May 8 2012
NACSonline.
CHICAGO – As fuel consumption continues to decline, “The future of the convenience store industry will depend on foodservice,†declared Dean Dirks, founder and CEO of c-store and foodservice consulting firm Dirks & Associates, speaking at the 2012 National Restaurant Association Show in Chicago this past weekend.
During an educational session titled “How to Do World-Class C-Store Foodservice,†Dean stressed the importance that foodservice will play on convenience store profits, stressing it must be “done right.â€
“You must do your due diligence to make sure that it’s going to work,†he said, offering up an example of a situation with one small c-store operator where it didn’t make sense to offer a QSR. For those to succeed, “you must have at least 1,500 people a day in your store,†he said. Anything less won’t be able to turn a profit.
The panel session included insights by Dr. Jack Cushman, executive vice president of foodservices for Nice N Easy Grocery Shoppes, and Jim Bressi, director of food research and development for Kwik Trip, Inc.
Cushman began by laying out three essential considerations for succeeding with a foodservice program:
Maximize the foodservice real estate by providing customers what they want. To do so requires a thorough understanding of the customer psychographic.
Maximize gross margins by choosing distributors wisely, engaging in menu engineering to add value, and viewing labor as a variable cost.
Differentiate your business by continuously reviewing and implementing foodservice and convenience store industry trends.
Bressi said that foodservice is “a daily challenge,†one that requires a near fanatical attention to detail, especially cleanliness — paramount as convenience stores try to change consumer perceptions as to the quality of c-store foodservice.
For more on how to offer world-class foodservice, see the NACS CAFE foodservice training program.
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