Why won’t Auntie Anne’s take a chance, and just create stand alone locations and not be glued to malls and airports?

r/

I feel Auntie Anne’s pretzels has a strong enough brand and good enough food to be a restaurant outside of malls. I dont wanna go through a mall or an airport just to eat at Auntie Anne’s.

Why do you guys think this is going on?

Would you go to Auntie Anne’s if they made stand alone stores?

Comments

  1. hopeless4luv Avatar

    There’s a bunch in Walmarts in the US too.

  2. RickKassidy Avatar

    Would people really go to a stand-alone store to buy pretzels?

  3. o07jdb Avatar

    I assume they are succeeding just fine with their current business model and don’t see the risk of changing it to be worth it

  4. pdjudd Avatar

    My theory is that they just don’t get enough business to justify the expense of a standalone restaurant location where they have way more competition. What they sell is really handy for where they are primarily located.

  5. disregardable Avatar

    they rely on lots of people around to impulse buy their product.

    personally, rather than that, I’d rather have a full pretzel shop that also does bread and sandwiches (like my local pretzel shop).

  6. ChickenXing Avatar

    Auntie Anne’s only offers a snack item, not full meals, which is why you don’t see stand alone stores. The link below discusses this point and discusses how locations outside the mall exist, but are paired with other brands like Jamba Juice, Cinnabon, and Carvel

    https://www.restaurantbusinessonline.com/operations/auntie-annes-finally-gives-us-drive-thru-pretzels

  7. ATLien_3000 Avatar

    You’re going to have to ask Auntie Anne, I guess.

    For one, they’re franchised so they’re all individual businesses, probably with some exclusivity contracted.

    That means that corporate isn’t going to run around closing locations; if the franchisee still makes money, bully for him.

    For two, I think you’re overestimating the average American’s willingness to stop and buy a pretzel at a place that only sells pretzels, especially when he can’t smell them.

    I would imagine they’d do reasonably well in any pedestrian-oriented area. The two examples you give qualify.

    They do have some in “town center” areas and pedestrian oriented communities.

  8. LordSnarfington Avatar

    I love auntie Anne’s. Get it almost everytime I’m in the airport.

    I’d be dead before i went into a standalone restaurant. They doing just fine

  9. UnitedChain4566 Avatar

    There’s an Auntie Annie’s attached to my grocery store

  10. jupatoh Avatar

    Auntie Anne’s thrives on impulse buys. People smell the pretzels and grab one because they’re already there. A standalone store would require people to actively seek it out, which is a much bigger hurdle. Unlike fast food chains, it’s a niche snack brand, not a meal destination.

    For it to work, they’d need to expand the menu beyond just pretzels, similar to how Krispy Kreme had to adapt after overestimating demand for standalone stores. Unless that happens, they’re better off sticking to malls and airports where foot traffic does the work for them

  11. LittleMsSavoirFaire Avatar

    When you only need 150 sq ft for operations, why would you pay for a whole building 

  12. BreakfastFluid9419 Avatar

    No one goes to the mall for a pretzel but they’ll get a pretzel at the mall.

  13. MsTerious1 Avatar

    The cost per sq. foot of renting space for a low priced product (and a smaller product line in total) probably doesn’t math out well for it to happen.

  14. Wandering_Song Avatar

    Create a frozen pretzel kit you make at home and I will literally eat nothing else.

  15. improbsable Avatar

    What they stand to lose is greater than what they stand to gain. Pretzels are more of a thing that you stumble across than they are something you venture out to get.

    How many pretzel shops have you ever seen on their own? Probably not many, because they thrive on foot traffic

  16. Careless_Ad_9665 Avatar

    If I could go through a drive through to get them I would. I will not go to the mall for them. There’s one thing a year at the mall I want and my saint of a husband goes for me.

  17. MartialBob Avatar

    Does my local Walmart count?

  18. DeterminedArrow Avatar

    I just wish there was a place where I could buy a giant soft gluten free pretzel. I wouldn’t trust a place like Auntie Anne’s though as cross contamination would be a nightmare. Give me giant soft pretzels – someone, please!

  19. sam_the_beagle Avatar

    At my local mall, they are so busy, they have two shops within view of each other. I think they’re doing ok. There’s another mall nearby with one Auntie Anne’s and a Wetzel pretzels. You can guess which one is dead.

  20. notthegoatseguy Avatar

    Low overhead, built in customer base, and it costs almost nothing to close out a location should they need to do so.

    Physical spaces, either free standing or in a strip mall, are way more expensive.

    Auntie Annes is also an impulse purchase. People aren’t going to go out of their way to get one. Its something you get when you’re already out and about.

  21. floralscentedbreeze Avatar

    I’ve seen their mobile trucks on college campuses to sell to students

  22. cyvaquero Avatar

    They do. They just built a stand alone Aunt Annies/Cinnabon on my road in San Antonio.

    https://maps.app.goo.gl/vDc1B1a5sdeQhm4X9?g_st=com.google.maps.preview.copy

  23. HaroerHaktak Avatar

    Because it’s not a proper restaurant. You won’t find these places on their own unless they’re willing to expand their menu

  24. Runnrgirl Avatar

    They just need to go into quick trips!

  25. crazycajun660 Avatar

    They started out in a farmer’s market, Anne offered to pay for months in advance just for a chance to be in a mall the mall manager was not too willing to open a pretzel place, he later became a franchise owner. They also turned down the exhaust vents to get the smell out into the mall. Now that they are a well-established name yes, a stand alone would be great but they have a winning business model going. It might work but having thousands of people walking by one in a mall with that smell and impulse buyers out there why take the chance. They were recently featured on the history channels The food that built America.

  26. Wisdomandlore Avatar

    A Lowes Home Improvement near me briefly has an Auntie Anne’s

  27. Jazigrrl Avatar

    Specialty foods that aren’t considered meals are a high risk venture as standalones. Pretzels are activity foods. You enjoy them while you’re doing something else like shopping or watching sports. At least in American culture.

  28. DecentExplanation750 Avatar

    They put a counter in at a gas station near me and I don’t think it lasted even 2 months.

  29. Hypnox88 Avatar

    Its a “snack” I wouldn’t really stop by to buy a snack. They would have to get burgers or something as the “meal” and the pretzels would be an additional.

    Could see it as a combo place, like those tacobell KFC type places.

  30. imhereforthemeta Avatar

    I’m still waiting for them to bring back their garlic Parmesan pretzel. Until they do that, they are not ready for standalone restaurants.

  31. RecommendationBig768 Avatar

    airports and malls have thousands of people passing by everyday. stand alone locations might only see a tenth or less

  32. spderweb Avatar

    Beaver tails is doing this in Canada. Not sure how it’s doing. Though it’s been in a plaza for a year where I am, so that’s has to mean good,right?

  33. Ok-Temporary-8243 Avatar

    Aunt Annie’s offers snack foods and takes up basically a kiosk of space. It’s very hard to find areas like that where landlords will rent out.

    They essentially are profitable because they’re rent is nonexistent 

  34. sikkerhet Avatar

    Something I don’t see mentioned here already is that the smell of fresh baked pretzels can be contained and targeted from a mall booth but not from a standalone store. You don’t typically go to the mall to buy a pretzel, you smell pretzels and decide you want that smell in your mouth. The smell of the shop is a REALLY effective ad. 

  35. Darnitol1 Avatar

    There’s a stand-alone Auntie-Anne’s in Little Elm, Texas (a suburb of Dallas).

  36. awkwardocto Avatar

    there’s one in our meijer now, it’s nice.

  37. Much-Respond9614 Avatar

    I’d love to know how a question like this gets in someone’s head…

  38. Impossible_Green18 Avatar

    We have a standalone Auntie Ann’s/Jamba Juice nearby. I guess that’s technically not entirely standalone since it’s a combination business, but it’s not inside a food court. Seems to be pretty popular.

  39. R5Jockey Avatar

    I’ve never once been sitting at home and thought, hmmmm, lemme go drive and grab a pretzel. Sitting at the mall or the airport, on the other hand…

    It’s be different if they served meals. People drive for meals.

  40. cinnamon-apple1 Avatar

    There’s an Auntie Anne’s Jamba Juice in the middle of a grass field across from Costco near my in-laws house.

  41. ViolentAntihero Avatar

    Research I imagine