Menu refresh

by David Klemt David Klemt No Comments

Balancing Menu Creativity with Preferences

Menu Design: Balancing Creativity and Guest Preferences

by Nathen Dubé

An AI-generated image of a chef-owner and head chef reviewing a restaurant menu

Note: AI-generated image.

A menu is not just a list of dishes; it’s a strategic tool that influences guest choices, enhances the dining experience, and maximizes sales.

Therefore, a well-designed menu is a crucial component of a restaurant’s success.

Come along with me and we’ll explore the principles of effective menu design, balancing creativity with guest preferences, and the role of menu psychology in driving decisions.

Key Principles of Effective Menu Design

Layout and Structure

The foundation of a great menu lies in its layout and structure. Organizing menu items logically—grouping appetizers, mains, desserts, and beverages into distinct sections—guides guests through their dining journey.

This structure helps in creating a seamless experience where guests can find what they are looking for easily. Subsections like “vegetarian,” “seafood,” or “grilled” can further refine the selection process.

Logical organization not only aids in navigation but also enhances the overall dining experience by reducing decision fatigue.

Item Placement

Item placement on the menu can have a significant impact on what guests decide to order.

The “Golden Triangle” concept suggests that guests’ eyes typically first gravitate to the center, then the top right, and finally, the top left of the menu. Placing high-margin items in these areas can drive sales.

Additionally, highlighting signature dishes and specials in these prime spots can make them more appealing. Strategic placement is essential for maximizing the visibility of certain items, encouraging guests to order the dishes that are most profitable or unique.

Readability

A menu should be easy to read and visually appealing. Choosing appropriate fonts and sizes ensures that the text is legible in various lighting conditions.

A key factor to bear in mind is maintaining clear spacing between items to prevent the menu from looking cluttered and overwhelming.

Ensuring the clarity and ease of reading is vital; if a guest struggles to read the menu, it detracts from their dining experience. Effective readability involves the thoughtful selection of fonts, sizes, and spacing to create a harmonious and inviting look.

Balancing Creativity and Guest Preferences

Creative Culinary Expression

A menu is an opportunity to showcase the chef’s creativity and culinary expertise. Innovative dishes that use unique ingredients or cooking techniques can set a restaurant apart from its competitors.

Creativity is crucial for developing a distinctive culinary identity, and offering guests an exciting and memorable dining experience.

However, it’s important to balance creativity with dishes that guests are familiar with and enjoy. Balancing innovation with tradition ensures that while the menu offers new and novel experiences, it also provides comfort and familiarity.

Popular Guest Preferences

To appeal to a broad audience, a menu should include a mix of creative dishes and popular favorites. Including familiar dishes alongside innovative options can cater to a wider audience, making everyone feel welcomed and valued.

Additionally, considering dietary restrictions and preferences is crucial. Offering vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, and allergen-friendly options ensures that all guests can find something they love. Addressing dietary needs and preferences not only broadens the guest base but also demonstrates the restaurant’s commitment to inclusivity and guest satisfaction.

Market Trends

Staying updated with current culinary trends helps keep the menu fresh and exciting.

For instance, trends such as plant-based diets, sustainability, and ethnic fusion can attract trend-conscious diners. Incorporating these trends into the menu shows that the restaurant is contemporary and aware of its guests’ evolving tastes.

Aligning the menu with market trends can create a buzz and draw attention to the restaurant, enhancing its reputation as a forward-thinking and dynamic establishment.

The Role of Menu Psychology

Influencing Guest Choices

Menu psychology involves using strategic design and phrasing to influence what guests order.

Some effective techniques include strategic pricing methods like decoy pricing. This approach involves placing a high-priced item next to a mid-priced item to make the latter seem more reasonable. Another tactic is charm pricing, an approach that uses prices that end in “.99” to make them appear more attractive.

These subtle cues can guide guest decisions and encourage them to choose certain dishes. Understanding menu psychology allows restaurants to steer guests subtly towards higher-margin items without being overtly pushy.

Maximizing Sales

Highlighting profitable dishes with visual cues, such as boxes, borders, or bold text, can draw attention to these items. Descriptive language that evokes the senses can make dishes sound more appealing, and entice guests to try them.

For example, describing a dish as “succulent, slow-roasted pork with a caramelized apple glaze” creates a vivid image, and stimulates appetite.

Effective use of menu psychology can boost sales significantly, and enhance the dining experience by making the menu more engaging and enticing.

Enhancing Appeal with Descriptive Language and Visuals

Descriptive Language

Using evocative and sensory words to describe dishes can enhance their appeal. Highlighting unique ingredients, preparation methods, and the origin of the dish creates a story that resonates with guests.

Descriptive language adds depth and dimension to the menu, transforming it from a simple list of dishes into a narrative that engages the guest’s imagination. Phrases like “handcrafted,” “locally sourced,” and “artisanal” add a touch of sophistication and quality, making dishes sound more attractive and special.

Visuals

Including high-quality images or illustrations of key dishes can boost their appeal significantly. Visuals help guests imagine the dish, and can trigger an emotional response

A well-designed menu with complementary color schemes and design elements reinforces the restaurant’s theme, and creates a cohesive brand identity.

The use of appealing visuals can stimulate appetite, and make the decision-making process more enjoyable for guests, enhancing their overall dining experience.

Examples of Innovative Menus

Case Studies of Successful Menus

Analyzing menus from renowned restaurants provides valuable insights into successful design choices.

For instance, The French Laundry in California uses a minimalist menu design that emphasizes simplicity and elegance, allowing the focus to remain on the high-quality ingredients and sophisticated dishes.

Similarly, Nobu’s menu balances innovative Japanese-Peruvian fusion dishes with classic favorites, catering to a diverse clientele.

These examples illustrate how thoughtful menu design can enhance the dining experience, and create a distinctive brand identity.

Insights from Industry Experts

Menu design professionals and restaurateurs offer valuable best practices. Experts suggest evaluating and adapting the menu continuously to meet changing guest preferences and market trends.

Updating the menu regularly not only keeps it interesting for repeat guests but also allows for the introduction of seasonal ingredients and new culinary innovations.

Industry insights highlight the importance of flexibility and responsiveness in menu design, ensuring that the restaurant remains relevant and competitive.

Conclusion

A thoughtfully designed menu is a powerful tool in the restaurant industry. It balances creativity with guest preferences, uses psychology to influence choices, and enhances appeal through descriptive language and visuals.

Investing in effective menu design can enhance the dining experience, drive guest satisfaction, and boost sales. For restaurateurs, it’s an essential aspect of creating a successful and memorable dining establishment.

By understanding and implementing these principles, restaurant owners can craft menus that not only reflect their culinary vision but also resonate with their target audience, ensuring a winning formula for success.

A well-designed menu can transform the dining experience, making it more engaging, enjoyable, and, ultimately, profitable for the restaurant.

Image: Microsoft Designer

KRG Hospitality Contact Request for Proposal 30 Minute Discovery Session

Book Below to Setup a 30-Minute Complimentary Discovery Call and Request for Proposal.


by David Klemt David Klemt No Comments

SevenRooms Drops Extensive 2024 Report

SevenRooms Drops Extensive 2024 Report

by David Klemt

Guests dining in a light, bright restaurant featuring a glass ceiling and hanging plants

Today, we’re taking a look at the first-annual trends report from marketing and operations platform SevenRooms, which focuses on the guest experience.

To gain an understanding of the current state of affairs in America, SevenRooms analyzed the product data of more than 3,000 US clients. Further, the platform engaged over 250 operators, and 1,000 consumers.

The result is a data-rich report that offers helpful insights for operators.

Two findings are particularly interesting to me, and the team here at KRG Hospitality. One, it appears that Americans are back to seeking out their third spots. As a refresher, a third spot, space, or place is where one spends time when away from home or work. Consumers tend to be loyal to these places, making them part of their everyday or weekend routine.

Two, younger consumers are leading the way in terms of restaurant visits. Per SevenRooms, 38 percent of Millennials visit restaurants five or more times per month. Gen Z is also visiting restaurants frequently, with 24 percent visiting five times or more. However, that number climbs to 45 percent for Gen Z when it comes to three or four monthly visits. Among Millennials, 33 percent visit restaurants three or four times per month.

That tells us that younger consumers are eager to socialize, and restaurants can fulfill that desire. As savvy operators know, a person can eat or drink at home; food and beverages are just excuses to get out, hang out, and meet new people.

This also tells us that operators need to ensure they’re ticking several boxes to resonate with younger guests: value, convenience, and personalization. I’ll add that consumers have shown they want to support brands with values that align with their own.

There are many more insights in SevenRooms’ new report, which you can find below. To view the report in its entirety, click here.

SEVENROOMS RELEASES 2024 RESTAURANT TRENDS AND DINER EXPECTATIONS REPORT FOR THE HOSPITALITY INDUSTRY

Annual report gives an inside look at how restaurants are delivering better guest experiences and personalizing their marketing in the age of AI and automation

NEW YORK (August 6, 2024) – SevenRooms, the leading CRM, marketing and operations platform for growing restaurants, today released its first annual trends report, “2024 Restaurant Trends and Diner Expectations, highlighting how restaurants are filling the need for ‘third places’, connection spots outside the home and workplace, what consumers expect from their dining experiences, and how restaurants are leveraging AI and automation to keep diners coming back.

The study, commissioned through independent third-party research firm Censuswide, examines consumer and foodservice operator insights, alongside data from SevenRooms restaurant customers. It emphasizes the importance of restaurants understanding their guests and providing experiences and value to consumers, including marketing and tech trends that operators are paying attention to.

Diners Expect More From Restaurants

While it’s no surprise that diner expectations have evolved in recent years, consumers across generations and cities share key expectations when dining out — they’re looking for convenience, personalization and value from brands they trust. Restaurants must nail all aspects of the guest experience, from hospitality and service to ambiance and atmosphere, to transform diners into brand ambassadors and get them to bring their dollars back more often.

When looking across generations, Millennials are driving a dining resurgence – dining out most frequently with 38% saying they dine out more than 5x a month. They are seeking more from their restaurant visits, and are willing to spend more for elevated experiences, like theatrical elements or high-end items like caviar. For these experiences, Americans are willing to spend up to $63 per person with 45% of Gen Zers open to paying even more. As diners focus on the quality over quantity of their experiences, that means restaurants must do more to keep those diner dollars. Dining upgrades consumers are willing to spend more fall into three categories – experiential, luxurious and personal, including:

  • Experiential (e.g. tableside martini cart; fish presentation or deboning, etc.)
    Dallas – a menu item with some theater (86%)
    Washington DC – a menu item with some theater (71%)
  • Personal (e.g. birthday dessert; welcome drink)
    Chicago – a mocktail or personalized item (55%)
  • Luxurious (e.g. caviar, freshly shaved truffles, seafood tower)
    Los Angeles – high-end items like caviar (55%)
    New York – high-end items like caviar (48%)

Outside of these experiential offerings, restaurants must also capitalize on influential factors that bring diners back. For example, 34% of Gen Zers want personalized surprises in service like a free dessert. Meanwhile, 26% of Millennials care about the ease of making a reservation and 24% of Gen Xers consider the rapport they develop with front-of-house staff. Tailoring guest experience and service helps operators turn one-time diners into loyal customers.

“New consumer demands are pushing restaurants to find the right balance between hospitality and automation to create the experiences guests crave and return for,” said Joel Montaniel, CEO & Co-Founder at SevenRooms. “Diners want both access and recognition when spending their hard-earned dollars, and restaurants must embrace new strategies – and technologies like AI and automation – to enhance hospitality at every touch point. Whether leveraging platform data to personalize diner experiences or power marketing and retention programs, technology and data serve as a vehicle to execute hospitality that guests remember and return for. When technology is used effectively, it allows operators to focus on building deeper connections and delighting guests, one experience at a time.”

Loyalty is Never One-Size-Fits-All

In the U.S., there was a 21% year-over-year increase in reservations comparing Q1 2023 to Q1 2024 and restaurants are looking to a promising future. Whether operators are focused on opening new locations or revamping their social media marketing efforts, one factor remains the same – establishing personal relationships with diners is the strongest way to build and maintain loyal customers.

Consumers have a strong intent to dine with their favorite brands. If a guest can’t get a reservation at their preferred restaurant, 39% of guests look for a sister restaurant to dine at, and 27% check other sites for the same restaurant.

Cultivating loyalty is critical. Loyalty is not a one-size-fits-all effort and diners have different interests when it comes to the benefits they seek out from loyalty programs. Restaurants need to understand their diner demographics to curate operations and offerings, getting their guests to not only return more often but spend more in the process.

38% of diners who would spend $89-$126 on an average night are looking for exclusive VIP events, while 33% of consumers who dine out 7-8 times per month want VIP access to specialty seating areas. Breaking down generational differences:

  • 72% of Gen Zers care most about free menu items
  • 30% of Millennials care most about VIP access to specialty dining areas
  • 1 in 5 Gen Xers and Baby Boomers want early access to reservations

Genuine, Tailored Marketing is Critical to Success

When it comes to marketing, authenticity and personalization reign supreme for consumers. Guests want to be known by their favorite restaurants, and restaurants want to know and understand their guests. To reach these consumers, and serve up personalized marketing that makes guests want to return, restaurants have to use all the tools in their arsenal – from social media to email and text marketing automation – to create high-touch communications that are both authentic and personal.

79% of restaurant operators spend the majority of their marketing budget on social media. Their top social media goals are to drive bookings or online orders (39%), increase brand awareness (29%) and communicate with their audiences (29%). But not all content is created equal – 39% of operators say that organic posts drive the most bookings to their restaurants. Restaurants that showcase their personality – highlighting their team, food and drinks and atmosphere – will win with consumers as they look for more genuine content from brands.

Most diners like hearing about restaurant promotions and offers via email and text, and aren’t as interested in social media DMs or phone calls, but specific preferences vary by generation. 41% of Gen Zers prefer text marketing, whereas 38% of Millennials and 37% of Gen X prefer email marketing.

With targeted Email Marketing, the data report notes that operators see 23% higher open rates and 28% higher click-to-open rates, generating 2x more revenue per email. Text marketing is fairly new for restaurants, but has huge potential, with an average open rate of 98% and $1.64 average reservation revenue generated per text message on SevenRooms. For one SevenRooms customer, Fabio Viviani Hospitality, it drove $220,000 in revenue and 3,000 new guests in just 4 months.

“The biggest thing that excites me about text messaging is that it’s very hard to ignore. When our phones beep, we are just driven to look at them,” said Harry Kaminski, CMO at Fabio Viviani Hospitality. “It’s easier to ignore an email than it is a text.”

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Comes into Play

Every industry today is using AI and automation in some way to streamline their operations and help staff work more efficiently – and the same is true for the restaurant industry. 70% of operators surveyed said they use artificial intelligence in some way to run their business, including:

  • 35% – Processing reservations
  • 34% – Inventory management
  • 33% – Data analytics
  • 27% – Scheduling
  • 26% – Dynamic pricing

But there is room to grow with AI, with only 16% saying they use it to create marketing collateral and 15% for staff hiring and training. With personalized marketing a large focus for operators in 2024 and beyond, as well as hiring and retaining staff to deliver on high-touch hospitality, operators have an opportunity to use AI more effectively.

“AI elevates our storytelling around data,” said Kelly MacPherson, Chief Supply Chain and Technology Officer at Union Square Hospitality Group. “We have a wealth of data at our fingertips, but this can create analysis paralysis. With AI, we can more efficiently synthesize the data, create stories about what’s happening, why it’s happening, and what we can do about it, and then present these stories to our teams in a digestible format with actionable next steps.”

For more information about SevenRooms and to download the full report, please visit here.

About SevenRooms

SevenRooms is a CRM, marketing and operations platform for growing restaurants in the hospitality industry. From Michelin star gems to local favorites, the all-in-one platform helps restaurants increase sales, delight guests, and keep them coming back, automatically. The full suite of products includes reservations, waitlist and table management, review aggregation, referrals, email marketing, and marketing automation. Founded in 2011 and venture-backed by Amazon, Comcast Ventures and PSG, SevenRooms has more than 10,000 dining, hotel F&B, nightlife and entertainment clients globally, including: Marriott International, MGM Resorts International, Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group, Wynn Resorts, Jumeirah Group, Hard Rock Hotels & Resorts, Wolfgang Puck, Michael Mina, Bloomin’ Brands, Union Square Hospitality Group, Australian Venue Co., Maple & Ash, The Wolseley Hospitality Group, Dishoom, Groot Hospitality, MLSE, Live Nation and Topgolf.

Research Methodology

SevenRooms partnered with Censuswide Research – a third-party, professional research and consulting organization. Total sample size was 1,004 U.S. consumers. Fieldwork was undertaken between March 4-11, 2024. The survey was carried out online. The figures have been weighted and are representative of all U.S. adults (aged 16+).

SevenRooms partnered with Censuswide Research – a third-party, professional research and consulting organization. Total sample size was 251 U.S. operators (hospitality decision-makers). Fieldwork was undertaken between March 4-19, 2024. The survey was carried out online. The figures have been weighted and are representative of U.S. hospitality operators.

SevenRooms provided anonymized internal data representative of U.S.-based restaurants using the SevenRooms platform and surveyed a sample of operators at various restaurant sizes and types across the U.S. from March-May 2024.

Image: kayleigh harrington on Unsplash

KRG Hospitality Contact Request for Proposal 30 Minute Discovery Session

by David Klemt David Klemt No Comments

Put Your Finger on the Culinary TrendPulse

Put Your Finger on the Culinary TrendPulse

by David Klemt

Elote or street corn-style dish on a table

An informative and engaging culinary trend report from Campbell’s Foodservice provides compelling insight that will help operators refresh their menus.

Recently, Campbell’s dropped their Culinary TrendPulse 2024 report. To download your own copy, click here.

Executive chef Gerald Drummond and senior chef Greg Boggs have identified four culinary trends for 2024. The chefs analyzed data provided by Campbell’s Foodservice and the company’s partners.

As has become commonplace, Campbell’s also took note of food and flavor social media mentions and conversations. This makes sense; if people are talking about it on social media, it’s probably growing in demand.

Now, I’m going to share each of the trends below. However, I’m going to laser in on one in particular. My reasoning is simple: It’s a compelling take on segment that has been experiencing growth, along with the accompanying growing pains.

To start, though, a brief look at three of the 2024 culinary trends identified by Chefs Drummond and Boggs.

TrendPulse 2024: Trends 1, 3 and 4

To put it bluntly, I think the first trend in this report is here to stay. It’s safe to say it has reached the proliferation stage.

So, when I see “global cuisine” in reports, I don’t really consider it a trend. What I want to see is specific cuisines, dishes or flavors identified as trending.

Fortunately, Chefs Drummond and Boggs have identified three global cuisines on the rise. Per the chefs and Campbell’s, Mexican, Asian, and North African cuisines are on an upward trend in the US.

In particular, operators should be aware of the following:

  • Asian cuisine: Korean, Souteast Asian, and Thai food are on the rise.
  • Mexican cuisine: birria, quesabirria, birriamen, chamoy, and street corn mentions have grown in menu mentions and social discussions.
  • North African cuisine is projected to grow by more than 12 percent on menus, year over year. Currently, operators should look at harissa, tagine, and peri-peri (a.k.a. piri-piri, or peli-peli).

Another trend from this report is “new nostalgia.” As the term suggests, consumers are showing interest in creative spins on well-known comfort foods.

Likely driven at least in part by global cuisines, heat is also on the rise. I mean that figuratively and literally.

Per a Tastewise data point cited in the Campbell’s report, sweet and spicy mentionsknown as “swicy”—have grown nearly 50 percent over the past year.

TrendPulse 2024: Trend 2

Alright, so here’s the trend that stands out to me.

According to Chefs Drummond and Boggs, consumers are still very much interested in plant-based cuisine. However, they want actual plants to be the stars.

Or, as Campbell’s puts it in their report, one of their top trends is “putting plants back in plant-based.” Interestingly, this trend fits with the first one in the Campbell’s report: global cuisine.

Per a Technomic report cited by Campbell’s, 41 percent of consumers eat a vegetarian or vegan dish at least once per week. However, it seems that these same consumers are showing a preference for actual plants.

Most plant-based meat alternatives are processed foods. In fact, some sources designate them “ultra-processed foods.” Today’s consumer is more educated on processed foods and seeks to avoid them.

So, operators should menu more dishes that feature plants. There’s a place for plant-based meat alternatives but their highly processed nature may be putting off a not-insignificant number of consumers.

In their report, Campbell’s suggests offering dishes featuring the following proteins: beans, legumes, and pulses.

Look, trend predictions are guesses. In this case, they’re data-driven and educated, but they’re still guesses. When considering menu changes, operators need to make choices that make sense for their business, guests, and market.

If you’re like me, you’ve noticed that all four of these trends pair well with one another. Operators should encourage their kitchen teams to get creative and craft new dishes that leverage two or more of the above trends.

Image: Aleisha Kalina on Unsplash

by David Klemt David Klemt No Comments

Datassential: The Flavors of 2023

Datassential: The Flavors and Menu Items of 2023

by David Klemt

Basket of hot chicken wings

Food and beverage market research agency Datassential has some data-driven thoughts on the flavors and menu items that will define 2023.

Featured in their latest Foodbytes report are 20 items for operators to consider this year. There are ten food items, drinks, and ingredients Datassential predicts will be on basically every menu.

And there are another ten food items, drinks, and ingredients the agency feels could suddenly hit in 2023.

For you own copy of Datassential’s 2023 Food Trends, click here.

Prolific Performers

As Datassential refers to them in their report, these are the items “that will be everywhere” this year.

Food

  • Birria. This one makes sense as birria only appears to be capable of continually growing in popularity.
  • Mushroom. In Datassential’s opinion, we should expect more menus to feature mushroom snacks. Also, expect to see (or add yourself) lesser-known, rare, and exotic mushrooms on menus.
  • Salsa macha. Over the past four years, according to Datassential, salsa macha as grown a staggering 339 percent on menus.

Drink

  • London Fog. A compelling earl grey tea latte.
  • Mangonada. Salty, tart, fruity, and bold, the Mangonada is a flavorful frozen drink.
  • Ranch Water. Simple, timeless, and refreshing. In 2022, per Datassential, Ranch Water was the fastest-growing cocktail.
  • Soju. According to Datassential, soju is the third fastest-growing spirit on restaurant and bar menus.

Ingredient

  • Spicy maple. As the image atop this article suggests, expect spicy maple to replace or at least give hot honey a run for its money.
  • Ube. A striking purple yam from the Philippines.
  • Yuzu. Datassential predicts this citrus fruit will start showing up on many chain restaurant menus.

Promising Performers

In Datassential’s data-driven opinion, the following items need to be on every operator’s radar.

These are the items that have the potential to “hit it big” in 2023.

Food

  • Pickled strawberries. Interestingly, this matches up with Technomic’s trend prediction for the US, Canadaworldwide, really.
  • Savory granola. Not only on its own but as an element of savory, healthy bowl.
  • Sisig. A Filipino delicacy with pork belly, pig’s face, and chicken liver as key elements.

Drink

  • White coffee. As Datassential states, “there’s always room for coffee innovation on menus.”

Ingredient

  • Black tahini. The appearance of black tahini is quite striking, making for dramatic presentations. And as we know, striking presentations are perfect for social media marketing and engagement.
  • Cannabis. The legalization of recreational cannabis use in almost half of US states is leading to innovation in this space. And as more markets legalize public consumption in the form of F&B items on-premise, restaurants and bars will add cannabis-infused items to their menus.
  • Cherry blossom, or sakura. It seems that cherry blossoms are poised to take off in the US market.
  • Chestnut flower. Per Datassential, this ingredient is gaining popularity for use in winter baked goods.
  • MSG. For decades, restaurants proudly proclaimed “no MSG” or “MSG-free” on menus due to misconceptions. Now that consumers are better educated about ingredients, restaurants are proudly proclaiming their use of MSG.
  • Verjus. An ancient juice made by crushing unripened wine grapes. It can be an ingredient in a sauce, as a condiment, or to deglaze a pan.

There you have it—20 items to consider adding in your next menu update, featuring in your next LTO, or at least keeping an eye on in 2023.

Image: Scott Eckersley on Unsplash

by krghospitality krghospitality No Comments

International Chain Slashes Menu

International Chain Slashes Menu

by David Klemt

Applebee's Grill & Bar casual dining restaurant

If you’re curious as to whether “lean and mean” menus are here to stay as a result of the pandemic, look no further than one international chain.

Moving forward, Applebee’s Grill + Bar menus will be some 60 items lighter.

The chain’s menu will be 38 percent smaller, and the change is permanent.

Significant Overhaul

Of course, it isn’t like the Applebee’s menu is tiny now. At about 100 items, it’s still larger than most independent restaurant menus. For contrast, KRG Hospitality president Doug Radkey, in most cases, recommends 12- to 32-item food menus.

Still, the casual dining chain cutting 60 items permanently is a big move.

The decision is a direct result of the pandemic and the toll it took on Applebee’s and the industry overall. Unfortunately, like many operators big and small, chain and independent, the chain had to furlough staff. Lightening the menu made it easier for the chain to adapt and shift toward takeout and delivery.

Weak performers and complex items that affect efficiency are gone. According to John Cywinski, Applebee’s president, the decision means faster ticket times, more consistency, and better efficiency.

Among the 60 or so items that are no longer available: the triple cheeseburger, clam chowder, and BBQ brisket tacos.

Streamline Summer

The decision to eliminate dozens of complex and lagging items puts Applebee’s in a better position for Summer 2021, potentially.

Speaking with CNN Business, Cywinski said, “The team will have to be very thoughtful about every single product or beverage they introduce, and the consequence of it from a complexity standpoint.”

That thoughtful approach is crucial in large part because of Applebee’s new menu policy: When a new item comes onto the menu, an old item must go.

Accordingly, Applebee’s can remain innovative while avoiding once again inflating their menus.

With demand for social interaction, a return to normalcy, and in-person restaurant and bar visits set to explode, Applebee’s finds itself with a menu that’s nearly 40-percent smaller. That should make it simpler for the chain’s restaurant and bar teams to fill orders quickly, efficiently, and consistently.

Menu Refresh

Every operator needs to know their numbers. That doesn’t just mean costs and inventory, by the way.

Do you know the cook times for each food item on your menu? Do you know how many dishes you can make with a given ingredient? Is thoughtful cross-utilization an important element of your F&B operations?

The answers to those questions can help you identify bottlenecks in your operation and become more agile.

Another important question to consider: Do you know which menu items are your slowest sellers? If you do, answer this: Why are they still on your menu?

When you eliminate an item, yes, some guests will express their disappointment. You’ll have to weigh the costs of keeping a poor performer against freeing up resources by losing an item that rarely sells. You may even identify an item that you personally love but just doesn’t move. Again, you have to do what’s best for your bottom line.

You may not have 160 items on your menu. You may not have 100. That doesn’t mean you don’t have at least a handful of items that you can eliminate to reduce costs and increase revenue.

Image: Applebee’s Grill + Bar

Top