Fortune | FORTUNE 08月10日
Sweetgreen’s CEO is beefing up protein portion sizes because corporate America is demanding more from $16 sad desk salads
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快餐沙拉连锁品牌Sweetgreen为应对客流下滑和消费者对高价沙拉兴趣减退的局面,正在进行菜单调整。公司CEO表示,将增加25%的鸡肉和豆腐份量,并升级蛋白质配方,同时推出会员特惠沙拉,价格低至13美元。此举旨在回应消费者习惯的改变,特别是公司午餐订单的减少以及对更高性价比的需求。尽管面临销售下滑和股价下跌的挑战,Sweetgreen仍在推进扩张计划,并寄望于调整后的菜单能吸引更多注重健康又需要饱足感的消费者。

📈 **客流与销售下滑,股价承压**:Sweetgreen近期面临严峻挑战,同店销售额下滑高达7.6%,客户流量下降10.1%。公司已连续两个季度下调年度营收预期,平均售价16美元的沙拉难以吸引预算紧张的消费者,导致股价自年初以来下跌超过70%。

💼 **消费习惯改变,传统优势不再**:疫情后,企业工作模式永久改变,依赖公司午餐订单的城市业务受到重创。混合办公模式和写字楼入驻率不稳定,使得曾经是Sweetgreen主要客户群的办公室职员大幅减少,企业午餐订单成为历史。

💰 **消费者更注重性价比, protein成新宠**:在通胀和经济不确定性影响下,即使是富裕客户也开始仔细衡量开支。Sweetgreen的消费者调查显示,顾客更倾向于需要更多蛋白质的“正餐”,认为这更能体现餐食的价值,尤其是在晚餐时段。

🍽️ **菜单调整与新品推出,力求吸引新客群**:为应对市场变化,Sweetgreen推出了25%的更大份鸡肉和豆腐,并升级了蛋白质配方。近期推出的“protein plates”(如牛排、鸡肉或豆腐搭配谷物)在晚餐时段表现强劲,占晚餐订单近20%,显示出更丰盛的餐食是赢得丢失收入的关键。

🚀 **扩张与效率提升并行,但市场仍存疑虑**:尽管业绩不佳,Sweetgreen仍在积极扩张,计划今年新开至少40家门店,并引入自动化以降低劳动力成本。公司聘请了前Chipotle高管担任COO,以解决从份量到速度等一系列运营问题。然而,市场对其在高价值餐饮环境中能否持续盈利仍持怀疑态度。

Faced with slumping lunch traffic from downtown offices and waning consumer interest in pricey salads, Sweetgreen CEO Jonathan Neman is leaning into America’s 2020s-era protein craze. The fast-casual salad chain announced significant changes to its menu this summer—a response to shifting habits in corporate America, where employees are less likely to order delivery salads for solitary desk lunches, and are demanding more value for their dollar.

Sweetgreen’s turnaround strategy includes 25% bigger portions of chicken and tofu, recipe upgrades for proteins like chicken and salmon, and member deals on salads as cheap as $13. The decision follows months of disappointing sales: Same-store sales have dropped by as much as 7.6% this summer, with a reported 10.1% plunge in customer traffic. Sweetgreen also cut its annual outlook for the second quarter in a row as it struggles to keep budget-strained diners interested in salads averaging $16 a bowl.

Same-store sales are now expected to decline 4%-6% for 2025, a stark reversal from previous hopes for flat performance. It was a bruising second quarter for the salad chain, and investors responded by sending Sweetgreen shares plunging more than 25% to their lowest levels since 2023. The stock has lost more than 70% of its value since January, and is trading well below its IPO price of $28.

“So I think it’s pretty obvious that the consumer is not in a great place overall,” Neman said Thursday in the company’s second-quarter earnings call. Several factors have converged to force Sweetgreen’s hand. The biggest: Working habits have permanently changed since the pandemic. Corporate lunch orders, once the backbone of Sweetgreen’s urban business, have slumped as office occupancy fluctuates and hybrid schedules persist. Affluent customers, long willing to shell out for digitally ordered salads, are now scrutinizing every expense as inflation pinches and economic uncertainty lingers.

Business districts, once Sweetgreen’s prime locations, are no longer packed with lunchtime regulars. Instead, urban outlets now depend on local traffic and dinner orders—which require more substantial fare than a bowl of greens. Sweetgreen’s own consumer surveys reveal guests want more protein—the gravitational center of a “meal” that feels worth its ticket price.

Slowing growth and mounting losses

For the quarter ended June 29, Sweetgreen reported total revenue of $185.6 million, barely up from $184.6 million a year prior—an increase of just 0.5% and well below Wall Street expectations of $191.73 million. Traffic sharply deteriorated even as Sweetgreen raised menu prices, with executives citing a “more cautious consumer environment” and headwinds in urban markets where office lunch traffic remains weak.

Restaurant-level profit margin dropped to 18.9% from 22.5% a year prior, squeezed by higher food costs (notably new tariffs on packaging) and rising labor costs. The company posted a net loss of $23.2 million, widening from a $14.5 million loss in the prior year, and reported adjusted EBITDA of $6.4 million—down by nearly half from last year’s $12.4 million.

Neman cited drag from the revamped SG Rewards loyalty program, which prompted fewer repeat visits; only one-third of Sweetgreen restaurants currently meet operational standards for speed and consistency. The firm recently hired former Chipotle executive Jason Cochran as COO to address issues ranging from portioning to speed across both digital and in-store channels. Sweetgreen is also closing two underperforming locations and recording a $5.3 million impairment charge.

Management cautiously optimistic, but confidence shaken

Despite the rocky performance, Sweetgreen is forging ahead with expansion, opening nine new restaurants (including four Infinite Kitchens) in Q2, and plans for at least 40 new openings this year—many featuring automation and lower labor requirements. Neman and CFO Mitch Reback stressed “actions taken are already showing positive results,” pointing to steady improvement in guest frequency from the revamped loyalty program and enthusiasm for seasonal menu items.

Still, the street remains skeptical. Sweetgreen’s stumbles have reinforced doubts about whether premium salad chains can thrive in today’s value-conscious dining environment, especially as hybrid work saps the desk-lunch crowd and consumers search for more affordable options.

Feedback on the new protein portions has been swift: Guest satisfaction improved by 30% following the July rollout of larger chicken and tofu servings. In recent weeks, Sweetgreen has expanded its repertoire with “protein plates”—larger servings of steak, chicken, or tofu over grains, aimed at winning dinner traffic and meeting customer demand for heartier offerings.

When Sweetgreen first tested steak protein plates in Boston, the item accounted for nearly 20% of dinner orders—a sign that more substantial meals may be a key to capturing lost revenue from desk salads. “We need to meet people where they are. For us, it’s about healthier options that are still filling,” Neman said. Steak is sourced from grass-fed, regenerative farms to keep Sweetgreen’s sustainability ethos intact.

Even as Sweetgreen tweaks its menu, reviews and ratings remain mixed. Some loyalists grumbled for months about skimpy chicken portions. Reddit threads catalog the question of whether portions are getting smaller for the $16 bowl, and company executives acknowledge that consistency remains a concern.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

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Sweetgreen 快餐沙拉 菜单调整 消费者行为 蛋白质
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