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Buffalo Wild Wings

May 22, 2020

Starbucks Speeds Up Its Plans to Make Stores More To-Go Centric

As if it weren’t to-go-friendly enough, coffee behemoth Starbucks announced this week it is speeding up the reformatting of many of its stores to cater to more off-premises orders. Yes, the move is in response to the impact COVID-19 has had on the restaurant industry. It’s also part of Starbucks’ ongoing “Bridge to the Future” reopening plan, which CEO Kevin Johnson outlined in a letter yesterday.

A huge part of that plan is to accelerate the pace of development for what Starbucks calls its “third place” — that is, stores that cater heavily to on-the-go customers and off-premises orders. That includes drive-thru locations, Starbucks Pickup stores, and more recent formats, such as curbside pickup.

Starbucks, which claims 80 percent of its orders before the pandemic were already “on the go,” had already been moving in this direction. But as Johnson suggested in his letter this week, the pandemic has changed consumer behaviors and habits and made many folks more amenable to off-premises formats and less excited about sitting down in brick-and-mortar locations. In keeping with that, Starbucks’ plans to transition its store formats “over a three- to five-year period will now occur over the next 12 to 18 months.”

That will include building out more drive-thrus, creating more pickup locations in dense urban areas, and relocating low-performing stores (e.g., those in malls) to locations where they can have a drive thru. Johnson added in his letter that customers will “soon see more curbside pickup options as well as delivery – all formats optimized for the current crisis and a future of changing consumer expectations for the third place across the U.S.”

This emphasis on the so-called third space isn’t unique to Starbucks, although no other restaurant chain out there is pursuing it quite as aggressively. Probably because few restaurant brands have as much money or reach as Starbucks, who said this week it has now regained roughly 60 to 65 percent of prior year comparable U.S. store sales, according to Johnson.

Other brands may be able to incorporate some of these “third place” initiatives into their own operations. Buffalo Wild Wings just launched its first to-go-only concept store in Atlanta, GA, while Shake Shack unveiled its own off-premises concept earlier this month.

More interesting, though, are what smaller chains are up to. For instance, Austin, TX-based chain Torchy’s Tacos has been retrofitting existing drive-thru windows at its stores and creating on-the-fly curbside pickup at other locations. When we spoke back in April, the brand’s Chief Marketing Officer, Scott Hudler, said the company had “MacGyver’d” a bunch of technologies together to run these off-premises operations smoothly. So far it seems to be working. 

Few will be able to accomplish a total overhaul of their store formats a la Starbucks. But plucking one or two elements for the coffee giant’s playbook, at least when it comes to making to-go orders more efficient, could make all the difference as the entire restaurant industry moves closer to that third place.

May 11, 2020

Buffalo Wild Wings Launches a To-Go-Only Concept Store

Buffalo Wild Wings is set to unveil a new model for its sports bar/restaurant this week. The chain announced today it will open its first GO model on May 13 in Atlanta, GA, and is designed specifically for takeout and delivery orders. Depending on its success, the new store format could serve as a blueprint for other casual dining restaurants looking to transition to more off-premises-focused formats for the future.

If you’ve been to a Buffalo Wild Wings in the past, you’ll know the restaurant specializes in big dining rooms where customers pack in to watch sports games on the massive television sets that hang on pretty much every available bit of wall space there is. But thanks to the pandemic, packed sports bars are decidedly a thing of the past. Buffalo Wild Wings clearly knows this, as the chain said in the announcement it has been converting its 1,250-plus locations into versions of this to-go-only format for the last six weeks.  

The new 1,800 sq. ft. GO store in Atlanta will still have some TVs as well as limited seating where guests can wait for their orders without missing any of the game. But, as mentioned above, the store is dedicated to off-premises orders. Customers that order ahead will be able to pick up their food from heated lockers. The store will also feature a walk-up counter for placing orders. 

In a statement, Buffalo Wild Wings’ Chief Operating Officer John Bowie said that the company’s takeout and delivery business has grown over 140 percent over the last six weeks — more or less since shelter-in-place orders hit the U.S. What’s worked so far has largely informed the new GO store format.

Other popular casual dining chains will also have to incorporate more to-go-friendly formats in the coming months to meet the requirements for social distancing. Some already are. At the end of March, Outback Steakhouse announced the first U.S. unit of its fast-casual standalone concept Aussie Grill, which is basically a food court version of Outback. Shake Shack announced its own off-premises-only Shack Track stores earlier this month. Some chains, like IHOP and The Cheesecake Factory, were unrolling to-go-focused standalone concepts long before the pandemic.  

Sports bar or no, the days of crowded dining rooms are gone — possibly forever, at least for a couple of years. Pivots to off-premises-focused concepts, as Buffalo Wild Wings and others have done, will soon enough become the norm for those chains with the money to overhaul their operations. While that’s bad news for sports fans who like watching the game out, it’s good news for businesses looking for clues as to how to reimagine their restaurants in a post-pandemic era. 

February 19, 2020

Jimmy John’s Parent Company May Be Opening Its Own Ghost Kitchens

Inspire Brands, which owns Arby’s, Buffalo Wild Wings, Jimmy John’s, and other restaurant chains, has filed for trademarks meant for ghost kitchens, according to Restaurant Business Online.

The company filed “Inspire Kitchen” and “Alliance Kitchen” with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in January, and both filings mention “food delivery” and “delivery of food by restaurants.” The filings also name-drop ghost kitchens themselves, stating that the concepts will provide “restaurant services, namely providing ghost kitchens and commercial kitchens for use in the preparation of meals and beverages for consumption off premises.”

That Inspire is filing trademarks suggests the company is exploring not just ghost kitchens, but its own ghost kitchens. A growing number of restaurants now utilize the concept, which allows businesses to manage and fulfill delivery and takeout orders without overburdening in-house restaurant staff. To date, however, the vast majority of restaurants have teamed up with third-party providers like Zuul Kitchens, Kitchen United, and DoorDash Kitchens, who provide space, equipment, and other infrastructure to restaurants.

A smaller number of chains have launched their own ghost kitchens. Fat Brands, for example, is outfitting its own in-house kitchens to double as ghost kitchens. Starbucks teamed up with Alibaba’s Heme Supermarkets to operate ghost kitchens in China. 

Since Inspire Brands owns multiple brands, it’s not hard to imagine a setup where one single facility can house kitchens for Jimmy John’s, Arby’s, Sonic, and Inspire’s other restaurant chains. Throw in one of Middleby’s recently launched out-of-the-box ghost kitchen concepts, which helps companies build out and equip their facilities, and you’d basically have a self-sustaining ghost kitchen that doesn’t need a major third-party provider like Kitchen United or DoorDash to operate.

That’s rather speculative on my part, since Inspire told Restaurant Business Online that it was “not ready to comment” on the trademarks. However, more restaurants exploring ghost kitchens means we’ll see more approaches to the concept as it moves forward. The most scalable, economically feasible solution — whether that’s teaming up with a third-party kitchen provider, operating one’s own facility, or something else — is yet to be determined.

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