Showing posts with label Chefs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chefs. Show all posts

Monday, May 27, 2024

Can Amazon Gain Momentum in the Food Sector



As the summer temperatures soar, so does the fierce competition for shoppers' wallets in the grocery industry. Enter Amazon Fresh, touting massive price cuts on a wide range of grocery items both in-store and online. But don't be fooled by the shiny discounts – beneath the surface lies a betrayal of fundamental values. Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® ask how did Amazon let the fresh food opportunity slip away?

Amazon Fresh's aggressive price-slashing strategy promises up to 30% off on 4,000 grocery products. Sounds like a shopper's dream, right? Not so fast. Peel back the layers, and you'll find a dangerous precedent: short-term gains at the expense of long-term sustainability and quality. 


In a Battle for Share of Stomach

Price Matters


As a grocerant guru®, I've always championed fair pricing that reflects product value. Quality ingredients, ethical sourcing, and fair wages – these are the bedrock of a thriving food industry. Amazon's relentless pursuit of rock-bottom prices threatens these principles, shaking the very foundation of our food system. 

Amazon claims to offer "great prices on quality items every day." But let's call it what it is: a thinly veiled disguise. Their price-slashing frenzy isn't about affordability; it's a race to the bottom, leaving quality and integrity in the dust. 

Amazon's Prime members get an extra 10% discount on hundreds of grocery items. Sounds sweet, but it perpetuates the discount-driven mindset, blurring the true value of food. 


Amazon Fresh isn't the only player. Target and ALDI have also joined the fray, promising thousands of price reductions. But saving money shouldn't mean compromising quality or sustainability. 

As consumers, we must ask: What's the price of these discounts? Are we willing to sacrifice our food system's integrity for a few dollars at the checkout? Let's say no. 

It's time to hold retailers accountable. Let's champion businesses that prioritize quality, sustainability, and fair pricing. True value isn't just about discounts; it's the nourishment and joy food.  

Amazon’s food marketing ideations look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how Foodservice Solutions® 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 the following links: FacebookLinkedIn, or Twitter 



Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Is Mom Cooking your Dinner or is the Neighbor

 


Last week Joanna FantozziSenior Editor for Nation's Restaurant News and Restaurant Hospitality posed a great question; Do you know where your food is being cooked? According to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® most Americans simply don’t care who cooks dinner as long as it is not them.  Here are some facts:

 


    1. Recent Grocerant ScoreCards found 82.3% of consumers don’t know what’s for dinner at Noon, and 61.8 %don’t know what’ s for dinner at 4PM.
    2. Roughly 63.7% of consumers purchase prepared food items from a retail location at least three times a month.
    3. 79.6% all dinners have at least 1 grocerant niche Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat meal component and 66.6% have two meal components per day.
    4. When asked if they wanted to cook dinner from scratch or assemble dinner from fresh meal components 91.3 % of Gen Z chose assemble from Fresh Prepared Meal Components and Millennials 83.4% chose meal components.
    5. Seventy-three percent of retail prepared food purchases are taken to go
    6. 88.2 % of consumers prefer hand held food over sit down meals with a knife and fork

 


That said we want to share Joanna Fantozzi article as we believe you will find it as interesting as the team at Foodservice Solutions® did. Here we go:

“Since the rise of the ghost kitchen several years ago, trust and transparency have consistently been issues that third-party delivery aggregators have tried to address through tougher operator guidelines and by cracking down on redundant brands, like Uber Eats did earlier this year.

But this week, a TikTok user @cammy_yam, aka personal chef Auntie Cammy, went viral with a behind-the-scenes video introducing her audience to her virtual restaurant business where she delivers food through DoorDash. In the video — which has now been taken down — she was proud that she made $10 by delivering a loaded salad with shrimp to a customer at 3 a.m., though users were quick to criticize her business as “ghetto” because she was running her food business out of her home.

In response, Auntie Cammy defended herself, commenting back that DoorDash “knows I’m doing it from home, and they sent the equipment to my home knowing I’m going to be cooking here” and showed off a “Welcome Kit” box that she was sent by DoorDash.  

Since the video went viral on The Daily Dot, DoorDash said that Auntie Cammy’s virtual restaurant has been taken down from the DoorDash platform for not being compliant with local laws and restrictions.

“Restaurants operating on DoorDash are required to comply with all applicable laws and regulations,” a DoorDash spokesperson said in a statement. “If DoorDash learns of any operation in violation, we will swiftly remove them from the platform.”

While DoorDash says it supports businesses with varying business models, all operators must follow the company’s merchant terms of service, which requires business owners to follow local laws and restrictions. While these laws vary by city and state, operators have to follow local guidelines to provide proper paperwork. Houston city law, for example — where Auntie Cammy was selling meals on DoorDash — stipulates that all hot meals sold for consumption must be prepared in a commercial kitchen.



Auntie Cammy was able to bypass these regulations by signing up through DoorDash’s self-serve merchant onboarding process without speaking to DoorDash representatives. Small business owners must provide basic information of their business as well as a tax ID number when signing up to sell food via DoorDash. Every merchant that signs up receives a welcome kit in the mail identical to the one Auntie Cammy was showing off in her video. If DoorDash gets wind of operators attempting to bypass any company guidelines or local laws, the perpetrators are quickly taken down from the platform.

It would be easy to dismiss Auntie Cammy’s ill-fated viral video as a one-off instance of a home seller slipping through the cracks, but there have been several examples over the years of people showing off on social media how much money they’ve made selling food out of their homes through an aggregator.

Three years ago, one YouTuber posted a video that racked up over three million views detailing his time selling frozen pizzas out of his home through Uber Eats. He noted how easy it was to get started on Uber Eats, pay for advertisements through the platform, and order from his own “restaurant” to set up his business with a five-star review. Another YouTuber similarly posted a video about his own experience opening up a DoorDash restaurant from his balcony. More recently, local Chicago news station WGN9 News investigated a virtual restaurant calling itself Blackbird (likely to copy the Michelin-starred Chicago restaurant) after an Uber Eats driver complained that he had to deliver food from this alleged restaurant that was operating out of an apartment complex. The driver reported his findings to the local Department of Health and the operation was swiftly ordered to shut down.


Some of these instances — alongside other issues like redundant virtual storefronts, underperforming ghost kitchens, and otherwise mislabeled or misleading aggregator listings — have likely been the impetus for platforms to crack down on these shady restaurants. Uber Eats’ new policies for example, stipulate that all restaurants must “meet all relevant licensing requirements and to follow all food regulations—including food safety regulations—and industry best practices. Restaurants must maintain valid food establishment licenses and/or permits.”

Grubhub similarly updates its policy language to match the gist of DoorDash’s and Uber Eats’ updates, further stating that all Grubhub operators must provide a “federal tax ID number that matches the brick-and-mortar location of the restaurant.” Although none of these compliance policies from DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Grubhub appear to explicitly ban virtual restaurants operated out of a home kitchen, the policies in place should make it very difficult for a home chef to register with one of these aggregators services, and for local health departments to shut down an illegal restaurant.

However, these at-home virtual restaurant brands that have gained traction on social media are likely not the only illegal foodservice operations slipping through the cracks. Once their noncompliance goes viral on TikTok or YouTube or is covered by the local news, they have been universally shut down by the health departments and by the aggregator companies. Right now, it seems like it’s much easier for aggregator companies to spot noncompliant operators in the aftermath of public attention and subsequently kick them off the platform, than it is to deny their application to begin with. However, these policy crackdowns are hopefully a step in the right direction.”

Success does leave clues. One clue that time and time again continues to resurface is “the consumer is dynamic not static”.  Regular readers of this blog know that is the common refrain of Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.  Our Grocerant Guru® can help your company edify your brand with relevance.  Call 253-759-7869 for more information. 



Friday, September 30, 2022

Have a Recipe, Jupiter Can Help you Monetize It

 


Chef’s, home cooks, restaurants, and bodegas can now all monetize their recipes easier than ever before according to Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®. There is a company called Jupiter.  Its Jupiter’s goal is to make it insanely easy for people to make recipes from the creators they love while helping creators increase their earnings and engagement.  

Yes, the next generation in food commerce is built for creators empowering them to monetize recipes, increase earnings from brand relationships, and have complete control over their community of home cooks, fans, and peers.

In case you have not heard, Jupiter, is the creator-first recipe and grocery shopping platform. That recently launched with over 60 individual creator storefronts, including Molly Baz. With Jupiter, creators seamlessly integrate creator’s social and web content into beautifully curated, branded, and shoppable recipe stores, where home cooks browse, shop individual recipes for ingredients, manage grocery lists, and get same-day grocery deliveries all from individual storefronts from each food creator. 

Now available nationwide, Jupiter opens up a world of opportunity, monetization, and brand control and ownership for food creators. Dubbed Jupiter “co-pilots”, creators can now:

·         Receive direct compensation from groceries shopped through their recipes

·         Build ongoing relationships with brands that were previously limited to one-off posts and sponsored content  

·         Launch recipe storefronts integrated with Instagram, TikTok, Pinterest and other social media platforms, where followers shop recipes and brand products directly

·         Open up multiple revenue streams where every recipe is an opportunity to get paid without needing direct followers - a limitation of individual subscription models. 

Jupiter’s goal is to make it insanely easy for people to make recipes from the creators they love while helping creators increase their earnings and engagement.  


Chad Munroe, Co-founder & CEO of Jupiter, stated, “During the pandemic, two forces came to bear - the explosive growth of people cooking at home and the rise of viral food trends on TikTok and Instagram ”. “With Jupiter storefronts, creators can earn recurring revenue for their work, and engage their community of followers while home cooks can follow as many creators as they’d like, knowing that every recipe they’ve shopped for directly compensates the creators for the content they consume.” 

In the current model, food creators while creating content have to do sales on the side to get one-off brand sponsorship deals. Additionally, these sponsorships require them to create more content that doesn’t always feel authentic. Jupiter closes that gap, simply: every time someone shops a recipe, the creator earns income. Creators can now focus on what they do best: creating good food.

Alice Sun, Jupiter Co-Pilot and content creator, stated, “As a recipe and content creator, I want to spend my time doing things I enjoy - cooking, shooting, editing, and seeing people enjoy my creations. But for this to really work, I needed a revenue model that is simple, fast, and sustainable”... “When I was introduced to Jupiter, I was thrilled to find that anyone could connect with me over one recipe or multiple recipes. I am also able to add value and build a direct relationship with my community by helping them make meal planning easy. My home chef followers now have a one-stop shop to gather all the ingredients they need for my recipes.” 

Yes, home cooks, Jupiter is the easiest way to make the recipes from the creators you love and shop for weekly grocery items on a single platform. They can follow all their favorite recipe creators -- easily find new ones, and leverage Jupiter’s intelligent platform to populate their shopping cart. 

Don’t over reach. Are you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideations look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how Foodservice Solutions® 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 the following links: Facebook,  LinkedIn, or Twitter


In a Battle for Share of Stomach

you can Cash In with Recipes