Courtesy of TGI Fridays

Mention TGI Fridays to its regular customers and they’ll have no trouble conjuring an image of the casual-dining chain: dark-wood interiors, kitschy antiques on the walls, plenty of noise and the standard pub grub of mozzarella sticks and strawberry daiquiris. This atmosphere has served the restaurant well for decades now—and why shouldn’t it? Isn’t TGI Fridays where people go after work to loosen their belts and knock back a few?

Sure—but maybe not for much longer.

Last week, the 51-year-old chain opened the doors of a new prototype in Corpus Christi, Texas, and it’s a big departure from the usual candy-stripe awnings and red Naugahyde booths. Fridays’ new 10,000-square-foot restaurant is a light-filled terrain of blond wood. The bar (still a focal point) now includes stations for juices and coffees. An open deli case offers a variety of grab-and-go salads and sandwiches. Now open at 7 a.m., the eatery features Wi-Fi-equipped areas for the laptop crowd. And later at night, Fridays presents live events, including bands, trivia and open-mic nights.

“It’s a response to what customers are looking for,” said CMO Brian Gies, explaining that flexibility and “fluid social zones” were the operative ideas behind the concept. In addition to capturing the after-work or weekend crowd, Fridays hopes to be seen as a viable lunch destination, a place for an office meeting or a home base for work-at-home types who are tired of actually working at home. “We’re finding that people will use the grab-and-go to bring something back to their table, or if they’ve been at the bar having a beer and they’re winding down, they may grab a bite to go,” Gies said. “It’s about delivering flexibility.”tgi-fridays-1.png

It’s certainly about delivering results. In 2014, longtime owner Carlson sold TGI Fridays for $800 million to a pair of private-equity firms. For years now, nimble newcomers in the so-called fast-casual segment have given indigestion to casual-dining concepts, and TGI Fridays is among the oldest of those. Indeed, Fridays pioneered the idea of the well-mannered singles bar with a full menu in 1965, when the first Fridays opened in New York on the corner of 63rd Street and First Avenue. And though the chain has had plenty of face-lifts and menu redesigns since then, the basic concept is long overdue for radical surgery, according to Darren Tristano, president of restaurant consultancy Technomic.

“Today’s younger consumer wants to go to a place that their parents didn’t patronize,” he said, “and certainly not a bar and grill from the ’70s where you could pick up a flight attendant.”

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SOURCE: Adweek

 

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Prince Malachi is the founder of The Oracle Network and the Streetwear brand Y.A.H. Apparel

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