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We compared the most popular menu items at KFC and Popeyes — and the winner is crystal clear

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chick fil a kfc popeyes fast food chicken restaurant chain review 36

  • When a craving for fast-foodfried chicken hits, KFC and Popeyes offer two viable options for satisfying your deep-fried desires.
  • To see how the two fried chicken chains compare, we visited both chains in the San Francisco Bay Area and collected some of the most popular menu items at each.
  • While KFC didn't bring much to the table, Popeyes shone brightly for its high-quality, mouthwatering, and crispy chicken.
  • Take a look at how the two chicken chains stack up:

SEE ALSO: We compared Chick-fil-A with Raising Cane's to find the best chicken chain — and the winner is clear

Popeyes and KFC are two of the biggest names in the fried chicken fast-food scene.

Source: Business Insider and The Huffington Post



And you'll find similar items on the menu at both restaurants.



The chicken tenders, the nuggets, the chicken sandwich — these are staples at any go-to chicken spot.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

KFC's chicken and waffles are returning to menus across America

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Kentucky Fried Chicken & Waffles Platter

  • KFC is bringing its Kentucky Fried Chicken and Waffles back to menus nationwide this weekend. 
  • Chicken and waffles were an immediate hit when KFC introduced the dish in November. 
  • The dish will be available from late March to late April. 

KFC's chicken and waffles are once again returning to menus nationwide. 

On Thursday, the chicken chain announced that Kentucky Fried Chicken and Waffles will roll out across the United States this Saturday. The dish, available as a basket meal and as a sandwich, will remain on menus until late April. 

KFC first rolled out its Kentucky Fried Chicken and Waffles nationally in November. The menu item was an immediate success, with some locations selling out within two weeks, according to KFC. 

Kentucky Fried Chicken & Waffles Sandwich

Read more:KFC's chicken & waffle sandwich is the best of its new dishes and unlike anything else on the menu

"We expected people would love Kentucky Fried Chicken and Waffles when we launched it in 2018,” said Andrea Zahumensky, KFC's US CMO, said in a statement. "But we underestimated how much love there would be, so we're bringing it back just four months later. Too soon? Not a minute."

Kentucky Fried Chicken and Waffles use Liège-style waffles, a sweeter and doughier variation than classic American style waffles. A chicken and waffles basket meal will cost $5.49, while the sandwich costs $5.99. 

"KFC's use of the Liège-style waffle lent itself especially well to the sandwich, in my opinion," INSIDER's Anay Katyal reported in November."The waffles' density coupled with their sweetness complemented the chicken's sweet and hot flavoring. I thought the sandwich's flavor is unlike anything else on KFC's menu."

SEE ALSO: Burger King takes a direct hit at KFC in a new ad that dresses the King up in Colonel Sanders' clothing

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These are the restaurant chains that Gen Z eats at most, according to a survey of more than 1,800 young Americans

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McDonald's teens kids

  • Generation Z has a clear favorite when it comes to fast-food and casual-dining chains.
  • Business Insider surveyed over 1,800 Americans between the age of 13 and 21 to learn more about their restaurant preferences.
  • We found that McDonald's dominated the list.

Editor's note: Business Insider surveyed 1,884 young Americans about their buying attitudes and beliefs. This is part of a series of stories that will be rolled out over the next several weeks.

Teens like their food cheap.

So it makes sense that they'd like fast-food and casual-dining chains. Everyone who's ever been a teen — or parented one — won't be surprised to see young people hitting up the local burger joint during lunch period, sliding ino the drive-thru after snagging their licenses, or congregating at the local casual-dining restaurant.

But which chain come first for Generation Z?

Read more: These are the brands that Gen Z shops at most, according to a survey of more than 1,800 young Americans

To find out, Business Insider surveyed 1,884 Americans between the age of 13 and 21 to get a better sense of their spending habits. The national poll was conducted with SurveyMonkey Audience partner Cint on behalf of Business Insider. It ran from January 11 through January 14.

In the survey, we asked participants: "Which of the following fast-food chains have you bought food or drink from in the last six months?" and then gave them the option to check multiple restaurants.

Here are the top restaurant chains that Generation Z frequents:

SEE ALSO: Instagram has avoided Facebook's trust problem, beating its parent as app of choice for Generation Z

19. Five Guys

A decent number of young folks said they'd recently purchased a meal at Five Guys.

Percentage of respondents who bought food or drink from this chain in the past six months: 17.20%



18. Panera

Panera's soups, sandwiches, and, of course, signature bread remain popular with teens.

Percentage of respondents who bought food or drink from this chain in the past six months: 18.84%



17. Applebee's

Plenty of young people said they're still "eating good in the neighborhood" at Applebee's.

Percentage of respondents who bought food or drink from this chain in the past six months: 19.85%



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

KFC is selling a piece of the chicken it's never used before to boost its China business

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kfc china

  • KFC restaurants in China sold parts of chickens they've never used before in the first quarter of 2019.
  • The restaurant chain introduced "a part of the chicken that we somehow have not used in the last 30-some years," said CEO Joey Wat on Yum China's first-quarter earnings call.
  • Yum China, which runs KFC and Pizza Hut in China and was spun off from Yum Brands in 2016, made the move in response to rising costs.
  • Chinese poultry costs have risen as an outbreak of African Swine Fever has hit pork production, and the trade war with the US has reduced chicken imports.
  • KFC's operating margin shrunk from 20.6% to 18.7% due to the higher costs. 
  • Watch Yum China and Yum! Brands trade live.

KFC was forced to get creative when Chinese poultry prices rose in the first three months of 2019. The restaurant chain rushed to protect its profit margins by introducing a cut of chicken it had never used before.

Yum China, a New York Stock Exchange-listed spin-off from Yum Brands that runs KFC and Pizza Hut restaurants in China, turned to "a part of the chicken that we somehow have not used in the last 30-some years," said CEO Joey Wat on the company's first-quarter earnings call. The name of the piece was said in Mandarin and not translated in the transcript.

"This is the piece of chicken between the chicken wing and the chicken breast," he elaborated.

Poultry prices in China have risen this year due to a widespread outbreak of African Swine Fever that has hampered domestic pork production, as well as restrictions on poultry imports due to the US-China trade war, according to an industry report from Rabobank.

As a result, KFC — which has more than 6,000 restaurants in China — faced commodity inflation of 5% in the first quarter, the company said its earnings call.

The fried-chicken chain's same-store sales rose 5% excluding currency impacts, but its food and paper costs rose by 12%, according to its earnings report. Coupled with higher labor costs, that reduced the brand's operating profit by about 3% to $288 million. 

"We expect poultry inflation to weigh on margins for the rest of the year," said Jacky Lo, CFO of Yum China, in the earnings report.

Wat downplayed the impact of higher poultry prices, arguing KFC could negotiate lower prices from suppliers and draw from chicken inventories. Moreover, the chain continues to explore whether new technology can provide "another way to cut out chicken," he said. It's also on the lookout for "some sort of ingredient that probably has not been used before."

For example, KFC plans to introduce shrimp and crayfish into its wraps as the prices of these typically "pretty expensive" proteins now look attractive relative to chicken, Wat added.

Excluding currency impacts, Yum China's same-store sales rose 4% in the first quarter, pushing adjusted operating profits up 9%. 

Yum China

SEE ALSO: KFC is by far the most popular fast food chain in China and it's nothing like the US brand — here's what it's like

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The death of the American middle class and rising costs have forced fast-food chains like McDonald's and Taco Bell to try new strategies in their quest to win over budget shoppers (MCD, YUM)

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Taco Bell Value Menu

Even as the American economy seems to be thriving, many people are still struggling to make ends meet

This state of affairs creates an opportunity for fast-food chains — known for selling the cheapest meals around — but also sparks problems as chains battle rising costs. 

"Obviously the US economy is in pretty good shape," Greg Creed, the CEO of the Taco Bell, KFC, and Pizza Hut parent company Yum Brands said in a call with investors on Wednesday. 

"But I also do think that there is some sort of bifurcation going on in the marketplace," Creed said.

"There are certainly people making a lot of money, there are certainly people for whom value will remain incredibly important," he added. 

This bifurcation has resulted in many Americans being stuck without any money to spare. In 2018, Moody's said in a report that "income gains have been unevenly distributed," meaning that rising interest and other costs will prevent many households from spending more

Read more:Moody's warns the decline of the middle class will make 2019 a rough year for retailers

In the case of Yum Brands, Creed said that the company is balancing meeting the needs of customers — including Americans who may not be benefiting from the improved economy — with franchisee economics, which requires making sure that the menu is profitable for restaurants. The UBS analyst Dennis Geiger, who asked Creed about value, said Yum has emphasized value as other chains have pulled back on massive discounts and deals. 

Taco Bell in particular has emphasized its dollar menu, making it one of the few chains that regularly debuts new menu items at the $1 price point. KFC, meanwhile, has been testing new value strategies, with options like the "2 for $6 Mix 'n' Match" providing more options at lower price points than the more expensive buckets. 

Other chains Geiger referenced are ditching these massive discounts. 

McDonald's Value Menu

McDonald's, for example, has backed away from its $1 $2 $3 menu, meant to replace its popular Dollar Menu that was killed in 2013. Instead, the chain is emphasizing the "2 for $5 Mix and Match Deal" and initiatives that convince customers to pay more, including through delivery and ordering via kiosk. 

Read more:McDonald's is convincing customers to pay more as the fast-food giant ditches its Dollar Menu roots and raises prices

More generally, prices are rising in the restaurant industry as labor costs increase with higher minimum wages and a more competitive labor market. McDonald's, Starbucks, and Chipotle all mentioned raising prices in the most recent quarter during calls with investors. 

In essence, fast-food chains are caught between two magnets drawing them in opposite directions. On one hand is profitability, as inexpensive items that draw in budget shoppers can tank profitability and spark a franchisee revolt. On the other is meeting the needs of their target customers, who tend to be lower-income Americans who have been excluded from rising economic prosperity. 

The shrinking American middle class complicates these issues, as chains try simultaneously to put out higher-quality products while keeping prices dirt cheap. 

Only 52% of American adults were classified as middle-income in 2016, compared to 61% in 1971, according to Pew Research Center data. Pew defines the American middle class as households earning two-thirds to twice the median household income

And while median US income is on the rise, growth for top earners is significantly outpacing the increase in earnings for lower-income households. In 2017, the top 5% of households saw average income rise 8.7% higher than prerecession levels. Among the bottom fifth of the population, average income grew but remained 2.7% below prerecession figures.

SEE ALSO: Burger King takes a shot at McDonald's Happy Meals with a dark ad showing bullying, unpaid student loans, and mental health struggles

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Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen uses chicken statue, bucket of KFC to poke fun at Attorney General Barr's refusal to appear at House hearing

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steve cohen

  • Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen poked fun at Attorney General William Barr with a bucket of KFC chicken and a statue of a chicken.
  • Cohen appeared to be suggesting Barr is a "chicken" for not showing up to a House Judiciary Committee hearing on the Mueller report. 
  • The Justice Department on Wednesday informed the committee Barr would not be coming to the hearing after roughly a week of terse exchanges with Democrats over the terms of his testimony. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen on Thursday brought a bucket of KFC chicken and a small statue of a chicken to a House Judiciary Committee hearing in an attempt to mock Attorney General William Barr for refusing to show up and testify on special counsel Robert Mueller's report. 

Cohen was suggesting that Barr was too "chicken" to come and face questions about his handling of the Mueller report's release. 

"Chicken Barr should've shown up today and answered questions. He was afraid ... An attorney general who's picked for his legal acumen and his abilities would not be fearful," Cohen said in comments to reporters after the hearing. 

Cohen went on to suggest Barr was only picked by President Donald Trump to be the president's "fixer."  

On Wednesday, the Department of Justice notified the House Judiciary Committee that Barr would not be coming to testify the next day over a disagreement about Democrats' plan to bring staff attorneys to question him. The two sides has been debating the format of the hearing for more than a week.

Read more:AG William Barr is refusing to testify before the House Judiciary Committee, daring Democrats to subpoena him

"Congress and the Executive branch are co-equal branches of government, and each have a constitutional obligation to respect and accommodate one another's legitimate interests," Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec said in a statement released Wednesday evening.

The Justice Department also informed the House Judiciary Committee that Barr would not comply with a subpoena to issue a full, unredacted version of Mueller's report. 

House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler signaled he could move to hold Barr in contempt of Congress if he does not deliver the unredacted report in the next few days. 

Read more:Barr went to incredible lengths to argue why a key interaction between Trump and Don McGahn was not obstruction

The back-and-forth with the House came after Barr on Wednesday appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify on Mueller's report on the Russia probe, and faced a grilling from Democratic senators about the release of the probe's finding.

The attorney general released a redacted version of the Mueller report two weeks ago and has faced sharp criticism from Democrats on how he handled the rollout. The pushback from Democrats intensified after the release on Tuesday of a letter from Mueller to Barr objecting to the Attorney General's description of the special counsel's findings prior to the release of the full report.

KFC declined to comment to INSIDER on Cohen's use of their chicken.

Kate Taylor contributed reporting.

SEE ALSO: Democratic senator accuses Attorney General Barr of lying to Congress in fiery exchange over Mueller's report

Join the conversation about this story »

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KFC denies that a student tricked employees into giving him free chicken by pretending to be a fast-food executive

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kfc chicken

  • KFC South Africa has refuted reports that said a student was arrested after pretending to be an executive from the fast-food brand to get free chicken from restaurants around Durban, South Africa.
  • On Tuesday, the Daily Mail reported that the now-viral story was fueled by media coverage that began with a "rumour."
  • According to the original reports, a 27-year-old man entered KFC stores wearing "smart" clothing and carrying a clipboard, telling employees that he worked in the fast-food company's head office before testing food in the kitchen.
  • KFC Africa's public affairs director, Thabisa Mkhwanazi, confirmed to Business Insider South Africa that the story was false.
  • Before KFC denied the reports, people on social media lauded the creative method of getting free food.
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories.

KFC South Africa has denied reports that said a student was arrested after pretending to be an executive from the fast-food brand in order to get free chicken from restaurants.

On Tuesday, the Daily Mail reported that the now-viral story was fueled by media coverage that began with a "rumour."

According to the story, which appeared on the South African sites Xpouzar and Daily Active Kenya, an unnamed 27-year-old man who was said to be a student at KwaZulu Natal University dressed in "smart" clothing and arrived in a limousine to visit KFC restaurants around Durban, South Africa, to get free food for over a year.

The man was said to have told employees that he worked in KFC's head office and that he was there to test the quality of the food. He was also said to have carried a clipboard and a fake identification card to forge his identity. Reports said the student was awaiting a court appearance, and mentioned a part-time limousine driver also assisted in the so-called heist.

Read more: Chicken nugget ice cream made with chopped-up pieces of the McDonald's food is popping up in Ireland

KFC South Africa refuted the reports in a series of posts on social media on Tuesday. Representatives for the brand responded to Twitter users who were seemingly impressed by the story, calling it "fake news."

"Fake is as good as this story gets," KFC South Africa wrote to its followers in one tweet. "As legendary as it would be we can confirm that this is false. We haven't kept the secret recipe 'secret' for this long, only to be duped by a student."

KFC Africa's public affairs director, Thabisa Mkhwanazi, confirmed to Business Insider South Africa that the story was false.

"We follow strict operational processes,"Mkhwanazi said. "Any unauthorized individuals posing as KFC team members in our restaurants and head office would have been picked up immediately."

Before KFC denied the reports, people on social media seemed to be impressed with the storied stunt and called the man a "legend."

Read more:

Join the conversation about this story »

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KFC is now serving a chicken slider taco, but you'll have to go to Japan to get it

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kfc taco

Tacos at KFC? Well, that's different. KFC Japan is now selling a chicken slider taco that includes both fried chicken and taco meat all wrapped in a tortilla.

The 75 Best Fried Chicken Places in America

 A tweet from KFC Japan describes the dish: A soft tortilla is filled with a fried chicken strip, taco meat, and three types of cheese. Food blog Brand Eating notes that the three cheeses are Gouda, cheddar and mozzarella, and that a special mayo sauce is also included.

 

Read more: KFC denies that a student tricked employees into giving him free chicken by pretending to be a fast-food executive

The dish can be ordered separately for 300 yen ($2.72) or in a combo meal with a biscuit and drink for 500 yen ($4.53). That doesn't include your airfare to and hotel room in Japan, of course, but maybe it's worth it to you.

This isn't the first time this year that an Asian KFC item has made headlines. Back in March, model Chrissy Teigen pleaded for the chicken chain to help her recreate a tasty treat she once enjoyed at a KFC restaurant in Thailand. (The chain promised to help, but we've yet to see a resolution to this recipe adventure.) The slider taco belongs on a list of international food items that are goofy but somehow tempting, much like these 15 international potato chip flavors we long to try.

18 Popular Foods You Should Never Make at Home

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KFC is meeting with plant-based 'meat' makers as chains like Burger King and Del Taco jump on the vegan bandwagon (YUM)

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KFC Chicken Tenders

As vegan, plant-based "meats" join the menu at chains like Del Taco and Burger King, chicken chains might be next to jump on the meat-substitute bandwagon. 

It's a future that Kevin Hochman, the president of KFC's US business, once thought unthinkable. Now, he's not so sure. 

"If you would have asked me six months ago, I would have said no, to be completely honest with you," Hochman told Business Insider. "Because, we're about fried chicken."

However, if the current buzz around companies like Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat translates into long-term customer demand, then KFC will certainly test a plant-based meat substitute in the US, Hochman said. The chain has already been testing vegetarian "fried chicken" in the UK. 

"In the last two weeks I've made several appointments with some of the big guys, just to figure out — what does alternative protein look like in chicken?" Hochman said. 

Chick-fil-A

Hochman's logic echoes what Amanda Norris, the executive director of Chick-fil-A's menu, told Business Insider earlier in May. According to Norris, the chain is in the early stages of exploring adding vegan options to the menu.

"We're certainly wanting to broaden our thinking and really start big in that funnel and come down," Norris said. "We think it is certainly beyond just no meat on salads or no meat in a wrap. It might be some kind of alternative protein on a sandwich."

Read more: Chick-fil-A is exploring vegan menu items as chains like Burger King and Chipotle double down on meat substitutes

Plant-based "meat" has been sweeping the fast-food industry in recent months. 

Chains including TGI Fridays, Carl's Jr., and Red Robin serve either the Impossible Burger or the Beyond Burger. Del Taco's vegan Beyond Taco is on track to become one of the chain's best-ever new-product launches. Burger King teamed up with Impossible Foods to roll out Impossible Whoppers nationally by the end of 2019. 

KFC Chicken Tenders

"We think this is a new category that we can build on for the long haul," Restaurant Brands International CEO José Cil told Business Insider."We think that plant-based burgers and other products will continue to be part of our business for the long term."

The meat-substitute makers have been cashing in as demand swells. Impossible Foods announced a $300 million series E funding round led by Temasek and Horizon Ventures in mid-May. The news followed Beyond Meat's explosive public debut earlier in May, when shares soared 163% on its first day of trading.

Now, this explosive success might mean KFC starts dabbling in Kentucky Faux Chicken. 

"Never say never. I would have said never six months ago," Hochman said. "Now, I've really re-thought that. We're going to learn more about that. ... It still feels a little early, but we're going to learn about it." 

SEE ALSO: We tried Burger King's plant-based Impossible Whopper next to the original — here's how they actually compare

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What it costs to open 12 of the biggest fast-food chains in the US, including McDonald's, Chick-fil-A, and Taco Bell (MCD)

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burger king

Owning a fast food franchise can be a lucrative business, but it requires a lot of cash.

You must have at least $500,000 in liquid assets to open a McDonald's, $750,000 to open a Taco Bell, and $2 million to open a Wendy's, for example.

Potential franchisees need a lot of cash available to help fund startup costs, which exceed $1 million for most major fast food chains in the US.

In addition to startup costs, franchisees have to pay ongoing monthly fees for royalties, advertising, and other services that can add up to more than 10% of gross sales.

We compiled a list of some basic financial requirements for becoming a franchise owner of 12 of the biggest fast-food chains in the US.

Following the name of each restaurant chain is the average total startup costs to open one new restaurant in the US.

SEE ALSO: More than 7,000 stores are closing in 2019 as the retail apocalypse drags on — here's the full list

McDonald's: $1.3 million to $2.2 million

Startup costs: $1.3 million to $2.2 million. This total is determined by the geography and size of the restaurant, the selection of kitchen equipment, signage, style of decor, and landscaping. The sum includes construction and equipment expenses.

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $500,000

Franchise fee: $45,000

Ongoing fees:McDonald's charges a monthly service fee equal to 4% of gross sales. Franchisees must also pay rent to the company, which is a percentage of monthly sales. 

Average per-unit sales*: $2.7 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Chick-fil-A: $10,000

Startup costs: $0

Franchise fee: $10,000

Minimum liquid asset requirement: none

Minimum net worth requirement: none

Ongoing fees:Chick-fil-A charges a fee equal to 15% of sales plus 50% of pretax profit remaining, the company told Business Insider. 

It's also important to note that Chick-fil-A prohibits most of its franchisees from opening multiple units, which can limit franchisees' potential profits.

Chick-fil-A says this limitation is meant to enable its franchisees to be intimately involved in the day-to-day operations of their restaurants.

Average per-unit sales*: $4.1 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Subway: $116,000 to $263,000

Startup costs:$116,000 to $263,000 

Liquid asset requirement: $80,000 to $90,000

Franchise fee: $15,000

Ongoing fees:Subway charges franchisees a weekly fee of 12.5% of gross sales minus the sales tax. The company says 8% goes toward the franchise royalties and 4.5% goes towards advertising.

Average per-unit sales*: $417,000

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Burger King: $1.9 million to $3.3 million

Startup costs: $1.9 million to $3.3 million for a free-standing Burger King.

Franchise fee: $50,000

Ongoing fees: Burger King charges an advertising fee (4% of gross sales) and royalty fee (4.5% of gross sales).

Average per-unit sales*: $1.4 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Taco Bell: $1.2 million to $2.9 million

Startup costs: $1.2 million to $2.9 million. This includes the franchise fee and other startup expenses such as real estate and construction. The costs are slightly lower — between $175,000 and $1.8 million — for franchisees to acquire an existing Taco Bell restaurant.

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $750,000 minimum

Minimum net worth requirement: $1.5 million

Franchise fee: $45,000 for a new traditional Taco Bell restaurant. Fees are lower ($25,000) for an in-line or end-cap restaurant.

Ongoing fees:Taco Bell charges a royalty fee equal to 5.5% of gross sales and a marketing fee equal to 4.25% of gross sales.

Average per-unit sales*: $1.5 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Wendy's: $2 million to $3.5 million

Startup costs: $2 million to $3.5 million

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $2 million

Minimum net worth requirement: $5 million

Franchise fee: $50,000

Ongoing fees: Wendy's charges franchisees ongoing fees for local and national advertising (4% of gross sales) and royalties (4% of gross sales).

Average per-unit sales*: $1.6 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



KFC: $1.4 million to $2.8 million

Startup costs:$1.4 million to $2.8 million for a "traditional"KFC location.*

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $750,000*

Franchise fee: $45,000*

Ongoing fees: KFC charges franchisees about 10% of gross revenues (5% for royalties and 4.5% for advertising).*

Average per-unit sales**: $1.2 million

*According to Franchise Direct, which cited a 2019 KFC Franchise Disclosure Document.

**2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Dairy Queen: $1.1 million to $1.8 million

Startup costs: $1.1 million to $1.8 million

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $400,000

Minimum net worth requirement: $750,000

Franchise fee: $35,000

Ongoing fees: Dairy Queen charges a royalty fee equal to 4% of sales and a marketing fee equal to 5% to 6% of sales. 

Average per-unit sales*: $1.3 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Sonic: $1.22 million to $3.53 million

Startup costs: $356,500 to $977,300 for a "non-traditional" unit and $1.22 million to $3.53 million for a "traditional" unit. These figures exclude the cost of land.

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $500,000

Minimum net worth requirement: $1 million

Franchise fee: $22,500 for a "non-traditional" unit  45,000 for a "traditional" unit. There is an additional area development fee of $10,000 per location. 

Ongoing fees: Sonic charges a royalty fee of up to 5% of gross sales and advertising fees of at least 3.25%, according to Franchise Direct

Average per-unit sales*: $1.3 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Papa John's: $300,000

Startup costs: $300,000

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $75,000

Minimum net worth requirement: $250,000

Franchise fee: $25,000

Ongoing fees:Papa John's charges a monthly royalty fee of 5% of net sales that is due on a monthly basis. Papa John's also requires that franchisees spend 8% of net monthly sales on marketing.

Average per-unit sales*: $968,000

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Dunkin' Donuts: $229,000 to $1.7 million

Startup costs: $229,000 to $1.7 million

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $250,000

Minimum net worth requirement: $500,000

Franchise fee: $40,000 to $90,000

Ongoing fees: Dunkin' Donuts charges franchisees advertising fees (5% of gross sales) and royalties fees (2% to 6% of gross sales).

Average per-unit sales*: $733,000

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



Arby's: $320,550 to $2 million

Total startup costs: $320,550 to $2 million

Minimum liquid asset requirement: $500,000

Minimum net worth requirement: $1 million

Franchise fee: $6,250 to $40,900

Ongoing fees: Arby's charges a royalty fee equal to 4% of sales and an advertising fee equal to 4.2% of sales. 

Average per-unit sales*: $1.1 million

*2017 figures according to QSR Magazine.



KFC is now selling fried chicken skin, but you'll have to go to Indonesia to get it

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KFC chicken skin

  • Five KFC locations in Indonesia have added chicken skin to their menus.
  • Online customer response to the chicken skin has been overwhelming positive, according to The Sun.
  • It's unclear whether the company has plans to roll out chicken skins at locations in other countries, but INSIDER has reached out to KFC to find out more.
  • For now, you can purchase an order of chicken skin for 13,636 Indonesian Rupiah ($0.96 USD).
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories.

KFC has introduced crispy fried chicken skin to its menu. The only catch is that you'll have to travel to Indonesia to give the skin a try.

KFC chicken skinFive KFC locations in the country have added chicken skin to their menus, which already feature other unique items such as tater tots, pancakes, and spaghetti, which aren't available at locations in the US.

KFC Indonesia's official Twitter account announced the new menu addition in a post on May 11.

 

Read more: KFC denies that a student tricked employees into giving him free chicken by pretending to be a fast-food executive

According to The Sun, online customer response to the chicken skins has been overwhelming positive. The publication also reported that the chicken skin has been so popular that they have sold out at multiple locations.

"It's really crisp and crunchy! I'll definitely order again as a snack," one reviewer wrote on Instagram, according to The Sun.

A representative for KFC told INSIDER the company currently doesn't plan to bring fried chicken skin to the US, but said that "the company's global food innovation teams look at both external trends and blockbuster products from other markets" to determine its menu items in global locations.

"It could show up elsewhere in the future," the representative added. 

For now, you can purchase an order of chicken skins for 13,636 Indonesian Rupiah ($0.96 USD) at KFC's locations in Salemba, Cideng, Kemang, Kalimalang, and Kelana Gading — that is, if they are not sold out.

This is far from the first time KFC has experimented with its menu items. For a limited time, the fried chicken chain introduced chicken and waffles to its menus at US locations back in 2018. And at the beginning of this year, KFC rolled out a Cheetos sandwich that featured the crunchy snacks and cheese sauce atop fried chicken.

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KFC is taking a page out of Taco Bell's playbook as it prepares to launch more new menu items in 2019 than in the past 5 years combined

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Kentucky Fried Chicken & Waffles Platter

  • KFC plans to roll out as many new menu items in 2019 as it did in the past five years combined, Kevin Hochman, the president of KFC's US business, told Business Insider. 
  • The chain hopes to win over millennials and Gen Zers with quirky new menu items that customers can't get anywhere else. 
  • Hochman said KFC is looking to Taco Bell for inspiration.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

KFC is doubling down on menu innovation as the chain commits to getting a little bit weird. 

Kevin Hochman, the president of KFC's US business, told Business Insider that the chain plans to have as much menu "innovation" in 2019 as it had in the past five years combined. Recent new menu items include quirky options such as chicken and waffles and Cinnabon biscuits. 

"There's a foot in this old world of core chicken and sides ... But if we really want to attract a younger customer it can't just be about fun advertising and fun stunts," Hochman said in a recent interview. 

"That's really why we said we're going to double down on innovation and try to figure out how we bring some new recipes to the restaurant," Hochman added.

Read more:KFC is meeting with plant-based 'meat' makers as chains like Burger King and Del Taco jump on the vegan bandwagon

Over the past five years, Hochman has helped lead KFC's turnaround. The chain brought back Colonel Sanders in marketing, rolled out an initiative to improve quality in restaurants, and began remodeling locations to appear more modern. Menu innovation, Hochman said, will help speed up growth in the next five years.

cinnabon biscuits kfc

Hochman said KFC has three main factors it considers when it comes to new menu items: They need to be something people can't get elsewhere, they usually are collaborations with other major brands (such as the Cinnabon dessert biscuit), and they have to be affordable. 

"We almost call it an abundant need — we know that they're going to feel happy and full, and it'll only cost them a single $5 bill," Hochman said. "That is hard work."

Hochman said KFC has looked to its sister brand Taco Bell for inspiration when it comes to new menu items. Taco Bell is known for its commitment to the dollar menu, pairing wacky options with extremely low prices. 

"Just when you think they can't get any more successful, they do, right? It's because they are — and our mindset is the same way now, which is we're hungry," Hochman said. "What's the next thing, and how can we do better? What can we learn with the things that we don't do as well so that we can take the brand where we want it to be?" 

SEE ALSO: The death of the American middle class and rising costs have forced fast-food chains like McDonald's and Taco Bell to try new strategies in their quest to win over budget shoppers

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NOW WATCH: How Supreme went from a small skateboarding store in New York to an $1 billion streetwear company with a cult-like following among teens

The head of KFC's US business on comebacks, delivery, vegan 'chicken,' and the chain's new approach to menu innovation (YUM)

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Kevin Hochman

  • Kevin Hochman has led KFC through five years of same-store sales growth, kicking off the chicken chain's turnaround. 
  • Now, Hochman tells Business Insider he is ready to go from turnaround to a new era of growth. 
  • Hochman is looking to new menu items, delivery, and more to fuel the future of KFC. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Kevin Hochman is the man who revived Colonel Sanders. 

When Hochman joined KFC in 2014 as chief marketing officer, the chain was deep into a period of slumping sales. So, Hochman decided to bring the Colonel back from the dead — or at least his character. 

Since then, everyone from Reba McEntire to George Hamilton has donned the white suit of KFC's esteemed founder. Hochman was promoted from CMO to president of KFC in 2017. And, sales have steadily grown, with the chain hitting five years of same-store sales growth. 

"I'm trying to get people in the mindset that we should be in growth mode, not turnaround mode anymore," Hochman told Business Insider in a recent interview.

Read on for how Hochman plans to fuel that growth, from delivery, to new menu items, to faux fried chicken. 

"I think we can have 10 years of growth on this brand and really become a player in the industry again, like we were decades ago," Hochman said. "So, we've got some big bets." 

The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.

From comeback to growth

KFC Chicken Tenders

Kate Taylor: Are we still in the re-Colonelization phrase? What happens now?

Kevin Hochman: We've completed five years of growth now. I'm trying to get people in the mindset that we should be in growth mode, not turnaround mode anymore. We still have a lot of work to do to get it done, but there's so much opportunity for our brand now that we've kind of got some stability and we've got some young people back into the brand. We're getting our remodels completed and we're building again. My message at our convention in February to our franchisees was like, "Hey, congratulations on a great five years. We should all feel really good about that. However, we've got a lot of challenges in front of us and we need to grow a whole lot faster in the next five years."

I think we can have 10 years of growth on this brand and really become a player in the industry again, like we were decades ago. So, we've got some big bets that we're talking about.

One is really fast-paced, ramping up innovation plans. I think you've seen some of it already — the chicken and waffles was kind of the start of this revamped innovation plan. We have a bunch more stuff that's coming in the back half of the year. I would tell you that our innovation this year is more than the previous five years combined when you add it all up; it's been very deliberate because we've got people that are interested in our brand again.

This will be our first year, if all goes according to plan, that we should build more stores than we close, which is a big deal. ... I think it will be the first positive year on net builds in like 17 years. 

We're still one of the only fast-food brands that you bring home, you take out of the packaging and actually put on plates, especially if you're having a group meal. So the food's already kind of designed to travel, and we have this great deal with GrubHub. A little over a year ago, we announced a deal with GrubHub across Taco Bell and KFC, and that's a really good deal for both of us. They want to expand faster; we obviously want great, favorable terms for our franchisees and we want to integrate them because we want to get the time from order to delivery down.

We spent the last 12 months literally building that in the restaurants. We had a tablet that — you'd get the order from the tablet, so I'd order on my phone, go to the tablet, then the team member's got to re-key it in  — which is fraught with error. And then it gets pushed through what we call a KDS, which is our projection system, then it gets fulfilled. Now we've spent probably about nine months developing and testing where you order on your phone and it goes right into that projection system right when it needs to be packed up for the driver.

Now we can go roll this out to as many restaurants as we can get it into. I think we're at 2,800 restaurants now for delivery, 3,300 in mobile ordering, and our hope is to get to 75% delivery — which would be all of the GrubHub markets today — by Q4, when we want to launch a big national campaign.

We're going to launch a huge item that goes with delivery— something you would expected from Kentucky Fried Chicken. I get really bullish about not just having a delivery layer, but we're actually designing products now that will really meet that occasion.

Mixing up the menu

KFC Smoky Mountain BBQ Chicken

Taylor: I do feel like a lot of the fried chicken chains aren't really known for menu innovation. How did you decide that it was time to change that paradigm?

Hochman: We grew faster in the first few years of the turnaround than the last couple of years. It's clear we've got to grow faster. If we want to have 10 years of growth, which is kind of the vision, we've got to grow faster. You start checking the boxes of "What are the things that we can do? What are the choices we can make?"

Obviously development and remodel is going to help that. I think that the advertising campaign has obviously helped bring different people in the brand. Really, the missing piece is: what is the new item that I want to run toward? There's a foot in this old world of core chicken and sides, and that's what our core customer wants. But if we really want to attract a younger customer, it can't just be about fun advertising and fun stunts. It's got to be about something that completes that circle.

I think that's really why we said we're going to double down on innovation and try to figure out how we bring some new recipes to the restaurant. We have a really logical way to think about it. So what are recipes you can't get anywhere else? Right, so pickle fried chicken was one. Nashville Hot — well you can get that in Nashville or a fancy restaurant here, but it's not really available in 4,000-plus stores at a really attractive price point that everybody can afford. We take that and tried to make it nationwide at an attractive price point.

The second, the best way to describe it is collaborations. So you see, in like, music where it's like these two genres get together — when I was growing up it was a big deal. Like, "Oh my god, a rapper and a country music singer are coming together." Now it's more commonplace, right? But I think food's no different. I think people like when two disparate foods come together. Well we're having some success with it, so maybe we fell into this strategy, but I think we'll do more of it. The chicken and waffles, I think, got better with Mrs. Buttersworth. We did Cinnabon biscuits now, which are delicious.

I think the third big one is really about value innovation. We can't forget about our core customer. KFC in some ways is a little bit of a treat at a really affordable price, right? The best example I can give you is, we have a $5 famous bowl meal. It's potatoes and gravy, and fried chicken, and corn and cheese. That's a pound of food in that bowl. Then you get a biscuit, and then you get a cookie, and then you get a drink — and it's $5. Even with all the inflationary pressures, we're going to keep it at $5.

That requires people thinking outside the box of like: How do we put the right things in the thing so that the franchisee can make money still and be excited about it, and keep it at $5? We almost call it an abundant need — we know that they're going to feel happy and full, and it'll only cost them a single $5 bill. That is hard work.

Guests want a good price point, but they don't want to sacrifice. We just researched with really value-conscious customers, and they told us, "Yeah, I know the dollar chicken sandwich is the dumbed down version of the $3 sandwich. So that doesn't really excite me."

Winning over budget shoppers

Kevin Hochman

Taylor: What are these really value-conscious customers looking for when you guys talk to them?

Hochman: It's not cheap. You talk to them and you say, "We have a dollar menu." Well, usually that's someone saying, "I have to sacrifice, and you know it's not really that good." It's really about price divided by quality. Especially with a value-conscious consumer, because if they go into a store or restaurant and they buy something and it's not good, they can't necessarily afford to buy something else. Like they're out of luck, right?

They actually double down on wanting to have something that's a really quality thing versus what's the cheapest thing available. And you see that time and time again. When we can bring quality at affordable price points, we win. And when we don't, we have trouble keeping that core customer. It's our job to figure out new and interesting ways to do that so we delight that customer, versus disappoint them. And when we delight them, they reward us. They reward us with more traffic, and then we have better sales and everybody wins.

Taylor: How does the improved economy affect things?

Hochman: I think people will always be value-conscious, right? I don't think that's a fad. I think when the economy is better, we have a tailwind that helps us grow faster.

For us, gas prices are a big deal. When gas prices were down we had a big tailwind; when gas prices start to rise we have a headwind. That just says you've got to deliver value; it's even more important. For every dollar of increase in gas prices — a big part of our core customer base, this is like 20% of disposable income. It's got to come from somewhere. And sadly, sometimes you hear about them skipping meals or, "I'm going to eat one really big meal and that'll take me to dinner." Our job is: How do we help them not compensate as much? How are we able to mesh great values and great products?

If we can delight them we're going to win. And if we don't, we lose some of that core customer.

Taylor: Who is your core customer now?

Hochman: The core customer is someone that comes to KFC pretty regularly. They tend to be a little bit less than average income for the fast-food customer. They are looking for a real meal, so they don't come I for like, a snack, the way they do for some other QSRs [quick-service restaurants]. They're very value-conscious, so they want to make sure they're getting something really good for their money, and it has to be consistent. A lot of our franchisees ask questions like, "Well, how do I compete with a mom-and-pop chicken chain that has dropped their price down?"

The way you compete with that is really quality experience, because ultimately that customer cannot afford to have a bad experience. It's just a completely different mindset about "Where do I spend my money and make sure I get a good-quality meal?"  versus "I'm going to roll the dice and flip it."

That's the way I think we're going to win in the future, and I don't think that's going to change with a good economy or a bad economy. I think actually a bad economy ... if we can step up and win with that, it actually helps us in some ways because that great value becomes even more important.

Keeping Colonel Sanders fresh

KFC Reba

Taylor: Obviously we're still having new Colonel Sanders — how do you keep that fresh? How many Colonel Sanders do you want to go through in a year?

Hochman: We actually do talk about that. We can't blow the budgets. We look at the year and say, "What are our big bets?" That mystery item for delivery, that we'll definitely have a new Colonel.

Then, how they get the Colonel is really about "What are they advertising?" So like, the Colonel for this new mystery item in the fall for delivery, when you see the type of food and the occasion, you'll say "Oh okay, of course they'd have to hire a Colonel like that," right? So it's very, very deliberate. A lot of people think it's random, but it's not. There's some really smart people behind it, trying to figure this stuff out.

Taylor: I remember it was controversial at first, bringing the Colonel back. What was kind of the moment where you're like, "Okay this is working"?

Hochman: No matter what you do, you're always going to have some bad comments, right? The most important thing that we do is we have very clear social monitoring. Then we're able to understand, "Okay this is a winner. And let's not discount the bad comments, but it's a very small portion." Because you're going to get that in anything you do. Then we have more confidence in being able to do these things, because we have the metric in place to know it is working.

One or two times, I don't want to talk about ones where we said, "Okay this didn't work. And we need to stop." But, we've probably done over 50 executions since then, and the vast majority were very, very positive sentiment. We learn how to make them better each time. You know, it's a real challenge. This poor marketing team's got to figure out how to keep this interesting. Because like, what's the next new turn, you know?

The female Colonel was amazing. They had the Robocop Colonel. The stuff that's coming is going to be even more out there. We have a really phenomenal advertising team. And our marketing team led by Andrea [Zahumensky] is exceptional; they're really world-class folks, and they work really well together. They just have a lot of trust in each other, and they have a lot of respect for the brand. These guys know the brand better than anybody in the world.

Taylor: Now it's like upping the ante when it comes to marketing and with the menu innovation. How do you think about continuing to up the ante?

Hochman: It's like, what are you going to do to beat what you did previously, right? And the great brands continue to do it.

One of our sister brands I admire tremendously is Taco Bell. Just when you think they can't get any more successful, they do, right? It's because they are — and our mindset's the same way now, which is — we're hungry. What's the next thing, and how can we do better? What can we learn with the things that we don't do as well so that we can take the brand where we want it to be? Once we get complacent, we'll be back where we were before the turnaround started.

'Our superhuman strength is fried chicken and Colonel Sanders.'

Taylor: Do you see that as you guys having the same competitors as before, or do you have different competitors?

Hochman: I think we've got to do our own thing, first of all. One of the things that we lost our way for years was, we chased competitive relevance. And it was like, no, we're about core fried chicken, we're about the sides, we're about the Colonel and his showmanship.Whatever we do, whoever our competitors are, if we lose our sight on that, that's exactly what our competitors want us to do. Our superhuman strength is core fried chicken and Colonel Sanders.

I don't think the competitors have changed, per se; I think our competitors have raised the bar on what great food looks like, what great value looks like. The best thing I can say about our competition is that they keep us on our toes. Everybody should have somebody that pushes you.

Taylor: I've been reading about Chick-fil-A recently, just because they've had such a surprising growth story. You guys are kind of taking a very different tactic with more limited-time offers, more things like that. Is that a conscious choice?

Chick-fil-A

Hochman: I think they're doing their own thing, too. I think they're really smart in what they're doing, and they understand who they are, and they own it. And we're trying to do the same thing. How are we going to innovate on fried chicken and make it new and exciting again? We're obsessed with making fried chicken exciting and fun. And we're obsessed about bringing the Colonel back, because when we were growing 20 years ago or 30 years ago, he was the center of everything.

Taylor: Now you're going from turnaround to growth, what are the next steps here?

Hochman: We believe it's more innovation that makes our brand fresh and exciting. We've got to finish this remodel project, which is going to be 50% by the end of this year, 70% by the end of next year. It's going to look like a fresh new brand for people. And a lot of times, people have seen the advertising or they might see the new ad on like, the Nashville Hot and say, "Oh, KFC's back." And then they see that their local restaurant is still looking really old, and it's a disconnect; it's like, "I don't want to go in there because it doesn't look like what I think that the brand should look like."

We've got to start building again, because when you build, what does it tell the customer? It says you're back. Like, you know dying brands don't build new restaurants. Growing brands do. 

We've got to evolve the digital parts of our restaurant so that whether you want to talk to somebody or you never want to talk to somebody, you can do that and get an amazing experience from KFC. At the same time, we've got to start simplifying the back of the restaurant. Our people take almost an hour and a half a day counting inventory. There's technology now — see, I can take your phone and go like this, and it just counts it. 

The fourth thing beyond digital is just simplifying the operations, making it easier for our team members to be able to support. The digital example is one, but there's plenty of non-digital stuff that we can do to make things easier.

Delivery could be a $400 billion business

Kevin Hochman

Taylor: How big can delivery be for KFC?

Hochman: KFC is in over 135 countries. Many of them have delivery and have had delivery for many years, and some of the markets go up to 10% mix. So, you start doing the math on that — in theory, the potential here could be a $400 billion business. I think that's going to take time, and we've got a lot of work to do to get there, but, to me that's a big north star for our company. And certainly some of our competitors in the U.S. have even more than 10% mix already.

Taylor: How are you approaching your delivery rollout?

Hochman: Our plan will be to launch with free delivery. We want people to adopt this as a new way of doing. We'll have new graphics and talk about delivery. We're working on potentially some new packaging too, but I think that's a little further down the road, in year two of delivery.

We've been spending nine months literally developing a system so that when someone orders on her phone, it goes directly into the pack-out monitors at the exact right time. When the driver comes, it's ready to go. That's a big deal. Because you think about: what are really the two big things, when you're scrolling through your aggregator app before you're going to buy? It's going to be: what's the cost? We have very good terms with GrubHub because of our relationship, so the cost is very low in our world versus other worlds. And then: how fast is it going to come? And, while we may not be able to beat the pizza guys because they have their own drivers, eliminating all that friction of going to the store and being able to grab it can get our times pretty close to those guys.

That's why we think this national launch is such a big deal for us, because we think that it's a layer of business that we think is sustainable. It meets a need, right? It's easy, right? And it tastes great when it gets there. But then, how do we make it as easy as possible for the customer to adopt that? It's free delivery, probably have some really cool offers, new products.

Kentucky Faux Chicken 

Taylor: I've been reading so much about plant-based meat in the last couple of months. For KFC, would that ever happen as you guys are doing all this menu innovation?

Hochman: Well, it's funny, honestly if you asked me six months ago, I would've said no, I'm just being really honest with you, because we're about fried chicken. Obviously if the customer — if it becomes broad-based and alternative protein is an important business to be in, we're going to go test it.

So, in the last two weeks I've made several appointments with some of the big guys just to learn about: what does alternative protein look like in chicken? The success that we've seen obviously has been in beef or alternative beef. So that answer is: never say never. I would say never six months ago. Now if we really thought that, we're going to learn more about it.

I will say that the UK — I don't know if it was late last year — they tested an alternative chicken in a few stores. I'd say that we're open to it if that's where the customer goes. It still feels a little early, but we're going to learn about it. I'll be able to tell you more in a month after I've learned. I just don't know enough about the industry to understand, you know, is it the same experience? 

SEE ALSO: KFC is taking a page out of Taco Bell's playbook as it prepares to launch more new menu items in 2019 than in the past 5 years combined

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KFC released a Cheetos sandwich complete with fried chicken, Cheetos, and cheese sauce

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KFC Cheetos Sandwich

  • Kentucky Fried Chicken on Tuesday began testing a limited-edition chicken sandwich loaded with Cheetos.
  • The Cheetos Sandwich is dressed with a special Cheetos sauce and a layer of the crunchy chip.
  • So far the chain is offering it only at locations in select cities in North Carolina, Virginia, and Georgia.

If you haven't already broken your New Year's resolution to eat healthier, the new Cheetos Sandwich from Kentucky Fried Chicken may just tempt you to do so.

On Tuesday, fast-food giant KFC announced its newest limited-edition sandwich, and it's a match made in junk-food heaven. The restaurant behind the Double Down is teaming up with snack-chip king Cheetos for an unbelievable dish.

The Cheetos Sandwich is loaded with crunch. There's a hand-breaded, extra crispy chicken fillet that's coated with special Cheetos sauce and placed on a toasted bun loaded with mayonnaise and a layer of crunchy Cheetos.

The sandwich is being tested in certain KFC locations

KFC"Both KFC and Cheetos have dedicated fanbases loyal to each new creation," a KFC representative said in a statement. "It only made sense to merge these two iconic brands together to provide an irresistible and flavorful sandwich that gives the best of both worlds."

According to the KFC spokesperson, the sandwich delivers a 'blast of craveable Cheetos in every bite'

cheetosThe sandwich is still in launch mode, so it's not for sale at every KFC. Right now, you can find it only in Greensboro, North Carolina; Raleigh, North Carolina; Roanoke, Virginia; Richmond, Virginia; and Greenville, Georgia KFC locations.

But although it's a limited offering, if this sandwich receives as much attention as last year's Kentucky Fried Chicken & Waffles, a nationwide rollout could be in its future. Bon appetit!

Visit INSIDER's homepage for more

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The head of KFC's US business on comebacks, delivery, vegan 'chicken,' and the chain's new approach to menu innovation (YUM)

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Kevin Hochman

  • Kevin Hochman has led KFC through five years of same-store sales growth, kicking off the chicken chain's turnaround. 
  • Now, Hochman tells Business Insider he is ready to go from turnaround to a new era of growth. 
  • Hochman is looking to new menu items, delivery, and more to fuel the future of KFC. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Kevin Hochman is the man who revived Colonel Sanders. 

When Hochman joined KFC in 2014 as chief marketing officer, the chain was deep into a period of slumping sales. So, Hochman decided to bring the Colonel back from the dead — or at least his character. 

Since then, everyone from Reba McEntire to George Hamilton has donned the white suit of KFC's esteemed founder. Hochman was promoted from CMO to president of KFC in 2017. And, sales have steadily grown, with the chain hitting five years of same-store sales growth. 

"I'm trying to get people in the mindset that we should be in growth mode, not turnaround mode anymore," Hochman told Business Insider in a recent interview.

Read on for how Hochman plans to fuel that growth, from delivery, to new menu items, to faux fried chicken. 

"I think we can have 10 years of growth on this brand and really become a player in the industry again, like we were decades ago," Hochman said. "So, we've got some big bets." 

The following interview has been edited for length and clarity.

From comeback to growth

KFC Chicken Tenders

Kate Taylor: Are we still in the re-Colonelization phrase? What happens now?

Kevin Hochman: We've completed five years of growth now. I'm trying to get people in the mindset that we should be in growth mode, not turnaround mode anymore. We still have a lot of work to do to get it done, but there's so much opportunity for our brand now that we've kind of got some stability and we've got some young people back into the brand. We're getting our remodels completed and we're building again. My message at our convention in February to our franchisees was like, "Hey, congratulations on a great five years. We should all feel really good about that. However, we've got a lot of challenges in front of us and we need to grow a whole lot faster in the next five years."

I think we can have 10 years of growth on this brand and really become a player in the industry again, like we were decades ago. So, we've got some big bets that we're talking about.

One is really fast-paced, ramping up innovation plans. I think you've seen some of it already — the chicken and waffles was kind of the start of this revamped innovation plan. We have a bunch more stuff that's coming in the back half of the year. I would tell you that our innovation this year is more than the previous five years combined when you add it all up; it's been very deliberate because we've got people that are interested in our brand again.

This will be our first year, if all goes according to plan, that we should build more stores than we close, which is a big deal. ... I think it will be the first positive year on net builds in like 17 years. 

We're still one of the only fast-food brands that you bring home, you take out of the packaging and actually put on plates, especially if you're having a group meal. So the food's already kind of designed to travel, and we have this great deal with GrubHub. A little over a year ago, we announced a deal with GrubHub across Taco Bell and KFC, and that's a really good deal for both of us. They want to expand faster; we obviously want great, favorable terms for our franchisees and we want to integrate them because we want to get the time from order to delivery down.

We spent the last 12 months literally building that in the restaurants. We had a tablet that — you'd get the order from the tablet, so I'd order on my phone, go to the tablet, then the team member's got to re-key it in  — which is fraught with error. And then it gets pushed through what we call a KDS, which is our projection system, then it gets fulfilled. Now we've spent probably about nine months developing and testing where you order on your phone and it goes right into that projection system right when it needs to be packed up for the driver.

Now we can go roll this out to as many restaurants as we can get it into. I think we're at 2,800 restaurants now for delivery, 3,300 in mobile ordering, and our hope is to get to 75% delivery — which would be all of the GrubHub markets today — by Q4, when we want to launch a big national campaign.

We're going to launch a huge item that goes with delivery— something you would expected from Kentucky Fried Chicken. I get really bullish about not just having a delivery layer, but we're actually designing products now that will really meet that occasion.

Mixing up the menu

KFC Smoky Mountain BBQ Chicken

Taylor: I do feel like a lot of the fried chicken chains aren't really known for menu innovation. How did you decide that it was time to change that paradigm?

Hochman: We grew faster in the first few years of the turnaround than the last couple of years. It's clear we've got to grow faster. If we want to have 10 years of growth, which is kind of the vision, we've got to grow faster. You start checking the boxes of "What are the things that we can do? What are the choices we can make?"

Obviously development and remodel is going to help that. I think that the advertising campaign has obviously helped bring different people in the brand. Really, the missing piece is: what is the new item that I want to run toward? There's a foot in this old world of core chicken and sides, and that's what our core customer wants. But if we really want to attract a younger customer, it can't just be about fun advertising and fun stunts. It's got to be about something that completes that circle.

I think that's really why we said we're going to double down on innovation and try to figure out how we bring some new recipes to the restaurant. We have a really logical way to think about it. So what are recipes you can't get anywhere else? Right, so pickle fried chicken was one. Nashville Hot — well you can get that in Nashville or a fancy restaurant here, but it's not really available in 4,000-plus stores at a really attractive price point that everybody can afford. We take that and tried to make it nationwide at an attractive price point.

The second, the best way to describe it is collaborations. So you see, in like, music where it's like these two genres get together — when I was growing up it was a big deal. Like, "Oh my god, a rapper and a country music singer are coming together." Now it's more commonplace, right? But I think food's no different. I think people like when two disparate foods come together. Well we're having some success with it, so maybe we fell into this strategy, but I think we'll do more of it. The chicken and waffles, I think, got better with Mrs. Buttersworth. We did Cinnabon biscuits now, which are delicious.

I think the third big one is really about value innovation. We can't forget about our core customer. KFC in some ways is a little bit of a treat at a really affordable price, right? The best example I can give you is, we have a $5 famous bowl meal. It's potatoes and gravy, and fried chicken, and corn and cheese. That's a pound of food in that bowl. Then you get a biscuit, and then you get a cookie, and then you get a drink — and it's $5. Even with all the inflationary pressures, we're going to keep it at $5.

That requires people thinking outside the box of like: How do we put the right things in the thing so that the franchisee can make money still and be excited about it, and keep it at $5? We almost call it an abundant need — we know that they're going to feel happy and full, and it'll only cost them a single $5 bill. That is hard work.

Guests want a good price point, but they don't want to sacrifice. We just researched with really value-conscious customers, and they told us, "Yeah, I know the dollar chicken sandwich is the dumbed down version of the $3 sandwich. So that doesn't really excite me."

Winning over budget shoppers

Kevin Hochman

Taylor: What are these really value-conscious customers looking for when you guys talk to them?

Hochman: It's not cheap. You talk to them and you say, "We have a dollar menu." Well, usually that's someone saying, "I have to sacrifice, and you know it's not really that good." It's really about price divided by quality. Especially with a value-conscious consumer, because if they go into a store or restaurant and they buy something and it's not good, they can't necessarily afford to buy something else. Like they're out of luck, right?

They actually double down on wanting to have something that's a really quality thing versus what's the cheapest thing available. And you see that time and time again. When we can bring quality at affordable price points, we win. And when we don't, we have trouble keeping that core customer. It's our job to figure out new and interesting ways to do that so we delight that customer, versus disappoint them. And when we delight them, they reward us. They reward us with more traffic, and then we have better sales and everybody wins.

Taylor: How does the improved economy affect things?

Hochman: I think people will always be value-conscious, right? I don't think that's a fad. I think when the economy is better, we have a tailwind that helps us grow faster.

For us, gas prices are a big deal. When gas prices were down we had a big tailwind; when gas prices start to rise we have a headwind. That just says you've got to deliver value; it's even more important. For every dollar of increase in gas prices — a big part of our core customer base, this is like 20% of disposable income. It's got to come from somewhere. And sadly, sometimes you hear about them skipping meals or, "I'm going to eat one really big meal and that'll take me to dinner." Our job is: How do we help them not compensate as much? How are we able to mesh great values and great products?

If we can delight them we're going to win. And if we don't, we lose some of that core customer.

Taylor: Who is your core customer now?

Hochman: The core customer is someone that comes to KFC pretty regularly. They tend to be a little bit less than average income for the fast-food customer. They are looking for a real meal, so they don't come I for like, a snack, the way they do for some other QSRs [quick-service restaurants]. They're very value-conscious, so they want to make sure they're getting something really good for their money, and it has to be consistent. A lot of our franchisees ask questions like, "Well, how do I compete with a mom-and-pop chicken chain that has dropped their price down?"

The way you compete with that is really quality experience, because ultimately that customer cannot afford to have a bad experience. It's just a completely different mindset about "Where do I spend my money and make sure I get a good-quality meal?"  versus "I'm going to roll the dice and flip it."

That's the way I think we're going to win in the future, and I don't think that's going to change with a good economy or a bad economy. I think actually a bad economy ... if we can step up and win with that, it actually helps us in some ways because that great value becomes even more important.

Keeping Colonel Sanders fresh

KFC Reba

Taylor: Obviously we're still having new Colonel Sanders — how do you keep that fresh? How many Colonel Sanders do you want to go through in a year?

Hochman: We actually do talk about that. We can't blow the budgets. We look at the year and say, "What are our big bets?" That mystery item for delivery, that we'll definitely have a new Colonel.

Then, how they get the Colonel is really about "What are they advertising?" So like, the Colonel for this new mystery item in the fall for delivery, when you see the type of food and the occasion, you'll say "Oh okay, of course they'd have to hire a Colonel like that," right? So it's very, very deliberate. A lot of people think it's random, but it's not. There's some really smart people behind it, trying to figure this stuff out.

Taylor: I remember it was controversial at first, bringing the Colonel back. What was kind of the moment where you're like, "Okay this is working"?

Hochman: No matter what you do, you're always going to have some bad comments, right? The most important thing that we do is we have very clear social monitoring. Then we're able to understand, "Okay this is a winner. And let's not discount the bad comments, but it's a very small portion." Because you're going to get that in anything you do. Then we have more confidence in being able to do these things, because we have the metric in place to know it is working.

One or two times, I don't want to talk about ones where we said, "Okay this didn't work. And we need to stop." But, we've probably done over 50 executions since then, and the vast majority were very, very positive sentiment. We learn how to make them better each time. You know, it's a real challenge. This poor marketing team's got to figure out how to keep this interesting. Because like, what's the next new turn, you know?

The female Colonel was amazing. They had the Robocop Colonel. The stuff that's coming is going to be even more out there. We have a really phenomenal advertising team. And our marketing team led by Andrea [Zahumensky] is exceptional; they're really world-class folks, and they work really well together. They just have a lot of trust in each other, and they have a lot of respect for the brand. These guys know the brand better than anybody in the world.

Taylor: Now it's like upping the ante when it comes to marketing and with the menu innovation. How do you think about continuing to up the ante?

Hochman: It's like, what are you going to do to beat what you did previously, right? And the great brands continue to do it.

One of our sister brands I admire tremendously is Taco Bell. Just when you think they can't get any more successful, they do, right? It's because they are — and our mindset's the same way now, which is — we're hungry. What's the next thing, and how can we do better? What can we learn with the things that we don't do as well so that we can take the brand where we want it to be? Once we get complacent, we'll be back where we were before the turnaround started.

'Our superhuman strength is fried chicken and Colonel Sanders.'

Taylor: Do you see that as you guys having the same competitors as before, or do you have different competitors?

Hochman: I think we've got to do our own thing, first of all. One of the things that we lost our way for years was, we chased competitive relevance. And it was like, no, we're about core fried chicken, we're about the sides, we're about the Colonel and his showmanship.Whatever we do, whoever our competitors are, if we lose our sight on that, that's exactly what our competitors want us to do. Our superhuman strength is core fried chicken and Colonel Sanders.

I don't think the competitors have changed, per se; I think our competitors have raised the bar on what great food looks like, what great value looks like. The best thing I can say about our competition is that they keep us on our toes. Everybody should have somebody that pushes you.

Taylor: I've been reading about Chick-fil-A recently, just because they've had such a surprising growth story. You guys are kind of taking a very different tactic with more limited-time offers, more things like that. Is that a conscious choice?

Chick-fil-A

Hochman: I think they're doing their own thing, too. I think they're really smart in what they're doing, and they understand who they are, and they own it. And we're trying to do the same thing. How are we going to innovate on fried chicken and make it new and exciting again? We're obsessed with making fried chicken exciting and fun. And we're obsessed about bringing the Colonel back, because when we were growing 20 years ago or 30 years ago, he was the center of everything.

Taylor: Now you're going from turnaround to growth, what are the next steps here?

Hochman: We believe it's more innovation that makes our brand fresh and exciting. We've got to finish this remodel project, which is going to be 50% by the end of this year, 70% by the end of next year. It's going to look like a fresh new brand for people. And a lot of times, people have seen the advertising or they might see the new ad on like, the Nashville Hot and say, "Oh, KFC's back." And then they see that their local restaurant is still looking really old, and it's a disconnect; it's like, "I don't want to go in there because it doesn't look like what I think that the brand should look like."

We've got to start building again, because when you build, what does it tell the customer? It says you're back. Like, you know dying brands don't build new restaurants. Growing brands do. 

We've got to evolve the digital parts of our restaurant so that whether you want to talk to somebody or you never want to talk to somebody, you can do that and get an amazing experience from KFC. At the same time, we've got to start simplifying the back of the restaurant. Our people take almost an hour and a half a day counting inventory. There's technology now — see, I can take your phone and go like this, and it just counts it. 

The fourth thing beyond digital is just simplifying the operations, making it easier for our team members to be able to support. The digital example is one, but there's plenty of non-digital stuff that we can do to make things easier.

Delivery could be a $400 billion business

Kevin Hochman

Taylor: How big can delivery be for KFC?

Hochman: KFC is in over 135 countries. Many of them have delivery and have had delivery for many years, and some of the markets go up to 10% mix. So, you start doing the math on that — in theory, the potential here could be a $400 billion business. I think that's going to take time, and we've got a lot of work to do to get there, but, to me that's a big north star for our company. And certainly some of our competitors in the U.S. have even more than 10% mix already.

Taylor: How are you approaching your delivery rollout?

Hochman: Our plan will be to launch with free delivery. We want people to adopt this as a new way of doing. We'll have new graphics and talk about delivery. We're working on potentially some new packaging too, but I think that's a little further down the road, in year two of delivery.

We've been spending nine months literally developing a system so that when someone orders on her phone, it goes directly into the pack-out monitors at the exact right time. When the driver comes, it's ready to go. That's a big deal. Because you think about: what are really the two big things, when you're scrolling through your aggregator app before you're going to buy? It's going to be: what's the cost? We have very good terms with GrubHub because of our relationship, so the cost is very low in our world versus other worlds. And then: how fast is it going to come? And, while we may not be able to beat the pizza guys because they have their own drivers, eliminating all that friction of going to the store and being able to grab it can get our times pretty close to those guys.

That's why we think this national launch is such a big deal for us, because we think that it's a layer of business that we think is sustainable. It meets a need, right? It's easy, right? And it tastes great when it gets there. But then, how do we make it as easy as possible for the customer to adopt that? It's free delivery, probably have some really cool offers, new products.

Kentucky Faux Chicken 

Taylor: I've been reading so much about plant-based meat in the last couple of months. For KFC, would that ever happen as you guys are doing all this menu innovation?

Hochman: Well, it's funny, honestly if you asked me six months ago, I would've said no, I'm just being really honest with you, because we're about fried chicken. Obviously if the customer — if it becomes broad-based and alternative protein is an important business to be in, we're going to go test it.

So, in the last two weeks I've made several appointments with some of the big guys just to learn about: what does alternative protein look like in chicken? The success that we've seen obviously has been in beef or alternative beef. So that answer is: never say never. I would say never six months ago. Now if we really thought that, we're going to learn more about it.

I will say that the UK — I don't know if it was late last year — they tested an alternative chicken in a few stores. I'd say that we're open to it if that's where the customer goes. It still feels a little early, but we're going to learn about it. I'll be able to tell you more in a month after I've learned. I just don't know enough about the industry to understand, you know, is it the same experience? 

SEE ALSO: KFC is taking a page out of Taco Bell's playbook as it prepares to launch more new menu items in 2019 than in the past 5 years combined

Join the conversation about this story »

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KFC's president reveals how the chain picks who plays Colonel Sanders as the brand cycles through countless versions of the character

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George Hamilton KFC

  • KFC's US president, Kevin Hochman, says the chain is "very, very deliberate" when it comes to casting its Colonel Sanders
  • The chain said it needs to determine what new products need a Colonel to make a splash, as well as make sure there is an actual link between the actor and the new menu item or deal. 
  • Past Colonel Sanders have included Reba McEntire, Jason Alexander, George Hamilton, and a Chippendales dancer. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

There's a method to the madness of KFC's constantly rotating cast of Colonel Sanders.

"It's very, very deliberate ... A lot of people think it's random, but it's not," KFC's US president Kevin Hochman told Business Insider. "There's some really smart people behind trying to figure this stuff out."

Read more: KFC is meeting with plant-based 'meat' makers as chains like Burger King and Del Taco jump on the vegan bandwagon

There are two major points that KFC considers when picking a new Colonel Sanders. The first is deciding which product launches deserve a new Colonel. 

A quirky new menu item, such as its Cinnabon Dessert Biscuits, will typically be accompanied by a new Colonel — in this case, a shirtless Chippendales dancer. When KFC launches delivery nationally later this year, there will be a new Colonel whom Hochman says the chain has already selected. 

"We can't blow the budgets," Hochman says. "We look at the year and say, 'What are our big bets?'"

KFC Jason Alexander

Next, KFC needs to match the correct Colonel Sanders to the right product.

The chain hired Jason Alexander, the actor best known for playing George Costanza on the television show "Seinfeld," for a series of ads spoofing traditional sitcoms. Reba McEntire told Business Insider that her Oklahoma roots helped her become the first female Colonel, selling the Smoky Mountain BBQ chicken. George Hamilton was hired as the "Extra Crispy Colonel"in part because of his iconic tan. 

Hochman says that fans can continue to expect KFC to push the boundaries of who exactly can serve as the next Colonel Sanders. 

"It's a real challenge," Hochman says. "This poor marketing team's got to figure out how to keep this interesting."

SEE ALSO: The head of KFC's US business on comebacks, delivery, vegan 'chicken,' and the chain's new approach to menu innovation

Join the conversation about this story »

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KFC is launching its first ever vegan fried 'chicken' burger in the UK

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Imposter Burger2

  • KFC has created a vegan version of its signature fried chicken burger.
  • The "Imposter Burger" is made from meat substitute Quorn and is coated in the Colonel's Original Recipe herbs and spices, with vegan mayo and lettuce, in a soft bun.
  • It's being trialled at select branches of the fast food restaurant across the UK for four weeks.
  • The launch follows the introduction of plant-based alternatives at popular chains such as Burger King and IKEA.
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories.

KFC is jumping on the plant-based bandwagon and launching its first ever vegan fried "chicken" burger.

Named the Imposter Burger, the vegan version of the fried chicken chain's Original Recipe Fillet Burger will be made from a "bespoke" Quorn fillet, coated in the Colonel's Original Recipe herbs and spices.

The fillet will sit atop iceberg lettuce and creamy vegan mayo, sandwiched together in a soft glazed bun.

A spokesperson for KFC confirmed to INSIDER that the Imposter Burger clocks in at 450 calories, practically the same as the chicken equivalent at 475 calories.

The Imposter Burger LR

The Imposter Burger will also contain a respectable 18.8g protein, which although less than the 29.7g of its chicken counterpart, is a decent amount for a vegan patty.

The burger is a world-first for the American fast food chain, and is currently only going to be available in select KFC stores in the UK for a four-week trial run.

On its own, the Imposter burger will cost £2.99 ($3.79) or £3.49 ($4.42) with a drink, as a wrap with a drink it'll be £3.99 ($5.06), and as a salad with a drink, it'll cost £3.79 ($4.80).

From June 17, vegans, flexitarians, or simply intrigued meat-eaters can sample the Imposter Burger at the following branches of KFC in Bristol, London, and the Midlands:

  • Bristol - Fishponds
  • Bristol Bradley Stoke
  • Bristol - Winterstoke Road
  • Bristol - Eastgate Retail Park
  • Bristol — Avonmeads Retail Park
  • Bristol — Shield Retail Park
  • Bristol — Keynsham
  • Bristol — Hengrove Leisure Park
  • Bristol — The Venue Cribbs Causeway
  • Birmingham — Great Bridge Retail Pk
  • Bloxwich — Leamore Lane
  • Cannock — Orbital Retail Park
  • Tamworth — Ventura Retail Park
  • Tyburn — Kingsbury Road
  • Walsall — Junction 10 M6 Services
  • Walsall — Park Street
  • Dudley — Merry Hill Food Court
  • Stourbridge — St Johns Road
  • Dudley — Merry Hill Drive Thru
  • London — Gloucester Road

The same KFC branches will also be offering a new vegetarian creation called the Southern Fritter Stacker, which will be available as a burger, wrap, or ricebox, from July 15.

Victoria Robertson, "Chief Vegetable Enthusiast" at KFC UK & Ireland commented: "We know … it's unfair.

"Vegans have been cruelly denied the incredible taste of KFC up to now, which is why we've worked hard to perfect The Imposter — a vegan burger that the Colonel would be proud of."

KFC's US president Kevin Hochman recently told Business Insider that the company was looking into launching vegan options in the States too, which has been a surprising development for him.

"If you would have asked me six months ago, I would have said no, to be completely honest with you," Hochman said. "Because we're about fried chicken."

But he added: "In the last two weeks I've made several appointments with some of the big guys, just to figure out — what does alternative protein look like in chicken?" 

Read more:KFC is meeting with plant-based 'meat' makers as chains like Burger King and Del Taco jump on the vegan bandwagon

The launch follows the introduction of plant-based alternatives at other popular fast food chains: Burger King now has the Impossible Whopper, Greggs launched a vegan sausage roll, and IKEA is working on a plant-based version of its signature meatballs.

And the trend for lab-grown meat alternatives shows no signs of slowing down. In fact, a recent report claimed that by 2040, 60% of the "meat" we consume will not come from animals. 

Join the conversation about this story »

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KFC is launching a Cheetos Sandwich across America, and it represents a massive shift in the chicken chain's strategy

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Cheetos Sandwich

KFC is rolling out a fried chicken sandwich with Cheetos on it at locations across America. 

Starting July 1, KFC is launching a fried chicken sandwich with a layer of Cheetos. In addition to the "pinch of the thumb, index and middle fingers" of Cheetos, the sandwich also features Cheetos sauce and mayo.

The sandwich will only be available for four weeks, and represents a new strategy at KFC. The chain is planning to launch more new menu items in 2019 than in the prior five years combined, Kevin Hochman, the president of KFC's US business, told Business Insider earlier in June. 

"There's a foot in this old world of core chicken and sides ... But if we really want to attract a younger customer it can't just be about fun advertising and fun stunts," Hochman said.

"That's really why we said we're going to double down on innovation and try to figure out how we bring some new recipes to the restaurant," Hochman added.

Read more: KFC is taking a page out of Taco Bell's playbook as it prepares to launch more new menu items in 2019 than in the past 5 years combined

Other recent fruits of KFC's new menu strategy include chicken and waffles and Cinnabon biscuits. KFC previously tested the Cheetos sandwich in a handful of markets earlier this year.

Hochman said KFC has three main factors it considers when it comes to new menu items: They need to be something people can't get elsewhere, they usually are collaborations with other major brands (such as the Cinnabon dessert biscuit), and they have to be affordable.

Cheetos Tile Image   FINAL

To celebrate the launch of the Cheetos Sandwich, KFC is holding an event in New York City featuring other Cheetos-inspired dishes. Menu items include Cheetos-fied KFC Hot Wings, Cheetos Loaded Fries, and a KFC Mac and Cheetos Bowl. 

SEE ALSO: The head of KFC's US business on comebacks, delivery, vegan 'chicken,' and the chain's new approach to menu innovation

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We tried KFC's new Cheetos sandwich — and it was shockingly good

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KFC Cheetos Sandwich

Star-crossed lovers Cheetos and fried chicken will finally unite in holy-moly matrimony this summer.

In its first-ever collaboration with Frito-Lay, KFC on July 1 is releasing a Cheetos sandwich that will fulfill all your childhood dreams of cheese, crunch, and crispy fried chicken. The Cheetos sandwich will be only be available through the end of July, though KFC's executive chef, Bob Das, told Business Insider that the chain is looking to continue to offer limited-edition mash-up menu items like this one.

We, your ever-faithful fast-food taste-testers at Business Insider, tried this love child of junk food and fast-food, and it was every bit as weirdly delicious as it was in our prepubescent dreams.

KFC Cheetos Sandwich

We didn't know what to expect, but what we got was this: a soft potato bun stuffed with jagged crispy chicken, intensely orange artificial Cheetos sauce, and a fistful of Cheetos.

It was orange. Oh, so orange.

KFC Cheetos Sandwich

We were not prepared for the lactic magic that was about to happen.

KFC Cheetos Sandwich

The sharp, pungent, Cheetos cheese tang was the perfect match for KFC's crispy-as-funk fried chicken. The Cheetos glued to the bottom with a swab of mayo added even more crunch to the bunch.

Business Insider's senior retail correspondent, Kate Taylor, described the sandwich as "better than a salad" in every way besides nutritional value. 

KFC Cheetos Sandwich

Cheetos and KFC's fried chicken were a match made in heaven, and we're so relieved that they were finally able to consummate their longtime, long-distance flirtation. Congratulations to the happy couple and props to KFC for making our childhood dreams come true.

KFC's president, Kevin Hochman, told Business Insider that KFC is looking to do more collaborations with other major brands, such as the Cinnabon dessert biscuit that launched earlier this year.

We can't wait.

SEE ALSO: We tried Hard Rock Cafe's new 24-karat gold leaf burger, and we're not convinced it's better than a normal burger

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A KFC franchise owner in a remote area of Australia thinks his restaurant is worthy of a Michelin star

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KFC

  • The owner of a KFC franchise in a remote area of Australia thinks his restaurant is worthy of a Michelin star.

  • Sam Edelman, who runs an outpost for the popular American fried chicken company in the remote northern town of Alice Springs, Australia, has created an online campaign to earn the prestigious culinary award.
  • Edelman told news.com.au that the restaurant is worthy of a Michelin star because people drive "hundreds of kilometers" to eat at his remote location, making it a tourist draw.
  • It's unclear if Edelman's bid will be successful though, since Michelin does not publish a guide in Australia, but he hopes the stunt will drive some positive publicity towards his team and town.
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories.

The owner of a KFC franchise in a remote area of Australia thinks his restaurant is worthy of a Michelin star.

Sam Edelman, who runs an outpost for the popular American fried chicken chain in the northern town of Alice Springs, Australia, created a Facebook group called "Kentucky Fried Chicken deserves a Michelin Star" last week in his bid for the crowning achievement of culinary success.

"Technically we meet the criteria ... so let's just see how we go!" the group's description reads.

The Michelin guide is published each year and ranks restaurants around the world using a three-star rating system, which distinguishes restaurants that are "worth a stop", "detour" or in the most impressive cases are worth a "special journey." According to its website, ratings are based on five criteria, including food quality, mastery, personality, value, and consistency.

Michelin does not publish a guide in Australia and does not include Australian restaurants in its rating system.

Edelman told news.com.au that his restaurant fits the starring criteria because of the remote location of his store. He said customers have travelled "hundreds of kilometers" to eat the fried chicken at his KFC.

Read more:KFC released a Cheetos sandwich complete with fried chicken, Cheetos, and cheese sauce

"We are the most remote KFC in the world," he said. "We're about 1,200 kilometers (745 miles) from the next nearest KFC, and that's why when I read about the criteria, I thought, 'Hey, yeah we are unique.'"

Edelman, who has been with KFC for 20 years and became a franchise owner seven years ago, told news.com.au that he was inspired to start his campaign after watching Netflix's Street Food, which highlights unique street vendors around the world. One episode featured an elderly vendor named Jay Fai, whose humble Bangkok street cart earned a Michelin star in 2017.

Edelman has consulted with a Michelin starred chef, who appeared skeptical of his bid. While Edelman told news.com.au that he wasn't sure if his stunt would be successful, he hoped to bring some publicity to his team and to Alice Springs.

"Just because we are a franchise and considered fast food doesn't mean it's not good food," he said.

INSIDER contacted Michelin and Edelman for comment, and we'll update as necessary.

Join the conversation about this story »

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