NPD: Deals Are No Longer Driving Restaurant Traffic & May Need A Refresh

Chicago — With restaurant visits on a deal or discount down last year, it appears that restaurant customers may perceive the price of deals offered over a length of time as regular pricing, according to The NPD Group, a leading global information company.  NPD’s foodservice market research reports that restaurant visits on a deal were down 3 percent in the year ending December 2012 compared to same period year ago. Combo meals and value menu item offers, two of the most frequently offered deals, are largely responsible for the decrease in deal traffic. Visits that included coupons, buy one-get-one, and discounted price were up. 

At the height of the recession, when industry traffic was down, deals, and special offers drove industry restaurant visits. In 2008, visits on a deal were up 5 percent and non-deal traffic was down -1 percent, and in 2009 deal traffic was up 3 percent and non-deal traffic down 4 percent, according to NPD’s CREST®, which through its daily tracking captures over 400,000 consumer restaurant visits a year.  In 2012, after many of the promotions that emerged during the recession had been in existence a few years, restaurant deal visits declined by three percent and non-deal traffic was up 2 percent.

A recently released NPD report, Planning for Growth in the New Normal Marketplace, finds that nearly all types of deal visits are down with younger consumers particularly combo meal deals and value menus, with strong declines in the last few years. Deal checks have risen over time and the disparity between deal and non-deal checks is not vastly different. 

“Deals and special offers definitely influence restaurant visits and if it weren’t for deals during the recession the industry would have fared much worse, but some of the deals being offered today aren’t resonating with consumers,” said Bonnie Riggs, NPD’s restaurant industry analyst. “Considering current consumer sentiment and their continuing frugality, the deals that have historically appealed to restaurant customers need to be re-engineered and the next generation of deals introduced.”

About The NPD Group

The NPD Group provides global information and advisory services to drive better business decisions.  By combining unique data assets with unmatched industry expertise, we help our clients track their markets, understand consumers, and drive profitable growth.  Sectors covered include automotive, beauty, entertainment, fashion, food / foodservice, home, office supplies, sports, technology, toys, video games, and wireless.  For more information, visit www.npd.com and npdgroupblog.com.  Follow us on Twitter: @npdgroup.

Source: The NPD Group