KFC is fixing a mistake it's been making for years

Advertisement

kfc col sanders

Kate Taylor

A Colonel Sanders cut out at a KFC press event

KFC knows that it has lost customers' trust. Now, it is debuting a new program to win Americans back.

Advertisement

"Customers were saying, 'Your food doesn't taste the same,'" Jason Marker, KFC's US president, said in a press event on Monday. "We're not making the food the same way the Colonel had, and we're not making food in what he described as 'the hard way.' Today marks the end of that."

The chicken chain is undergoing a process it is calling "Re-Colonelization" - a public re-commitment to quality, involving employee retraining and a new satisfaction guarantee.

Effective immediately, if customers aren't satisfied their KFC order, the restaurant will remake whatever aspect of their meal fell short.

hot chicken kfc

KFC

Advertisement

The chain has rolled out an extensive "chicken mastery certification" program, spending more than 100,000 hours retraining more than 20,000 employees. The retraining involved 43 rallies across the US, attended by more than 97% of restaurant general managers, as well as holding a national training event in every KFC location across the country.

More broadly, KFC has been trying to turn business around by updating its restaurant design, with plans to remodel 3,000 locations in the next three years.

It's Colonel-centric marketing campaign, launched in 2015, is another piece of the puzzle in presenting KFC as a brand that is in touch with its culinary roots. New menu items, such as the Nashville Hot Chicken, have similarly emphasized the importance of creativity and well-crafted recipes.

KFC's domestic business has struggled in recent years, with Marker comparing the brand to a football team "that was once great." As rivals such as Chick-fil-A have exploded in the US, KFC hasn't been able to keep up with modern, fast-casual-influenced customers' demands. According to KFC CMO Kevin Hochman, only two in five millennials have even visited the chain.

Advertisement

"I think it's fair to say that we haven't been living up to the standards or the philosophy of Colonel Sanders himself," says Marker.

The Re-Colonelization - and the repositioning of the Colonel as a figure of authenticity at the center of the brand - attempts to recalibrate KFC by returning to its roots. In an era when consumers are craving authenticity, the Re-Colonelization could be just what the brand needs to jump-start its business in the US.

NOW WATCH: An Iraq War veteran who works at KFC nails the minimum wage debate