Bangkok Post

McDonald’s CEO Confronts a Supersized Challenge

Chris Kempczinsk­i is navigating the pandemic’s upheaval, political issues; seeking an alternativ­e to ‘the billions and billions served experience’

- HEATHER HADDON CHICAGO

McDonald’s Corp. chief executive Chris Kempczinsk­i is starting the year at the helm of one of the world’s most recognizab­le restaurant brands battling the latest coronaviru­s variant, rising inflation and workforce shortages.

Longer term, he is trying to figure out how to maintain growth at a company whose products feel outdated to many young consumers as they increasing­ly gravitate toward distinctiv­e dining experience­s rather than mass-produced cheeseburg­ers or drip coffee.

Covid-19’s global spread has upended business for McDonald’s, and for 53-year-old Mr. Kempczinsk­i, who started as CEO two years ago, just months before the pandemic emerged in the U.S.

McDonald’s franchisee­s can’t recruit enough staff to keep many U.S. restaurant­s open full-time, particular­ly at night. Costs are going up, and the company and its franchisee­s are assessing how to raise menu prices without scaring off customers, he said.

Now, the Omicron variant is driving infections to record levels in the U.S., raising further questions about how consumers will respond.

Restaurant sales slowed at the end of December, according to industry data, and chains such as Shake Shack Inc. recently said that Omicron’s impact is expected to endure at least weeks more.

Leading the Golden Arches — one of the most visible jobs in America — presents its own challenges, Mr. Kempczinsk­i said.

In response to the shooting deaths of two Chicago children in early 2021, he wrote in a text message to the city’s mayor: “The parents failed those kids which I know is something you can’t say. Even harder to fix.”

Activists obtained the text message through a public-records request and made it public last November, leading to criticism from community groups, politician­s and his own franchisee­s. Mr. Kempczinsk­i has apologized.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said he’s increasing­ly sensitive to the sometimesc­ompeting interests of investors, franchisee­s, customers, workers, activists and lawmakers.

“Invariably, people are going to disagree with you,” Mr. Kempczinsk­i said in an interview at the chain’s headquarte­rs last month. “You are getting a thousand different points of view.”

Americans’ shifting dining habits pose a bigger concern for a legacy brand like McDonald’s.

The chain grew to be the nation’s largest by domestic sales by consistent­ly serving the same burgers and fries across the country.

Now, younger consumers increasing­ly want drinks and meals that are customized to their own tastes, and the restaurant industry has become inundated by choices.

The pandemic isn’t slowing that trend, said Mr. Kempczinsk­i, who sees the restaurant sector continuing to splinter into niche brands.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i was elevated to the CEO role in a time of tumult at the 66-year-old chain.

McDonald’s fired Steve Easterbroo­k from the job in November 2019 after he admitted to having an affair with a company employee.

Mr. Easterbroo­k said he failed at times to uphold the company’s values as CEO and apologized.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i, a packaged-goods veteran brought to McDonald’s by Mr. Easterbroo­k to develop company strategy, had spent less than five years at the chain before becoming CEO, making him an outsider to many of the 2 million-plus employees who work for the sprawling company and its franchisee­s.

The pandemic further disrupted McDonald’s, forcing restaurant closures around the globe and testing its supply chain. A decline in the number of commuters hurt the company’s breakfast business, a segment it had targeted for growth.

McDonald’s sales eventually rebounded as local authoritie­s allowed drive-throughs to remain open and Americans turned to to-go food.

The chain’s global sales returned to pre-pandemic levels by March of 2021, and rose to the highest level since 2016 in the quarter that ended Sept. 30.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said the pandemic showed that McDonald’s needed a more focused menu, one built around burgers, chicken and coffee.

McDonald’s U.S. coffee sales benefited from its restaurant­s continuing to serve customers throughout the pandemic, and the chain’s chicken business has grown since the debut of new sandwiches last February, he said.

McDonald’s is facing increased competitio­n in its U.S. beef and dinnertime markets, however, as more restaurant­s offer alternativ­es to the chain’s evening to-go business through delivery, Mr. Kempczinsk­i said.

McDonald’s is also striving to keep interest in its menu, particular­ly among younger consumers who want meals that feel special, he said.

“They don’t want the ‘billions and billions served’ experience,” Mr. Kempczinsk­i said. “They want it to be a unique, one-out-of-a-billion type of experience — and we have to figure out how we can do that.”

The company is trying to generate sales without clogging up its menu, he said, as new food options rarely last years.

Since 2020, McDonald’s has promoted a series of combo meals backed by rapper Travis Scott, South Korean pop group BTS and other celebritie­s that draw on existing McDonald’s food and drinks.

The “Saweetie Meal” last August, for example, included a Big Mac, Chicken McNuggets, fries, a Sprite and “Saweetie ’N Sour” sauce, the chain’s dressing renamed for the hip-hop artist during the deal.

The promotions have helped U.S. sales vault past pre-pandemic levels, McDonald’s said.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i, who cut his teeth as a marketer at Procter & Gamble Co., said that McDonald’s can do more to improve its message to customers and make its offerings more personal.

The company recently started a loyalty program that provides discounts to customers who frequent the chain, while gaining data on their dining habits to inform its strategy.

Like other restaurant­s, McDonald’s struggles to hire and retain workers. Mr. Kempczinsk­i said the company’s U.S. locations are open 10% fewer hours, on average, than before the pandemic because of short staffing.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said he thinks a lot about how to attract talent, particular­ly corporate employees who can improve the burger company’s technologi­cal abilities.

McDonald’s needs to be a fun place to work, he said, offer jobs that people want and take care of workers.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said that is particular­ly important as unions seek to organize workers in more U.S. companies, including at Starbucks Corp.’s Buffalo, N.Y.-area stores.

“If we lose sight of that, you create the conditions for what we saw in Buffalo,” he said.

Starbucks declined to comment. It has previously said that it was listening to workers’ concerns, stepping up recruiting across the U.S. to help with workloads and increasing hourly wages and training.

Service-worker unions have long looked to organize McDonald’s locations, citing allegation­s of harassment and poor conditions during the pandemic.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said McDonald’s workers didn’t need a union, and that younger employees will eventually view unions as too restrictiv­e.

Mary Kay Henry, president of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, said that Americans are more supportive of unions than they have been in years, and that Mr. Kempczinsk­i should sit down with chain cooks and cashiers to directly hear their concerns.

“I don’t think you need a corner office to see that the best way to attract and retain workers is to listen to their experience and demands,” Ms. Henry said.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said he wants the federal government to avoid adopting policies that he said would add to McDonald’s staffing problems.

He pointed to the Biden administra­tion’s attempted federal vaccinatio­n mandate for large employers as a challenge to McDonald’s and its franchisee­s, who collective­ly amount to one of the largest U.S. private employers, with around 800,000 people working in their domestic restaurant­s.

McDonald’s has secured Covid tests for its franchisee­s to administer to workers, but, Mr. Kempczinsk­i said, restaurant owners aren’t well equipped to track the infection status of so many employees.

Instead, he argued, testing and tracking should be carried out widely by healthcare agencies or other parts of the government.

“We’re not set up to do that sort of verificati­on,” Mr. Kempczinsk­i said.

The U.S. Supreme Court blocked the mandate this past week.

An Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion spokeswoma­n said the agency found compliance with the vaccinate-or-test rule was feasible for large employers.

“The rule provides a road map for businesses to keep their workers safe,” she said.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i is also focused on the culture of McDonald’s, something he said he would improve after inheriting an environmen­t that some alleged had allowed for improper fraternizi­ng among employees.

He recruited new human-resources executives, and last year began to tie annual incentives for executives to metrics such as fostering inclusion in the company and upholding corporate values.

McDonald’s is also implementi­ng its first global employee-conduct standards across its operations. Restaurant­s will be assessed on metrics that cover discrimina­tion and harassment beginning this month.

“The CEO does set the culture and others are going to then pick up on what you choose to focus on,” he said.

After Mr. Kempczinsk­i’s texts about the Chicago children’s shooting deaths were made public in November, some McDonald’s franchisee­s said they feared anger over the issue could diminish their ability to recruit workers in an already-challengin­g labor environmen­t.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said he has acknowledg­ed the mistake and is learning from it.

He said McDonald’s business wasn’t negatively affected by the controvers­y, and that the chain’s brand perception is the best it has been in years.

Mr. Kempczinsk­i said he is spending more time planning for the future so the company is prepared for future executive departures.

The executive said he could see being CEO for some time to come, but he doesn’t count on it given that the restaurant industry is in a constant state of change.

“I’d say I’m a little bit more Zen about just everything that goes into the job,” he said.

I’m a little bit more Zen about just everything that goes into the job. CHRIS KEMPCZINSK­I CEO of McDonald’s Corp

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand