Tuesday, November 4, 2014

The Global Business Strategy of McDonald



McDonald's Corporation


The McDonald's Corporation is the world's largest chain of hamburger fast food restaurants, serving around 68 million customers daily in 118 countries. Headquartered in the United States, the company began in 1940 as a barbecue restaurant operated by Richard and Maurice McDonald; in 1948 they reorganized their business as a hamburger stand using production line principles. Businessman Ray Kroc joined the company as a franchise agent in 1955. He subsequently purchased the chain from the McDonald brothers and oversaw its worldwide growth.
A McDonald's restaurant is operated by a franchisee, an affiliate, or the corporation itself. McDonald's Corporation revenues come from the rent, royalties, and fees paid by the franchisees, as well as sales in company-operated restaurants. In 2012, McDonald's Corporation had annual revenues of $27.5 billion, and profits of $5.5 billion.
McDonald's primarily sells hamburgers, cheeseburgers, chicken, french fries, breakfast items, soft drinks, milkshakes, and desserts. In response to changing consumer tastes, the company has expanded its menu to include salads, fish, wraps, smoothies, and fruit.
McDonald's restaurants are found in 118 countries and territories around the world and serve 68 million customers each day. McDonald's operates over 32,000 restaurants worldwide, employing more than 1.7 million people. The company also operates other restaurant brands, such as Piles Café.
Focusing on its core brand, McDonald's began divesting itself of other chains it had acquired during the 1990s. The company owned a majority stake in Chipotle Mexican Grill until October 2006, when McDonald's fully divested from Chipotle through a stock exchange. Until December 2003, it also owned Donatos Pizza. On August 27, 2007, McDonald's sold Boston Market to Sun Capital Partners.
Notably, McDonald's has increased shareholder dividends for 25 consecutive years, making it one of the S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats. In October 2012, its monthly sales fell for the first time in nine years.

BUSINESS STRATEGIES ADOPTED BY MC DONALD

MCD has diversified its locations by operating over 32,500 restaurants in 118 countries, which   decreases the company’s exposure to the intensely competitive fast food industry in the United    States. Also, MCD serves an average of 68 million consumers each day. This per day figure has increased by $14 million (30%) since 2001 and $2 million over the past year. 
MCD currently divides its revenues into four segments: the United States, Europe, the APMEA (Asia, Pacific, Middle East, and Africa segment), and other countries (i.e. Canada and Latin America and corporate sales).  Almost 65% of MCD sales are derived internationally. MCD focuses both on penetrating emerging markets and expanding in developed markets.
*

SOURCE: McDonalds ANNUAL REPORT 2012

But just being McDonald's isn't enough — it's doing a lot, domestically and globally, to stay ahead. Here are ten strategies that are keeping McDonald's barreling forward:

§  Focusing heavily on emerging markets
McDonald's may seem like it's already everywhere, but it hasn't quite saturated the world yet. Over the past few years, McDonald's has made a heavy push toward emerging markets. And not just trendy markets like China and India, but places previously devoid of the Golden Arches, like some African nations. Sales are up 8.1% from last year in Asia/Pacific, Africa and the Middle East. Still, China is McDonald's most important international front, where it's battling Yum brands whole heartedly. It plans to have a whopping 2,000 stores there by 2013.

§  McCafé has been a big win
The McCafé has been demolishing expectations ever since the company started revving up its marketing machine for it in 2002. Now, there are 1,300 McCafé's worldwide in dozens of countries, and it just keeps growing. Its latest moves have been to Ukraine, along with a national rollout in Canada. The McCafé menu has been growing as well, adding non-coffee items like smoothies over the past couple years.

§  Offering a wider variety of food to attract more segments
It's not just snack foods and desserts that it's expanding into — there's a whole lot more. McDonald's is trying to get more consumer segments to chomp up its offerings by expanding non-traditional menu items, while keeping its core base of burgers-and-fries eaters. Many of the new items help combat McDonald's ever-present negative image of unhealthiness, though it will likely never shake it fully. For instance, oatmeal has been a big hit for McDonald's, serving as a replacement for high-calorie breakfast sandwiches. Additional types of salads have worked too, for people looking for a somewhat healthier option.

§  Delivering food to customers in places that demand it
Though not traditional in the US, McDonald's delivers in many markets around the world, and the company cites it as one of the reasons it has been so successful in those markets. Delivery is a common practice, even for fancy restaurants, in many Asian and Middle Eastern cities, so McDonald's is just meeting the cultural norms of its surroundings.

§  Making its stores more attractive to get customers in
McDonald's is improving its physical locations to make them more appealing to customers, and it seems to be working. In China, it's trying out a "Less is More" concept design, which goes with softer colors and cushioned seats. Also, over 95% of McDonald's locations have extended their hours now, and it has several thousand stores that are open 24/7. Free Wi-Fi is now available in McDonald's restaurants across the world, and lately it has made a big push to get flat screen TVs in the stores. It's even starting up its own TV channel with original programming, called McTV.

§  Increasing its offering of snack items
Americans love to snack on stuff, and McDonald's has recognized that demand and answered with a plethora of new products. Smaller items like wraps, along with an expansion into desserts (which it plans to ramp up soon), have made their way onto the menu and have done well.

§  Shortening its menu cycle
The most prominent example of this is the McRib, making an unprecedented second national appearance in two years. It took front and center this fall and was incredibly successful, driving a 4.9% gain in same store sales. Special edition McFlurries have been in and out of menus too, along with limited time smoothies. This sort of menu cycle is a move toward a more European model, which swaps out new menu items every six-to-eight weeks, reports Nation's Restaurant News.

§  Importing more of its successful niche products internationally
McDonald's has an incredible variety of culture-specific food items across the planet, and most wouldn't stand a chance internationally. But some are winners, and the company has started to test them out in other markets. One example is Australia's Chicken McBites (think popcorn chicken), which are now being tested in Detroit, Michigan. Then there are full-size wraps, common in Europe, which are being tested in new markets like the U.K. They have so many of these products that some are bound to be hits, it just has to find the correct area to expand them to.

§  Expanding its dollar menu to breakfast
McDonald's fired up a breakfast dollar menu in 2010 as the economy continued to slump, which supplemented its existing dollar menu for its usual fare. It has been working well thus far, capitalizing on Americans' attraction to the super-cheap in times like these. But even before that, its breakfast business was growing, just at a lower rate than normal. Competitors like Burger King and Dunkin' Donuts have made their own types of dollar menu, but nobody has had the widespread success that McDonald's has enjoyed.

§  And it hasn't been scared to take anybody on
Many of these expansions drew looks from brand new competitors, because McDonald's was encroaching on their territory. In most cases, McDonald's leveraged its size and brand to attack head on. McCafé is the most obvious example, and it has performed admirably against Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts. Its upcoming expansion into desserts is likely to concern Dunkin' even more, along with niche dessert chains like Dairy Queen. But there's plenty of risk in doing this. As it opens itself to more fronts than ever, it has more big, powerful brands breathing down its neck, and even more complexity to worry about in its internal operations.

The new strategy
In 2003 McDonald’s switched to generating more sales from its existing restaurants. In 2013 around 90% of the company’s growth is expected to come from incremental sales at its existing restaurants. Capital expenditures for new restaurants decreased $544 million in 2013 because the company opened fewer restaurants and focused on growing sales at existing restaurants including reinvestment initiatives such as restaurant reimaging in several markets around the world.

  Source: Company’s Financial Report 2012
Using the 7P’s of marketing mix, McDonald earned business success at every part of the globe.

1.    Product
     McDonald’s strives to offer a standardized service worldwide. However, the company is embedded with an ‘entrepreneurial spirit’ giving franchisees some local control and creativity, providing the service offering is of a high standard. Some of the most famous products including the Fillet o’ Fish, the Egg McMuffin and the Big Mac were created through franchisee innovation. Franchisees are given autonomy to adapt the products whilst the corporation maintains a high degree of standardization through quality control. The majority of well-known products are usually offered in all markets unless they do not suit local customs and religion. For instance, Big Macs are not sold in Indian outlets as the population is primarily Hindu. However, even ‘iconic’ products are adjusted to local taste such as providing spicier food in most Asian countries, allowing the company to overcome a variety of cross-cultural barriers.

2.    Price
     McDonald’s has positioned itself as a fast-food outlet offering low-cost food and drink. The affordable menu has been adapted worldwide whilst maintaining their core goal of quality assurance. Ongoing innovation has allowed new pricing strategies such as the ‘Dollar Menu’ or its equivalent ‘Saver menu’ in the UK. In response to increasing food costs, McDonald’s opted to increase prices by less than 1%, adopting the change gradually to the menu in order to retain price-sensitive customers (Lockyer, 2011).

3.     Place (International Distribution and Supply Chain)
     Although McDonald’s product offerings differ between countries, they operate a standardized global supply chain. This lean operation is 100% outsourced with no back-up system. The chain comprises of two tiers. Tier 2 suppliers are primarily food producers, whilst Tier 1 suppliers are processors. For example, a Tier 2 potato farm supplies a Tier 1 processing firm who turn the potatoes into French-fries and potato wedges. Produce is transported to distribution centers before allocation and delivery to individual restaurants. The success of the supply chain is attributed primarily to their commitment to outsourcing non-core activities to expert firms. McDonald’s supplier terms are rigorous; suppliers are expected to be accountable until the food is consumed and the end customer is satisfied. Legally-signed contracts with suppliers are not used; all deals are made on a handshake because they operate a ‘one supplier - one product’ policy and maintain long-term relationships regardless of the external environmental conditions.
     McDonald’s has 30 – 35 stock-keeping units at the supply side, creating a streamlined operation. Sole distribution partners are responsible for the entire logistics process in designated geographical areas, whether it be the daily hamburger order, or a replacement appliance. McDonald’s continuously scrutinizes these partners to ensure they are meeting goals and benchmarks to improve efficiency. The ‘pull strategy’ allows individual restaurants to place orders with distribution centers, which then re-issue orders to suppliers who only produce the quantities ordered. This means suppliers hold little surplus stock, optimizing efficiency.

4.    Promotion
     McDonald’s achieved 6th position on “Best Global Brands 2011” as a result of continuous promotional activities. The iconic “Golden Arches” are used in promotions globally. The “i’m lovin’ it” campaign, launched in 2003 used celebrity endorsement to increase their appeal to younger consumers. Justin Timberlake was used for vocals and the campaign was launched in 86 English-speaking countries and was adapted for non-English speaking countries. Recently, the “what we’re made of” campaign increased transparency and was used to fight against negative publicity regarding ingredients.

5.    People
     At McDonald’s, service employees represent the brand at the frontline where customers have their first interaction with the organization. It is important that staff give a good impression and therefore, training is of paramount importance. Employees undergo rigorous on-the-job training in customer service, food handling and preparation. In addition, McDonald’s provides opportunities for managers and would-be franchisees to develop and hone their management skills through a dedicated facility - the Hamburger University (HU). HU has campuses worldwide and provides training for employees to improve their proficiency in managing the restaurant.
     McDonald’s aim is to create a vibrant working environment for staff and managers. This creates a chain effect whereby customers are positively influenced and are more likely to return. To re-create this chain effect in different markets, the recruitment and training processes are standardized globally. McDonald’s is always on the look-out for lively team players who are trained according to guidelines.

6.    Process
     McDonald’s prepares and serves food rapidly. Strict guidelines and regulations are followed in food preparation to ensure high standards of hygiene and food safety. Customers can usually see the kitchen while being served, allowing transparency, so customers can eat in confidence. Food is mass-cooked and hot-held until service. However, due to the continual stream of customers, it does not deteriorate before consumption. To maintain its foothold as market leader, McDonald’s maintains a high degree of process standardization across all outlets to increase efficiency. This ensures that they have high standards of hygiene and food safety in all outlets.

7.    Physical Evidence
     McDonald's has a homogenous ‘look’ across their outlets from décor to staff uniform. Their global re-branding strategy furthers standardization, allowing consumers to areas, there are indoor playgrounds to satisfy customers. The company ensures that all franchisees comply with regulation regarding hygiene to maintain their reputation for cleanliness. Staff training is standardized globally to ensure customers are treated consistently.

Impact on McDonald
§  REVENUES
The Company’s revenues consist of sales by Company-operated restaurants and fees from restaurants operated by franchisees. Revenues from conventional franchised restaurants include rent and royalties based on a percent of sales along with minimum rent payments, and initial fees. Revenues from franchised restaurants that are licensed to foreign affiliates and developmental licensees include a royalty based on a percent of sales, and generally include initial fees.

Source: McDonald Annual Report 2012

Technological factors

Technological factor’s main elements are R&D, computerization, technology motivation and technological change rate. Technological movements affect expenditures, excellence, and innovation and machine made food is more hygienic. McDonald's employee’s quick service and quality food standards are the result of its high-tech operating procedure. Customized database management system and computers and smart cashiers are used in McDonald's to speed up serving and operating excellence.





McDonald's Bad and Good Effect


www.Youtube.com


BAD EFFECT

  10 Shocking Facts About McDonald's

GOOD EFFECT 

  McDonald's: Happy Meal Four Stories



BAD EFFECT
McDonald’s Actually Warns Employees of Fast Food’s Unhealthy Side Effects


A post on the McDonald’s employee resource website appears to ironically discourage individuals from consuming fast food, citing health reasons.
“Fast foods are quick, reasonably priced, and readily available alternatives to home cooking. While convenient and economical for a busy lifestyle, fast foods are typically high in calories, fat, saturated fat, sugar, and salt and may put people at risk for becoming overweight,” reads one post on the site, according to CNBC.
One post, which labels a cheeseburger and fries as an “unhealthy choice,” says “although not impossible it is more of a challenge to eat healthy when going to a fast food place.”
McDonald’s, however, defended the posts Monday and said it was taken out of context.

“Portions of this website continue to be taken entirelyout of context,” McDonald’s said in a statement, according to CNBC. “This website provides useful information from respected third-parties about many topics, among them health and wellness. It also includes information from experts about healthy eating and making balanced choices. McDonald’s agrees with this advice.”

http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/12/25/mcdonalds-warns-employees-of-fast-foods-unhealthy-side-effects/

BAD EFFECT

5 Reasons to Never Let Your Kids Eat McDonald‘s


1. Its a lie.

McDonald’s, really fast-food in general, isn’t real food. The “nugget” isn’t a part of the chicken’s anatomy, real ribs have bones (I’m looking at you McRib), and, most importantly, real food rots. Check out this McDonald’s hamburger from 1999. Yes, it’s been sitting on a shelf for 14 years. There’s not a spot of mold or a single maggot. If nature’s natural composters don’t recognize it as food, neither should you. If you feed your kids McDonald’s, you forever alter their concept of what real food looks, feels and tastes like.

2. It‘s heinously unhealthy.
There are few things that derail your health like fast-food. The average McDonald’s meal contains so much sodium, unhealthy fat, sugar and empty carbs, it’s staggering. It is the exact opposite of what any doctor or nutritionist (even the good ol’ USDA MyPlate) would consider a healthy diet. A 2004 study published in “The Lancet” found that eating fast food more than twice per week is linked to rapid weight gain, increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes, and sometimes fatal cardiovascular health problems. In fact, the processed fat in McDonald’s food (and other fast food) promotes endothelial dysfunction, which is linked to erectile dysfunction down the road. Is all of that really worth a couple of minutes without whining?

3. The company refuses to acknowledge what its food does to kids.
Sure, sure, every day we hear that McDonald’s offers a plethora of healthy choices, blah, blah, blah. It doesn’t matter. Offer as many weird, wilted salads as you want, but almost no one buys them, and certainly not kids. If McDonald’s is so healthy for kids, why doesn’t the company prove it? Instead, McDonald’s has consistently refused to assess the impact it has on children’s weight and health.
4. It hurts families.
Are you looking forward to the holidays? Planning family meals and special Christmas morning surprises? You’re lucky. For the millions of parents who have no other option but to take jobs in the fast food industry (because, you know, if they go on public assistance while looking for better work they’re called mooches), these luxuries don’t exist. In recent years, McDonald’s has urged its franchises to stay open on Christmas day. To add insult to injury, workers at company-owned restaurants didn’t receive overtime for working the holiday last year. This is on top of the frighteningly low pay, zero benefits and general exploitation.
5. Because your kids are their future.
We haven’t even begun to discuss the impact McDonald’s and other fast food chains have on the environment and agriculture (i.e. factory farming). If those issues matter to you, the last thing you should do is introduce your kids to this food. It’s no secret that one of the oldest items on the McDonald’s menu is the “Happy Meal,” a kid-sized sack of fake food accompanied by a plastic, Made in China toy. McDonald’s has and always will target children with its advertising. Why? Because kids, especially crying, screaming ones like in the NYC custody story, are very persuasive. Those commercials and toys are meant to get kids eating McDonald’s early, so that they’ll be customers for life. (Did we mention fast food has been proven to be intentionally addictive?) Once hooked, McDonald’s knows your kids will return as adults, allowing them to continue their gross, destructive, exploitative practices in perpetuity.

BAD EFFECT

McDonalds Fast Food: Toxic Ingredients Include Putty and Cosmetic Petrochemicals



Every mouthful of McDonalds meal contains a handful of chemicals that raise ‘bad’ cholesterol levels, increase diabetes risk, lower immunity, and damage DNA. In fact fast food contains so many harmful ingredients that I wouldn’t even feed it to a pet because it would be cruel.
When you go to the fast-food drive-through, you are:
paying to harm your own health;
your children’s health;
reducing your quality of life because the toxicity of eating synthetic chemicals will trigger illness;
put more money into the hands of the medical insurance companies.
Still lovin’ it?
Heard it before? Well despite the illusion of a gradual switch to a healthier menu containing salads and smoothies, McDonald’s line-up still contains nasty health-eroding chemicals: trans-fats, high levels of sugar, artificial sweeteners, petro-chemicals, and high-fructose corn syrup. The kids meals and salads also contain frightening ingredients and high levels of sugar.
Having perused their menus and nutritional information for their meals, it’s incredible what synthetic chemicals they add to salads, chicken meals, burgers, and even to their drinks. Did you know that many of their foods and drinks contain tertiary butylhydroquinone (TBHQ), a chemical preservative that is so deadly that just five grams is fatal? One gram of TBHQ can cause nausea, vomiting, ringing in the ears, delirium, a sense of suffocation, and collapse.
McDonald’s foods still contain trans-fats, in addition to a whole host of synthetic chemicals to produce a taste which they deliberately engineer to be addictive, so you spend more money with them according to investigations by Eric Schlosser in his book Fast Food Nation.
Trans Fat Lie
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration decided that a food can contain trans-fats and that the amount doesn’t have to be listed on the ingredient or nutrition list, providing the amount is not more than half a gram. Many burgers, shakes, and breakfast meals contain trans-fats. The problems with these oils is that they induce free radical damage in the body, which leads to artery damage, DNA damage, and oxidation of cholesterol, a.k.a. ‘bad cholesterol’. You are getting this with every mouthful.

Almost all foods on McDonald’s menu contain hydrogenated and partially hydrogenated oils, that are also harmful to the body because they damage your tissues and raise your ‘bad’ cholesterol. Did you know that if a food manufacturer’s food contains less than 0.5g of trans-fats then it doesn’t have to legally list trans-fats on the label?
Here is just one example of what McDonalds put in their foods. The unhealthful ingredients in McDonalds’ Chicken nuggets (straight from the McDonalds’ web site) include:
sodium phosphates;
bleached wheat flour (nutrients removed);
food starch-modified (likely genetically-modified);
dextrose (sugar);
partially hydrogenated soybean oil and cottonseed oil with mono-and diglycerides, (trans fats);
Prepared in vegetable oil (Canola oil, corn oil, soybean oil, hydrogenated soybean oil) (trans fats);
TBHQ, tertiary butylhydroquinone, a petroleium dervived product;
Dimethylpolysiloxane added as an antifoaming agent (a form of silicone used in cosmetics, and Silly Putty).
Look for yourself
Download this nutritional information chart. It’s a long PDF document of all their menu items. Find the foods you buy in the left column, and see how much trans-fats, and sugars are in them. THEN, visit McDonald’s web site, select the foods you eat, click on the nutrition link, and scroll down to the ingredients list. If you can’t pronounce any of the ingredients and don’t know what they are then is it wise to eat them? This is a choice only you can make, but give your kids a choice too.
Pay now and later
I’m not just picking on McDonald’s here. Visit the web sites of KFC, Wendy’s, and the other companies. Their foods contain the same harmful chemicals that age you and leave your wallet and body feeling empty inside within an hour of finishing the meal. Does this make sense from a financial standpoint? What about from a health perspective? If you buy fast food, you’ll pay now (with your money) and also later (with your health).
Why do I say that feeding fast food to a carnivorous pet would be cruel? Humans have a choice about what to eat, even if the choice is sometimes limited by finances, location, or time availability. When it comes to their food, pets rely on us making the best choice for them and trust that the food we put down for them is safe. If they don’t like it, they’d leave it. The sweetness, aroma, and fat content however make fast food as appealing to pets as it would to humans, and feeding them food containing toxic ingredients would be cruel in my view.


BAD EFFECT

10 Worst Effects of Fast Food

Fast food is the term given to food that can be prepared and served very quickly.Fast food can also be defined as any food that contributes little or no nutrient value to the diet, but instead provides excess calories and fat. Fast food can be a good way to save time ,but it is not the proper way for nutrition. Some of these foods that are of little nutritional value and often high in fat, sugar, and calories. Common foods include salted snack foods, gum, candy, sweet desserts, fried fast food, and carbonated beverages. Fast food may include chips, hot pies ,pasties, sandwiches, burgers, croissants, kebabs, pizzas, chicken, soups, and salads. It also includes drinks, for instance, milkshakes, and soft drinks.

Disadvantages of fast food

When you feel like eating something and think of food, the things come to mind first are the taste, odor or color. Those who have to look after their weight will think of the portion size, many others think of energy, fats, sugars, vitamins or minerals. But do you know that the food we eat may cause side effects and a list of disadvantages. We are not talking about spoiled or poor quality food. Freshly harvested or just cooked food may also cause side effects, some are serious, some are just disturbing, and some may put you into embarrassing situation. Over time, this can lead to an increased risk for illness and disease. Fast food is harmful to health. It is a cause of various diseases. Here we discus some most common disease and other side effects caused by fast food.
Obesity

10 Worst Effects of Fast Food


Obesity means having too much body fat. It is not the same as being overweight, which means weighing too much. Fast food is high in calories and sugar that contribute to increased-weight gain. Even small amount of fast food can increase your calorie intake considerably. Fast foods also replace healthy eating habits, People who consume fast foods are less likely to eat fruits, vegetables, milk etc. This change in eating habits can easily lead to obesity.

Heart Disease



Heart Diseases by Fast Food

People who eat fast-food four or more times a week, up their risk of dying from heart disease by 80 percent. Fast foods create a much higher risk of heart disease because of the high level of saturated or trans fats found in much of the food. Those fats can clog the arteries and, over time, contribute to high cholesterol levels.

Type 2 Diabetes
Fast Foods causes TYPE 2 DIABETES
Fast food has become a way of life for many busy persons seeking a fast and inexpensive alternative to cooking at home. Although they may develop type 2 diabetes, this type of diabetes is often caused by poor lifestyle choices, such as being overweight and not being physically active. There is a side effect to consuming frequent amounts of fast food ‘obesity’ which can lead to the development of diabetes.

Peptic Ulcer by fast food
A peptic ulcer, also known as PUD or peptic ulcer disease, is the most common ulcer of an area of the gastrointestinal tract that is usually acidic and thus extremely painful. For almost 100 years, doctors believed that stress, spicy foods, and alcohol caused most ulcers. Fast Foods which may causes Ulcer are Pizzas, Chips, Salted snakes etc.
fast food does not provide family members opportunity to set and eat at one place. Every one can buy and eat walking in the way, driving a vehicle and during his work in office. The satisfaction which a combine meal provide is lacking in Fast Food.

walking eating is irregular way
A healthy person need to eat at a proper time which fast food doesn’t have. Fast food can be consumed at any time or some time twice or thrice a day, while home cooked food is served at proper time which provides opportunity to take rest after eating.

Waste of Money
Fast food consumes too much money as compared to home prepared food. Low income people can hardly afford continuous use of fast food. It spends a lot of budget and is also cause of loss of healthy body.

Loss of Appetite
Normal food contains appetizer which are not properly present in fast food. Continues use of fast food may cause loss appetite, abnormal digestion and sometime food poisoning. Fast food does not satisfy all needs of stomach.
A well-balanced food contains all essential elements which are necessary for human development. Whereas fast food does not have all these elements, this type of food contains some elements in high quantity while others are absent. So, fast food does not fulfill all needs of body and sometime causes disorder.

Stress
Foods rich in fat are reason for many diseases related to heart, blood vessels, liver and many more. It also increases the level of stress. It has been observed that a rich fat meal can increase your stress level and make you at a greater level of stress in comparison to those who have a low fat meal. Certain foods and drinks act as powerful stimulants to the body and hence are a direct cause of stress. Like caffeine containing foods (coffee, tea, colas and chocolates), White flour, Salt, Saturated fats, Processed foods, such as junk foods and fast foods, contain synthetic additives – preservatives, emulsifiers, thickeners, stabilizers and flavor-enhancers. These foods are called “pseudostressors” or “sympathomimetics” .



GOOD EFFECT

McDonald's: Three Strategies To Reignite Sales Growth


“The menu you love, plus so much more,” goes the commercial in McDonald’s site. But judging from the company’s sales in recent years, consumers do not seem to express that love by heading to McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD). And Wall Street has taken noticed, with company’s stock lagging behind major equity indexes.
As we have written in previous pieces, McDonald’s developed the right business model to ride on the crest of two emerging trends. First, the baby-boomer trend — the swelling ranks of teenagers and rising numbers of women in the labor force in the 1960s, which boosted demand for the company’s fast and inexpensive menu. Second, the globalization trend — the increasing integration of world markets in the 1970s and the 1980s — which helped the company transfer the American way of life to many countries around the world.
That ride wasn’t always smooth. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the company faced all sorts of challenges to its business model among different consumer groups, and it took its toll on sales growth and equity performance.
Nonetheless, McDonald’s leadership managed to re-ignite sales growth by launching the “Fast and Convenient” campaign, a radical adjustment of the company’s product portfolio to meet emerging food industry trends; and refurbishing of McDonald’s restaurants to achieve a branded, updated, and more natural dining environment.
The “fast” and “convenient” elements of the McDonald’s concept were augmented by “healthy” and “more natural” features, adding salads, fruits, carrot sticks to the menu; and high quality coffee and healthy drinks (either through its traditional restaurants or the Cafés) which positioned the company to compete head to head with Starbucks and local cafeterias.
Now, McDonald’s challenge is far more serious, in our opinion. The two trends that have propelled the company’s growth are turning from tailwinds to headwinds. Baby-boomers are no longer the teenagers and the twenty-something they once were. They place calories and cholesterol count ahead of affordability, speed, and convenience. The same could be said to be true for a large segment of the younger, millennial generation.
McDonald’s is hardly the first place that comes to mind when thinking of a low-calorie-low-cholesterol menu. The McDonald’s name, which once was an asset for the baby-boomer market, turned into a liability.

In the meantime, the world economy hasn’t turned into a single market, but into a collection of three segments—a global, a local, and semiglobal. McDonald’s already conquered the global segment with little adaptation of its menu. But conquering the local segment can be very costly, as the company must come up with a highly localized menu which competes head to head with local restaurants.
Besides, the American image, which helped the company conquered the global segment of the world market,  may be a liability instead of an asset in expanding into the local and semiglobal segments.


So what can re-ignite the company’s growth this time around?

Here are three options:
First, change the company name. But that would certainly have its costs, as the company derives many benefits from a well-recognized global brand.  Alternatively, re-arrange the value proposition to change the image consumers have about McDonald’s — place salads and other healthy items, rather than hamburgers and sodas, in advertisements.
Second, acquire a restaurant chain that is already riding the new trends — like Chipotle Mexican Grill, Potbelly Corporation,  or The Noodle & Company — provided that one of these companies is up for sale and that McDonald’s is willing to pay a hefty premium over current market valuation.
Third, leverage the company’s core capabilities in franchising and logistics, to create two separate units– one that caters to the low-calorie-low cholesterol consumers, and another that caters to the local and semiglobal segments of the world economy.