From Nick
Welcome back to Hammy Eats.
Last issue, we spoke about the hero dish.
This week, I want to talk about the thing that decides whether that hero dish actually gets ordered:
Value.
Not “make everything cheaper.” That is usually how good food businesses hurt themselves.
I am talking about whether a customer can understand, in a few seconds, why your food is worth the money, the drive, the delivery fee, the wait, the group decision, and the repeat visit.
Because in 2026, people still want great food.
They still want the bunny chow, the pizza, the kota, the roti, the chip parcel, the burger, the Greek spread, the family curry, the coffee, the pastry, the Friday-night takeaway, and the Sunday lunch that feels like home.
But they are doing more maths before they buy.
That is the new battleground.
Value is becoming the business tool. Make the value obvious before the customer has to work for it.
The Big Bite
Value is becoming the business tool
For a long time, food businesses treated value like a discount poster.
R30 off. Two for one. Free delivery. Combo deal. Limited offer. Today only.
Those things can work. But they are not a strategy on their own.
The better way to think about value is this: Value is the customer feeling clever after they buy.
Stats SA’s March 2026 food and beverages release is useful here. In real terms, total income for the South African food and beverages industry was up 2.2% year-on-year. But the shape of that growth is interesting: takeaway and fast-food outlets were up 5.8%, catering was up 2.5%, while restaurants and coffee shops were down 0.9% for the month.
Over the first quarter of 2026, total income was up 4.0% year-on-year, with takeaway and fast-food outlets growing 6.4% and restaurants and coffee shops growing 2.9%. That does not mean everyone must become fast food, but rather that convenience, clarity, price confidence, and low-risk ordering are pulling hard.
At the same time, Stats SA’s May 2026 inflation update shows food and non-alcoholic beverage inflation easing to 1.9%, while fuel was still doing damage as we all know. For restaurants, that matters because the customer is not only thinking about menu price. They are thinking about the full cost of the choice.
The drive. • The delivery fee. • The parking. • The time. • The risk of a bad meal.
Globally, the same signal is showing up in a different accent. The National Restaurant Association’s 2026 outlook says foodservice sales are still expected to grow, but operators are dealing with persistent cost pressure and cautious households. Their 2026 culinary forecast puts comfort, nostalgia, health, and value right at the front of menu thinking.
Locally, the 2025 South African Fast Food & QSR Digital Trends Report says trust, speed, and value are the main drivers of positive brand sentiment. It also found that more than 90% of fast-food searches now include “near me”, and that households earning under R10,000 a month show strong pull towards R50 to R100 value combos and local flavour.
So the lesson isn't “be cheap.” But rather: Make the value obvious before the customer has to work for it.
What this means for your food business
Here’s the practical version.
Every food business needs a “safe yes.” The safe yes is the thing a new customer orders when they do not know you yet. It does not have to be your cheapest item. It has to feel low-risk.
If someone has just found you on TikTok, Instagram, Google, Mr D, a creator post, or a friend’s WhatsApp, do not make them decode your full menu. Give them an entry point.
Some restaurants are better value than their marketing shows. The portion is huge, but the photo is cropped too tightly. The platter feeds four, but the description just says “large.” The curry comes with sambals, rice, and roti, but the app listing does not say that.
Spell it out. Use clear wins:
- “Should feed two hungry people.”
- “Includes chips and sauce.”
- “Ready in 10 minutes.”
- “Travels well.”
- “Best for sharing.”
- “Under R100 lunch.”
- “Family dinner sorted.”
- “Office order friendly.”
Do not make the customer guess the win.
Discounts are not evil. Random discounts are dangerous. Before you run a special, ask what behaviour you are buying: Are you filling quiet lunch hours? Moving a high-margin drink? Increasing average order value? Creating a first-time trial? Building a midweek habit? Reducing waste before prep expires?
If you do not know the behaviour, the discount is just a leak. Rather build bundles that make operational sense:
- Hero dish plus high-margin side.
- Family meal built around what you already prep.
- Lunch special that does not break the kitchen.
- Dessert add-on that travels well.
- Limited code for a specific window, not your whole week.
Value should be designed, not begged.
People do not only buy food. They buy “lunch is handled.” They buy “date night without thinking.” They buy “the office order is sorted.” They buy “after church.” They buy “before the game.” They buy “Friday treat.” They buy “I am too tired to cook.”
Your content should name the occasion:
- A bunny chow is food. “Durban comfort for a cold Jozi night” is an occasion.
- A croissant box is food. “Office birthday sorted by 10am” is an occasion.
- A kota is food. “Payday lunch with the guys” is an occasion.
On the ground
One thing Hammy Eats keeps proving: People respond when food feels specific.
The strongest moments are not only the expensive ones or the fancy ones. They are the places with a clear reason to care. The Cape Town chip parcel with a story. The Durban bunny chow that carries a city with it. The roti people argue about. The smash burger with a name and a point of view. The family-run spot that has been doing the same thing properly for years. The hidden shop that locals protect like a secret.
Look at the recent Hammy Eats run and you can see the pattern:
V&A fish and chips • Cape Town pizza • Durban bunny chow • roti • Greek food • smash burgers • Vienna chip parcels • Portuguese food • noodles • bakeries • burgers • food tours through misunderstood neighbourhoods.
Different cities. Different categories. Different price points. But the winning pattern is the same: The customer understands the reason to go.
That is what good food content does. It does not just show the dish. It gives the customer a reason to act. And those reasons are usually very practical:
When your content answers those questions, you are not just building awareness. You are reducing risk.
Trend radar
1. “Near me” is purchase intent
When more than 90% of fast-food searches include “near me”, customers are not only browsing. They are looking for the closest good decision. Your Google profile, trading hours, menu photos, address, WhatsApp number, delivery radius, and latest prices are part of your sales team. If those are messy, the customer moves on before your food gets a chance.
2. Delivery menus need value architecture
Mr D now shows customers more than 12,000 restaurants, and the Hammy Eats x Mr D work has been built around helping people discover local, independent food businesses. That is a massive opportunity. It can also be a very crowded shop window. Your delivery menu should not be a dumped version of your till system. Put the easy decisions first: Best-seller, first-time combo, feeds-two option, family meal, high-margin add-on, or special that makes sense. Clear photo. Clear price. Clear portion.
3. Social media is moving from attention to action
Deloitte’s restaurant marketing research found that 65% of consumers follow food and lifestyle topics on social media, and that creator recommendations are becoming a real discovery channel. South Africa is already a phone-first food market. DataReportal’s 2026 South Africa report counts 51.7 million internet users and 29.1 million social media user identities. So content cannot only be “look how good this looks.” It also has to answer buying questions: Where is it? What does it cost? What should I order? Who is it for? When should I go? Does it deliver? Why is it worth choosing today?
4. Comfort and value are winning together
The National Restaurant Association’s 2026 culinary forecast puts comfort, nostalgia, health, and value at the front of menu trends. The point is not to copy America. The point is that diners everywhere are saying the same thing in different accents: Give me food that feels familiar, worth it, and easy to choose.
The Hammy Eats Question
Would a first-time customer understand the value of your food in ten seconds?
Not your whole story. Not your whole menu. Ten seconds. Could they see:
If not, the problem may not be the food. It may be the offer.
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