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The Australian fast food market is valued at more than 2.7 billion GPB and is composed of 1.4 billion fast food meals. This includes meals serviced at 17,000 fast food outlets. The fast food market has experienced an average annual growth rate of 6.5 percent, which is the most rapidly growing sector of the retail food market. [42]
Fast food advertising promotes fast food products and utilizes numerous aspects to reach out to the public. Along with automobiles, insurance, retail outlets, and consumer electronics, fast food is among the most heavily advertised sectors of the United States economy; spending over 4.6 billion dollars on advertising in 2012. [ 1 ]
A fast-food chain restaurant is generally owned either by the parent company of the fast-food chain or a franchisee – an independent party given the right to use the company's trademark and trade name. In the latter case, a contract is made between the franchisee and the parent company, typically requiring the franchisee to pay an initial ...
In October, the fast-food chain revealed its new restaurant prototype called "Sizzle," which is part of the chain's "Reclaim the Flame" initiative for accelerating restaurant growth and sales. Tom ...
Mexican fast-food chain Naugles operated from 1970 to 1995. The first restaurant opened in Riverside, California, and grew to include establishments in a number of other states including Nevada ...
The Wendy’s combo, which the chain says is “a delicious and value-able reason to jump out of bed in the morning,” keys in on the one word defining fast food restaurants’ latest battle: value.
Food marketing systems differ worldwide due to the level of development in the particular country, economically and technologically. [7] Understanding and interpreting a particular countries food marketing techniques also requires taking into account the socio-economic, cultural, legal-political and technological environment of that country. [7]
The legal definition of franchising in Spain is an activity in which an undertaking, the franchisor, grants to another party, the franchisee, for a specific market and in exchange for financial compensation (either direct, indirect or both), the right to exploit an owned system to commercialize products or services already exploited by the ...