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In-N-Out wins by staying true to its rootsIn-N-Out wins by staying true to its roots

Nancy Luna, Senior editor, Nation's Restaurant News

October 29, 2018

2 Min Read
In-N-Out wins by staying true to its roots
Courtesy of In-N-Out Burger

NRN presents Consumer Picks, a comprehensive look at customer preference and restaurant brand strength. This annual special report is produced with Datassential. Get the full report>>

In-N-Out Burger, the Southern California burger chain known for its cult following, earned high scores in nearly every consumer satisfaction category of this year’s Consumer Picks survey.

The 70-year-old brand perennially ranks high on various consumer surveys. In the Consumer Picks survey, In-N-Out scored especially high on brand loyalty, food quality and service.

The chain posted the top True Loyalty score, with 63 percent of respondents saying their visits are driven by a true desire to experience In-N-Out brand, as opposed to convenience.

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Despite today’s on-demand economy, In-N-Out fans are willing to sacrifice convenience for their Double-Double. The brand, which often draws long drive-thru lines, may not keep pace with speedier quick-service rivals, but customers still leave happy. In fact, In-N-Out had the highest score for service in the survey, with 70 percent saying it was “best in class” or “above average.”

Respondents also gave the brand high marks for freshness and taste. It earned top scores among all brands for freshness, taste, service and high-quality food.

Vice president of operations Denny Warnick said the chain’s formula for success is sticking to the same limited menu of fresh, never frozen, burgers and fries created by founders Harry and Esther Snyder in 1948.

“Since we only serve burgers, fries and drinks, making a high-quality hamburger patty is everything to us,” Warnick told Nation’s Restaurant News in a statement.

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In-N-Out butchers and produces its own beef patties, which are delivered to its restaurants from three patty-making facilities in California and Texas. Each of the chain’s more than 330 restaurants in California, Utah, Oregon, Texas, Arizona and Nevada are strategically located within a day’s drive to a plant.

“This makes it possible for the fresh hamburger patties produced by our team of butchers to be delivered to every location by the following morning,” Warnick said.

A fourth beef production facility is in the works for Colorado to support the Irvine, Calif.-based brand’s highly anticipated expansion to that state in a couple of years.

The Snyders opened the first In-N-Out across the street from their house in Baldwin Park, Calif. The company is now run by their granddaughter, Lynsi Snyder.

Contact Nancy Luna at [email protected] 

Follow her on Twitter: @FastFoodMaven 

About the Author

Nancy Luna

Senior editor, Nation's Restaurant News

Nancy Luna is a senior editor at Nation's Restaurant News and a contributing editor at Supermarket News. She covers the industry's largest and most talked about fast-food brands including McDonald's, Starbucks, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, KFC and Subway. She is an award-winning journalist with more than 25 years reporting experience. As a veteran business reporter based in Southern California, Nancy has covered some of the country's most beloved food and retail brands including In-N-Out, Taco Bell, Trader Joe's, Aldi, Whole Foods Market, Target and Costco. Luna is a graduate of Cal State Fullerton. When she's not digging for news on her beat, you can find Nancy regaling her fans about her latest dining adventures on her Fast Food Maven social media channels. Contact [email protected]  or follow her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/fastfoodmaven

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