In-Supermarket Locations Allow Restaurants to Drive Frequency, Reach New Customers

In-Grocery Sites Let Restaurants Drive Frequency

Increasingly, consumers are viewing their restaurant and grocery routines as one and the same.

The rise of digital ordering, PYMNTS research revealed, has consumers now more likely to order restaurant meals for off-premise consumption than for on-site dining, breaking down the food-at-home versus food-away-from home restaurant/grocery distinction. Similarly, as grocers expand their prepared food offerings, shoppers are increasingly able to acquire high-quality, ready-to-eat hot meals from their local supermarket.

Read more: 182M Consumers Now Use Digital Channels to Shop and Pay for Food

Now, taking advantage of the growing overlap between the two categories, many restaurant and grocery brands are offering in-store restaurants, allowing consumers to get more of their food needs met during just one shopping trip.

Take, for instance, Shawarma Press, a small, fast-casual Mediterranean-style chain that recently opened its second location inside of a Walmart store. It offers consumers the chance to pick up a meal alongside their weekly grocery shop.

“In the beginning, customers were going shopping first, and then stopping by [the restaurant],” Sawsan Abublan, CEO and co-founder of Shawarma Press, told PYMNTS in an interview. “Once we break that barrier … the next time around, their habits do change. They may place an order ahead of time and pick it up on their way out or actually plan the visit where … they’re not taking the order to go. They’re coming in, sitting down and enjoying that meal.”

Blurred Lines

The blending of the two categories has accelerated in recent months. Last month, grocery giant Kroger opened its first in-store, off-premise-only, multi-brand restaurant in partnership with ghost kitchen company Kitchen United.

See more: Kroger Brings Ghost Kitchens to Stores With Kitchen United Partnership

Additionally, leading online grocery marketplace Instacart announced the launch of its Ready Meals Hub, offering prepared meals from grocery stores.

Read more: Instacart Aims to Price out DoorDash With Launch of Meal Delivery

Meanwhile, leading meal delivery services have been expanding their grocery offerings, aiming to get consumers to place their online restaurant and grocery orders through the same digital marketplace. Also last month, Uber Eats announced an expansion of its West Coast grocery selection, and Just Eat Takeaway discussed its intention to drive more grocery sales.

See more: Uber Eats Expands West Coast Grocery, Alcohol Selection to Become More Central to Consumers’ Daily Lives

Read also: Just Eat Takeaway Aims to Leave ‘No More Oxygen’ for Competitors Globally

For Shawarma Press, the Walmart locations pose not only a chance to embed ordering opportunities into one of consumers’ most common weekly routines, but they are also a valuable chance for customer acquisition, attracting new eyes and entering highly-trafficked areas.

“We have seen after a while of being open [at our first in-Walmart location] that customers are actually placing to-go orders without having to and shop because we’re close by to where they are,” said Abublan.

Taking Center Stage

In addition to in-Walmart stores, the brand is also looking for other nontraditional formats that would bring the restaurant into contact with more consumers. For instance, once contagion fears and health restrictions are less of a concern, Abublan said she is interested in pursuing locations inside of food halls. In fact, the brand had been planning to enter the space pre-pandemic.

“They’re getting back to some normalcy, of course, but I’m glad that we were not in food halls in 2020,” she said.

Plus, the brand intends to integrate more technology into its physical spaces with the addition of new ordering kiosks.

Findings from PYMNTS’ 2021 Restaurant Readiness Index, created in collaboration with Paytronix, indicated that restaurant managers overestimate the value of kiosks relative to consumers. Twenty-eight percent of restaurant managers reported believing that self-service kiosks will be important to restaurants’ future success, while only 19% of consumers said the same.

See also: QSRs’ Lagging Loyalty-Reward Investment Hurts Innovation and Sales

As such, Shawarma Press is not centering kiosk ordering as a core channel but rather making the option available to those who want it.

“The kiosk is just an option on the side,” said Abublan. “For example, if the store is really busy, and the customer does not want to wait [in] line … they can use a kiosk

Charting the Course

Looking ahead, two of the main strategies that Shawarma Press is looking to leverage to grow in concert with consumers’ evolving needs are its digital platforms and its in-Walmart locations.

Regarding the former, Abublan noted that over the past couple of years, digital orders have grown to account for about half of all Shawarma Press sales, allowing the brand to meet the needs of time-crunched consumers on their lunch break and others who need to be in an out as quickly as possible.

As to the latter, Abublan said, “We see ourselves within the next five years opening at least 100 locations inside Walmarts in different states.”