Age will no longer define the frequency and type of restaurant visited; less wealth, unemployment, anxiety about what may happen tomorrow or in the future will be the concern in years to come, regardless of age or demographic.
Food Trucks are the new “Mom & Pops”
- Lower price of admission
- Lesser cost of doing business day to day and lower overhead
- Success more in dense populations – bringing the food to the guest
- Based on today’s customer, but not necessarily for the long run
- i.e. Breakfast all day
- Morning Happy Hours
- Supper aka “Small Plates”
- Blue Plate Specials – the new/revised & current definition of Prix Fixe
- An American Icon will become a global Icon
- Independents thank the chains for upgrading the awareness
- Overdone and not every new burger concept means profitability and success
- Response to the economic position we are in
- Eventually will burn out - think TCBY/FroYo outlets of the 1990’s
- Consumers are justifying the reason to spend less
- We have stepped down in our acceptance of requirements
- Stepped over the threshold of negative stigma that couponing is a fact and way of life
- Stepped sideways to let the “food trendinista’s” talk about the next big trend, but the majority of consumers are not necessarily buying
- Restaurant chains want locations where there are potential for transient consumers - i.e., dense populations
- Independent operators will cling to city centers, due to the large concentration of potential consumers
- Stable food prices have been a silver lining in the weak economy. That is changing fast
- Expectations are retail food prices to increase 3.5% to 4.5% this year, after climbing just 0.8% in 2010, the slowest rate since 1962
- The midpoint of the new outlook signals the sharpest acceleration in the food inflation rate from one year to the next since 1978, and makes the increase itself the biggest since 2008, when prices rose 5.5%
- Compared with restaurants, grocery stores and food manufacturers are having less of a difficult time passing on costs to consumers, who are preparing meals at home more often
- Local sourcing of produce, meats and seafood; sustainability, and simplicity
- Terms like house-made, artisan, chef-grown, and made-from-scratch resonate with customers
- Less is More, focus on fresh and healthy
- For the past decade, the Millennial Generation is being credited with driving wine consumption growth in the U.S.
- Single service plastic and metal wine containers are now becoming popular
- Beer is now seeing competition from wine as Major League ballparks go upscale, offering more high-end and branded foods and beverages
Source: http://www.hotelinteractive.com/article.aspx?articleid=22879
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