Mickey D's McMakeover

The heavy plastic look is history. A clean, simple design is on the way in.

http://money.aol.com/bw/investing/canvas3/_a/mickey-ds-mcmakeover/2006050910
0909990001

A comfortable armchair. Cool hanging lights. Funky graphics and photos on
the walls. Wi-Fi access. Premium coffee. Isn't Starbucks great?
Except...this is McDonald's. McDonald's? That's right. After 30 years
without a major design overhaul, the 51-year-old fast-food giant is adopting
a hip new look. The world's largest hamburger chain is redesigning its
30,000 eateries around the globe in a 21st century makeover of unprecedented
scale.

The redesign is risky and has many franchisees up in arms over the high
costs of a makeover. But company officials believe the overhaul is needed.
McDonald's, whose restaurants are visited by more than 40 million people
every day, has moved aggressively over the past three years to revamp its
menu and attract a new breed of customer. It has added healthier items like
premium salads targeted at women, and apple slices and skim milk for
children. But as more upscale items like Asian chicken salad show up on its
menu, the chain's typical starkly lit, plastic-heavy look is at odds with
the contemporary, welcoming image the company wants to present. "McDonald's
promises to be a 'forever young' brand," says John Miologos, vice-president
of worldwide architecture, design, and construction at McDonald's Corp. "We
have to deliver on that promise." The last major change at McDonald's
restaurants was the introduction of play places for children in the early
1980s.

NEW COLORS
What will the new McDonald's look like? "Think iPod: clean lines,
simplicity," says Miologos. The signature mansard roof? History. "The big
red roof looks too dated today," says John Bricker, creative director at
design firm Gensler's brand-strategy arm, Studio 585. It's being replaced by
a flat roof topped by a newly designed, contemporary, golden sloping curve.
Ronald McDonald appears safe: The mascot was given a leaner, sportier look
just last year. And the iconic twin golden arches will still play a big role
in the branding.

After conducting a global contest among design firms, the burger giant chose
New York-based Lippincott Mercer in the summer of 2004. Peter Dixon, the
design firm's creative director, spent 2005 with McDonald's internal
architecture and design team testing and prototyping the new look, which is
being officially rolled out this year. Lippincott Mercer, which until it
signed McDonald's had few clients in the restaurant business, has made a
name for itself working with companies going through a shift in brand
identity and image. In 2002, for example, it helped redesign Nissan Motor
Co. (NSANY) dealerships to reflect the company's launch of several new
upscale cars. Within a year, the redesigned dealerships saw an average of
57% sales growth, vs. 33% overall.


The traditional McDonald's yellow and red colors will remain, but the red
will be muted to terra cotta and olive and sage green will be added to the
mix. To warm up its look, the restaurants will have less plastic and more
brick and wood, with modern hanging lights to produce a softer glow.
Contemporary art or framed photographs will hang on the walls. Bob Dixon, a
private school fund-raiser in Chicago, says of an Oak Brook (Ill.)
restaurant that sports the new design: "It's bright, it's lively, it's
clean. It stunned me how beautiful it was."

The dining area will be separated into three sections with distinct
personalities. The "linger" zone will offer comfortable armchairs, sofas,
and Wi-Fi connections. "The focus is on young adults who want to socialize,
hang out, and linger," says Dixon. Brand consultant Robert Passikoff,
president of Brand Keys, a brand consulting firm, says that Starbucks has
raised the bar: "A level has been set by Starbucks, which offers the
experience of relaxed chairs and a clean environment where people feel
comfortable hanging out even if it's just over a cup of coffee."


The "grab and go" zone will feature tall counters with bar stools for
customers who eat alone; plasma TVs will offer them news and weather
reports. And in the "flexible" zone, families will have booths featuring
fabric cushions with colorful patterns and flexible seating. The new design
allows different music to be targeted to each zone.

>From BusinessWeek

RESISTANCE 
McDonald's won't confirm the cost of a redesign. Richard Adams, a former
franchisee and consultant to current owners, estimates they will have to pay
$300,000 to $400,000 to renovate an existing outlet -- an amount roughly
equal to a restaurant's annual profit. Tearing down a store and rebuilding
from scratch could cost $1 million, Adams says. The franchisees will have to
pay for the renovations themselves, which has some of them seething. "Many
franchisees are dead set against this change, especially because they
already spent millions remodeling their restaurants in the past four years,"
says Adams. In 2002, when McDonald's introduced premium salads, it did ask a
number of franchisees to spruce up their dining rooms, but it wasn't a major
redesign project. McDonald's says it worked collaboratively with franchisees
to jointly develop a strategy for the current "re-imaging" of its
restaurants.


In a recent letter to management at the company's headquarters in Oak Brook,
about 160 franchisees from North Carolina spelled out why they oppose the
new plan. They say the roof change erases 40 years of brand building and
that "there has been no business case presented which justifies the change."
Says Frederick Huebner, who owns 11 McDonald's in North Carolina: "We don't
want to lose the iconic look of what we've got." If franchisees balk,
McDonald's can refuse to renew their contract.


Right now, only 20 recently opened restaurants in the U.S. sport the
makeover in its entirety. Another 20, primarily in Tulsa, Okla. and
Columbus, Ohio, have been completely remodeled. All brand-new restaurants
will have to hew to the redesign blueprints, and by the end of 2006, more
than half of the 13,720 U.S. restaurants will feature some element of the
design. Says Gensler's Bricker: "It's something that McDonald's has to do if
it wants to be part of the 21st century."

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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