How Domino’s plans to mitigate the cost of rising minimum wages

FAN Editor

Pizza restaurant Domino’s is relying on an existing strategy to combat minimum wage hikes in states throughout the U.S., in addition to the possibility of a potential nationwide increase under President-elect Joe Biden.

Continue Reading Below

The company engages in a strategy known as “fortressing,” which essentially means building new franchise locations in existing markets in order to better meet customer supply, reduce delivery times and ensure there is a storefront available for takeout customers.

“When we fortress and we’re closer to our customer, we deliver to their homes more quickly,” Russell Weiner, Domino’s Chief Operating Officer and President, explained during a virtual session with investors on Thursday.

Domino’s CEO Ritch Allison said fortressing is a key component to how the company plans to address rising labor costs.

“It really allows us to build that carryout business, which – while the ticket is lower on carryout – the cost to serve is significantly lower,” Allison said. “And then with delivery, the economics really are all around how many deliveries per driver, per hour we can execute and shrinking the radius of those delivery zones honestly is something that we have to do.”

Allison explained as labor costs rise to $10, $12 and $15 per hour, taking $20 worth of food 9 minutes away from a store becomes “economically very challenging.”

FLORIDA VOTERS APPROVE $15 MINIMUM WAGE HIKE 

As previously reported by FOX Business, Florida voters approved a commitment to gradually raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2026, making it the eighth state to pass such a measure.

However, President-elect Joe Biden supports a federal minimum wage of $15 per hour. It remains to be seen whether such a measure would be able to pass what is largely expected to be a divided Congress.

The federal minimum wage currently sits at $7.25.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Factbox: What Twitter said worked – and didn’t – in its U.S. election measures

3D printed ballot boxes are seen in front of a displayed Twitter logo in this illustration taken November 4, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration November 12, 2020 By Elizabeth Culliford (Reuters) – Twitter Inc on Thursday released data for the first time on the effectiveness of measures introduced to combat U.S. election […]

You May Like