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On this week’s Extra Serving, NRN editor in chief Sam Oches and executive editor Alicia Kelso discuss the latest restaurant industry news, including Jack in the Box’s sale of Del Taco, new data that shows consumers are getting deal fatigue from QSR brands, and Domino’s third quarter sales that were up more than 5%. First up is Jack in the Box, which only three years ago purchased Del Taco for nearly $600 million and yet this month sold the taco chain for a mere $115 million. Sam and Alicia discuss what might have gone wrong and why the partnering of those two brands could have been a case of bad timing (among other things). Next up, they talk about a new study that shows how the fast food category is the only restaurant segment that lost traffic in August. Could the problem be deal fatigue? Sam and Alicia talk about how consumers have become better with value perception and why traditional deals might not be cutting it anymore. Then they shift their focus once again to Domino’s Pizza, a company that could be proving the deal fatigue theory wrong. Domino’s reported its third-quarter earnings last week, with same-store sales up 5.2% on the strength of deals like its $9.99 Best Deal Ever. Find out what’s going right at Domino’s — but why that pizza chain is also sounding the alarms about what could be around the corner. Finally, we share an interview between senior food and beverage editor Bret Thorn and Andy Seiple, corporate executive chef at Firebirds Wood Fired Grill.
For more on these stories:
Jack in the Box selling Del Taco for $115M
QSR’s traffic woes may be driven by deal fatigue
Domino’s leans on discounting as same-store sales grow 5.2%
By Nation's Restaurant News4
2828 ratings
On this week’s Extra Serving, NRN editor in chief Sam Oches and executive editor Alicia Kelso discuss the latest restaurant industry news, including Jack in the Box’s sale of Del Taco, new data that shows consumers are getting deal fatigue from QSR brands, and Domino’s third quarter sales that were up more than 5%. First up is Jack in the Box, which only three years ago purchased Del Taco for nearly $600 million and yet this month sold the taco chain for a mere $115 million. Sam and Alicia discuss what might have gone wrong and why the partnering of those two brands could have been a case of bad timing (among other things). Next up, they talk about a new study that shows how the fast food category is the only restaurant segment that lost traffic in August. Could the problem be deal fatigue? Sam and Alicia talk about how consumers have become better with value perception and why traditional deals might not be cutting it anymore. Then they shift their focus once again to Domino’s Pizza, a company that could be proving the deal fatigue theory wrong. Domino’s reported its third-quarter earnings last week, with same-store sales up 5.2% on the strength of deals like its $9.99 Best Deal Ever. Find out what’s going right at Domino’s — but why that pizza chain is also sounding the alarms about what could be around the corner. Finally, we share an interview between senior food and beverage editor Bret Thorn and Andy Seiple, corporate executive chef at Firebirds Wood Fired Grill.
For more on these stories:
Jack in the Box selling Del Taco for $115M
QSR’s traffic woes may be driven by deal fatigue
Domino’s leans on discounting as same-store sales grow 5.2%

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