Hmm. I'd think that that'd make sense if people were just lingering and sipping sodas and they were trying to decongest the restaurant, but the article says that the opposite is true:
Still, the company announced earlier this year that foot traffic to its restaurants had slowed as inflation increased.
EDIT: Hmm. This recent article says that apparently Burger King is running off with their value customers:
As it loses customers to rivals, McDonald's shifts its focus to value
The fast-food giant appears to be losing the battle for customers looking for lower prices to Burger King and Domino’s. McDonald’s wants a national value offer to change that.
By Jonathan Maze on Apr. 30, 2024
McDonald’s appears to be losing some customers to rivals like Burger King and Domino’s as inflation-weary consumers cut back on their dining and focus more on value offers.
That has the Chicago-based fast-food giant working to develop a national value offer that will resonate more with customers than its current batch of local and digital deals.
“It’s a street fight,” CFO Ian Borden told analysts on Tuesday. “Everybody is fighting for fewer consumers. We have to make sure we have that street fighting capability.”
The company is working to develop a national value platform that will be “net neutral” to franchisee profitability.
But executives also said that store profits have returned to pre-pandemic levels, which should give the company the ability to offer that kind of value.
“We’re in a strong position,” CEO Chris Kempczinski said. “Franchisee cash flow is at the second highest levels ever.”
McDonald’s has been signaling a more concerted value focus for months, particularly since February when Kempczinski suggested the brand was losing lower-income customers to grocery stores.
Maybe they're trying to figure out what they can do to cut prices to bring back customers, and they're looking at shaving off perks or services that presently exist to see what they can do to get their prices down.
Still, the company announced earlier this year that foot traffic to its restaurants had slowed as inflation increased.
It's not just foot traffic I'm sure. That's what happens when a business sees a temporary 9% inflation bump as a good time to increase all prices 30%+ across the board. McDonald's is nearly as expensive as Five Guys in my area now. They forgot what market niche they were filling when they got greedy. What used to be a $3 meal off the dollar menu is now $8 for the same items, and the "deals" all suck unless you want those specific 3 options or a discount equivalent to the sales tax.
For my $, Wendy's is winning the value competition. Their value deals are cheap and decent, their reward system is better, their online deals are better. Subjectively, I like the taste better, so that's nice too.
BK and McD offer better deals at volume than for a single person meal, but even then it's not better than Wendy's. Single person it's just not even a contest.
Hmm. So, setting aside the business discussion, I personally prefer Wendy's too, but there are also a fair bit more McDonald's locations out there than there are Wendy's locations (not even to mention the European Union situation, where Wendy's isn't present at all due to a trademark dispute with some Dutch restaurant). So it's not always an option to do Wendy's.
According to its website, Wendy's currently has locations in 30 countries around the world, in the following regions: Asia Pacific, Caribbean, Europe, Middle East, Africa, Latin America and of course, North America. There's just one region that shouldn't be on that list: Europe. There are still no European Wendy's locations, and the reason might surprise you.
So what's the deal? Well, there used to be a Wendy's in Europe. Back in 1979, the first European location opened in Munich, Germany. Following this, several more locations opened up in the Benelux region (Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg) and elsewhere, but they didn't remain open past the late '80's.
In 1988, a man named Raymond Warrens decided to open a restaurant in Goes, Netherlands and named it—you guessed it—Wendy's, after his youngest daughter. As the American Wendy's activity dwindled in Europe, Warrens decided to register a trademark for the name in 1995. He got it, and American Wendy's was prohibited from opening any future locations in the Benelux region.
Since the year 2000, Wendy's has been embroiled in a legal war with the Dutch Wendy's, attempting over and over to acquire a European trademark. Dutch courts, however, continuously side with Dutch Wendy's because if American Wendy's did win the rights to a trademark, countries from the Benelux region would be included as they are part of Europe, and that would infringe on Dutch Wendy's rights.
So there you have it. That's why there are no delicious old fashioned hamburgers, spicy chicken sandwiches, Frosty's or the famous baked potato with sour cream and chives in Europe. Well you might find all of these at other fast food places; they just won't be descended from Dave Thomas's legacy.
That's a silly reason not to bring their formula to Europe under a different name, say call it Bendy's, with similar design aesthetic to the US franchises.
BK has been offering 2 sandwiches for the price of 1 deals since the pandemic, and also printing bargain coupon sheets in the weekly coupon flyers, along with KFC, Taco Bell, and Subway.
BK has been working hard to capture the value fast food market, while McDs has been... installing self serve kiosks?
Come to think of it, I don't think I've ever seen self-serve soft drinks at a McDs around here.
Fun fact: In later editions of the movie, Demolition Man, references to Taco Bell were replaced with KFC Pizza Hut. Thanks @JordanZ@lemmy.world for the correction.