First Bite Nation's Restaurant News
-
- Näringsliv
First Bite, hosted by Nation’s Restaurant News digital editor Holly Petre, highlights the top restaurant industry headlines of each day followed by a short conversation on one of the day’s trending stories. Published early every weekday morning, First Bite is the perfect way to get a brief recap of the daily foodservice news alongside your first cup of coffee.
-
Restaurant Daily preview: Starbucks' legal win, Dave & Buster's, Bob Evans
The Supreme Court delivers a win for Starbucks. The economy comes for Dave & Buster's. And yet another chain launches a meal bundle.
First Bite is becoming Restaurant Daily! Don't forget to subscribe at Apple Podcasts here and Spotify here. -
Restaurant Daily preview: Alamo Drafthouse, menu prices, Starbucks combos
Alamo Drafthouse has been sold. There's good news and bad news on the menu price inflation front. And Starbucks is joining the value wars.
First Bite is becoming Restaurant Daily! Don't forget to subscribe at Apple Podcasts here and Spotify here. -
A note from First Bite
Today’s episode is bittersweet, as it is the last episode of First Bite — but with an exciting twist.
-
Will Starbucks' new delivery partner help with the restaurant's wait time issues?
Starbucks and Grubhub announced a partnership on Thursday that would allow customers to order Starbucks delivery via the Grubhub app for the first time ever. The delivery partnership will roll out to select markets in Pennsylvania, Colorado, and Illinois in June, and expand to the rest of Grubhub’s markets across the 50 states by August.
According to Grubhub, Starbucks is the most searched merchant on its app that is not yet available. Overall, Starbucks has been slower to partner with third-party delivery companies than many other top chains in the foodservice industry. While the company began offering third-party delivery through Uber Eats in select markets in 2018, Uber Eats delivery was not available nationally until 2020. Starbucks did not begin offering delivery with DoorDash until last January, and the partnership was not expanded nationally until March 2023.
Grubhub is the final delivery company of the “big three” that Starbucks is now partnering with, though the company has the smallest delivery market share at 8% (as compared with DoorDash’s 67% and Uber Eats’ 23%), according to Bloomberg Second Measure. -
If you want to be like Chipotle, you should increase employee benefits
Chipotle was one of very few winners from Q1’s financial reports and the company’s momentum certainly didn’t start there. In fact, you’d have to go back to the second quarter of 2020 – the pandemic quarter, if you will – to find a negative same-store sales number.
The company’s engine has no doubt been churning at full speed of late, as evidenced by share prices jumping by nearly 75% since October alone. There are several factors pushing the company to new heights, including a sharpened focus on throughput and a prioritization of the employee proposition. For that latter piece, Chipotle has continuously evolved its benefits to include mental healthcare, expanded parental leave, tuition reimbursement, English as a Second Language classes, pet insurance, and more. Most recently, the company added a service that provides faster access to paychecks, as well as a matching contribution to 401(k) workers’ student loan repayments. This continuous evolution of benefits is informed by town hall meetings each quarter, a “pulse survey” every other year that goes out to all the company’s 120,000 employees, and a benefits department that is highly in touch with workers’ changing demands. -
What Rubio's bankruptcy could mean for restaurant finance for the rest of the year
Less than a week after abruptly closing nearly 50 California locations, Rubio’s has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The company said it is pursuing this action to facilitate the sale of the 41-year-old business, adding that its remaining 86 locations in California, Arizona, and Nevada will continue to operate as is.
The company has cited challenging economic conditions, diminishing in-store traffic driven by sustained work-from-home trends, rising food and utility costs, and “significant increases to the minimum wage in California.” On April 1, California’s minimum wage increased by 25% to $20 an hour.
Rubio’s is seeking court approval to continue operations during the sale process to ensure continued payment of employee wages and benefits. All gift cards and rewards will be honored at the remaining 86 locations.