Austin American-Statesman

Chipotle CEO using Taco Bell playbook

Brian Niccol takes pages from his previous strategies.

- By Leslie Patton

If imitation is the highest form of flattery, Taco Bell should be feeling pretty good.

That’s because Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. — its biggest competitor in the U.S. Mexican-inspired dining segment — is taking pages directly from its playbook as it tries to revamp its image. And no wonder: it was Chipotle’s new CEO that wrote the script during his years leading the fast-food rival.

From digital expansion to a loyalty program, Chief Executive Officer Brian Niccol is implementi­ng many of the same strategies he did at Taco Bell, and he’s hoping for similar success — but without giving up the healthier halo that Chipotle has built for itself.

“What fits into people’s lifestyle is Chipotle’s great-tasting, clean ingredient­s,” Niccol said. “You’re going to see us lean more into that.”

After struggling to bring back diners following multiple illness outbreaks, Chipotle has recently started to see better results under Niccol, who took the helm in March. The chain is investing in employees and store remodels, working on faster service times and spending to improve its advertisin­g, executives said during a call Wednesday for shareholde­rs and analysts.

“There was a general lack of customer understand­ing,” Niccol said. “Our marketing dollars had been inefficien­tly allocated.”

So Chipotle is tweaking almost everything. There’s a new marketing tagline coming later this year with new advertisin­g coming in 2019, Niccol said. The company began running national television commercial­s this spring to help bump sales in the short term. Last week, Chipotle said it would start testing new foods in New York City including chocolate milkshakes, avocado tostadas and nachos. Niccol also recently partnered with DoorDash to offer delivery service.

“We’re going to be much more digitally focused, we’re going to be much more consumer focused,” Niccol said. Niccol said he sees the potential for Chipotle to some day hit $10 billion in revenue, more than double last year’s sales.

Chipotle shares fell 6.3 percent to $428.36 in New York on Thursday, underscori­ng Niccol’s challenge.

“Management is firmly on the right path,” BTIG analyst Peter Saleh said in a note. Still, “the call was lighter on detail than we would have liked so we expect weakness in the stock today.”

The restaurant chain will begin testing a loyalty program in the second half of this year, which it expects to put in place more widely in 2019. It’s also planning to add delivery to its mobile app and expand its digital order pick-up shelf tests, and will test a new restaurant design this fall.

In the past, Chipotle has mostly stayed away from menu changes and internatio­nal expansion. As of March 31, Chipotle had more than 2,400 restaurant­s with just a handful of those overseas. It did try selling Asian food with its ShopHouse offshoot but closed that chain last year.

In the clearest sign of how Chipotle is following in Taco Bell’s footsteps, the chain announced last month it would move its headquarte­rs from Denver to Newport Beach, Calif. — just miles from Taco Bell’s head office. Chipotle said it expects charges of $115 million to $135 million in the coming quarters as it relocates. The charges will also reflect the closure of 55 to 65 poorly performing stores.

 ?? CAITLIN O’HARA / BLOOMBERG ?? Chipotle is investing in employees and store remodels, working on faster service times and spending to improve its advertisin­g, executives said Wednesday.
CAITLIN O’HARA / BLOOMBERG Chipotle is investing in employees and store remodels, working on faster service times and spending to improve its advertisin­g, executives said Wednesday.

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