Restaurant examples are McDonalds, Pret
A Manger Burger King, Pizza Hut, Papa Murphy's and Starbucks, each having a fresh
ready-2-eat or heat-N-eat food menu. You may not think of Walgreens as a food
destination yet Walgreens sells fresh soft-serve yogurt, coffee and sushi at
selected stores, so they are technically grocerants. In the Casual Dining
sector Maggiano's Little Italy offers a buy one take a 2nd home for
free in their Classic Pastas menu section.
Convenience Store examples are 7 Eleven, Wawa,
Sheetz and QuickChek, all of which sell fresh and prepared sandwiches, salads,
beverages.
Supermarket examples are Whole Foods, Central Market,
Safeway and Kroger… all sell fresh prepared chicken, salads, sandwiches and
most offer sushi and beverages.
Drug Store
examples are Walgreen and Duane Reade both offer in both New York and ChicagoSushi, Smoothie, Wine, Coffee, and Fro-yo Bars then there are the 455+
CafeW’s severing baked goods and beverages.
The retail supermarket and convenience store sector have
unique grocerant challenges. Presentation of the ready-2-eat or heat-N-eat
fresh food is important. When you get a meal at a restaurant, the plate and the
food look great… let's call this "food for now". Retailers are primarily
selling "food for later" or take-out and unless an item is a
sandwich, the looks of ready-2-eat meals and snacks begin to change.
Why is it so hard to package food to go? In the Hot food
section of the grocery store the food in most cases does not look appealing so
our expectations drop when we get it for Take-Away. In convenience stores like
Wawa, the ready to eat food looks great in the to-go containers. Why? Because
Wawa puts the entire package together. They exert more control on the look and
feel of "food for later".
Around the world we are now seeing sections in
department's stores and kiosk in malls in Europe and Asia and airports around
the world. The items can range from entrees to side items and deserts. Some
examples of items range from fried chicken, mash potatoes, cream spinach, to
liver and onions, pizza, hot dogs, steak, prime rib, various casseroles
(hot-dish) to salads, side salads pie, cake and any single proportioned
deserts. They can be picked up at the specific unit, or delivered.
In summary, a Grocerant is a result of the blurring of
the line between restaurants and grocery stores aimed at the time-starved
consumer with ready-2-eat or heat-N-eat food components that can be bundled
into a meal. With new non-traditional points of distribution and retail food
competition opening daily food retail is evolving fast.
Outside eyes can deliver top line sales and bottom
line profits. Invite
Foodservice Solutions® to provide brand and product positioning assistance or a
grocerant program assessment. Since 1991 Foodservice
Solutions® of Tacoma, WA has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche for
more on Steven A. Johnson and Foodservice Solutions® visit http://www.linkedin.com/in/grocerant or twitter.com/grocerant


Very interesting, Steven. Thanks for finding me on LinkedIn so I can have the pleasure of reading your blog. I used to keep a blog, so I appreciate the effort it takes to keep it up and keep it interesting.
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