Business World

McDonald’s Corp. flips to fresh beef in 3,500 US restaurant­s

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OAK BROOK, ILLINOIS — McDonald’s Corp. said on Tuesday that it had begun serving fresh beef Quarter Pounders and other premium burgers at about 3,500 restaurant­s in the United States, and most of its other US locations will follow suit by May.

The fresh beef expansion comes as McDonald’s is improving food quality and increasing menu variety to counter competitio­n from older rivals such as Wendy’s Co. as well as more premium chains like Chick- fil- A, InN- Out and Shake Shack, Inc.

One year ago, McDonald’s announced plans to sell some of its burgers made with fresh — rather than frozen — beef in the majority of its roughly 14,000 US restaurant­s by mid- 2018 to produce juicier burgers.

McDonald’s US President Chris Kempczinsk­i called the switch to fresh beef Quarter Pounders the most significan­t change to restaurant operations since the company began offering allday breakfast in 2015.

The project has required changes by kitchen crews and suppliers.

“Our suppliers have invested about $60 million updating their supply chain to be able to make this conversion from frozen to fresh,” Kempczinsk­i told reporters. Franchisee­s were initially concerned about what cooking made- to- order burgers would do to service time, he later told Reuters.

“If it slows down the drive- through, that’s the critical part of our business. And so we just had to spend a lot of time really making sure that as we were cooking only when someone ordered, we’d figured out a way to do it that wasn’t going to slow down service time,” he said.

Fresh beef Quarter Pounders and premium “signature crafted” burgers are now available in restaurant­s in Miami, Orlando and Nashville. Over the next month, the rollout will add Los Angeles, Houston and San Francisco.

McDonald’s also announced on Tuesday a new premium burger, called Garlic White Cheddar and said it would release more “signature crafted” sandwiches later in the year.

Chief Executive Steve Easterbroo­k has made many changes since taking the helm three years ago, including eliminatin­g artificial preservati­ves from the company’s popular McNuggets, slimming down its Happy Meal menus for children and reversing traffic declines with help from all-day breakfast.

The new processes and technology have created anxiety for some franchisee­s who are grappling with a tight labor market.

“There’s no question that we’re being asked to do more, faster than we previously were. But if we don’t stay ahead, particular­ly on technology, I believe that would be a mistake,” said Joe Jasper, who owns 20 McDonald’s franchises in Texas. —

 ??  ?? MCDONALD’S US President Chris Kempczinsk­i speaks about fresh beef expansion at a McDonald’s event in Oak Brook, Illinois, United States on March 5.
MCDONALD’S US President Chris Kempczinsk­i speaks about fresh beef expansion at a McDonald’s event in Oak Brook, Illinois, United States on March 5.

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