Chain Restaurant Menu Trends: All For One, One For All
The latest chain-menu additions are all about helping diners conserve cash and calories, but the underlying trend is giving consumers what they want, exactly how they want it.
By Allison Perlik, Senior Editor -- Restaurants & Institutions, July 1, 2009
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| Einstein Bros.’ Bagel Poppers targeted snackers. |
The big theme shaping chain menus in 2009 is the drive to help diners tighten their belts, both literally and figuratively.
Value-priced options, smaller portions, snacks and more-healthful choices—trends that gained momentum last year in response to the economic crisis, a growing interest in grazing and Americans’ increasing health-consciousness—remain top priority on chain menus. Every month, new menu items that cater to these trends debut, from 99-cent BBQ Chicken Sliders at Costa Mesa, Calif.-based El Pollo Loco and snackable Bagel Poppers at Lakewood, Colo.-based Einstein Bros. Bagels and Noah’s Bagels to the Fresh & Fit menu at Irvine, Calif.-based Mimi’s Cafe.
Yet looming over all menu-innovation decisions for Top 400 companies and other chains is the knowledge that consumers want more say in their dining experiences. Diners are looking for restaurants that will give them what they want to eat and drink, whenever they want to have it and at a price they’re willing to pay.
“People want lower prices, period, but more than that, consumers just want control,” says John Dillon, vice president of marketing and product development for Spartanburg, S.C.-based Denny’s. “We’re trying to capture every consumer mindset that walks into our restaurant.”
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| The Cheesecake Factory’s Snacks & Small Plates menu offers smaller portions at lower prices. |
Sounds like a tall order, but chains’ recent game plans suggest that this approach of broadening menu choices to please more-demanding diners is gaining steam. In recent months, Denny’s has introduced half-portions of signatures such as the Moons Over My Hammy breakfast, downsized meatloaf and other hefty dishes, added better-for-you choices including egg-white omelets and whole-wheat pancakes, and debuted the All Nighter snack menu with dishes starting at $2.99.
Meanwhile, a slew of pizza concepts, including Ann Arbor, Mich.-based Domino’s Pizza and Pittsburgh-based Vocelli Pizza have added pasta lines; Miami-based Burger King is rolling out ribs; Dublin, Ohio-based Wendy’s has introduced boneless chicken wings; and Louisville, Ky.-based KFC now touts grilled chicken. Even Calabasas Hills, Calif.-based The Cheesecake Factory, noted for its mountainous portions, launched a Snacks & Small Plates menu this spring.
“Even though we already have a great variety story, news drives the business,” says Mark Mears, senior vice president and chief marketing officer. “It’s really a different way to dine at The Cheesecake Factory. These dishes allow us to make [our] dining experience more accessible to more people.”
Less is More
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| Chili’s Carne Asada offers diners a healthful choice. |
More customer-friendly pricing isn’t the only driver behind the push toward downsized servings, but it’s a big part of the strategy. That’s one reason why even companies such as Chipotle, which rarely changes its menu and never discounts, are getting on board.
Chipotle’s Low Roller Menu, testing since April in the chain’s home market of Denver, veers from the classic mix of hefty burritos and taco trios. Options include a chicken taco with salsa and lettuce and a choice of cheese or sour cream; a cup of roasted tomatillo, tomato and hominy soup; and a side salad of chopped romaine with salsa, cheese and chipotle-honey vinaigrette, all priced from $2.25 to $6.35. The new items offer more variety at affordable price points, says founder, Chairman and co-CEO Steve Ells.
Trimmed portions also let diners mix and match more on menus. Customers who want to try Atlanta-based Ted’s Montana Grill’s new chopped salad (with salami, artichoke hearts, corn, garbanzo beans, tomato, cucumber and basil dressed in vinaigrette) can order half-portions for $5 instead of the full size for $10 and still have room for a sandwich or entrée.
And of course, helping guests eat more healthfully often is a key objective. Sometimes, says Dillon at Denny’s, “It’s just being a good consumer advocate and making sure we aren’t giving people too much food.”
Healthy, Wealthy & Wise
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| Guests can order the new Chopped Salad at Ted's Montana Grill in half-portions. |
Still, more-manageable portion sizes are only part of what health-minded chain consumers are asking for, says Cammie Spillyards, director of culinary innovation for Dallas-based Chili’s Grill & Bar. “We’re hearing from guests about more transparency about what’s in our items,” she says, noting that sodium (which the chain is planning to reduce across the menu) and artificially occurring trans fats (eliminated in 2007) are among diners’ top concerns.
Listening to their customers, more chains are offering special menus dedicated to more-healthful fare. At Prairie du Sac, Wis.-based Culver’s Frozen Custard & ButterBurgers, the 500 Club Healthy Menu spotlights sub-500-calorie choices, such as the pot-roast sandwich with a side salad. The 400-calorie Lighter Fare menus from Einstein Bros. Bagels and Noah’s Bagels feature such items as the Ancho Chicken Wedge—a wheat tortilla filled with chiles, jalapeño-salsa cream cheese and ancho-chile-marinated chicken, and an egg-white bagel sandwich with turkey sausage.
Chili’s, which has offered Guiltless Grill dishes containing fewer than 750 calories and 25 grams of fat since 1993, added four new entrées to its lineup in February. The goal, says Spillyards, isn’t just to create more-healthful options by relying on leaner proteins, steamed vegetables, and lower-fat and lower-calorie sauces, but also to make the choices sound appealing to guests.
“Words like 'Buffalo chicken,’ 'honey-mustard glaze’ and 'carne asada’ say to diners, 'Hey, this isn’t just a chicken breast and some rice.’ It’s not the old days of, 'I have to suffer for my health,” she says of new selections, including Carne Asada (spice-rubbed sirloin with fresh-squeezed lime juice and house-made pico de gallo) and a Buffalo Chicken Sandwich (grilled chicken breast with low-fat ranch dressing and Buffalo sauce).
The Snack Factor
Giving customers more control over how they use restaurants also means giving them the flexibility to eat what they like, whenever they like. Snacks, which offer the lower prices and smaller sizes that customers crave, are a prime example, and chains across segments are rolling them out.
The variety in such entries ranges from El Pollo Loco’s Grilled Chicken Tortilla Roll (with citrus-marinated grilled chicken, Jack and Cheddar cheeses and a choice of toppings for $1.99) to Winston-Salem, N.C.-based Krispy Kreme’s personal-size cakes.
At The Cheesecake Factory, the Snacks & Small Plates menu includes trend-forward choices such as sweet-corn fritters and bacon-wrapped dates stuffed with Parmesan cheese.
“We have 16 different tastes that can be shared as a pre-appetizer or mixed and matched for a snack or meal,” Mears says. “We’re not seeing ill effects on our appetizer mix, because the price point is so attractive, customers see it as a low-risk way to try new tastes.”
Contact writer at aperlik@reedbusiness.com
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