Foodservice

Foodservice Inspiration

The Pantry borrows from Sheetz, is cautioned by Sheetz
CARY, N.C. -- As The Pantry enters the third month of its major foodservice makeover, it's getting some advice from an unlikely source: Sheetz. The Pantry is remodeling stores by getting rid of clutter, adding a better coffee selection and offering more fresh-food options.

It's a risky gamble for the Cary, N.C.-based parent company of the Kangaroo gas station chain. It will cost millions of dollars. But The Pantry is following a national trend that may someday result in convenience stores being more like restaurants that happen to sell gas, according to a report in The [image-nocss] News & Observer.

The shift is natural considering that gas margins are small and volatile, and profit on food is much more substantial. As budget-crunched consumers cut back on travel, gas station owners looked elsewhere to make up the lost gas sales.

"It is a profitable venture if you do it right," Jeff Lenard, spokesman for the National Association of Convenience Stores, told the newspaper. "If you do it wrong, you can literally get handed your lunch."

According to Pantry CEO Terrance Marks, the mission is simply this: "Eighty-five percent of gas purchasers leave without going in the store. You've got to give them a reason to come in."

For Marks, who joined the company nearly a year ago after a career at a Coca-Cola bottler, it's a chance to reinvent and improve a company with solid roots. For The Pantry, it's a chance to reach customers in ways it hasn't been able to before.

Among the highlights of the new look: An expanded selection of the company's new Bean Street coffee. A case just inside the door with ready-made sandwiches, sliced fruit and other healthy options. Bright signs that tell shoppers what is available and what each item costs. A designated "hospitality associate" responsible for helping customers, tidying the coffee bar and making sure there's always a fresh pot on.

Conversions began in the Triangle area that includes Raleigh, N.C., will move to Charlotte, N.C., and from there, to Fayetteville, N.C., and beyond. The Pantry plans to finish converting all of the stores in the chain by 2012.

(Click here for previous CSP Daily News coverage of The Pantry's Fresh Initiative.)

"We are uniquely positioned," John Fisher, senior vice president of marketing, told the newspaper. "Here you can get a fill-up, grab some lunch and pick up a 2-liter of Coke or a bag of chips for tonight. To me, it's an evolution of this channel, and the winners are going to understand that."

There are, of course, convenience chains that have been offering more food for years. The Pantry's executives make no secret that they visited rivals while developing their strategy.

"There are definitely others who have sort of blazed the path here," Marks said. "We just want to do it better than anyone else."

But even established players are having trouble getting customers to associate their stores with fresh food.

"We're doing well, but we're always trying to get that food awareness out there in people's minds," said Travis Sheetz, vice president of operations for the Altoona, Pa.-based Sheetz chain.

Sheetz told the newspaper The Pantry's entry into the fresh-food arena will raise consumer awareness that convenience stores sell higher-quality offerings.

"It's difficult because [customers] are carrying baggage with them of gas station food not being of the best quality," he said.

Since opening in the Triangle, Sheetz has aggressively run TV ads and offered coupons and giveaways to get people to try its food.

"You've got to get in their face," he said. "You've got to give them a reason to try it, and if it's a free reason, then it's a free reason. However, it's not a long-term strategy. There's not a lot of companies around today that have done free as a long-term strategy."

This fall, once The Pantry is a bit further along in its conversion, it is planning advertising and promotional giveaways as well, Fisher said. "Everyone in Raleigh will know Kangaroo has a great new Bean Street coffee," he said.

The Pantry's changes have been looked upon favorably.

Last week, the company's stock was upgraded by analysts at Morgan Keegan, according to the newspaper report. Analysts visited stores in the Triangle and concluded that the potential revenue from the improved coffee selection alone could be $15,000 to $20,000 per year in higher-volume stores.

"We believe expanded foodservice offerings are being well received by consumers while generating a positive tone across the company," they wrote.

As The Pantry moves forward with its new look and operating model, there may be further changes.

Marks said that while the company is using some ideas that other chains found successful, The Pantry chose not to have touch-screen ordering systems that Sheetz and other chains use "because we like the fast, friendly and clean model, and it's hard for a computer to be friendly."

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