Friday, January 16, 2026

How Meal-Time Flexibility Is Redefining Retail Food in 2026

 


The grocerant niche—fresh, Ready-to-Eat (RTE) and Heat-N-Eat (HNE) food designed for flexible meal assembly—has moved from a retail undercurrent to a primary growth engine across grocery, convenience, and foodservice-adjacent channels.

Foodservice Solutions® Grocerant Guru® Steven Johnson forecast this shift years ago, noting that time-starved yet flavor-charged consumers increasingly source meal components from non-traditional retail outlets. That insight has not only proven accurate—it has become foundational to modern food retail strategy in 2024, 2025, and now 2026.


Meal-Time Flexibility Is No Longer Optional

By 2024, industry data showed that more than 80% of at-home dinners included at least one prepared or semi-prepared food component, reflecting a structural change in how households build meals. In 2025, that behavior accelerated as inflation-pressured consumers sought value through controlled indulgence—premium flavor without full-service restaurant pricing. Enter the grocerant.

In 2026, consumers are no longer asking where the food comes from—they are asking how easily it fits their day. According to recent food marketing and consumer behavior studies:

·       Over 70% of shoppers now decide what’s for dinner after 3:00 p.m., favoring retail destinations that offer immediate, ready-to-assemble solutions.

·       Fresh prepared foods are among the top three traffic drivers for grocery and convenience formats, outperforming many center-store categories in same-store sales growth in both 2024 and 2025.

·       Households with mixed work-from-home and in-office schedules—now the majority—purchase prepared food components across multiple dayparts, blurring breakfast, lunch, and dinner definitions.

The grocerant niche thrives precisely because it supports mix-and-match meal construction: a protein here, a vegetable there, a globally inspired sauce or side that personalizes the plate. Consumers are not abandoning cooking—they are curating it.



From Brand Management to Brand Cultivation

Building a retail food brand in 2026 requires more than operational excellence; it requires brand cultivation. Brands are dynamic, not static. They evolve with consumer expectations, lifestyles, and taste preferences.

Successful grocerant programs focus on:

·       Distinctive, differentiated consumables by daypart (breakfast bowls, lunch-forward handhelds, dinner-centric family bundles).

·       Programmatic consistency with built-in flexibility, allowing consumers to personalize without friction.

·       Clear food identity, where each component stands alone but performs better when bundled.

Foodservice Solutions® has tracked this evolution since 1991, observing that the most successful operators balance palate, price, pleasure, and perceived quality—a mix requiring both analytical rigor (IQ) and emotional intelligence (EQ).

Differentiated Means Familiar—With a Twist

In industry language, differentiated does not mean unfamiliar to the consumer. It means recognizable, comforting, and trustworthy—enhanced with a twist of flavor, format, or functionality.

The modern food value proposition balances three forces:

1.       Better-for-you attributes (cleaner labels, protein-forward, functional benefits)

2.       Flavor and indulgence (global spices, regional authenticity, chef-inspired profiles)

3.       Traditional comfort (foods consumers already love, reimagined for speed and flexibility)

Retailers winning in the grocerant niche are growing both top-line sales and bottom-line profitability by leaning into this equilibrium—using prepared food not as a side business, but as a brand anchor.


The Strategic Question

If consumers are already assembling meals from your store, the real question is: Are you intentionally designing for it?

Grocerant programs are no longer experimental—they are strategic. Assessment of brand alignment, product placement, and meal-component positioning is now table stakes for competitive relevance.

Foodservice Solutions® continues to advise global retailers on grocerant program development, leveraging more than three decades of category insight from its base in Tacoma, Washington.

 


Four Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Meal replacement has evolved into meal curation. Consumers do not want finished answers—they want smart components that let them decide.

2.       Prepared food is the new brand billboard. The quality and clarity of your grocerant offer communicates more about your brand than any ad ever could.

3.       Daypart discipline drives profitability. Winning operators design different food solutions for how consumers actually eat, not how legacy formats define meals.

4.       Flexibility is the new convenience. Speed matters, but relevance matters more—grocerants that adapt to lifestyle variability will outpace those built on rigid menus.

If you are not expanding your grocerant niche today, you are likely leaving both loyalty and margin on the table.

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



Thursday, January 15, 2026

Food Sales Channel Blurring: Myth, Misdiagnosis, or Missed Opportunity?

 


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
👉 Connect with us on social media: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter



Wednesday, January 14, 2026

A Historical Reset: Federal Nutrition Policy Comes Full Circle

 


For more than half a century, federal dietary guidance has functioned as both a public health instrument and a market signal. From the original “Basic Seven” food groups introduced during World War II, to the low-fat, carbohydrate-forward food pyramid of the 1990s, nutrition policy has repeatedly reshaped how Americans eat—and how food is produced, marketed, procured, and served.

This week, the Trump administration unveiled what it characterizes as “the most significant reset of federal nutrition policy in decades” with the release of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2025–2030. In historical context, the move represents a decisive pivot away from the late-20th-century fear of fats and animal proteins, and a return to whole-food fundamentals that dominated dietary thinking prior to the industrialization of the American food system.

The newly released guidelines emphasize high-quality protein, healthy fats, fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, while explicitly discouraging highly processed foods and refined carbohydrates. Accompanying the guidance is a redesigned food pyramid that places meat, cheese, vegetables, and fruit at the top, visually reversing decades of carbohydrate prioritization.


According to U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the administration is “ending the war on saturated fats,” arguing that protein and certain fats were wrongly discouraged in prior guidance despite long-standing cultural and culinary norms. Historically, this marks a break from policies that indirectly fueled the rise of ultra-processed foods marketed as “low-fat” but high in sugar and starch.

The new guidelines also introduce firmer language around sugar consumption, urging parents to completely avoid added sugars for children under age four, a recommendation aligned more closely with pediatric nutrition science than prior federal messaging. Alcohol guidance, meanwhile, has been simplified: rather than numeric thresholds, adults are encouraged to limit consumption for better overall health, reinforcing moderation without prescriptive limits.

In a notable departure from recent framing, the administration’s fact sheet argues that nutrition science should remain insulated from ideological considerations, stating that when “DEI impacts nutrition science,” it can be used to justify maintaining unhealthy status quos under the banner of equity. Instead, the administration calls for a “commonsense, science-driven document” that reshapes culture and federal food procurement to improve access to affordable, real food.

Industry response has been measured but supportive. FMI – The Food Industry Association emphasized that the guidelines provide science-based recommendations while reinforcing the grocery store’s role as a frontline health partner. FMI’s research indicates that 80% of shoppers believe their primary food store already does at least a good job supporting health and well-being, and that consumers increasingly expect personalized health solutions at retail, guided by registered dietitians and transparent food choices.

Meanwhile, the National Association of Wine Retailers applauded the alcohol guidance for maintaining a science-based, moderate approach, noting that balance—not abstinence absolutism—has long been the foundation of responsible consumption.

Viewed historically, the 2025–2030 Dietary Guidelines represent less a revolution than a course correction—one that aligns federal policy more closely with ancestral eating patterns, contemporary nutrition science, and the realities of how Americans actually source food today.

 


What Will Change Next: Sector-by-Sector Evolution

Grocery Sector: Three Likely Evolutions

1.       Protein-Centric Merchandising
Meat, dairy, eggs, and plant-forward protein sets will gain prominence, with perimeter departments reclaiming influence from center-store packaged goods.

2.       De-Emphasis of “Low-Fat” Labeling
Retailers will shift away from legacy low-fat claims toward “minimally processed,” “real ingredients,” and functional nutrition messaging.

3.       Dietitian-Led Personalization at Scale
In-store and digital nutrition guidance—already underway—will accelerate, tying loyalty programs to individualized health goals aligned with federal guidance.

 


Restaurant Sector: Three Likely Evolutions

1.       Menu Rebalancing Toward Protein and Fats
Carbohydrate-heavy value meals will give way to protein-forward bowls, plates, and bundles that align with consumer health perceptions.

2.       Transparency as a Competitive Advantage
Operators will highlight ingredient sourcing, cooking methods, and fat quality to reassure consumers navigating evolving nutrition norms.

3.       Smaller Portions, Higher Quality
Expect fewer “supersized” offerings and more emphasis on satiation, nutrient density, and culinary credibility.

 


Convenience Store Sector: Three Likely Evolutions

1.       Protein Becomes the New Snack Anchor
Hot food bars, roller grills, and grab-and-go cases will expand protein-rich options beyond jerky and bars into fresh, prepared formats.

2.       Reduced Sugar in Immediate-Consumption Items
Fountain beverages, breakfast items, and snacks will see reformulation pressure as sugar avoidance messaging gains traction.

3.       C-Stores as Functional Food Destinations
The sector will further position itself as a fast, affordable source of “real food” rather than a last resort for indulgence.

 


School Lunch Programs: Three Likely Evolutions

1.       Higher-Quality Proteins Return to the Plate
Meat, dairy, and eggs will regain prominence after years of cost-driven carbohydrate substitution.

2.       Stricter Sugar Elimination in Early Childhood Meals
Compliance with zero-added-sugar guidance for young children will reshape supplier formulations and menus.

3.       Procurement Shifts Toward Whole Foods
Federal purchasing standards will increasingly favor minimally processed ingredients, affecting agriculture, distributors, and foodservice manufacturers alike.

 


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Policy Signals Become Purchase Signals
Federal dietary guidance may not dictate behavior, but it legitimizes consumer instincts already shifting toward protein, fats, and real food.

2.       Ultra-Processed Foods Face a Long-Term Reckoning
The guidelines accelerate a slow but inevitable erosion of credibility for products built on refined carbs and added sugars.

3.       Access, Not Awareness, Is the Next Battleground
Americans largely know what “healthy” looks like; the winners across sectors will be those who make it affordable, convenient, and culturally relevant.

Elevate Your Brand with Expert Insights

For corporate presentations, regional chain strategies, educational forums, or keynote speaking, Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, delivers actionable insights that fuel success.

With deep experience in restaurant operations, brand positioning, and strategic consulting, Steven provides valuable takeaways that inspire and drive results.

💡 Visit GrocerantGuru.com or FoodserviceSolutions.US
📞 Call 1-253-759-7869