Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Food Consumer Relevance in 2026: The New Battleground for Food Retail and Foodservice

 


Customer relevance in 2026 is no longer a soft metric. It is a primary driver of traffic, frequency, and margin. Price still matters, but it is no longer sufficient. Today, relevance is defined by how effectively a brand aligns with how consumers actually live, eat, and shop across dayparts, channels, and occasions.

Recent cultural relevance rankings from Collage Group highlight leaders such as Amazon, Walmart, and Costco Wholesale. These companies lead not simply because of scale, but because they consistently align with evolving consumer behaviors and expectations across diverse demographic groups.

 


Grocery: From Stock-Up to Daily Food Solutions

Grocery has transitioned from a pantry-loading channel into a daily meal solution platform.

Key Data Points Driving Relevance

More than seventy percent of grocery shoppers now purchase ready to eat or heat and eat items at least once per week. Prepared foods generate two to three times higher margins than traditional center store packaged goods. Online grocery penetration remains above fifteen percent of total sales, yet influences more than half of in-store purchasing decisions through digital engagement. Gen Z and Millennials account for over sixty percent of growth in fresh prepared foods.

Why Leaders Win

Walmart combines price leadership with strong meal solutions such as value-priced rotisserie chicken and sub ten dollar meal kits.
Costco Wholesale delivers high quality, large format prepared meals that reinforce value perception for families.
Amazon integrates data, personalization, and convenience through delivery ecosystems and frictionless checkout.

Where Others Struggle

Target resonates culturally with Millennials but lacks consistent authority in food.
Aldi leads on price but underutilizes immediate meal solutions.
Kroger shows uneven performance across demographic groups, signaling fragmented relevance.

Grocerant insight: grocery relevance is now built on meal immediacy, digital influence, and clear value positioning.

 


C Stores: Immediate Consumption as a Growth Engine

Convenience stores have rapidly evolved into one of the most dynamic foodservice channels.

Key Data Points Driving Relevance

Foodservice contributes between twenty five and thirty five percent of in-store sales at leading chains. Prepared foods often exceed fifty percent gross margins. Morning and late night dayparts are expanding due to hybrid work patterns. Nearly sixty percent of Gen Z consumers now consider convenience stores a viable meal destination.

Why Leaders Win

Chains like 7-Eleven are repositioning as food-first retailers by expanding fresh coffee programs, enhancing hot food assortments, and integrating digital ordering and delivery.

The Relevance Shift

Convenience stores dominate in speed, impulse-driven purchases, and flexible daypart coverage. They are no longer competing with fuel stations. They are competing directly with quick service restaurants.

Grocerant insight: the modern convenience store wins by delivering food within minutes, not just products.

 


Restaurants: Competing on Occasion Relevance

Restaurants are no longer defined by cuisine type. They are defined by how well they serve specific eating occasions.

Key Data Points Driving Relevance

More than sixty five percent of restaurant occasions now occur off premise through takeout, delivery, or drive thru. Digital orders typically produce check averages twenty to thirty percent higher than in-store orders. Drive thru accounts for more than seventy percent of sales at many quick service brands. Consumers regularly rotate across three to five food channels each week.

Why Winners Win

Successful brands align tightly with specific use cases such as quick lunch, family dinner, or late night snacking. They streamline menus, prioritize speed, and invest in off premise infrastructure including pickup shelves and ghost kitchens.

The Relevance Gap

Legacy restaurant brands often fall behind because they overemphasize dine-in experiences, maintain overly complex menus, and fail to compete with the price value equation offered by grocery and convenience stores.

Grocerant insight: restaurants now compete in a landscape where a grocery meal kit, a convenience store combo, and a quick service meal all serve the same consumer need.

 


The Convergence Economy

The boundaries between grocery, convenience, and restaurants have effectively disappeared.

Grocery stores operate in-store dining and prepared food stations.
Convenience stores offer expanded fresh and hot food programs.
Restaurants sell packaged meals and retail products.

This is the grocerant economy, where food is defined by occasion rather than channel. Consumers move seamlessly between formats based on need, time, and value.

 


The Grocerant Guru’s Three Insights for 2026

1. Own a Daypart or Risk Irrelevance
Brands that dominate a specific eating occasion build habitual traffic. Those without a clear daypart focus lose consistency and frequency.

2. Compress Time and Maximize Value Per Minute
Speed has become a critical performance metric. The most relevant brands deliver high quality food with minimal time investment.

3. Build Edible Trust Across Every Channel
Consistency across in-store, pickup, and delivery experiences is essential. Trust in food quality and reliability drives repeat engagement.

 


Final Word from the Grocerant Guru®
Relevance in 2026 is not about visibility. It is about repeated selection. The brands that succeed understand a fundamental shift in consumer behavior:

Consumers do not think in channels. They think in meals.

Gain a Competitive Edge with a Grocerant ScoreCard

Unlock new opportunities with a Grocerant ScoreCard, designed to optimize product positioning, placement, and consumer engagement.

Since 1991, Foodservice Solutions® has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche—helping brands identify high-growth strategies that resonate with modern consumers.

Call 253-759-7869 or Email Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us



Monday, April 20, 2026

Restaurant Brands in Trouble: Structural Stagnation, Broken Franchise Models, and the Cost of Not Evolving Fast Enough

 


The restaurant industry is no longer being disrupted in cycles—it is being structurally rewired. Consumer behavior has shifted faster than most franchised systems can adapt: off-premise now dominates occasions, value is defined by time savings plus total meal utility, and digital engagement is no longer optional—it is the operating system.

Against that backdrop, a growing set of restaurant brands are showing a consistent pattern: flat or declining traffic, franchisee profitability compression, and strategic lag in menu + channel innovation.

The result is predictable: franchisees are increasingly carrying the downside risk of outdated brand systems according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

 


Case Study 1: Roll Em Up Taquitos — The Emerging Brand Breakdown

The lawsuit involving Roll Em Up Taquitos, where franchisees allege misrepresentation of viability and compare the system to a “Ponzi scheme,” is not just a legal issue—it is a classic early-stage franchise overextension failure pattern.

Food marketing reality check:

·       Emerging QSR concepts typically require $1.2M–$2.5M per unit build-out + working capital

·       New brands often project 15–20% EBITDA, but mature systems in fast-casual average closer to 8–12%

·       Early-stage brands frequently over-index on:

o   novelty traffic spikes (first 6–12 months)

o   influencer-driven trial

o   LTO curiosity demand

Structural issue:

These models often lack:

·       repeat-frequency engineering (loyalty architecture)

·       daypart depth beyond lunch/dinner

·       digital acquisition cost control (CAC inflation can exceed $8–$15 per order in new brands)

Grocerant reality: novelty is not a business model. Repeatable occasions are.

 


Case Study 2: Carl’s Jr. — Legacy Burger Fatigue in a Value-Driven Market

Carl’s Jr. illustrates a broader legacy burger segment slowdown, where transaction dependency on discounting erodes long-term margin structure.

Quantified pressure points:

·       Franchisee distress tied to multi-unit closures (dozens of units in distressed portfolios)

·       Typical QSR burger chains now operate at:

o   50%–70% of transactions tied to promotional pricing

·       Labor inflation in key markets pushing wage costs above 20% of sales in some franchise groups

Food marketing disconnect:

·       Menu architecture still heavily weighted toward:

o   large, high-calorie SKUs

o   limited “mini-meal” or snackable bundles

·       Competitors are pulling share via:

o   value bundles under $5–$7

o   digital-exclusive combos

o   “snackification” of core menu items

Structural issue:

Burger brands are still optimized for 2005-era dine-in + drive-thru duality, while consumer behavior has shifted to:

·       multiple smaller daily eating occasions

·       mobile-first ordering spikes

·       “grab-and-go micro-meals”

 


Case Study 3: Hooters — Brand Equity Decay and Occasion Loss

The bankruptcy tied to $376 million in debt reflects more than financial leverage—it reflects occasion erosion and cultural repositioning failure.

Demand-side signals:

·       Casual dining traffic across the sector has declined ~15–25% over the past decade (industry-wide trend)

·       Off-premise now represents 60%+ of restaurant occasions

·       Younger consumers (Gen Z, Millennials) increasingly favor:

o   fast casual

o   ghost kitchens

o   hybrid retail-food concepts

Marketing breakdown:

·       Hooters historically relied on:

o   experiential dine-in entertainment

o   sports-bar occasion clustering

·       But failed to evolve into:

o   digital engagement ecosystem

o   off-premise scalable menu formats

o   multi-channel brand relevance

Structural issue:

The brand remained dependent on physical-space-driven demand density, while competitors built:

·       delivery-first menu optimization

·       app-based loyalty ecosystems

·       modular menu pricing strategies

 


Case Study 4: Roti — The Urban Lunch Trap

Roti’s contraction (from ~40+ units to under 20) is a textbook case of overexposure to a single daypart + geography collapse risk.

Data signals:

·       Urban fast-casual lunch traffic declined sharply post-pandemic, with many downtown cores still operating at 70–85% of pre-2020 weekday office occupancy

·       Lunch-only brands can lose 40–60% of daily revenue base when office traffic collapses

Food marketing failure:

·       Limited expansion into:

o   dinner bundling

o   family meals

o   retail-ready grab-and-go

·       Underdeveloped:

o   third-party delivery optimization

o   grocery adjacencies (prepared meals, kits)

Structural issue:

A single-daypart dependency model in a multi-daypart consumer economy is no longer viable.

 


Case Study 5: Smokey Bones — Casual Dining Footprint Collapse

Smokey Bones shrinking from ~129 to under 20 units reflects the broader casual dining contraction curve.

Category-wide benchmarks:

·       Casual dining traffic has underperformed QSR by 300–500 basis points annually for over a decade

·       Average ticket growth is often offset by:

o   higher discounting rates

o   rising food cost volatility (beef + poultry inflation cycles)

Food marketing disconnect:

·       Large-format restaurants struggle with:

o   high fixed labor cost structures

o   inefficient kitchen throughput ratios

·       Competitors outperform via:

o   smaller footprints

o   hybrid takeout-first formats

o   simplified menus (SKU reduction improves margin 5–10%)

Structural issue:

The “big box dining room” model is structurally overbuilt for today’s off-premise dominant consumption economy.

 


Case Study 6: Jack in the Box — Complexity vs Execution

Jack in the Box’s closure of 150–200 stores and multi-percent sales decline reflects operational complexity failure.

Data-driven pressure points:

·       Menu complexity often exceeds 50+ core SKUs, increasing:

o   labor time per order

o   food waste variability

o   training costs

·       Digital channel adoption still uneven across franchise systems

Food marketing gap:

·       Competitors winning share through:

o   simplified value menus

o   app-exclusive bundles

o   AI-driven upsell personalization

·       Jack in the Box remains challenged by:

o   inconsistent brand positioning across regions

o   under-optimized drive-thru throughput systems

Structural issue:

Too many SKUs = slower service = lower throughput = weaker unit economics.

 


Case Study 7: Franchisee Capital Stress (Farmer Boys example)

Franchisee bankruptcy tied to $5.2M in high-interest debt illustrates a broader capital structure issue.

Industry reality:

·       Franchise leverage often includes:

o   SBA loans + private lending stacking

o   interest rates now frequently 7–12%+ depending on structure

·       Break-even volumes are rising due to:

o   labor inflation

o   food cost volatility

o   occupancy cost pressure

Marketing disconnect:

Brands still sell “ownership opportunity” narratives while:

·       store-level cash-on-cash returns are compressing

·       payback periods are extending beyond 5–8 years in many cases

Structural issue:

Franchise systems are often marketed on growth assumptions that no longer match post-inflation unit economics.

 


The Common Failure Pattern Across All Brands

Across emerging and legacy systems, five structural breakdowns repeat:

1. Traffic Over Dependency on Discounting

Brands increasingly rely on promotions that:

·       inflate short-term traffic

·       erode long-term margin

2. Failure to Engineer Multi-Occasion Relevance

Winning brands now operate across:

·       snack

·       mini-meal

·       full meal

·       late-night

·       retail hybrid

Most struggling brands still operate in two occasions or fewer.

3. Off-Premise Under-Optimization

Despite 60%+ of occasions occurring off-premise:

·       packaging

·       menu architecture

·       bundling strategies remain underdeveloped

4. Franchisee Capital Misalignment

·       Rising build costs

·       rising labor costs

·       slower-than-projected payback cycles

5. Menu Complexity Inflation

More SKUs ≠ more sales
More SKUs = lower throughput efficiency and higher labor drag

 


The Grocerant Guru®: Four Advanced Recovery Insights

1. Engineer “Channel-Agnostic Food”

Every item must perform in:

·       dine-in

·       drive-thru

·       delivery

·       retail grab-and-go

If it fails in one channel, it fails strategically.

2. Build Occasion-Based Revenue Architecture

Replace “menu thinking” with:

·       $5 snack occasions

·       $10–$12 mini-meals

·       $20–$30 family bundles

·       late-night impulse sets

3. Treat Packaging as the Second Menu

Packaging is now:

·       brand communication

·       upsell driver

·       quality perception engine

Under-invested packaging = underperforming brand equity.

4. Franchise Systems Must Be Repriced to Reality

Winning systems will:

·       lower build costs

·       reduce SKU counts

·       improve unit-level EBITDA visibility

·       prioritize operator profitability over unit count growth

Think About This

Restaurant brands are not failing randomly—they are failing predictably.

The industry is shifting from:

expansion-driven franchising → efficiency-driven food systems

And the brands that continue to operate on outdated assumptions about traffic, menus, and franchise economics are no longer just behind the curve—they are structurally exposed to it.

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


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