Should Restaurateurs Change Their Offerings For 2030?

Despite a conservative vision, consumers do want to see drastic changes. How can restaurateurs respond to client expectations? Personalization is key!

Despite a mostly conservative vision concerning their experience at a restaurant for 2030, Swiss consumers do want to see drastic changes in some areas, mainly related to customization. Are restaurateurs aware and ready to respond to their clients' expectations? A new study provides insights and recommendations for restaurateurs and F&B professionals.

Should Restaurateurs Change Their Offerings For 2030?

EHL

Based on its 2018 study conducted with over a thousand Swiss residents - customers, restaurateurs and field experts - EHL's SAVIVA F&B Chair investigated the future of Swiss restaurants. The study reveals significant changes in demand for 2030 and provides recommendations for restaurateurs and F&B professionals. In this article, we look into the new trends that restaurateurs should consider while preparing to upgrade their offering.

Major trend: Personalization

One of the biggest F&B trends revealed from this study is that Swiss consumers would like to be able to customize their meals while dining out at restaurants.

A staggering 88% of the survey's participants said they would like to order customizable meals by 2030, which means that restaurateurs must find ways to respond to this new market demand.

What can be customized?

Ingredients: according to the study, 40% of Swiss consumers want their meals to be customized when it comes to the ingredients. This trend has arisen due to people's growing dietary constraints nowadays, but also due to the fact that people are getting used to customization when buying goods and services.

Size: a lower percentage (34% of Swiss consumers) want to be able to select the size of their meal as well. Small, medium and big sizes should become an available option on restaurants' menus by 2030. This may also enhance restaurants' waste management.

Preparation: the Swiss would also like to decide how their meal will be prepared, for example, if they would like to have a soup, a salad, a wok or a gratin with the suggested ingredients. This is an interesting option to consider.

The key point for restaurateurs: by 2030, prepare to offer multiple options to clients when it comes to customization of meals, including ingredients, size and preparation. Restaurateurs should focus on one or more areas of customization, while in a few years, meals will be 100% customized to each customer's nutritional needs and constraints.

Other trends to consider

Word-of-mouth recommendation is key
Swiss consumers select restaurants primarily based on word-of-mouth and only use tools such as geolocated search or evaluation websites at a secondary level. The main factors influencing the choice of a restaurant over another is primarily the customer's previous experiences (50% of respondents) and their current mood (36% of respondents).

The key point for restaurateurs: offer a great experience to every customer, be visible on digitalized maps and monitor online reviews.

Pleasure-oriented meal
Swiss go to restaurants to treat themselves with a pleasure-oriented meal which focuses on the sensory experience. In addition, they prefer traditional Swiss cuisine at a restaurant while they are keener on world cuisine for delivery and takeaway.

The key point for restaurateurs: Swiss people select mainly pleasure-oriented meals and prefer traditional cuisine at a restaurant.

Convivial eating
Restaurants remain places of conviviality as the Swiss are mostly accompanied by their significant other, their friends or their families when eating out. On the other hand, business meals are in decline.

The key point for restaurateurs: the atmosphere of a restaurant should be adapted for convivial eating throughout the whole day, including lunchtime.

Ordering and payment at the restaurant
Full and fast casual service at the table remains the popular choice among Swiss consumers who are, however, inclined to use terminals more broadly within the fast food industry by 2030.

Based on the survey, Swiss people prefer fixed pricing over dynamic or free pricing in the F&B industry and they would rather pay at the end of their meal. When it comes to the means of payment, a credit card is their preferred option with cash coming second, while they also show an interest in digital options such as contactless payment and payment through biometrical identification.

The key point for restaurateurs: terminals could be used more broadly in the future, especially within the fast food industry, to cut down on human resources costs but also as a way of integrating upselling or cross-selling suggestions automatically.

Click here to download the study booklet.

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Sales & Marketing Europe Switzerland

Stéphanie Buri is the coordinator of the Saviva Food and Beverage Chair at the Ecole hôtelière de Lausanne. She has an MSc in entrepreneurship and specializes in quantitative analysis and innovation in the F&B industry.

Clémence Cornuz has an MA in English literature. Her interest in the symbolic and cultural dimensions of food and consumption practices led her to join the Ecole hôtelière de Lausanne at the end of her studies. There, as a research associate at the Saviva Food & Beverage Chair, she gets to explore these topics from a different angle.

Morgane Voumard holds a Master degree in Tourism Management and Planning from the Universitat de les Illes Balears (Spain). She was the research coordinator of the Saviva Food and Beverage Chair at EHL, where she was handling and coordinating various tasks linked to the Chair activities.

EHL Hospitality Business School (Lausanne) is an ambassador for traditional Swiss hospitality and has been a pioneer in hospitality education since 1893 with over 25,000 alumni worldwide and over 120 nationalities. EHL is the world's first hospitality management school that provides university-level programs at its campuses in Lausanne and Chur-Passugg, as well as online learning solutions.

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