I agree with these guys that the worlds largest food chain is about to jump the shark with this marketing idea of up-scaling their restaurants to a more cozy relaxed atmosphere... kinda like mmm Starbucks.
They were spot on in that with McDonald's you get what you expect every time you walk in no matter WHERE you are. That was the secret of their success. That you didn't have to worry about the food tasting different or anything else related to the one in your home town. Others followed suit of course and were successful, Burger King, Wendy's, et al.
Yet moving up to a quieter place is going to alienate a certain class of people. Call 'em what you want, trailer park, rural farmers, projects, whatever... also the average hard-working everyday family in the lower to mid-middle class sector of the population.
When I worked there that was the bulk of the customer base, that and folks coming off the freeway which was within spitting distance of our front door.
They plan to spend 1 Billion dollars over the next few years with this "social experiment"... hmm seems to me that a better choice of what to do with that money allocated could be thought of.
http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/does-going-upscale-sense-mcdonald-170612393.html
In an effort to revamp its image and attract new customers, McDonald's is going upscale. USA Today Monday got a sneak preview of a $1 billion plan to upgrade restaurants by installing flat-screen televisions, bringing in wooden tables and toning down the loud color scheme. That's pushing the chain into "looking less like McDonald's and more like Starbucks," as reporter Bruce Horovitz wrote.
Is this a good idea? Does it make sense to tinker with the formula that has achieved market saturation, global domination and positive results in good times and bad? Should McDonald's be trying to pull customers from more expensive chains? Can McDonald's really hope to turn itself into a coffee house? As my Daily Ticker colleague Aaron Task and I discuss in the accompanying video, getting into Starbucks' face and market space might be a dubious proposition.
They were spot on in that with McDonald's you get what you expect every time you walk in no matter WHERE you are. That was the secret of their success. That you didn't have to worry about the food tasting different or anything else related to the one in your home town. Others followed suit of course and were successful, Burger King, Wendy's, et al.
Yet moving up to a quieter place is going to alienate a certain class of people. Call 'em what you want, trailer park, rural farmers, projects, whatever... also the average hard-working everyday family in the lower to mid-middle class sector of the population.
When I worked there that was the bulk of the customer base, that and folks coming off the freeway which was within spitting distance of our front door.
They plan to spend 1 Billion dollars over the next few years with this "social experiment"... hmm seems to me that a better choice of what to do with that money allocated could be thought of.