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Fatburger expands
into Chicago market with Kanye West-owned franchise
By
Emily Bryson York
AdAge.com (August 15, 2008) Here's a cheap marketing strategy that gets
attention: sign a celebrity as franchisee. Fatburger, the Santa Monica,
Calif.-based fast-food chain, is expanding into Chicago behind Kanye
West, one of the city's favorite sons. The rapper has rights to open 10
locations in the city's metropolitan area, with the first slated to open
in September.
"You're looking for a way to be able to call attention to what generally
would be a yawn, in terms of Chicago and restaurants," said Robert
Passikoff, president of Brand Keys. "But given that it's his hometown,
people are going to attribute more realism to it than turn and say,
'It's another celebrity taking another check.'"
Fatburger declined to comment for this story, and also declined to
comment on whether it works with an ad agency. Mr. West did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
Celebs back Fatburger The rapper, producer and sometimes political activist isn't the
first celebrity franchisee to stake new territory for the 56-year-old
chain. Fatburger has focused on African-American tastemakers to aid its
expansion. Last year, talk-show host Montel Williams opened stores in
Colorado and rapper Pharrell Williams opened the first locations in New
York. Former Baltimore Raven Orlando Brown also bought rights to open
Fatburgers last year in Washington.
At the same time, Fatburger's measured-media spending declined,
according to TNS Media Intelligence. The company spent just $336,000 in
2006 and $192,000 in 2007. Perhaps the biggest fish in the Fatburger
celebrity pool is former investor Earvin "Magic" Johnson, who held a
stake in the company from 2001 to 2003. Mr. Johnson now owns more than
30 Burger King restaurants.
"It's a smart move on both Kanye's and Fatburger's parts," Mr. Johnson
said. "Kanye has a big brand and it takes someone like him to bring
Fatburger to Chicago. It just shows you that Kanye West is not only a
great entertainer but a smart businessman as well."
Still, it's a relatively surprising alliance for Mr. West, who has made
a name for himself in high-fashion circles. For instance, during a 2007
performance honoring Salvatore Ferragamo on Rodeo Drive, Mr. West said,
"I'm glad I got the chance to earn back some of the money I've spent on
this street."
Darren Tristano, exec VP of restaurant consulting firm Technomic, said
Fatburger, known of course for its burgers, is also "a pretty cool place
to go." The restaurants have a '50s-style, retro design and feature
web-enabled jukeboxes with 150,000 songs to choose from.
'Upscale' reputation
"It's not your 99-cent burger place," Mr. Tristano said. "It does have
somewhat of an upscale feel and reputation. Just because it's fast food
doesn't really mean it's not upscale within fast food."
With heavy dependence on word-of-mouth, Fatburger has gained a cult
following for its one-third-pound made-to-order burgers -- and sassy
signage. The stark, yellow-and-black signs focus on quality with slogans
like "Heat lamps. Where burgers are sent for bad behavior." Although the
chain does have a veggie burger on the menu, most of the ads are crafted
for meat eaters. One sign from the archives jokes, "Attention
carnivores: Fatburger's this way. Attention vegetarians: Hey look, a
tree."
Still, Mr. Tristano said the company is going to have to do more as they
near the benchmark of 100 U.S. stores. (Fatburger had 88 U.S. locations
by the end of 2007.)
Mr. Tristano noted that Fatburger's 53 franchised restaurants brought in
an average of $800,000 each in 2007, for a total of about $42 million.
Most fast-feeders aim for ad budgets between 2% and 3% of sales, which
would put Fatburger's target conservatively between $800,000 and $1.2
million.
While he said the celebrity factor will boost brand awareness right now,
"obviously spending on marketing is going to the best way to do it."
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