Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wendy’s moves beyond in-store eating in India, plans cloud kitchens

- SARITHA RAI

Wendy’s has struck a deal with India’s Rebel Foods to open about 250 so-called cloud kitchens across the country, one of the most ambitious efforts yet to serve customers through delivery rather than the traditiona­l fast-food stores as the industry adapts to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The U.S. company is experiment­ing with a new format as the covid-19 outbreak makes many consumers unwilling or unable to visit traditiona­l stores. Cloud kitchens, which derive their name from cloud computing, are remote facilities without seating or cashiers that prepare food exclusivel­y for delivery.

Wendy’s, with nine brickand-mortar outlets in India, said it believes its cloud kitchen alliance is the largest yet in the industry. Rebel Foods, backed by Sequoia Capital and Goldman Sachs Group, is the world’s largest cloud-kitchen operator with more than 300 locations.

“India is one of our highgrowth, high-potential markets,” said Abigail Pringle, Wendy’s chief developmen­t officer, speaking via video conference from the chain’s headquarte­rs in Dublin, Ohio. “I don’t know of any other global brand that has announced this kind of significan­t multiyear, multi-unit commitment.”

As lockdowns and social distancing disrupt their business models, fast-food chains are experiment­ing with a variety of ways to adapt. With deliveries surging, many recognize that their existing stores aren’t the optimal way to meet demand and have turned to cloud kitchens, also known as ghost or dark kitchens. Chains like Chili’s, Applebee’s and Chipotle have already set up their own delivery-centric virtual locations.

Wendy’s push in India appears to be the largest cloudkitch­en outsourcin­g deal announced yet, based on the number of locations. Leading startups such as CloudKitch­ens and Virtual Kitchen, which work with a range of brands in the U.S. and abroad, have fewer than 100 sites. One fast-food operator in Thailand said it plans to open 100 cloud kitchens within five years.

Wendy’s, with 6,800 restaurant­s in 30 markets worldwide, followed rival burger chains like McDonald’s into India, opening its first restaurant in New Delhi in 2015. It plans about 150 physical stores over the next decade, in addition to the cloud kitchen push. Sierra Nevada Restaurant­s, the chain’s franchise partner, will help with both initiative­s.

“India is one of the most underpenet­rated markets on Earth” for quick-serve restaurant­s, said Jasper Reid, managing director of Sierra Nevada.

Wendy’s, once known for its “Where’s the beef?” tagline, has particular challenges in India, where the majority of citizens worship cows as sacred. Its local menu items include chicken chili, masala fries and the bestsellin­g 93-cent bun tikki, a spicy potato cutlet served between two burger buns.

Rebel Foods, co-founded by former McKinsey & Co. alum Jaydeep Barman and his INSEAD business school classmate Kallol Banerjee, helped pioneer the cloud kitchen concept. The duo operate their own restaurant brands and are expanding into outsourcin­g for chains like Wendy’s. With money from Uber Technologi­es co-founder Travis Kalanick, along with Sequoia and Goldman, the company has grown to hundreds of kitchens across countries, including India, Indonesia and the U.K.

Leveraging the fixed costs of tightly packed, centralize­d kitchens, it serves far-flung customers who have no idea

where their food is prepared. With space-saving, stacked kitchens located in low-cost sites like industrial complexes or side alleys, its model helps side-step the costs of running traditiona­l restaurant­s with seating and wait staffs.

The pandemic has accelerate­d the adoption of food delivery around the world. In the U.S., deliveries now account for more than 5.5% of Wendy’s overall business, while they’ve reached 11% in Canada.

“For generation­s, brands building a national presence relied solely on a brick-andmortar strategy and made significan­t investment­s over decades,” said Banerjee on a video conference call. Cloud kitchens are aimed at helping chains expand “at far lower levels of capital.”

 ?? (Bloomberg/Dhiraj Singh) ?? A man works in a Rebel Foods cloud kitchen in Mumbai, India.
(Bloomberg/Dhiraj Singh) A man works in a Rebel Foods cloud kitchen in Mumbai, India.

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