America's Picky Eaters Are Overhauling The Restaurant Industry

America's Picky Eaters Are Overhauling The Restaurant Industry

In Panera Bread CEO Ron Shaich's vision of the future, every restaurant could have "a different menu for every person."

Shaich's chain and others are bringing his vision closer to reality, making it easier for diners to order exactly to their preferences instead of picking from a rigid set of menu items like they did in the Dark Ages. That could either be a food utopia or a diner's nightmare. It just all depends on what kind of eater you are.

A growing number of diners are walking into restaurants knowing exactly what they want, thanks to an “explosion” of specific diets like vegan and gluten-free, according to David Just, a Cornell University behavioral economist who focuses on food. And for those consumers, many of whom are already flocking to build-a-meal chains like Chipotle, Panera’s foray into customization could take some of the stress out of ordering a salad-dressing-on-the-side-no croutons.

ronald shaichPanera CEO Ron Shaich.

But for diners who rely on the service traditionally provided by restaurants -- to curate a tasty meal tested by professionals so you don’t have to think about it -- the proliferation of choices could leave them feeling stressed out. Some research has found that when customers are presented with an overwhelming number of options, they’re less likely to make a purchase and are more likely to regret their choice once they do because they’re focused on how they could have chosen differently.

“When you know exactly what you want, the larger the choice set is, the more likely you are going to be able to find it,” said Barry Schwartz, a professor at Swarthmore College who focuses on food and economics and has written a book, The Paradox of Choice, on the negative aspects of having too many options. By way of example, Schwartz noted that Amazon is the perfect place to find a book if you know the exact title you’re looking for, but “if I were going to browse on Amazon, I would never read another book again.”

Panera and other restaurants that are accommodating diners with specialized demands seem to assume that most of us fall into that category, and that more of us are moving in that direction. A few fast-food chains have long sold themselves successfully as places where customers can get exactly what they want -- think Burger King’s “have it your way” campaign. And their ranks are growing. Even chains known for signature products, like McDonald’s and White Castle, are testing build-your-own-burger concepts.

panera salad
A Panera "You Pick 2" combination, which lets customers select two items from the following: half pasta, a cup of coup, half sandwich, half salad. (Jason Alley/Flickr)

About 50 percent of Panera customers already modify their orders in some way, according to Shaich. “Where you millennials are going is you want it your way,” Shaich told this millennial, who likes her sandwiches as God intended them -- exactly as they appear on the menu. “You’re demanding it, they have to adjust to it.”

And it's more than just young people demanding exactly what they want.

“What you eat has become both a major health issue and a moral issue,” Schwartz said. “All of a sudden, instead of ‘I don’t like that so much,’ now it’s become, ‘It’s irresponsible to have that,’ and that raises the stakes. It’s really like an existential crisis to order in a restaurant.”

Panera's $42 million overhaul -- which will allow diners to easily tweak their orders online or on tablets inside the store -- will be a boon to those customers. Shaich showed me how his son’s specifications for the Asian Sesame Chicken Salad popped up once he swiped his Panera “My Rewards” card. “That was a lot easier -- all with customization -- than talking to somebody,” Shaich said.

panera

For diners like Shaich’s son, who eats at Panera multiple times a week and knows what he likes and doesn't like on his salad, the customization feature is great. Talking to a machine eliminates the discomfort that can come with placing a complicated order, and minimizes the human error typically involved in making sure that those special orders come out right.

The problem though, is that most of us aren’t actually that picky, according to Schwartz. His and other experts' research shows that “it’s rare for people to know exactly what they want,” which can turn a bevy of options into “a nightmare.”

One famous experiment performed by Sheena Iyengar, a Columbia Business School professor, adds fodder to this point. Iyengar and her colleagues alternated offering six and 24 different sample flavors of jam to customers at a supermarket. What they found was that people were more likely to buy the jam when they only had six options.

This phenomenon has proven to hold true in other arenas. Research shows that the more choices people have when it comes to saving for retirement, the less likely they are to choose a plan at all.

“Choice is good, more choice is better, everyone thinks that," Schwartz said. "But when people have a lot of choice, they get paralyzed instead of liberated. They often make worse decisions, and they end up less satisfied when they make good decisions.”

As Shaich notes, “if you put me in the kitchen, I could make thousands of items.” But many of us get anxious when presented with the responsibility of putting those ingredients together, which is why we’d rather rely on the meals curated by professionals, even when presented with the option to get whatever we want.

Jennifer Harris, the director of marketing at the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, said her research found that even when fast-food eateries offered kids menus with healthier substitutions -- largely in response to demands from parents and health groups -- most parents went for the default, unhealthy option anyway.

“Giving people all of these options with their meals makes them feel like they have a lot of choice and the restaurant is providing a valuable service,” she said, which is why fast-food restaurants have increased the number of menu items they offer by 50 percent over the past three years. “But the bottom line is that most people take the main option or the default option regardless of how many choices there are.”

In other countries, the option to be picky is rarely even available, Schwartz added. “This has always been to some degree present in the U.S. and pretty much uniquely in the U.S.,” he said. “If you go to a nice restaurant in Europe and say ‘I’m going to have the salmon but ...’ the answer you get is, ‘No.’”

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