Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Ikea to make over stores’ menus

- By Sarah Halzack Washington Post

When Ikea executives ponder changes to the restaurant­s within their sprawling furniture stores, they think about an imaginary customer they’ve dubbed Sarah. Sarah is the average Ikea diner: She’s in her 30s, gets a moderate amount of exercise, eats three meals and two snacks aday.

And when legions of Sarahs set foot in Ikea’s restaurant­s this spring, they will be sitting in a redesigned setting and eating off a recently refreshed menu that Ikea hopes will help it unlock more sales from its dining business.

While for decades it has been part of the Ikea experience to get your new couch with a side of Swedish meatballs, Ikea’s U.S. president Lars Petersson said in a recent interview that “Ikea food is becoming a core business” for the privatelyh­eld, Sweden-based company.

In the most recent fiscal year, the food division — which also includes sales of take-home, packaged food items such as chocolates, jams and sauces— saw sales surge 8 percent in the U.S. over the previous year, outpacing the 4.5 percent sales growth seen at its U.S. stores open more than a year. Foot traffic to Ikea’s restaurant­s is also “trending better” than foot traffic to the furnishing­s areas of their stores, according to Peter Ho, a product developer in Ikea’s food division.

In other words, there are a significan­t number of customers who come to Ikea just to eat, and the chain is trying to figure out how to cater to them better.

That’s why all 41 of its stateside stores — including stores in Sunrise and Miami — are getting restaurant makeovers in the next several months. Instead of the current setup, which is a spare, open space, the goal is to create three zones for different types of diners. One area will be outfitted with high tables and barstools suited for scarfing down a quick bite. A second will aim to be family-friend-

ly, with activities for kids and tables for their parents to dine nearby. The third area they call “Fika,” which is a Swedish word for a coffee break that involves socializin­g. As the name suggests, the space is meant to offer something of a coffee house vibe: Cushy chairs and couches that are changed out several times a year to create a homey, seasonal spot where you’d feel comfortabl­e lingering and chatting with friends. (And that might also inspire you to buy the furniture you’re sitting on, which will always be pulled directly from Ikea’s current line-up.)

Ikea’s strategy is part of a broader push in casual and quick-service dining that is likely to become more competitiv­e by leveraging existing restaurant space for different meals, or “day parts,” as they’re known in industry speak. Sit-down dining chain Olive Garden, for example, is pushing hard to make carry-out a bigger part of its business, while Starbucks is trying to win more of your lunch dollars instead of just being your go-to place for coffee.

Ikea’s move to change up the look and feel of its dining areas follows an announceme­nt last year that it would tweak its protein offerings to reflect consumers’ changing dietary preference­s. For starters, there’s now a veggie version of the famous meatball, which contains chickpeas, kale, peas and other ingredient­s. They’ve also added a chicken version of the meatball, which they say is produced in a more sustainabl­e way than their traditiona­l meatball.

“The public today definitely wants to know where their food is coming from,” Ho said.

Ikea will be trumpeting those efforts in the redesigned restaurant­s, with new graphics and menu boards that tout, for example, its decision to move last year to sourcing all of its fish from suppliers that use sustainabl­e fishing practices.

Here, too, Ikea’s willingnes­s to riff on its signature menu item reflects just how differentl­y diners in America and elsewhere are thinking about food. This is why you’ve seen everyone from McDonald’s to Panera Bread making announceme­nts in the last year about changing up their supply chains and trying to create more transparen­cy around howthey make their food.

It makes sense that Ikea is investing in its food business at this particular moment: In 2015, the Commerce Department reported that restaurant­s saw 8.1percent sales growth.

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