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Jay Nargundkar's avatar

Spot on, Professor. Really interesting to see how the pivot to operational efficiency drove Chipotle's profit margins—but marked a fundamental identity change, embracing the "fast food" role.

I came to a similar prediction about Starbucks recently, too: "They’ll fully cede the expensive, niche end of the market, but in retreating from having comfy cafes at which to sit and linger, they’ll have lower costs, and be able to operate and run in even smaller store footprints than currently." (https://yallstreet.substack.com/p/mermaid-misfiring)

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Josh's avatar

Great post. More marketers should consider how operational efficiency can be a product feature. An old but great example is how Dell’s ability to fill made to order PCs within ~3 days in the 1990s let them compete with retail.

My only small quibble is that I’m not sure that the “third space” experience and operational efficiency are in conflict for Starbucks. The burden of filling mobile orders has really hurt the in-store experience. I suspect that they’ll figure out how to better meet the requirements of mobile order customers and better segregate the “factory” feel of that process from what it feels like in the store. I suspect that the in store experience is still critical to new customer acquisition and important to profitable growth.

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