Rabu, 10 September 2014

McBrunch Frontier: McDonald's Eyes Weekend Mornings

McDonald’s (MCD) might want to put Egg McMuffins into the national brunch discussion. The burger giant has applied to trademark “McBrunch,” signaling yet another possible approach to boost its late-morning business on the weekends.

Image submitted to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. The application does not claim any particular font, style, size, or color.Image submitted to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. The application does not claim any particular font, style, size, or color.

Breakfast is the quickest-growing time of day for fast-food sales, and McDonald’s has been fighting to keep its lead against an increasingly crowded field of morning competitors. More robust food offerings from Starbucks (SBUX) now vie with a new morning menu at Taco Bell and better coffee from Chick-fil-A on the breakfast battlefield.

While brunch could attract more morning traffic to McDonald’s, a fast-food restaurant is not an obvious fit for a brunch gathering—often thought of as a leisurely, possibly hungover meal, perhaps accompanied by Bloody Marys unlikely to appear on a McDonald’s menu. Earlier this year, one New York McDonald’s even called police to remove seniors who spent hours sipping coffee with their friends. The restaurant manager later decided to ease the 20-minute time limit during off-peak hours, and the seniors agreed to give up their seats to other customers during peak time.

Fast-food brunch has been tried before. Burger King (BKW) briefly tested a brunch menu that included nonalcoholic mimosas—orange juice mixed with Sprite—and a ciabatta breakfast sandwich. It was offered in only a few markets in Massachusetts and Florida during regular breakfast hours, according to a report in BurgerBusiness, and the brunch experiment never went national.

Operational complications currently hold back McDonald’s from offering breakfast all day, executives have said, but perhaps a flirtation with McBrunch could signal an extension of breakfast hours. The chain is already serving some breakfast items on a “McDonald’s After Midnight” menu between midnight and 4 a.m. at certain locations.

The company won’t say what it’s up to. “We routinely file intent to use trademark applications as a regular course of business,” said McDonald’s spokeswoman Lisa McComb in an e-mail. “We can’t share details at this time as to how the trademarks may or may not be used.” Just seeking to trademark a term might mean nothing in the end: Applebee’s (DIN), for instance, recently applied to trademark “No Tech Tuesday” but denies any plans to ban restaurant customers from using their devices on Tuesdays. A brunch-ified McMuffin might likewise just be an idea for McDonald’s to chew over.

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