The State of the Restaurant Industry
  On March 29, The Food Institute hosted a webinar with some of the 
    most dynamic operators in the QSR space today. Hosted by Lazard's managing 
    director John Goldasich, the panel included Kim Malek, founder and CEO of 
    Salt & Straw; Aaron Noveshen, founder and CEO of The Culinary 
    Edge and Starbird Chicken; and Riley Lagesen, chair of Greenberg 
    Traurig's Global Restaurant Industry Group.
  They covered many topics with prime examples of what works in the industry 
    today and what doesn't, including (but not limited to) labor and supply chain 
    challenges, finding good real estate, an update on the California FAST Act 
    and Prop 22, as well as the modern consumer and what makes their businesses 
    and employees happy and successful.
  "The national landscape is as diverse as ever and continues to evolve," 
    Goldasich noted.
  
"The pandemic turned the industry on its head. When would you see so 
    many employees not return to work? The pandemic changed the way restaurants 
    engaged the workforce, incentivizing them to stick around. Also, how do operators 
    money against COVID and a political and regulatory landscape? Coupled with 
    rising wages, interest rates, and benefits coupled with inflation and layoffs, 
    many restaurants are still doing well all over the country. There's a healthy 
    amount of development and cautious optimism despite pressure and challenges."
  From there, the panelists dove into several topics; select excerpts are summarized 
    below.
  
Labor
  Goldasich noted that 75% of operators see labor costs increasing in 2023 
    amid the ongoing foodservice worker shortage, the changing workscape of recruitment 
    and retention, and perpetual cost increases from a world teetering on recession. 
    How have the guests responded?
  Kim Malek – To say it's been fascinating on this front is putting it lightly. 
    [Salt & Straw] has been fortunate to be fully staffed. From a culture 
    perspective, we're cashing in our chips. It's a fun job in a good environment 
    and people like that. There's lots of open communication – I'm missing our 
    monthly company-wide town hall as we speak.
  We're doubling down and investing in online training systems that people 
    can do on their phones, TikTok-style. We're trying to stay competitive from 
    a pay perspective. We manufacture our own ice cream and that's been harder 
    on the manufacturing side and the competition is unbelievable. We've had to 
    get creative with scheduling, flexibility, and training a culture that people 
    don't see in other places. We've added additional languages to training programs 
    and focused on folks in non-seeing/non-hearing environments, and we're looking 
    for folks for first-time employment or who are re-entering the workforce. 
    We need a work environment that supports people; I'm excited to do that.
  Aaron Noveshen – Starbird has a similar philosophy. How do you be an employer 
    of choice? It's a conscious effort – it's not "if you build it, they 
    will come." We have to pay our managers well in the San Francisco Bay 
    area.
  We feature a bonus structure with no limited upside that we call superbonuses. 
    If people achieve and exceed their budget, they take a share of every extra 
    dollar they make. There's an entrepreneurial spirit and everyone receives 
    tips no matter their role. Sales cures all ills!
  Starbird was also voted one of the best places to work in America. We always 
    battle food costs; we rarely battle labor costs.
  We also offer $5,000 per year for employees for education benefits. Not everyone 
    will work here and we want to make an investment in their futures, not just 
    our own bottom lines. We have great educational training and many ESL folks. 
    We invest in language training through mobile technology.
  
The FAST Act
  Riley Lagesen – The Fast Act was passed in September ‘22 to potentially increase 
    the California state minimum wage to $22/hr. It's characterized as a fast-food 
    restaurant proposition, but if wages are raised in one segment it will move 
    into all other segments. These are significant problems and issues for operators 
    and employees alike; there was a motion to impose joint employer liability 
    between franchisor and franchisees, but that was ultimately removed.
  Expect to see similar legislation in other states despite Virginia striking 
    it down. Unionizing a restaurant has to be on a location-by-location basis; 
    it usually occurs in businesses where people want to stay and want to work 
    long-term.
  Supply Chain 
  Same store sales are up yet margins are down for many operators. How can 
    operators mitigate supply chain challenges?
  Malek – Dairy was up 40% this past year; it's about halfway back and we hope 
    to see it move to a more reasonable place. To get ahead of that, we adjusted 
    pricing and are investing in efficiencies. We invested in our kitchen and 
    automation to increase output. We saw margins increase, which we were really 
    fighting for. Yes, sales kills all ills and we were living in a pretty envious 
    position before the pandemic without minding our Ps and Qs; today, we're managing 
    every line item within our stores and kitchens to make sure every decision 
    is approved and we try to find savings and efficiencies at every turn. We 
    switched suppliers, doubled down on services, and it's really paying off. 
    We'll be stronger operators. Sales are rebounding and prices are coming down.
  I'm grateful for the diligence we've been through. On the other side, the 
    buildout prices of our supply chain were skyrocketing and it was terrifying; 
    we couldn't have opened seven new stores by June at that rate. We really fought 
    for every dollar to get out ahead. Interestingly, we got through it all and 
    we're standing and ready to go.
  Noveshen – We increased some pricing but didn't want to overdo it; we don't 
    want to lose guests. We made up a 20% increase in food costs for sales through 
    everything else. We haven't lowered prices; we're promoting more tactically 
    but we're seeing incredible flow-through.
  A new processing partner helped with growth; packaging came down in 2022, 
    and we re-negotiated packaging contracts and got some wins there. We shifted 
    to wings quickly – one of the first items to drop in price during football 
    season – and we're also known for salads, so we were able to promote items 
    like salads with less of the more promotional items and sold them anyway.
  We did a promotion on truffle sandwiches and fries, charged an extra dollar, 
    and brought more margin dollars in that way. This buildout cost has been more 
    problematic than food costs. I have not seen one inch of movement in the cost 
    of construction coming down. We're paying 50% more for a fryer than we did 
    two, three years ago – there's no refuge in sight on that end. We're going 
    line item by line item – do we need this? Do we need custom tile in the bathroom 
    for a business that does 80% of business off-premise?
  
Real Estate
  Noveshen – Real estate is not going down. Real estate is tough; when you're 
    a brand looking for quality real estate you have to hyper selective – we use 
    analytics and try to understand our consumers. Competition drives up price 
    so we don't just leap at every site we like.
  Malek – We've had a similar experience. Deals aren't less expensive but there 
    are more available. We have to be ready to move quickly. We look at sites 
    and neighborhoods two and three years in advance – which block? Which side 
    of the street? We develop relationships with landlords so we can move with 
    them when we grow. It's mind-boggling how long it takes to get municipality 
    permits when we're ready to go. It's something important to figure out.
  Growth
  The restaurant business has never been easy, never for the meek or timid. 
    Similar to what we saw coming out of the great recession, there's a tremendous 
    amount of innovation and development in the restaurant space. Strongly influenced 
    by COVID, restaurants moved to different development options (virtual/ghost, 
    delivery-centric), but now the pendulum is swinging back to what's always 
    worked – company-owned, high-quality brick and mortar. We're seeing gravitation 
    back to some level of normal, but in a very different atmosphere. Everyone 
    has changed a little in how they view the foodservice experiment, when and 
    where they want to eat, and how much they'll pay for it.
  In dealing with real estate, as Kim and Aaron said, it is competitive. Good 
    real estate always is. It's more expensive than anyone wants to pay and you 
    hope the results justify it. As a lawyer, you want exit provisions in your 
    leases!
  Patience in real estate is so important in site selection. Make sound real 
    estate decisions; it's critical to your mental health, well-being, and happiness. 
    People who pick poor sites deal with it for years. It takes so much time and 
    resources. Making good decisions and building a good team has always worked. 
    You have to stay ahead of the game; you have to pay attention.
  Per guestxm.com, sales and traffic growth is plummeting after a brief bump 
    in January. Average guest checks are down as commodity and labor costs are 
    beginning to ease. The average check grew by only 6.5% year-over-year in February 
    – the lowest since 2021.
  Checks are down as commodity and labor costs are beginning to ease. The average 
    check grew by only 6.5% year-over-year in February – the lowest since 2021.
  
KPIs
  Malek – The whole country is challenged with labor and staffing. Let's make 
    sure we're staffed. What are the team satisfaction scores? What are the customer 
    satisfaction stores? Not only did we hit our sales target, but what could 
    drive that? If there's a jump in turnover, you'll see a negative sales impact 
    in a month. We reformatted our bonus program and focused on the work people 
    are doing that we can control. The positive outcomes will follow.
  Noveshen – We look at a lot of data. As long as it's accurate, it'll fly. 
    We look at sales every day, but we look at guest counts versus average checks; 
    where are sales coming from? What channels? Virtual brands/web apps/walk-in/kiosk? 
    We have so many different ways to order at Starbird. We look at speed-of-service, 
    even on an hourly basis. If something goes over 10 minutes we can identify 
    what went wrong.
  Stability among general managers is key and critical; not every GM is going 
    to have a regional or district manager opportunity. We survey them on a quarterly 
    basis. We look at menu mix, social scores, internal monitoring scores, chicken 
    markets and the forecast of chicken. LTO and promotional scores we look at 
    daily. Catering trends, loyalty trends, and controls; we look at comps and 
    assess where our controls are going. We do 2% of transactions in cash; it's 
    required by law.
  Automation
  Malek – Automated inventory has saved hours per week. We're working on other 
    innovations in this space when it comes to product; the ice cream industry 
    is famous for not having any innovation on a scoop-shop level.
  Noveshen – Regarding higher food costs and unprecedented rainfall and flooding 
    out west, it's still TBD on many of the California crops. We promote heavily 
    in the summertime around salads. This year we're doing a big switch and re-launching 
    the sandwich category; it's the most competitive part of the chicken business. 
 We're trying to win the sandwich category, too; when competing against the 
    $5 or $6 sandwich, there's no salad that cheap. We've spent the last 6 months 
    with new breads, new chicken, new saucing techniques, new packaging. We'll 
    launch new sandwiches – a little less produce-dependent – and the timing should 
    be good this year with the produce market. Food 
    Institute Focus
  
  The Teens Have Spoken: Chick-fil-A Remains Favorite Restaurant
  Three things remain constant in life: death, taxes, and Chick-fil-A.
  In Piper-Sandler's recent survey of teen spending in the U.S., the 
    Georgia-based restaurant chain still struts its stuff above Starbucks 
    and Chipotle and accounts for 13% of teens' pocket cash, according 
    to the report. Starbucks came close with 12% and Chipotle was a distant third 
    at 7%. Piper Sandler is an investment bank which conducts the semi-annual 
    poll of more than 5,000 American teens in 47 states.
  
Since the pandemic, Chick-fil-A has enjoyed quite the sales boon. The chicken 
    sandwich specialist enjoys almost twice as many cars in drive-thru lines than 
    its competitors according to QSR (5.45), followed by McDonald's (3.13) and 
    Wendy's (2.67). The motor queue also moves faster than its competitors, slinging 
    chicken at a clip of 107 seconds per vehicle, followed by McDonald's at 118 
    seconds and Taco Bell at 127 seconds.
  And, last week, Chick-fil-A released some truly staggering numbers, approaching 
    almost twice the sales revenue since before the pandemic. It generated $18.814 
    billion in sales in 2022. Its last four years look like this:
  Chick-fil-A Sales Revenue (billions)
  Where Do Teens Shop? On Their Phones
  Other key takeaways from the Piper Sandler report: food was the No. 1 spend 
    for men (24% of their wallet). Specific to food and beverage, SQ's Cash App 
    was the most popular peer-to-peer money transfer app with 41%, coming in just 
    above Venmo at 39%. Apple Pay ranked No. 1 for payment apps within the past 
    month (39%) followed by Cash App (25%).
  More than half of American teenagers cite Amazon as their favorite e-commerce 
    site (57%). Forty percent of teens are at least part-time employed.
  Following nationwide trends regarding plant-based food, less than half of 
    teens are willing to try plant-based meat (42%). During spring 2021, that 
    number was 49%. Plant-based dairy didn't fare much better; just 40% answered 
    they consume it or are willing to try it. Goldfish remains the most popular 
    snack brand (12%), followed by Cheez-It and Lay's (10% each), and Doritos 
    (6%).
  Perhaps most telling about this year's survey is how teens are consuming 
    media (and the influencers and brands upon them). In the year of TikTok everything, 
    TikTok usership actually declined as the favorite social media platform (37%), 
    followed by SNAP (27%) and Instagram (23%).
  For customer service interaction, the mobile phone is the preferred method 
    with multi-year gains via texting and SMS messaging. Top social causes are 
    the environment (19%), followed by racial equity (9%). Inflation was the top 
    concern for just 4% of survey respondents.
  The top influencers were Alix Earle, Andrew Tate, and Selena Gomez. YouTube 
    streamer and food/bev influencer Mr. Beast ranked No. 5. Food 
    Institute Focus
  
  Restaurants Struggling to Secure Chicken Sandwich Supplies
  The growing popularity of chicken sandwiches has pitted chicken producers 
    against restaurant chains as the latter increasingly seeks birds in the 4-pound 
    range, The Wall Street Journal reported.
  Restaurants are finding it tougher and more expensive to secure supplies 
    of smaller birds, especially in the wake of the pandemic, which saw the slaughter 
    of small birds halved between 2005 and today, the Journal reported.
  Chicken producers say it's more expensive to grow smaller birds and years 
    ago switched to developing 8-pound, big breasted varieties. Dan Shapiro, chief 
    executive of Krispy Krunchy Foods, which supplies C-stores and stadium concession 
    stands with chicken products, told the Journal smaller birds are needed to 
    satisfy consumer demand for chicken sandwiches.
  The Journal reported KFC and Chick-fil-A, the two biggest chicken 
    chains, also prefer the smaller birds. KFC has warned franchisees about supply 
    pressures. The two biggest suppliers, Tyson Foods and Pilgrim's Pride, say 
    they're reluctant to switch facilities to small bird production despite the 
    demand. Food 
    Institute Focus