.

The Golazo Meal, priced at $39.99, includes 20 pieces of legs and thighs or tenders, four large sides, 10 Honey-Butter Biscuits, and a collectible soccer ball representing the USA, Brazil, Argentina, or Mexico. Combined with soccer-themed packaging and community-focused activation events, Church's is doing much more than selling chicken—it is selling an experience.


Why This Matters in 2026

Consumers increasingly purchase meals based on occasion, convenience, portability, and perceived value rather than traditional restaurant channels. The consumer thinks "meal," "mini-meal," "snack," or "occasion." They no longer think in terms of fast food, convenience store, grocery deli, or restaurant categories.

This phenomenon, which the Grocerant Guru® has long described as CHANNEL BLURRING, continues to reshape foodservice.

According to industry research between 2020 and 2026:

·       Consumers increasingly seek bundled meal solutions that simplify group dining.

·       Family meal occasions remain one of the fastest-growing foodservice segments.

·       Sports-viewing occasions continue to drive incremental food purchases.

·       Value perception increasingly comes from quantity, customization, convenience, and experiential rewards rather than price alone.

·       Collectible merchandise and limited-time offers generate higher engagement among younger consumers.

The Golazo Meal intersects all five trends.


Three Mix-and-Match Meal Bundle Success Stories

1. Church's Texas Chicken Golazo Meal

Why it works:

Reason #1: Occasion-Based Consumption

Consumers are not simply buying chicken. They are buying a ready-made solution for soccer watch parties, family gatherings, and group celebrations.

Reason #2: Collectability Creates Repeat Visits

The four different soccer balls encourage multiple purchases throughout the promotion period. Consumers seeking all four collectibles create incremental traffic and increased purchase frequency.

2. Little Caesars NFL and Sports-Themed Bundles (2024-2026)

Little Caesars has consistently paired pizza bundles with major sporting events and entertainment occasions.

Why it works:

Reason #1: Group Consumption

Pizza naturally serves multiple people and simplifies decision-making for group occasions.

Reason #2: High Perceived Value

Consumers view bundled pizzas, sides, and promotional offers as a complete solution that reduces meal-planning friction.


3. Costco Food Court and Prepared Meal Bundles

Costco continues to expand its prepared meal offerings that combine entrees, sides, and family-sized portions.

Why it works:

Reason #1: Convenience

Consumers can solve dinner for an entire family with one purchase.

Reason #2: Trusted Value Proposition

The combination of quality, quantity, and pricing creates a compelling value equation that drives repeat purchasing.

4. Kroger, Albertsons, and Grocery Service Deli Meal Bundles

Since 2020, supermarkets have expanded Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat meal bundles that combine proteins, sides, desserts, and beverages.

Why it works:

Reason #1: Customization

Consumers can mix components to match household preferences.

Reason #2: Time Savings

The bundles eliminate planning, shopping, and preparation while maintaining a home-style meal experience.

The Grocerant Guru® Was Early to the Trend

Long before meal bundles became standard practice, the Grocerant Guru® identified Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling as a critical growth driver capable of increasing:

·       Transaction size

·       Customer frequency

·       Customer retention

·       Foodservice migration

·       Cross-category purchasing

More than 30 years ago, the Grocerant Guru® observed that consumers preferred building personalized meals from multiple components rather than purchasing rigid menu combinations.

Today that insight is visible everywhere—from convenience stores and supermarkets to quick-service restaurants and club stores.

What many industry observers once dismissed as simple "combo meals" have evolved into sophisticated meal solution platforms that drive consumer engagement across every foodservice segment.


Church's Understands the New Value Equation

The Golazo Meal succeeds because it combines:

·       Food

·       Entertainment

·       Collectability

·       Community engagement

·       Cultural relevance

Consumers increasingly reward brands that create memorable experiences around food rather than simply discounting products.

By aligning with the world's most popular sport and packaging the promotion around sharing occasions, Church's Texas Chicken is positioning itself squarely within one of the strongest growth trends in foodservice.

The promotion also demonstrates that successful meal bundles are no longer about feeding consumers; they are about helping consumers create moments.

That distinction is increasingly important as consumers continue migrating toward brands that deliver convenience, value, social connection, and experience simultaneously.


Three Grocerant Guru® Insights

Insight #1

The future belongs to brands that bundle occasions, not just food. Consumers buy solutions for events, gatherings, and experiences rather than individual menu items.

Insight #2

Collectible merchandise tied to meal bundles will continue driving repeat visits among younger consumers who value social sharing, exclusivity, and participation.

Insight #3

As CHANNEL BLUR accelerates, winning foodservice operators will increasingly compete against every retailer selling prepared food—not simply direct restaurant competitors. The consumer's question is no longer "Where should I eat?" but "Who offers the best meal solution for this occasion?"

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




Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Casey’s Proves Once Again That Consumers Buy Meals, Not Channels

 


For more than two decades, I have consistently stated that consumers do not think in retail channels—they think in meals, mini-meals, snacks, solutions, convenience, value, and occasions. Long before most industry analysts recognized Casey's General Stores as a serious foodservice competitor, the Grocerant Guru® was identifying, quantifying, and qualifying the company's remarkable success in fresh prepared foods and, specifically, pizza.

Today, the rest of the food industry is finally catching up.

Casey's, the Iowa-based retailer founded in 1968, now operates nearly 2,900 locations across 19 states and proudly claims its position as the fifth-largest pizza chain in America. That claim is no longer surprising. What is surprising is how long it took much of the legacy food industry press to recognize what was happening right in front of them.

For years, traditional industry media segmented foodservice into neat little boxes: convenience stores, quick-service restaurants, grocery service delis, club stores, supermarkets, and fast-food outlets. Unfortunately, consumers never received that memo.

Consumers don't wake up and say, "I'm going to buy lunch from a convenience store today." They ask, "What's for lunch?" They seek value, convenience, portability, quality, taste, and speed. The channel is irrelevant.


The ongoing discussion about "channel blurring" is itself evidence that too many analysts remain trapped in outdated retail thinking. Channel blurring exists only in the mind's eye of retail Neanderthals and channel-protecting demagogues who continue to view food retailing through a 1980s lens. Consumers don't blur channels because consumers never recognized those boundaries in the first place.

What Casey's understood decades ago is what many restaurant operators are only now beginning to grasp: foodservice drives traffic, loyalty, frequency, and profitability. Pizza wasn't an add-on category for Casey's—it became a destination category.

The company's pizza journey began in 1984 and accelerated through continuous innovation, including breakfast pizza, taco pizza, thin-crust offerings, and gluten-free options. More importantly, Casey's understood that consumers wanted food where they already were, not where industry executives thought they should go.

That strategy is paying dividends. Casey's generated approximately $1.5 billion in pizza sales in 2024, growing more than 10% year-over-year. While many traditional pizza chains find themselves locked in relentless discounting battles, Casey's has leveraged its broader business model to create a competitive advantage.

Its large pizzas often undercut national competitors by several dollars. Its highly successful slice program captures immediate-consumption occasions that many national pizza chains largely ignore. In fact, individual slices reportedly account for about half of pizza sales, creating incremental traffic opportunities throughout the day.


Even more significant is Casey's dominance in smaller communities. Roughly 71% of stores are located in towns with fewer than 20,000 residents. In many of these markets, Casey's serves as the local restaurant, grocery supplement, fuel station, and community gathering place all at once.

That is not channel blurring.

That is consumer relevance.

Meanwhile, traditional pizza operators continue to face mounting pressure from every direction. Third-party delivery has erased historical convenience advantages. Consumers now have unprecedented access to restaurant meals, grocery prepared foods, warehouse club food courts, convenience-store foodservice, meal kits, and delivery-only concepts.

The competitive set is no longer pizza chain versus pizza chain.

The competitive set is every food option available to satisfy a meal occasion.

Recent research showing that convenience stores increasingly capture visits that might otherwise have gone to quick-service restaurants only reinforces what the Grocerant Guru® has documented for years: consumers cross-shop food solutions, not retail channels.


Casey's success story is not really about pizza.

It is about understanding that today's consumer purchases meals and mini-meals based on value, convenience, quality, portability, and trust. The retailer that best fulfills those needs wins the transaction regardless of whether the sign outside says convenience store, supermarket, restaurant, club store, or fuel center.

As the Grocerant Guru® has said repeatedly, the future belongs to operators that focus on meal solutions rather than channel definitions.

Casey's simply figured that out before most of the industry as did our Grocerant Guru®.

Are you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how our Grocerant Guru® can edify your retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participationdifferentiation and individualization?  Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: us on our social media sites by clicking one of the following links: Facebook,  LinkedIn, or Twitter



Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Dunkin’ Scores a Hole-in-One with Interactive Food Marketing, Golf Culture, and Gen Z Engagement

 


The foodservice industry's newest battleground isn't just about what consumers eat or drink—it's about how brands invite consumers to participate, engage, share, and become part of the experience according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® based in Tacoma, WA at Foodservice Solutions®.

This week, Dunkin’ demonstrates exactly how modern food marketing is evolving as it launches a multi-layered golf-themed campaign that blends limited-time beverages, collectible merchandise, loyalty rewards, social media engagement, celebrity partnerships, and immersive retail experiences.

From the perspective of the Grocerant Guru®, this is not simply a product launch. It is a masterclass in interactive participatory food marketing.

As one of golf's biggest championship weeks unfolds, Dunkin’ is leveraging the growing popularity of golf among younger consumers while creating multiple touchpoints that encourage customers to interact with the brand both on and off the course.


Rather than relying solely on traditional advertising, Dunkin’ is inviting customers to become active participants in the experience.

The centerpiece of the campaign includes two limited-time golf-inspired beverages:

• Peach "Tee" Dunkin’ Zero, a peach-flavored iced tea energy drink.

• Raspberry "Tee" Lemonade, combining lemonade, iced black tea, and raspberry flavor.

These drinks are more than menu additions—they are conversation starters designed to connect with golf culture while creating social media-worthy moments.


Dunkin’ takes participation even further with its unique MUNCHKINS® Golf Ball Sleeve, pairing donut hole treats with a custom TaylorMade SpeedSoft golf ball. The promotion cleverly blurs the line between foodservice, sports, collectibles, and lifestyle branding.

Today's consumers—particularly younger consumers—are increasingly attracted to experiences that feel personalized, exclusive, and shareable. Dunkin’ recognizes that reality.

The company is also partnering with two-time major champion John Daly, one of golf's most recognizable and entertaining personalities. Daly's larger-than-life persona aligns perfectly with Dunkin's approachable and fun brand identity, creating authentic content opportunities that resonate across social platforms.

But perhaps the most important aspect of this campaign is how many participation points it creates for consumers.

Customers can:

• Try limited-time beverages.

• Collect golf-themed products.

• Earn bonus loyalty rewards.

• Engage with social media content.

• Purchase exclusive co-branded merchandise.

• Visit experiential retail locations.

• Share their experiences online.

That level of engagement transforms customers from buyers into brand advocates.

The exclusive Dunkin’ and TaylorMade merchandise collaboration further extends the brand beyond foodservice. Golf bags, apparel, hats, accessories, and collectibles allow consumers to physically display their relationship with the brand long after a cup of coffee has been consumed.


This strategy mirrors a growing trend the Grocerant Guru® has been tracking for years: consumers increasingly seek brands that fit seamlessly into their lifestyles, hobbies, and passions.

Dunkin’ also understands the growing influence of younger golfers.

Golf participation among Millennials and Gen Z consumers continues to expand, fueled by social media, golf entertainment venues, and a more casual, inclusive image of the sport. By aligning with golf culture in a playful, approachable manner, Dunkin’ positions itself to connect with emerging generations of consumers who value experiences as much as products.

The company's transformation of its Westhampton Beach location into a golf-themed destination featuring a putting green, photo opportunities, and golf-inspired décor further demonstrates the power of experiential retail. Consumers no longer simply visit stores—they visit destinations that create memories and generate content worth sharing.

The loyalty component may be the smartest move of all.

By offering FORE-X (4X) rewards points and additional bonus opportunities through its app and drive-thru channels, Dunkin’ strengthens customer engagement while encouraging digital ordering behavior and repeat visits.

From the Grocerant Guru® perspective, Dunkin’ is proving that successful foodservice marketing today requires much more than advertising. It requires creating ecosystems of participation where products, technology, entertainment, sports, loyalty programs, and social engagement work together to drive consumer excitement.

Golf may be the theme, but engagement is the real product.


Three Reasons the Grocerant Guru® Believes This Campaign Will Drive Success

1.       It Creates Active Participation
Consumers are no longer passive recipients of marketing. Dunkin’ gives customers multiple ways to interact with the brand, increasing emotional connection and loyalty.

2.       It Connects with Younger Consumers Through Lifestyle Marketing
Rather than selling coffee alone, Dunkin’ is connecting with passions, hobbies, experiences, and social sharing opportunities that resonate strongly with Millennials and Gen Z consumers.

3.       It Extends Brand Reach Beyond the Restaurant
Through merchandise, golf partnerships, experiential retail, loyalty rewards, and social media content, Dunkin’ remains visible long after the beverage purchase, creating greater brand relevance and consumer engagement.

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



Monday, June 15, 2026

World Central Kitchen Scores a Global Win by Connecting Food, Community, and the World Cup

 


Food has always been more than fuel. Food creates community, builds relationships, and provides comfort during life's most challenging moments according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®. Likewise, sports unite people across cultures, languages, and borders. This summer, World Central Kitchen (WCK) is bringing those two powerful forces together through an innovative series of World Cup activations designed to raise awareness, inspire volunteerism, and support its mission of feeding people in need around the world.

Founded in 2010 by renowned chef and humanitarian José Andrés, World Central Kitchen has evolved into one of the most respected nonprofit food relief organizations in the world. What began as a response to the devastating earthquake in Haiti has grown into a global network capable of mobilizing within hours after natural disasters, humanitarian crises, and conflicts.

Today, WCK operates with a simple but powerful belief: when disaster strikes, the first thing people need is a hot meal.

The organization's latest initiative, "Food Is Life," marks its first major sports-focused fan engagement campaign, launched during the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The campaign debuted in Los Angeles with a World Cup Watch Party on the iconic Santa Monica Pier.

Partnering with celebrated restaurateurs Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger, founders of Border Grill, World Central Kitchen distributed complimentary snacks to fans while sharing information about its global humanitarian efforts. Guests enjoyed sustainably sourced sablefish tostadas topped with avocado, lime, and aioli, made possible through a donation of 300 pounds of fish from sustainable seafood supplier Seremoni.

The event represents far more than a food giveaway. It highlights how food can bring communities together while shining a spotlight on the millions of people worldwide who rely on emergency food assistance.

Throughout the six-week World Cup tournament, WCK plans additional activations utilizing its fleet of food trucks near stadiums, fan zones, and soccer-related events in multiple cities. These efforts are designed to introduce new audiences to the organization's mission while encouraging community involvement and volunteer participation.

José Andrés captured the spirit of the initiative perfectly:

"Food has the power to bring people together around longer tables, while sports have the power to unite entire nations."

That philosophy has defined World Central Kitchen since its inception.

Unlike many disaster-relief organizations that focus solely on logistics, WCK emphasizes speed, local partnerships, and community engagement. The organization frequently works alongside local restaurants, chefs, foodservice operators, and volunteers, helping support local economies while delivering fresh meals to those in need.

Over the past decade, World Central Kitchen has responded to hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes, floods, wars, refugee crises, and public health emergencies across six continents. Their teams have provided millions of meals following events ranging from Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico and wildfires in California to the war in Ukraine and ongoing humanitarian challenges throughout the Middle East, Africa, and the Caribbean.

Recent efforts illustrate the scale of WCK's impact:

·       More than 10 million meals served in Haiti over the past year amid ongoing instability and displacement.

·       More than 2 million meals distributed in Lebanon following escalating regional conflict.

·       Continued operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo supporting communities facing public health and humanitarian emergencies.

·       Rapid-response feeding programs supporting disaster victims across North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America.

What makes World Central Kitchen unique is its ability to move quickly. Rather than building large bureaucratic systems, the organization relies on local cooks, local restaurants, local suppliers, and local volunteers to deliver immediate assistance where it is needed most.

For restaurant operators, food retailers, convenience stores, distributors, manufacturers, and foodservice professionals, WCK demonstrates the extraordinary role our industry can play beyond commercial success. It showcases how culinary expertise, supply chains, and hospitality can become powerful tools for humanitarian relief.

At a time when consumers increasingly seek brands and organizations that demonstrate purpose, World Central Kitchen stands as an example of how food can create meaningful social impact.

The World Cup campaign serves as a reminder that while fans may support different teams on the field, everyone can be part of the same team when it comes to feeding people in need.

As the Grocerant Guru®, I believe World Central Kitchen represents the very best of what the food industry can accomplish when compassion, logistics, and community come together.

Three Reasons Everyone Who Can Should Support World Central Kitchen

1. They Deliver Immediate Results

World Central Kitchen is often among the first organizations to arrive after a disaster and frequently remains long after media attention has moved on. Their ability to provide fresh meals quickly helps stabilize communities during their most vulnerable moments.

2. They Support Local Communities

Rather than importing large-scale feeding systems, WCK works with local restaurants, suppliers, farmers, and volunteers whenever possible, helping local economies recover while feeding those in need.

3. They Demonstrate the Positive Power of Food

Food is one of humanity's most universal languages. World Central Kitchen proves every day that a simple meal can provide comfort, dignity, hope, and a pathway toward recovery for people facing extraordinary challenges.

The Grocerant Guru® believes that when food brings people together, everybody wins.