Why Chipotle is awful now
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So 20 years ago, Chipotle was the staple
of what fast food should be where it
gave people a lot of food at a low
price. It had fast service and also use
fresh ingredients. But cut of the day
and the ingredients aren't so fresh, the
service isn't so fast, and the portion
sizes have definitely gone down and the
brand is fading. So I'm just wondering
why Chipotle sucks now. Starting this
off, we got to go back to the year 1993
where Taco Bell was huge having 7,000
stores, but there was a big problem
where people didn't think it was
authentic Mexican food and also at the
same time the main demographic going
there were kids and teenagers, but not a
lot of adults were that interested. The
most pitiful product that Taco Bell had
in the 90s was the burrito because there
was nothing customizable about it. And
also at the same time, it was very small
for burrito standards only being.3
pounds at the time. So because of that,
we got to meet this guy right here,
Steve Ells, where in 1993 he's this
recent graduate from culinary school.
And the thing about him is he goes to
these shops in San Francisco that are
selling burritos and he noticed just how
fast they are and how big the burritos
are. He's like, "Hey, this needs to go
to Colorado." He ends up taking out an
$85,000 loan to rent out an abandoned
Dolly Madison ice cream parlor in
Denver, Colorado. And there was the
first Chipotle. And there were two big
factors that led to Chipotle's growth
with the first one just being value.
Because even though their burritos were
$6 versus Taco Bell at $2.50, they
offered a lot more food to the point
they were only charging 20% more for the
amount of calories people were getting.
But they had way better ingredients, so
people didn't care. And then the next
one was actually McDonald's because in
1998, McDonald's decided to invest in
Chipotle. And by 2005, they invested so
much they actually own 90% of the
company. So what really helped Chipotle
grow is McDonald's was running all their
logistics and inventory. And the reason
why they did that was along with make
money, they wanted to start competing
with Taco Bell is that by 2006, Chipotle
was just living the dream where they
IPOed for $700 million, but they were
valued more like a tech stock. So they
end up being worth 1.3 billion. But once
that happened, problems began. The first
big problem being in 2006, McDonald's
decided to sell all their Chipotle stock
because the reason was the Chipotle
stock was so high. They thought they
were making this huge profit. But when
they left, all the logistics they
brought to Chipotle went with it. And
then what also happened was the 2008
recession. And the reason for that is
because the price of commercial real
estate dropped 30%. So rents across the
board went down massively. Reason that
became a big deal for Chipotle is this.
Because in 2006, before the recession
began, they had 500 locations. But then
after the recession in 2014, they're at
2,000. And the reason that's such a big
deal is because during the recession,
when real estate was cheap, they got all
these leases across the country in these
expensive areas because they thought
they were making out like bandits.
Problem with that long-term just became
the prices. Because when the recession
recovered, all those areas that they
bought, which were much more expensive
locations, had the rents go up massively
later on. So Chipotle had to raise their
prices which a lot of consumers were
pissed off about. There things only got
worse because in 2016 when they were
renegotiating a lot of their rent deals
they had a massive E.coli outbreak where
sales actually dipped 10% for the
company where before that they were
growing by 20% per year but that was the
first year ever they made less than the
year before. The big complaint about
Chipotle is they've cut the quality
where people are getting burritos and
they're largely just rice with a little
bit of meat. So because they're not
getting the same value that made them
really popular in the 90s and 2000s
going against Taco Bell. The reason is
just real estate because Chipotle put
themselves in these really expensive
locations to be more boutique. But the
problem is they can't keep up with that
because they're growing past inflation.
And with that, I'm Charles P.