Thursday, March 19, 2026

Bracketology Meets the Grocerant Economy: How Jollibee Turns March Madness into a Loyalty Marketing Power Play

 


Every March, the frenzy surrounding the NCAA basketball tournament transforms television viewing, snacking habits, and restaurant traffic patterns across the United States. The tournament itself—NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament—generates billions in food spending as consumers gather at home, order takeout, or visit restaurants to watch games.

Smart restaurant brands don’t simply ride that wave—they engineer marketing programs designed to capture it.

That’s precisely what Jollibee is doing with its March Madness-style menu bracket promotion, which pits eight menu items against each other in social-media voting while rewarding customers through the brand’s loyalty program. On the surface, it looks like a fun fan engagement stunt. In reality, it’s a well-timed marketing tactic that intersects three powerful food industry growth drivers:

1.       Loyalty program expansion

2.       Digital engagement and gamification

3.       Portable, craveable meal occasions tied to live sports viewing

In today’s rapidly evolving “grocerant economy,” those three factors are increasingly determining which brands win market share.

 


March Madness Is a $20+ Billion Food Occasion

Basketball fans may be focused on brackets, but food marketers are focused on consumption patterns.

Industry data shows:

·       Americans spend more than $20 billion on food and beverages during March Madness, according to estimates tied to viewing events.

·       Roughly 48 million Americans host or attend watch parties during the tournament.

·       Nearly 60% of viewers order takeout or delivery during games.

·       Chicken, pizza, burgers, and handheld snacks dominate the menu mix.

That consumption pattern is precisely where Fried Chicken brands thrive.

Few companies are better positioned to capitalize on that demand than Jollibee, whose signature product—Chickenjoy—is already engineered for group sharing, portability, and social eating.

 


Gamifying the Menu: The Bracket Strategy

Jollibee’s promotion mirrors the competitive structure of the NCAA tournament.

Eight menu items compete in head-to-head matchups through voting on the brand’s Instagram stories. Each week, fans vote to advance their favorite item until a champion emerges. The winning product ultimately becomes part of a BOGO (Buy One, Get One) promotion for loyalty members.

From a marketing perspective, this format accomplishes several strategic objectives simultaneously:

1. Social Media Engagement

Platforms such as Instagram have become essential for restaurant discovery and menu promotion. Polls and voting tools create micro-engagement moments that increase algorithm visibility.

2. Loyalty Program Growth

The promotions require participation through the Jollibee Rewards program, converting casual followers into identifiable customers with trackable purchasing behavior.

3. Menu Data Insights

Every vote becomes market research. Brands can identify which products resonate most with consumers, which items trigger impulse demand, and which may benefit from additional promotion.

In other words, the bracket isn’t just entertainment—it’s crowdsourced menu intelligence.

 


Loyalty Programs Now Drive Restaurant Traffic

Across the restaurant industry, loyalty programs are rapidly becoming the backbone of digital marketing.

According to industry data:

·       Over 80% of major quick-service restaurant chains now operate loyalty programs.

·       Loyalty members typically spend 15%–25% more per visit than non-members.

·       Personalized promotions increase repeat visits by as much as 30%.

Companies like McDonald's, Starbucks, and Chipotle Mexican Grill have proven that loyalty ecosystems can generate billions in incremental sales.

For rapidly expanding brands like Jollibee, loyalty programs also help introduce new consumers to the brand while building habitual purchasing behavior.

 


Why Chicken Dominates Game-Day Dining

The menu items featured in Jollibee’s bracket include premium sides and burgers made with Angus Beef, but the hero category remains chicken.

That’s not accidental.

Chicken is now the fastest-growing protein category in foodservice, with several structural advantages:

·       Lower cost volatility than beef

·       High portability for takeout and delivery

·       Strong appeal across multicultural consumer segments

In fact, chicken-centric chains are among the fastest-growing restaurant concepts in the U.S.

Examples include:

·       Chick-fil-A

·       Wingstop

·       Raising Cane's

Jollibee’s differentiation lies in its global flavor profile and cult-favorite fried chicken recipe, which has helped the brand build passionate fan bases in both Asia and North America.

 


The Rise of the “Second Screen” Marketing Economy

Another reason this campaign works is timing.

Today’s sports viewers rarely watch games with a single screen. Instead, they move constantly between television and mobile devices.

That creates a perfect environment for real-time marketing interaction.

While watching a tournament game on television, consumers can simultaneously vote in the bracket, check promotions, or place a mobile order.

That behavioral shift is redefining food marketing.

Consumers are no longer passive viewers—they are active digital participants.

 


The Grocerant Guru® Perspective

From the viewpoint of the Grocerant Guru®, Jollibee’s March promotion reflects a larger transformation in how food brands drive demand.

Restaurants are no longer just selling meals. They are selling experiences, engagement, and participation.

The most successful brands now operate at the intersection of:

·       Entertainment

·       Digital community

·       Food convenience

Jollibee’s menu bracket taps all three.

 


Grocerant Guru® Insights

1. Gamification Will Become Standard in Food Marketing

Expect more restaurant brands to adopt tournament-style promotions, voting competitions, and social media “food battles.” Consumers increasingly want to participate in brand storytelling, not just consume products.

2. Loyalty Ecosystems Are the New Marketing Currency

In the future, the most valuable restaurant asset won’t be store count—it will be loyalty membership scale and engagement frequency. Brands that build strong digital communities will dominate both traffic and data-driven marketing.

March Madness may crown a basketball champion each year.

But in the evolving grocerant economy, brands like Jollibee are proving that the real winners are the companies that turn cultural moments into interactive food experiences.

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



Wednesday, March 18, 2026

The American Restaurant “Melting Pot”: Why the Industry Must Lead on DEI to Reflect the Nation It Serves

 


The United States has long described itself as a “Melting Pot”—a nation strengthened by immigrants, cultures, traditions, and ideas blended together to create something uniquely American. Nowhere is that concept more visible, or more economically important, than in the restaurant industry.

From quick-service counters to fine-dining dining rooms, restaurants employ one of the most diverse workforces in the country. That reality is precisely why diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) is not a political talking point for foodservice—it is a business imperative.

A compelling example comes from Darden Restaurants, the parent company behind brands including Olive Garden, LongHorn Steakhouse, Yard House, Ruth's Chris Steak House, Cheddar's Scratch Kitchen, The Capital Grille, Chuy's, Seasons 52, and Eddie V's Prime Seafood.

Under the leadership of Chief People Officer Sarah King, the company has made inclusion a cornerstone of its workforce strategy. But the bigger story is not about one company—it’s about an entire industry that must embrace inclusion if it wants to grow.

 


The Restaurant Industry Is America’s Largest Cultural Workplace

Restaurants operate at the intersection of culture, community, and commerce.

Consider the scale:

·       The U.S. restaurant industry generates over $1.2 trillion in annual sales.

·       The sector employs more than 15 million workers, making it one of the largest private-sector employers in America.

·       More than 50% of restaurant workers are under age 35, and the workforce includes significant representation of immigrants, women, and first-time job seekers.

Restaurants are often the first job for young Americans, the entry point for immigrants, and a career ladder for people who did not follow traditional education paths.

In other words, restaurants look like America.

 


Why DEI Is Not Optional for Restaurants

When companies ignore workforce diversity, they ignore the realities of their own operations.

The typical restaurant team might include:

·       Multiple languages spoken in the kitchen

·       Multigenerational staff

·       Workers from dozens of national backgrounds

·       Students, parents, and career professionals

The restaurant dining room itself mirrors the same diversity.

Customers today expect brands to understand cultural tastes, dietary preferences, and lifestyle differences. Operators that fail to reflect their communities risk becoming irrelevant in an increasingly multicultural marketplace.

That is exactly why companies like Darden Restaurants emphasize building leadership pipelines that reflect the diversity of their teams.

 


Building Leadership Pipelines That Reflect the Workforce

Sarah King, who joined Darden in 2017 after a long HR career including two decades at Wyndham Worldwide Corporation, has focused on developing leadership pipelines across the organization.

Her philosophy is straightforward: representation at the top requires intentional development at every level.

The results are notable:

·       Nearly 60% of Darden’s executive leadership team is made up of women and/or people of color.

·       Several major brands inside the company are led by female presidents, including

o   LongHorn Steakhouse

o   The Capital Grille

o   Eddie V's Prime Seafood

o   Seasons 52

This approach stands out at a time when research from McKinsey & Company suggests progress for women in corporate leadership has slowed across many industries.

King’s view is simple: if companies want diversity at the top, they must develop the pipeline years in advance.

 


Fast Food and Casual Dining Face the Same Imperative

The reality is that this challenge is not unique to Darden.

Major chains across all segments must embrace the same approach.

Quick-service giant McDonald's employs more than 2 million people globally, with thousands of franchise owners representing diverse communities across the U.S.

Casual dining brands such as Red Robin Gourmet Burgers rely heavily on multicultural workforces in both front- and back-of-house roles.

Across the industry:

·       Immigrant workers represent a significant share of restaurant kitchen staff.

·       Women represent roughly half of restaurant employees and an increasing percentage of management roles.

·       Restaurants remain one of the largest employers of minority workers in the United States.

In other words, restaurants are already operating inside the American melting pot. Leadership simply needs to reflect that reality.

 


Inclusion Also Reduces One of the Industry’s Biggest Problems: Turnover

Restaurants historically struggle with high employee turnover, which can exceed 70% annually in some segments.

Inclusive workplaces help address this challenge.

When employees feel they belong:

·       retention improves

·       productivity increases

·       service quality improves

That philosophy also explains why King has become involved in new workforce tools designed specifically for hospitality.

One example is MAJC, a talent-matching platform backed by chef and TV personality Andrew Zimmern. The platform uses AI to connect workers with employers in ways that improve job fit and reduce turnover—an issue that costs the industry billions annually.

 




Restaurants Have Always Been a Place of Opportunity

The restaurant industry has long been a career gateway.

Dishwashers become chefs.
Servers become managers.
Immigrants become entrepreneurs.

Many of the most successful restaurateurs in America started in entry-level jobs.

King herself describes hospitality as the place where she “found her people,” a sentiment echoed by millions who built careers in restaurants when other industries offered fewer opportunities.

That is why inclusion in restaurants is more than policy—it is tradition.

 


The Grocerant Guru® Perspective: Three Industry Insights

1. Restaurants Are America’s Cultural Front Door
Restaurants are often the first workplace where different cultures collaborate daily. That dynamic gives the industry a unique role in shaping inclusive business practices.

2. Diversity Drives Menu Innovation
Multicultural teams bring culinary ideas, flavors, and techniques that drive menu innovation—from global street food to regional fusion concepts.

3. The Melting Pot Is the Restaurant Industry’s Competitive Advantage
Operators that embrace diversity—not just in hiring but in leadership, marketing, and menu development—will outperform those clinging to outdated models.

 


Think About This

The American restaurant industry is more than a food business.

It is a living expression of the nation’s Melting Pot, where cultures meet, ideas blend, and opportunity is created every day.

Companies like Darden Restaurants are demonstrating that inclusion is not simply the right thing to do—it is how restaurants remain relevant in a multicultural America.

And in an industry built on hospitality, everyone deserves a seat at the table.

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