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What are the Benefits of Self-Service POS Systems?

Jan 13, 2015

It’s no surprise that our culture is becoming increasingly more digital, especially the Millennial crowd. Restaurant operators are taking note and some are introducing self-service POS (point of sale) systems, allowing guests to order and pay for their meals using a device like a touch screen tablet or kiosk.

A recent study conducted by restaurant technology research group, Software Advice, showed that most consumers prefer this kind of technology in casual restaurants, especially for customizing orders (more on this here: Preferred Features of Self-Service POS Systems IndustryView | 2014).

What are the advantages of having self-service POS? Here are just a few:

  • Acts as an assistant to your server so he or she can fully focus on guest satisfaction
  • Promotes increased consumer spending
  • Can showcase images and details of menu items
  • Improves customer experience by reducing ordering wait time
  • Eases order and payment customization (customizing order, splitting bill, tipping)
  • Showcases specials and discounts

It’s important to note that not every restaurant may benefit from this kind of technology. The features of your self-service POS should be carefully tailored to your restaurant and target market. If you’re seeking professional assistance with implementing this technology into your restaurant, please contact Synergy.

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The Best Pizza in the U.S.?

Jan 06, 2015

The start of a new year is not truly complete without a look back at the past. That said, we appreciated the hardcore foodies who surveyed the U.S. in order to create the following “best of” pizzerias lists of 2014:

We too have literally traveled around the U.S. (and globe for that matter), seeking out the best pies out there. So what really makes a pizza outstanding? What makes one pizzeria stand out from the rest?

Through our travels, we have learned there are numerous factors that can affect the quality and ultimately, the taste of a pizza. What kind of flour is used? Is the pizza baked in a wood-fired, gas, coal, or electric oven? How long is the dough fermented? What kind of water is being used for the dough?

The perfect pizza? Is it an art? Is it a science? Perhaps it’s a thoughtful synergy of both!

Be sure to check out our past pizza blog articles on some of our favorite pizzerias.

 

 

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What Restaurants Can Do to Battle Rising Food Costs

Dec 27, 2014

We read about it in the news and you see it in grocery stores and restaurants: Food prices are hitting all-time highs. Driven by increased inflation rates from commodities like butter, eggs, pork and beef, year-to-date wholesale food prices are at their highest in three years, up 5.3% according to the National Restaurant Association’s Restaurant Performance Index. See video below for more details:

 

 

What can a restaurant operator do to curtail the effects of food inflation? Menu optimization and innovation can point to the items you want to sell. Play up lower-cost proteins like chicken or showcase in-season vegetables and fruits in your dishes to make the most of taste and value.  Earlier this year we wrote about how you can use the versatile potato to your advantage in order to curb high food costs. And don’t forget your beverage menu: Aside from your usual sodas, consider offering coffee, tea and wine by the glass in order to maximize profits.

 

Looking for expert help with your menu optimization? Contact Synergy for more information.

 

 

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Looking Ahead: Restaurant Trends for 2015

Dec 23, 2014
Soft serve predicted as a 2015 hot food trend | Photo credit: Flickr user stu_spivack license CC BY-SA 2.0
Soft serve predicted as a 2015 hot food trend | Photo credit: Flickr user stu_spivack license CC BY-SA 2.0

 

2014 has been quite an interesting year for restaurants! In our newsletters and blog articles over this past year, we have explored new restaurant concepts, food trends, the Millennial crowd and how the economy is impacting the industry.

Here are some interesting findings we investigated:

–          Concept trends like street food and the new revolution in fast casual

–          The increasing influence of Millennials

–          Protein as a selling point on menus

–          Growing consumer concerns like food sustainability and gluten-free availability

–          Mobile tech-advances

So what do we have to look forward to in 2015?

Nation’s Restaurant News recently conducted their “What’s Hot in 2015” culinary forecast and revealed that the top four hot trends from last year—locally sourced meats and seafood, locally grown produce, environmental sustainability, and healthy kids’ meals—will remain hot for 2015 based on their survey of 1,300 chefs. However, trends like nose-to-tail and housemade soft drinks were declining. See the full report here.

This NRN.com article delves right into menu items:  “Hot restaurant menu trends for 2015,” with tacos, soft serve, spicy flavors, meat spreads, mini cocktails, and Spanish cuisine as some to watch out for.

Needless to say, we at Synergy are excited to see what 2015 brings.

 

 

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September 2014 Newsletter

Sep 30, 2014

Greetings!

The news that July restaurant sales declined and operators are feeling less-than-optimistic about the future is giving everyone a bit of pause about the “recovery.” Rising food prices and concern about new minimum wage requirements are also giving the restaurant industry a case of the jitters. Expect more coverage on these key issues in the months to come.
The bottom line? Now is the time to double down and strengthen your business. As our associate Clyde Gilfillan argues in his excellent article on strategic planning, getting the entire organization moving in the same direction is more important than ever.

Operators also need to focus on the core basics of food, service and customer engagement, using whatever tactics it takes to get patrons in the door and to build guest loyalty once they’re there. One way you can do this is by avoiding these 12 common customer turnoffs.

Let us know if Synergy Restaurant Consultants can help you in any way.

To your success, Dean Small and Danny Bendas


Time: The CEO’s Best Friend

By J. Clyde Gilfillan, Synergy Restaurant Consultants

Time—hard to hold, hard to manage, relentless, ever pressing forward, and the one item that we can never replace. To the CEO, time is not just a valuable commodity; it’s an essential element to that ever-elusive goal of “success.” Time seems to be the most attractive, most exotic leadership skill to manage, yet we often don’t treat it as such.

We have time management books, monthly/weekly/daily planners, project management software. Speakers, authors, experts, whole companies devoted to this single aspect of leadership resourcefulness, all out to teach us how to keep time from essentially slipping away. Why? What’s happening to us? What’s preventing us from “staying focused”? The basic reason lies in the lack of strategic planning skills at all levels of management—at least, effective and efficient strategic and tactical planning.

Oftentimes, middle and/or lower-level managers are given priorities and asked to get results now. They are not given measurable/actionable/specific goals or objectives with both well-thought-out and agreed-upon strategies and, perhaps most importantly, tactics. Whatever is most important now is what is most important now it seems. The issue is that priorities shift and focus changes. Unfortunately, it is at this level of management that action, results, and accountability are at a premium. In other words, this is where the stuff gets done.

So how do we manage time? How do we stay focused and put “first things first” with our team? How do we get the job done throughout the organization? The answer lies in effective planning and the working of that plan: understanding the planning process, setting of common S.M.A.R.T. objectives, successful communication of the plan throughout the organization and/or department, and reaping the rewards of mentoring/coaching the progression.
The foundations of world-class planning are laid in:

STRATEGY

• Vision – The optimal result to be achieved over time; it provides the guidance and inspiration to focus on reaching the end goal; the proverbial “North Star” for everyone to understand their work and its contribution to the end game. Vision must be first and foremost, well-thought-out and clearly communicated.

S.M.A.R.T. Objectives – Objectives are narrow, precise, concrete, and measurable. Goals are different; they are broader, more general, abstract. Leaders work with objectives while keeping end goals in mind. If the techniques of S.M.A.R.T objectives are used (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-based), they work very effectively. Why make people guess? Be very clear.

Distinct Pathways – Leadership must provide the pathways to seeing the vision and its resulting rewards while shaping the course used to achieve the objectives. Pathways can include tools and techniques such as Gantt project management and time management planners as well as coaching the progress. Pathways direct where the objective lies.

Asking and answering the important questions relating to these strategic foundations is highly important to anchoring the process. The corresponding questions that must be asked and answered to effect the process and put the plan into perspective:

Vision – WHY are we doing this? You must answer this question first. Without a satisfactory and agreed-upon answer, then the plan and process is moot.

Goals/Objectives – WHAT are we trying to achieve? Defined again by the dichotomy between goals and objectives, the end game must be in view and attainable. Be general with goals, but very specific with objectives.

Pathways – WHERE are we going? Illumination of the course, the passageway to the objectives, is a vital step in getting everyone moving in the same direction.

TACTICS

Activities and Tasks: The steps necessary to move the strategy forward, often mistakenly referred to as “To-Do’s.” Outlining the tasks and activities to be taken before movement is the main ingredient in the tactical recipe. Devised in order of importance and implemented in order of dependence, tasks guide us in the minutia of the overall plan.

Resources: Personnel needed, tools provided, education necessary. Gather the resources, lay out the needs, and indicate the requirements of the tasks ahead in order to match resources to the skill sets essential to meeting targeted objectives.

Logistics: This is where we delineate the deadlines and time schedules devoted to the objectives. With the tasks defined and the resources outlined, adherence to agreed-upon time mandates becomes the linchpin in our planning process. This is the final key to achieving results and keeping time on your side instead of discouragingly watching it continue on its inexorable march.

Coming full circle, world-class results are directly tied to a CEO’s ability to relate time, process, and achievement of objectives to the vision of the organization, the department, or the field unit. Using effective planning will move the needle of your organization. It takes time, patience, and coaching/mentoring, but the alternative is time wasted. Moreover, time is the one commodity we cannot replace. Planning the work and working the plan – that is a CEO’s best friend.


 


Avoid These Guest Turnoffs

By Joan Lang

It’s official: Americans are in the midst of a full-blown food fetish. This is great news for restaurants, but it’s also true that with increasing sophistication comes an increasingly demanding diner.

If it seems like more people are complaining nowadays, they probably are. In the past, bad restaurant news came in two forms: bad print reviews, and bad word-of-mouth. The hand-in-hand rise of foodie culture and the online community have changed everything. Today’s diners—whether they are bloggers, professional food writers, or just people who like to go out to eat—have many different forums for expressing their likes and dislikes, and that represents both an opportunity and a challenge.

We’ve covered Yelp and other citizen review sites in this newsletter in the past, but no matter what you think of this growing trend to consumer empowerment, you should be reading your reviews to find out what your guests legitimately don’t like about your restaurants.

There are also some common points of dissatisfaction that are emerging about the restaurant universe in general—just take a look at this recent no-holds-barred rant from Eater San Francisco, where the reader comments are as enlightening as the writers’ list of grievances about what they think restaurants are doing wrong.

We’ve compiled a cheat sheet of some of the complaints that keep rising to the surface, from sources of all kinds. Pay attention, since many of these issues also address problems that can affect sales.

1. Obvious upselling and overselling. Guests know when they are being played for bigger checks. There are ways to build sales without putting pressure on customers or making them feel like they’re cheapskates if they say no

2. Bad service. This is a big one, time and time again, from seemingly little things like not facing a beer bottle label to the guest to major snafus such as mixing up an order. This article on “35 Things Restaurant Servers Do Wrong” should be required reading for anyone who is responsible for server training

3. On a related note, servers who don’t know the menu. Front-of-the-house staff should be familiar with every item that’s on the menu, including specials, so they can answer guests’ questions and steer them to the best possible experience. Savvy restaurateurs with ambitious beverage selections even put their servers through bartender training so they can assist guests with their wine, beer and cocktail choices

4. Taking guest favorites off the menu without thinking it through very, very carefully—and maybe making other arrangements, like offering a discontinued item as a special or letting regulars know they can still order it off-menu. After all, according to National Restaurant Association research, “favorite menu items” are a prime reason many people go out to eat at a particular restaurant

5. Using industry lingo. Discussing the “wine program” with anyone but a colleague or telling a guest that you can’t sit two people at a “four top” or that the pasta has been “86’d” is just bad manners

6. Wobbly tables and uncomfortable chairs. Enough said

7. Not making your current menu available online. Looking at the menu is one important way potential guests make their dining-out decisions. If at all possible, put the menu on your website and make sure it’s current, to avoid disappointment. If your menu changes so often that it doesn’t make sense to put it on your website, it can at least be on Facebook. And always include prices

8. Bad disability etiquette. In many locations, accessibility is the law, but there’s more to making all guests feel welcome than properly spaced tables. Accommodations like Braille menus, printed rather than verbal specials sheets, and server training also make good business sense

9. Not being prepared for a service you offer. It’s great to offer delivery, online ordering and other guest conveniences, but your infrastructure needs to be able to handle them. That means technology, staffing, staff training, operational adjustments and much, much more

10. Refusing to consider special requests. Within reason, service and kitchen staff should be willing to accommodate not only vegans, vegetarians, and customers with gluten and other food allergies, but also requests to leave out the green pepper. Yes, customers may have become hyperfussy, but we should never lose sight of the fact that these are our guests

11. Noise. There’s a difference between a lively atmosphere and a restaurant where guests can’t hear each other—and there’s a sentiment that unwanted noise is getting worse. With more casual concepts come harder surfaces—wood floors instead of carpet, bare tabletops instead of cloths—plus music, bar noise and other distractions. Use soundproofing, design and other techniques to avoid or fix the problem

12. Lack of cleanliness. Whether it’s the silverware, the tables or the bathroom, guests notice when things aren’t clean. Things may start out spic-and-span, but during the course of a busy shift the situation can degrade quickly. Make sure your dishwashing capabilities are up to snuff—including keeping your dishwasher happy —and your front-of-house staff has enough hands to bus and reset tables correctly. As for the bathrooms, they should be inspected regularly and attended to promptly. And while you’re at it, check the floors in all public areas for spills, dropped paper and linens, and other detritus

If you need help addressing any of the problems introduced in this article, contact Synergy Restaurant Consultants.


Protein Power

Whether your guests are following the Paleo diet or just minding their nutritional P’s and Q’s, protein has become a real selling point on menus. According to data from NPD, “high-protein” is now equated with healthy. This stands to reason after decades of carb-phobia, first at the hands of Dr. Atkins, and most recently because of the gluten-free trend. The science of sports nutrition may also lie behind the demand for protein. Then, too, there’s the increasing availability of heirloom and ethically raised meats to consider.

Arby’s new Meat Mountain sandwich says it all. First conceived as a promotional stunt to herald the erstwhile roast beef chain’s new “We Have the Meats” positioning, the eight-meat (and two-cheese) fantasy sandwich got so many customer requests that the item will be actually served.

According to Packaged Facts, 62% of consumers are looking to eat more protein, a trend that promises opportunity for manufacturers and foodservice operators alike—the so-called protein craze has even hit supermarket bagged salads. And fortunately for vegetarians, the word is out that there are plenty of non-meat sources of protein, including not only eggs and cheese but also hearty and nutritious grains, seeds, nuts, beans and legumes.

Not surprisingly, high-protein foods are showing up on more restaurant menus, despite the high food costs associated with most meats, and people seem willing to pay for them. Fatburger has introduced its Double Down “protein-style” bunless burger. Taco Bell is overhauling its Cantina platform with bowls and burritos that tout 20 grams of protein in a 500-calorie-and-under package.

Roaring Bowl, in Seattle, brings the traditional protein-laden Japanese specialty shabu-shabu into the 21st century. Hitting all the contemporary high notes, Roaring Bowl offers an interactive dining experience (check) that allows guests to customize their meals (check) with a DIY menu (check) of bowls, plates and salad (check) that can be topped with such high-quality, eco-conscious ingredients (check) as Kurobuta pork belly and Painted Hills beef, plus lots and lots of fresh vegetables (ditto). Craft beers, soju and sake (check) round out the bill of sale.

Meanwhile, next-wave steakhouses like Union Common, in Nashville, are pushing the bounds of meat-centric menus with a selection that includes a variety of different signature steaks—Duck Fat Roasted Filet with black garlic butter; steak frites; an aged ribeye with citrus gremolata—as well as a full raw bar and chilled seafood. The list of appetizers is unusually complete, offering such small plates as Roasted Bone Marrow, Lobster Nuggets and several different cheeses. The pricing structure supports the notion that while food costs on aged beef and other premium meats may be well above the 30-35% target range, profit margins on a $17 appetizer or $65 steak are apt to be very good indeed.

Another theme is the roast house, specializing in the kind of “large format” roasted and rotisseried meats whose popularity may have started as a backlash to the small plates trend. In Chicago, there’s Tony Mantuano’s new River Roast, with a live-fire menu featuring roast beef (priced per 8-oz. serving), wood-smoked whole chicken, and a $42 whole fish of the day—all carved at tableside and meant for sharing. “Table Snacks,” oysters, charcuterie, and lots and lots of side dishes (including Yorkshire pudding) round out the family-style meatfest feeling.

And then there’s the new crop of restaurants whose very names hold promise of meaty pleasures. Beast & Ale, for instance, in Philadelphia, is the Feliz Mexican restaurant group’s foray into the gastropub market. The self-styled “updated greasy spoon” menu is inspired by Philadelphia’s old-school beef and ale tradition, including the namesake double-patty Beast Burger as well as Steak “Poupard” (the flatiron cut, served with caramelized onion and potato hash and a fried egg), Buttermilk Fried Chicken, and even a Fried Bologna Sandwich. Décor is by the way of both natural and gold-emblazoned taxidermy, to further drive home the beast metaphor.

Could a more gender-neutral revival of the Beefsteak Club be far behind?


Tip of the Month

For more information about what annoys restaurant guests, drill down into the “gripe-o-meter” from Consumer Reports.

 

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Revitalized Focus on Service and Hospitality in Restaurants

Sep 17, 2014

Have you noticed exceptional service in restaurants lately? You’re not alone. An emerging trend is showing that restaurants are renewing their focus on service and hospitality. Instead of focusing on the chef and his/her of-the-moment food, servers are providing friendly service, helpful suggestions, and inviting the guest to relax and linger for a while. Some restaurants, such as Eleven Madison Park, go above and beyond and even research their diners before they arrive, using the information to enhance the guests visit. These restaurants are noted for their thoughtful, personal service:

 

The Restaurant at Meadowood, California – Guests can enjoy after dinner drinks and board games in the fireplace lounge

Eleven Madison Park , New York – Waiters perform card tricks in the dining room

Alinea, Chicago – The guest database includes personal photos along with dining preferences

Canlis, Seattle – Signature salads and drinks are prepared tableside

Melisse , Santa Monica – Special occasions are celebrated with unique treats from the kitcheN

Vetri, Philadelphia – Diners are offered a complementary glass of champagne before dinner and are sent home with a gift of coffee cake and chocolates for later.

How can you improve the guest experience at your restaurant? With over 30 years of experience, Synergy Restaurant Consultants can help. Contact us for professional help with improving the service and hospitality at your restaurant establishment.

Read more about the trend here and here.

 

 

 

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‘Fast Fine’ – The Future of Casual Dining

Aug 21, 2014

Premium fast-casual players have created a new market niche called ‘fast fine.’ Restaurants such as Mendocino Farms, 800 Degrees Pizza, and LYFE Kitchen are pushing the fast-casual model and putting a greater focus on hospitality and restaurant design. While still keeping prices low, these industry players are looking to fine dining for menu and design inspiration.

Here are a few examples of what Mendocino Farms is doing to elevate the guest experience:

• Guests are greeted by a host and, while being guided through the line, are informed of daily specials and unique menu items
• A server works the floor to get guests anything they need throughout their meal
• Real flatwear, not disposable, is used
• Curated seasonal beer and wine lists are offered at each restaurant
• Each location has a unique design that reflects the neighborhood

LYFE Kitchen is known for a health-conscious menu and takes pride in serving not just food, but a complete experience. Noodles and Company has found great success with using ‘Noodle Ambassadors’ that work the floor as servers during dinner. This helps guests that may want to linger and take time to enjoy their dinner. 800 Degrees has taken their concept to the next level by incorporating high-end restaurant design from world renowned Phillipe Starck.

Read more about the ‘fast-fine’ trend here.

Premium fast-casual is being called the future of casual dining. Contact Synergy Restaurant Consultants if you would like to learn more about elevating your casual restaurant concept.

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There’s Money in those Bottles: Drive Restaurant Profits with a Profitable Bar

Aug 17, 2014
Wall of tequila at Que Pasa Mexican Kitchen & Tequila Bar
Wall of tequila at Que Pasa Mexican Kitchen & Tequila Bar

By Jeffrey Manno

It seems like every week presents another obstacle for restaurateurs in order to make a profit. This year alone, the industry has been confronted with a rising minimum wage, increasing costs of food, and a rapid climb in rent prices, all of which cut deeply into an already slim profit margin. Despite all of these challenges, smart operators continue to not only profit, but to grow. One key way of achieving such success is by developing a highly appealing, profitable beverage program that doesn’t just compliment the food, but creates a destination.

 

So how can we create such a highly valuable beverage program? Beverage expert, David Flaherty, points out Five Elements to a Profitable Beverage Program:

 

1. Great Team:

Your team must have keen abilities, a thorough education, and an abundance of passion. Not only does your staff need to make the drinks, but they must share a passion for it to intelligently sell the drinks and enhance the guest experience.

2. Balance:

With the increasing challenge to maintain and grow the bottom line, the last thing a restaurateur wants to do is tie up loads of cash in an extensive beverage selection that won’t sell. Instead, one should strive to create an enticing array of beverage offerings that not only create appeal, but also fly off the shelves and drive profits. To avoid costly mistakes and achieve this unique balance, consult a skilled beverage professional.

3. Moving Target:

In the highly competitive world of restaurants, the old adage is true, “if you are not moving forward, you are falling behind.” Keep your beverage program exciting, fresh and always appealing to guests and employees alike. Regularly tweak your menu with seasonal offerings, beverage pairing dinners, and a rotating selection of favorites.

4. Systems:

Let’s do some simple math. If your team over pours Beverage Y 30 times/day at an over-pour cost of $0.50/pour, how much are you losing annually if you are open every day? That’s right, approximately $5475 per year! Assuming the pattern holds true for all of your beverages, the amount of lost profit can be staggering to an operator. As Flaherty points out, implementing some rather simple, yet attentive systems of inventory control and operations management can result in substantial improvements to your bottom line.

5. Competition:

As former fashion mogul Gianni Versace once said, “It is nice to have valid competition; it pushes you to do better.” However don’t just watch and study your competition like it’s your enemy, but rather befriend your competition and learn from each other. You may even collaborate together to create the next great trend.

 

It is not easy to make a profit in the restaurant industry, and it is not getting any easier. However, through intelligent planning, a passionate team and effective operations, a restaurateur can develop a beverage program that drives profits and increases appeal of the venue.

 

If you are looking for ways to increase your restaurant profits and enhance your beverage experience, give Synergy a call. We are always here to help you and your team to learn and grow your bar, your business and your profits.

Cheers!

 

 

 

 

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Trend Alert: Housemade Soda

Aug 10, 2014
Rhubarb basil soda and cucumber lime sea salt soda. From Brooklyn Soda Works. | Photo Credit Jennifer 8. Lee License CC BY 2.0
Rhubarb basil soda and cucumber lime sea salt soda. From Brooklyn Soda Works. | Photo Credit Jennifer 8. Lee License CC BY 2.0

 

Housemade sodas have been popping up at restaurants across the country and the trend is not fading out anytime soon. Our consultants at Synergy are big fans of this trend because it helps increase check averages and provides a fun, artisanal drink option for diners. As diners become more health conscious and traditional soda sales plummet, we’re learning of another great benefit to housemade drinks. According to Technomic, 87% of diners associate ‘fresh’ with ‘healthy.’ This means that consumers perceive that artisanal drinks made in-house with fresh ingredients provide good-for-you health benefits.

 

While many restaurants are aware the popularity of housemade sodas, two Chicago restaurants have especially capitalized on the trend. Mercadito in Chicago offers their signature Refrescos, a combination of fresh fruit juice with fruit-flavored soda water, at $6 a glass and has sold over 2,700 this year!   At sister restaurant Tavernita, diners are thrilled to find an entire section of the menu dedicated to housemade sodas. With flavors such as orange, white grape, and ginger chile ale, the menu also suggests pairing the soda with a favorite spirit. Tavernita’s sodas have accounted for nearly 14% of beverage sales this year.

 

While traditional soda sales are down across the country, consider adding fresh, housemade sodas to your menu to give beverage sales a boost.

 

Here are five fun flavor ideas for housemade sodas:

– Caramelized Pineapple
– Grapefruit
– Cucumber Mint Lime
– Orange Vanilla Cream
– Ginger Lemonade

You can read more about this trend here.

Please contact Synergy for help with menu innovation.

 

 

 

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What Kind of Wino Are You Catering to?

Jul 31, 2014

By Jeff Manno

Photo Credit: Flickr User Emiliano De Laurentii CC by 2.0
Photo Credit: Flickr User Emiliano De Laurentii CC by 2.0

The United States is the single largest wine market in the world and, unlike France and Italy, consumption is on the rise. However, the normal wine consumer in the US is hard to understand. Why? In large part, because there is no typical US wine consumer, but rather the market is segmented into six different types of wine consumers.

 

Constellation Brands, a global wine, beer and spirits producer and marketer studied 4000 people who drank wine at least once every three months, and found “that some wine drinkers want adventure, some use wine as a status symbol, some want wine that is inexpensive and easy to drink, and others find the world of wine confusing and intimidating.”

 

Based upon Constellation’s findings, the US wine drinker can be one of the following:

• Overwhelmed: 90% of wine drinkers do not like to shop for wine and find the experience complex, reports Constellation Brands.

• The Price Driven Consumer: 21% of American wine drinkers consider price their top consideration when buying. These same people also drink a lot of wine; wine makes up 38% of their total alcoholic beverage consumption.

Everyday Loyals: 20% of American wine drinkers, with a predominantly female skew, drink wine daily. According to the report, “they tend to be brand loyal, sticking to wines they like, and are not particularly interested in trying something new.”

Image Seekers: 18% of American winos, want to “seem like they’re in the know, and like to drink trendy brands with cool labels,” and they also have “a repertoire of well-known brands that they have in their back pocket.”

Engaged Newcomers: 12% of consumers, “these young consumers see wine as a big part of their social lives and want to learn more about it.” They are also likely to buy organic or biodynamic wines, and want to hear the stories of the winemaker.

Enthusiasts: The true wine lovers who “love talking about it, reading reviews about it, shopping for it and sharing it. They join wine clubs, too.”

 

With this valuable insight from Constellation Brands, restaurateurs need to take a serious look at how they will appeal to today’s American wine drinker. To stay competitive and drive sales in this complex wine consumer market, management needs to clearly segment, target and position their wine program to attract their ideal wine drinkers.

 

If you would like help in marketing your venue to today’s American Wine Drinker, Synergy has 25 years of proven consulting success, and is here to help. Contact us today.

 

To learn more about Constellation Brands Report, the full article is here.