Saturday, March 7, 2026

Where Is the Food, Value, Service, Equilibrium Today?

 


Are the food industry’s traditional measuring metrics still adequate? In today’s dynamic food ecosystem, Boomers, Gen X, and Millennials are simultaneously resetting the equilibrium between price, value, and service across the entire retail foodservice landscape.

A quote often attributed to Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard captures the moment perfectly:

“Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards.”

Looking forward, the food industry must acknowledge a fundamental truth: new consumer behaviors require new measurement models. Legacy metrics designed for a slower retail environment fail to capture the realities of modern food purchasing—where speed, transparency, portability, and digital convenience intersect with rising prices and shifting expectations.

 


The New Consumer Value Formula

In a world where ordering happens on a smartphone, pickup is curbside, and dinner may come from a grocery store, convenience store, or restaurant interchangeably, Foodservice Solutions® Grocerant Guru® Steven Johnson developed a framework for defining consumer equilibrium:

Mobile Transparency + Price + Quality + Service + Portability = Value

Incremental Value = Constantly Changing Menus
(Seasonal relevance + credible sustainability + culinary discovery)

This formula reflects a profound shift: value is no longer defined by price alone. Instead, value emerges from convenience, accessibility, personalization, and perceived quality.

 


The Convergence of Grocery, C-Stores, and Restaurants

The traditional boundaries separating grocery stores, convenience stores, and restaurants have largely disappeared. Consumers increasingly answer the nightly question—“What’s for dinner?”—from whichever channel delivers the best balance of price, quality, and speed.

Grocery Stores: The Rise of the Grocerant

Grocery retailers have aggressively expanded ready-to-eat and heat-and-eat meal programs, turning stores into hybrid foodservice destinations.

·       Kroger continues to scale fresh prepared meal programs and digital ordering tied to curbside pickup.

·       Whole Foods Market built its brand on chef-driven prepared foods, hot bars, and fresh meal kits.

·       Trader Joe's drives high traffic through globally inspired frozen meals and ready-to-cook items.

Prepared foods now represent one of the fastest-growing and highest-margin categories in grocery, reinforcing the grocerant model first forecast decades ago.

 


Convenience Stores: Foodservice as the Profit Engine

Convenience stores have transformed from fuel-and-snack outlets into serious foodservice competitors.

·       Wawa generates billions annually from made-to-order hoagies and digital ordering kiosks.

·       7‑Eleven continues expanding fresh food offerings including pizza, hot foods, and private-label meal solutions.

·       Casey's General Stores has become one of the largest pizza chains in the United States through its convenience-store kitchens.

For many consumers, the convenience store has become the fastest route to affordable, portable meals.

 


Quick-Service Restaurants: Speed and Menu Innovation

Quick-service chains continue to dominate in menu innovation, operational efficiency, and digital integration.

·       McDonald's leverages digital ordering, drive-thru optimization, and value bundles to retain traffic.

·       Taco Bell drives cultural relevance through limited-time offers and bold flavor innovation.

·       Chick‑fil‑A continues to redefine service metrics with industry-leading drive-thru throughput and customer satisfaction.

These brands prove that speed and service consistency remain core drivers of perceived value.

 


Full-Service Restaurants: Experience Still Matters

Despite pressure from off-premise dining and rising costs, full-service restaurants maintain an advantage in hospitality and experiential dining.

·       Olive Garden continues to attract diners with perceived abundance and familiar flavors.

·       Texas Roadhouse leads the casual dining segment through value-driven steak offerings and energetic service.

·       Applebee's relies on value promotions and bar-centric social dining occasions.

These brands remind the industry that service and atmosphere remain essential parts of the value equation.

 


A Demographic Shift Driving Food Behavior

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, roughly half of American adults are single, a demographic shift with enormous implications for food retail.

Single consumers tend to prefer:

·       Ready-to-Eat fresh foods

·       Fresh, local, “better-for-you” meals

·       Portion-controlled meal components

·       Mix-and-match dishes with vegetables

·       Portable food solutions

·       Heat-and-Eat convenience

These preferences have fueled the explosive growth of fresh prepared foods, meal kits, and ready-to-heat retail offerings.

 


Boomers and Millennials: Different Paths, Same Destination

While generational behaviors differ, they increasingly converge around technology-enabled convenience.

Boomers are becoming a generation of Point → Click → Eat.
Millennials are a generation of Seek → Discover → Migrate.

At first glance these behaviors appear different, yet both rely on digital discovery and frictionless purchasing.

The result: a shared expectation that food should be accessible anytime, anywhere, from any channel.

 


Success Leaves Clues

Looking backward provides valuable insights.

For more than three decades, Tacoma-based Foodservice Solutions® has documented the evolving fresh food retail ecosystem and the rise of the grocerant model.

Early industry analysis predicted many of the structural changes now shaping the food industry, including:

·       Restaurant brands extending into retail food environments

·       Growth of fresh prepared foods in grocery

·       Expansion of cook-chill and sous-vide production technologies

·       The blurring line between retail and foodservice

Today those predictions are visible everywhere—from supermarket meal departments to convenience store kitchens and restaurant brands inside grocery aisles.

The Real Question: Are You Measuring the Right Things?

Legacy metrics focused on same-store sales, average check, or menu price increases may no longer capture the full picture.

Modern food retail success increasingly depends on:

·       Consumer friction reduction

·       Cross-channel purchasing behavior

·       menu innovation velocity

·       digital engagement and loyalty ecosystems

·       perceived value relative to convenience

In other words: where and how consumers buy food matters as much as what they buy.

 


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. The Consumer No Longer Distinguishes Channels
Consumers do not think in terms of grocery, restaurant, or convenience store. They simply seek the best combination of speed, flavor, price, and accessibility at that moment.

2. Prepared Foods Are the New Retail Battleground
The fastest growth across food retail is occurring in fresh prepared, ready-to-eat, and heat-and-eat foods—the core of the grocerant opportunity.

3. Value Is Now a Multi-Variable Equation
Price alone no longer defines value. Today’s winning brands deliver portability, transparency, convenience, and menu discovery alongside competitive pricing.

Steven Johnson is the Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma-based Foodservice Solutions®. With decades of experience as a multi-unit operator, consultant, and brand strategist, he has helped companies understand the evolving intersection of grocery, convenience retail, and restaurants—now known globally as the grocerant niche.



Friday, March 6, 2026

The Grocery Barbell Effect: The Middle Is Shrinking — and the Food Dollars Are Moving

 


The latest JLL report confirms a structural reality: the American grocery marketplace is no longer linear — it’s polarized. Traditional supermarkets are being compressed between aggressive discounters and premium fresh specialists.

Foot traffic data from Placer.ai shows traditional grocers such as Kroger and Safeway captured 73.2% of grocery visits in Q1 of last year — the fourth consecutive annual decline. Meanwhile, value formats captured 16.6% of visits and fresh-format grocers captured 7.2%, both steadily rising over four years.

This is not cyclical softness. It is capital reallocation by the consumer.

 


FOOD FACT: Grocery Still Dominates — But It’s Losing Share of the Plate

·       Total U.S. food-at-home sales exceed $1 trillion annually.

·       Food-away-from-home (restaurants, prepared foods) now accounts for roughly 55% of total U.S. food spending, up from ~48% pre-2019.

·       Since 2022, restaurant sales have consistently outpaced grocery sales growth on a nominal basis.

Translation: Consumers are spending more total food dollars outside the traditional supermarket channel.

 


The Value Surge: Hard Discount Is Scaling Fast

Aldi posted 8.3% same-store traffic growth in 2025 and opened 180 new stores last year, with another 180 planned. Aldi now operates more than 2,400 U.S. stores and continues expanding into new states.

FOOD FACTS:

·       Aldi’s assortment averages 1,800–2,000 SKUs, compared to 30,000–45,000 in conventional supermarkets.

·       Private label penetration exceeds 75% of assortment.

·       Smaller footprints (~12,000–20,000 sq ft) reduce operating costs by double-digit percentages compared to legacy formats.

Consumers under inflation pressure are trading down strategically. Limited assortment equals lower prices and faster trips — exactly what fragmented shopping behavior demands.

 


Premium Fresh: Growth Fueled by Wellness

On the opposite end of the spectrum, curated fresh operators are thriving:

·       Trader Joe's: +10.4% same-store traffic

·       Whole Foods Market: +9.8%

·       Sprouts Farmers Market: 37 new stores in 2025

FOOD FACTS:

·       Organic food sales in the U.S. now exceed $60 billion annually.

·       High-protein and functional food claims are among the fastest-growing CPG attributes.

·       Private label at premium grocers often delivers margins 500–800 basis points above national brands.

Affluent shoppers are prioritizing health markers, ingredient transparency, and curated experiences. They are not abandoning grocery — they are upgrading within it.

 


Meanwhile… Restaurants Are Capturing Occasions

The JLL report focuses on grocery real estate, but the competitive set is broader.

FOOD FACTS:

·       U.S. restaurant industry sales exceed $1.1 trillion annually.

·       Drive-thru accounts for roughly 70% of QSR transactions.

·       Digital ordering now represents 30%+ of total restaurant sales at many national chains.

Restaurants are solving the “What’s for Dinner?” equation with frictionless access, bundling, and perceived value. Family meal deals priced between $20–$35 often compete directly with grocery center-store baskets — without prep time.

Traditional supermarkets built infrastructure around the weekly stock-up trip. Restaurants built infrastructure around daily meal replacement.

Frequency wins.

 


The C-Store Disruption: Small Box, Big Food Margins

Convenience stores are quietly capturing incremental grocery share.

FOOD FACTS:

·       The U.S. has over 150,000 convenience store locations.

·       In-store sales exceed $300 billion annually.

·       Prepared foodservice represents the highest-margin category inside c-stores, often delivering margins north of 50%.

Modern c-stores have upgraded roller grills, expanded fresh sandwiches, added proprietary beverages, and invested in commissary systems. Many operate as 3,000–5,000 sq ft micro-grocers with extended hours and proximity advantages.

When consumers shift to shorter, more frequent trips, proximity operators gain structural advantage.

 


Shrinking Baskets, Rising Trips

The JLL report identifies a crucial behavioral shift: more frequent, shorter grocery trips.

FOOD FACTS:

·       Average grocery basket size (units per trip) has declined post-pandemic while trip frequency has increased.

·       More than 40% of shoppers report visiting multiple grocery stores in a single week to manage price comparisons.

·       Inflation over the past three years has elevated price sensitivity across income tiers.

Fragmented shopping behavior benefits:

·       Discounters (value restock missions)

·       Fresh specialists (targeted premium purchases)

·       Restaurants (meal replacement)

·       C-stores (immediate consumption)

Traditional supermarkets optimized for 1990s-era weekly stock-ups are structurally misaligned with 2026 shopping patterns.

 


Real Estate Tells the Forward Story

Store openings signal confidence:

·       Publix opened 44 stores in 2025

·       Trader Joe’s: 39

·       Sprouts: 37

·       Aldi: 180

The Southeast led with 215 new openings, reflecting demographic migration and population growth.

Capital flows toward specialized formats. The middle remains cautious.

 


The Competitive Set Has Changed

The competitive frame is no longer:
Supermarket vs. Supermarket.

It is:
Supermarket vs. Discount
Supermarket vs. Premium Fresh
Supermarket vs. Restaurant
Supermarket vs. C-Store

And increasingly:
Supermarket vs. Digital convenience.

Food dollars are fluid.

 


Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Share of Stomach Is Replacing Share of Shelf.
Retailers that focus solely on SKU expansion miss the larger shift. Winning today means owning meal occasions, dayparts, and dietary needs — not just linear feet.

2. Margin Is Moving to Prepared and Proprietary.
Private label, foodservice, and ready-to-eat formats deliver structurally higher margins than center-store national brands. Operators that fail to expand proprietary programs will struggle to offset inflation compression.

3. The Weekly Stock-Up Trip Is No Longer Sacred.
Retail models must adapt to frequency-based consumption. Smaller formats, frictionless checkout, meal bundles, and digital integration are no longer optional — they are competitive prerequisites.

The grocery barbell is not temporary. It reflects a permanent recalibration of consumer behavior. The middle is shrinking — and the food dollars are moving with intention.

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