Changing Tastes Blamed for Slide at McDonald’s
By Stephanie Strom in the New York
Times
A week after installing a new chief
executive, McDonald’s announced on Monday that sales continued to fall in
February.
The company said its sales in stores
open at least a year fell by a startling 4 percent in the United States and by
1.7 percent globally.
“Consumer needs and preferences have
changed, and McDonald’s current performance reflects the urgent need to evolve
with today’s consumers, reset strategic priorities and restore business
momentum,” the company said in a statement.
Same-store sales have declined more
than Wall Street predicted for more than a year in the United States, the
company’s largest market, and it blamed “aggressive competitive activity” for
the latest sharp shortfall.
The company tried to attract
customers in February with a marketing program called “Pay With Lovin’,” a
promotion that gave some customers free food. But consumers — and McDonald’s
franchisees — were lukewarm about it. Easterbrook, a British national who
became chief executive on March 1, held a sort of pep rally
in Las Vegas last week for United States franchise holders. He laid out plans
for a turnaround that includes improving the company’s food and marketing
programs.
Same-store sales in Europe rose
slightly, while they were off more than 4 percent in the region encompassing
Asia, the Middle East and Africa. The company has struggled with supply issues
in Asia, after a food safety scandal
hit its meat supplier in Asia and delays at West Coast ports held up shipments
of potatoes.
Poster’s comments:
1) Plan B is
that the “Company” is doing everything OK, but times are just beginning to get
too hard to even routinely eat at McDonalds…..for so many.
2) How Golden
Rule are you if hard times should fall upon us?
For example, during the Great Depression, one out of four could not get
jobs, period; and they and their Families went hungry as a result all too
often.
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