National
Restaurant Association 2010 Restaurant Industry Forecast reveals economic,
workforce, consumer and menu trends
(Washington, D.C.) With the economic downturn easing, the restaurant industry
is expected to show gradual improvement in 2010, according to the National Restaurant Association’s 2010 Restaurant Industry Forecast released
today. Industry sales are projected to reach $580 billion this year, a 2.5
percent increase in current dollars over 2009 sales. When adjusted for
inflation, 2010 sales will be essentially flat, which is an improvement over
the 1.2 percent and 2.9 percent negative growth in real sales that the industry
experienced in 2008 and 2009, respectively.
Restaurants will continue to be strong contributors to the recovery of the
nation’s economy, with industry sales representing 4 percent of the U.S. gross domestic
product and employees comprising 9 percent of the U.S. workforce.
“The past two years have been a very challenging time for our industry. While
there are still substantial challenges ahead, we are encouraged that the
outlook is improving,” said Dawn Sweeney, President and CEO of the National
Restaurant Association. “With a total economic impact of more than $1.5
trillion, the restaurant industry is a strong player in the economic recovery.
Restaurants are the cornerstone of communities across this nation and we are a
key player in propelling job retention and creation across the United States.”
Industry Segment
Growth
Continuing the trend from last year, the quickservice restaurant segment is
expected to fare slightly better than the fullservice segment as diners focus
on value and specials. Quickservice restaurants are projected to post sales of
$164.8 billion in 2010, a gain of 3.0 percent over 2009. Sales at fullservice
restaurants are projected to reach $184.2 billion in 2010, an increase of 1.2
percent in current dollars over 2009.
The eating-and-drinking place segment expected to show the strongest growth in
2010 is social caterers, whose sales are expected to increase by 4.5 percent.
Among all commercial industry segments, the strongest growth is expected in
retail-host restaurants (including those located in gas/service stations and
drug- and grocery stores) with a 4.9 percent sales increase.
Workforce Outlook For only the second
time in nearly half a century, the restaurant industry lost jobs in 2009.
Despite the losses, the industry still outperformed the national economy, and
job growth is expected to resume in 2010. The restaurant-and-foodservice
industry remains one of the nation’s largest private sector employers with its
12.7 million employees. By 2020, the industry is projected to employ 14 million
people – an increase of 1.3 million jobs.
State Sales Growth
Colorado is expected to post the strongest sales growth in 2010 at 2.9 percent (2010
industry sales of $8.7 billion), followed by Idaho at 2.8 percent ($1.6
billion). Forecasted to post growth of 2.7 percent: New Jersey ($12.8 billion),
New York ($29.0 billion), North Carolina ($12.8 billion) and Texas ($34.8
billion).
The top states by restaurant sales volume in 2009 will be California at $58.0
billion (2.3 percent growth); Texas at $34.8 billion (2.7 percent growth); New
York at $29.0 billion (2.7 percent growth); Florida at $27.6 billion (2.4
percent growth); and Illinois at $18.7 billion (1.9 percent growth).
Consumer and Menu
Trends
According to the National Restaurant Association’s 2010 Restaurant Industry Forecast,
consumers will continue to seek value, convenience and expanded menu options in
2010 – and restaurants will deliver. Consumers forced to cut back on spending
say they aren’t dining out as often as they would like, and this pent-up demand
will turn into restaurant traffic as economic recovery continues.
The Association predicts that growth opportunities can be found in delivery and
other off-premise options, cooking classes and other interactive guest
activities, and using new media to reach new and returning guests.
Social media will become more critical to restaurant marketing this year. A
good plan and solid understanding of those tools – including Facebook, Twitter,
Yelp, and YouTube – can help operators mitigate the economic environment. “Word
of mouth” has moved online, and more consumers use the Web to browse menus,
make reservations, and get recommendations from other diners. Restaurants’ use
of e-mail, Internet and cell phone text messages in marketing efforts is also a
growing trend.
Restaurant operators continue to step up their efforts to go green, investing
in energy-efficient equipment and fixtures, using recyclable materials and
reducing their water use. Green initiatives not only help manage costs, they
can also drive traffic. Four of 10 fullservice and 31 percent of quickservice
operators plan to devote more resources to green initiatives in 2010 than they
did in 2009, and 4 in 10 consumers say they choose restaurants based on their
conservation practices.
Locally sourced food,
sustainability, and health and nutrition will be the top trends on restaurant
menus this year. Seventy percent of consumers say they are more likely to visit
restaurants that offer locally produced food, and nearly three out of four say
they are trying to eat healthier in restaurants now than they did two years
ago.
The top 10 menu trends in the Association’s “What’s Hot in 2010” survey of more
than 1,800 professional chefs (American Culinary Federation members) are:
locally grown produce, locally sourced meat/seafood, sustainability as a
culinary theme, bite-size desserts, locally produced beer/wine, healthy kids’
meals, half-potions, farm/estate-branded ingredients,
gluten-free/allergy-conscious items, and sustainable seafood.
Ethnic cuisines and flavors are also a hot menu trend this year, including
regional ethnic cuisine and fusion cuisine. Consumers are interested in trying
French, Spanish, Japanese (other than sushi), Thai, Cajun/Creole, soul food and
sushi.
For more information about
the National Restaurant Association’s 2010 Restaurant Industry Forecast, visit www.restaurant.org/research/forecast.
To view the social media version of this release, visit www.restaurant.org/pressroom/socialmedia/forecast2010.
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