HOME / moneybox: Commentary about business and finance.

Too Much BeefWhy Arby's is so low on the restaurant food chain.

Arby's restaurant. Click image to expand.Some companies came through the recently ended recession with flying colors. In the fast-food realm, we've argued, McDonald's was a victor. But in a time of pinched consumer spending, business has frequently been a zero-sum game. In every sector, it seems, if there's a winner, there's got to be a loser. And in the fast-food industry, it sure looks like Arby's has been one of the losers of this recession.

Arby's was started in Ohio in the 1960s. The name is, of course, a play on roast beef, and on the names of the founding Raffel brothers. (The conceit of this ad in the early 1980s, that Arby's stands for "America's Roast Beef, Yes Sir!" never really caught on.) In the 1990s, the company was acquired by Triarc, the investment vehicle of takeover artist Nelson Peltz. And in 2005, Triarc acquired the largest Arby's franchisee. Today, there are more than 3,700 stores, with ownership split between the company (1,165) and franchisees (2,574). Arby's is heavily concentrated in the Midwest. In 2007, its three largest states by number of restaurants were Ohio (291), Michigan (196), and Indiana (181).

Like the Midwest, Arby's seemed to fall into recession before the rest of the country did. In 2007, when the economy was still expanding, sales were essentially flat, as the then-parent company's 10-K shows. Once the national slowdown took hold, however, sales began to fall sharply. Most retailers and restaurants measure progress by same-store sale growth—how much product a store that's been open more than a year is moving today compared with the year before. For the last seven quarters, same-store sales have slumped at Arby's: down 1.6 percent in the first quarter of 2008, 3.2 percent in the second quarter, 5 percent in the 2008 third quarter, and 8.5 percent in the 2008 fourth quarter. Things have gotten worse this year, falling 8.7 percent and 6.9 percent in the first and second quarters, respectively. Last week, the company reported third-quarter sales. And in a period in which the economy was expanding, Arby's turned in its worst performance in recent memory. Same-store sales were off 9 percent from the year before, and operating margins at the outlets owned by the company fell sharply. To a degree, Arby's poor performance has been masked by Triarc's smart 2008 move to engineer a merger with Wendy's, which has a better brand image and has put up better results. At Wendy's, which is twice the size of Arby's, same-store sales at franchisee-owned restaurants actually rose in the third quarter. (Here's a chart of Wendy's/Arby's stock compared with McDonald's and the S&P 500 over the last two years).

What gives? At some chains, a reduction in same-store sales can be chalked up to discounting. If the prices of your offerings are falling, or people are spending less—if they're just getting the french dip and forgoing the potato bites loaded with bacon (though, really, if you're going down this road, you might as well go whole hog)—then stable traffic would still lead to sales reductions. And Arby's is clearly doing some discounting. On Saturdays and Sundays, you can get five regular roast beef sandwiches for $5.

But Arby's hasn't done much to break away from the crowd. Clearly, it has been laboring in a difficult environment. Its operations are concentrated in economically depressed areas. The chain wasn't exactly thriving before the recession. It can't compete with the big boys (or perhaps even with Big Boy) when it comes to brand awareness, presence, or advertising dollars. And now it's the junior partner in Wendy's/Arby's. But the chain doesn't seem to have taken the types of actions that other, more successful, chains have. While it does offer turkey sandwiches on something approximating wheat bread, Arby's doesn't seem to have made much of a nod to concerns about healthy eating and nutrition, a la the McDonald's salads. I can't recall a memorable recent Arby's ad campaign. The chain lacks the killer non-meat app—McDonald's french fries, Burger King's milkshakes—that bolsters margins and ropes in non-carnivores.

Perhaps most significantly, the meat of the business isn't particularly good. On Friday, I stopped into an Arby's for the first time this millennium. It was clean, and I noticed an array of products beyond the bare-bones menu I recall from my Midwestern youth. Moneybox may be a food snob, but he is a nondiscriminating connoisseur of street food and greasy fare who still makes the occasional run for the border at Taco Bell. (Don't tell Mrs. Moneybox.) But even I had difficulty completing the reporting for this assignment. Forget about salads and vegetables. As I scoured the menu—the gyro, the french dip, the patty melt—I had difficulty identifying anything that had gone through less processing than uranium. A few bites of a roast beef sandwich slathered with goopy cheddar sauce, and I was done. On the food chain, the thinly sliced beef is about as far from Boar's Head deli meat as Boar's Head oven-roasted ham is from the vaunted jamón Iberico.

Print This ArticlePRINTEmail to a FriendE-MAILShare This ArticleRECOMMEND...Get Slate RSS FeedsRSS
Daniel Gross is the Moneybox columnist for Slate and the business columnist for Newsweek. You can e-mail him at and follow him on Twitter. His latest book, Dumb Money: How Our Greatest Financial Minds Bankrupted the Nation, has just been published in paperback.
Photograph of an Arby's by Tim Boyle/Getty Images.
COMMENTS

All it needs is an update and refocus. I think that the problem with Arby's is that it is a bit too dowdy and slow. They have a lot of older restaurants that aren't in the best of shape and have become quite grimy. I'm not sure about the newer places, though. The one that I went to most often was an older one and it recently closed.

Also, I think that they lost focus. There are so many extraneous items on the menu that some people take forever to make up their minds when ordering. Egg rolls, jalopeno poppers, and mozzarella sticks are really off-base. Concentrate on roast beef and maybe have a few chicken or turkey sandwiches and fries (keep the curly fries and potato cakes). Get real brewed iced tea (dump that syrupy crap from the machine). The drinks need to be self-serve and free refills. No point wasting people's time for a quarter. The turnovers and shakes can stay. Dump the cinnamon rolls.

Make the restaurants open, bright, and airy. Take a cue from Chipotle here with exposed ductwork, simple furnishings, and interesting background music. Service needs to be quick, efficient, and friendly in that order. Modernize the logo so that the 10-gallon hat is less prominent. People think that it is a fast food version of Longhorn Steakhouse (yuck!).

-- eBob1969
(To reply,
click here)

I hope Arby's succeeds, because it represents a lot of jobs, and even mostly low-paying jobs count for something in our dead-end phoney baloney economy.

That said, their food is only so-so at best, and the cheese goo is bad beyond words. They need to revamp 70 or 80 or even 90 percent of their menu, and then advertise to let people know they've done so. They could hold on to a small portion of their better-performing older offerings as a "retro" menu, so as to not alienate their current customers.

For example, I still like the "Jamocha" shakes.

-- Hugo
(To reply,
click here)

They haven't been a consideration of mine since they dropped the 5 for $5 Beef and Cheddar deal they used to offer.

In other words, they are just way overpriced for the taste of their food. They went crazy with the fancy sandwiches when their original idea was just fine and used to be better tasting. I presume that's due to some quality loss to save money. Never do that when in the food biz.

I don't have 9 dollars to spend on fast food. Especially when it's so under par in comparison on how it used to be.

-- foobar
(To reply,
click here)

One big problem with Arby's not mentioned is that they don't cater to kids at all. I actually like Arby's as compared to other fast food joints. But they don't really do kids meals like the other places do and they are comparatively more expensive.

Which is fine, but I never go there when my kids are with me. And when it is just my wife and I w/out the kids we're not going to go to Arby's or any other fast food place, we'll go to a real restaurant. So I think Arby's is in this middle ground where it is too good for parents looking for something fast with the kids, but certainly not good enough for a night out on the town.

-- A Dude
(To reply,
click here)

What did you think of this article?
Join The Fray: Our Reader Discussion Forum
POST A MESSAGE | READ MESSAGES
TODAY'S PICTURES
TODAY'S CARTOONS
TODAY'S DOONESBURY
TODAY'S VIDEO
World AIDS Day.2/091201_TP.jpg
Cartoonists' take on entertainment.10/091201_TC.jpg
The alpha and the omega.67/091201_TD.jpg