Is America Ready for Japanese-Style 7-Elevens?
Stephen Dacus, head of the chain’s
parent company, aims to export its success in Japan, with signature offerings
like fresh prepared food.
Japanese-Style 7-Elevens Eye U.S.
Expansion
Stephen Dacus, CEO of Seven & i
Holdings (7-Eleven’s Japanese parent company), is spearheading a bold plan to
bring Japan’s high-quality convenience store experience to North America.
Here's a breakdown of the article’s key points:
Vision for U.S. Expansion
·
Seven & i plans to invest over $13
billion in the next five years to revamp U.S. stores.
·
The goal: replicate Japan’s “konbini”
model, known for fresh, high-quality food like bento boxes and egg salad
sandwiches.
·
Signature Japanese items, including
the beloved egg sandwich made with milk bread and Japanese mayo, are
being adapted for American tastes.
Corporate Pressure & Strategic
Shift
·
After a failed $47 billion takeover
bid by Canadian rival Couche-Tard, Seven & i’s stock dropped 11%.
·
Dacus, a retail veteran, is shifting
focus from Japan to overseas growth, especially in the U.S., where 7-Eleven
operates over 13,000 stores.
Challenges to Replication
·
Japan’s model relies on frequent
fresh-food deliveries and meticulous stock management — hard to replicate in
sprawling U.S. geographies.
·
Past attempts, like FamilyMart’s U.S.
venture, failed due to cultural and logistical hurdles.
·
U.S. convenience stores are still
largely seen as gas stations with snacks, not food destinations.
Competitive Landscape
·
The U.S. market is fragmented, with
thousands of operators and competition from fast-food chains.
·
Prepared food offers higher profit
margins, making it a key battleground for convenience stores.
Strategic Adaptations
·
In the U.S., fresh food may lean
toward hot, frozen items cooked on-site, reducing delivery needs.
·
Dacus aims to build tighter
relationships with suppliers to improve responsiveness and quality.
Domestic Struggles
·
Japan’s aging and shrinking population
limits growth potential.
·
Rising competition from Lawson, backed
by Mitsubishi, adds pressure.
·
Experts suggest focusing on U.S.
expansion for better returns.
Final Thought
Dacus believes Japan’s demanding
consumer standards drive innovation — a strength he hopes to leverage globally.
But success in the U.S. will depend on overcoming cultural perceptions and
logistical challenges to make 7-Eleven a true food destination.
[ABS
News Service/10.09.2025]
The Japanese parent company of
7-Eleven is betting billions of dollars that it can expand its business in the
United States by making its convenience stores more like the food meccas they
are in Japan.
Convenience stores, or konbini, are an
indispensable part of daily life in Japan, known for high-quality fresh food —
from seasonal bento boxes to egg salad sandwiches that the celebrity chef
Anthony Bourdain once called “pillows of love.”
Leading the push to expand Japanese-quality
fresh food to 7-Eleven in North America is Stephen Dacus, a
Japanese American former Walmart executive who started as chief executive of
Seven & i Holdings, the 7-Eleven parent company, three months ago.
Seven & i is under intense
pressure. Over the past year, it has fended off a takeover attempt by a
Canadian rival. When Alimentation Couche-Tard, the owner of Circle K
convenience stores, withdrew its $47 billion bid in July, Seven & i’s stock
price collapsed. Mr. Dacus and his team were left to prove they can deliver
growth and returns on their own.
Now, facing a stagnant and highly
competitive retail market in Japan, Seven & i’s growth is expected to come
from overseas. The strategy could hinge, industry experts say, on Mr. Dacus’s
ability to successfully introduce Japanese-level quality foods in the more than
13,000 stores that 7-Eleven operates, franchises and licenses in North America.
“Whether it’s hot food or cold food or
any kind of food, we have to lean into how we improve the quality and the
experience,” Mr. Dacus said in an interview on Friday. “That’s what Japan does
extraordinarily well.”
Over the next five years, Seven &
i is considering investing more than $13 billion to expand overseas. In the
United States, this means initiatives like refreshing existing sites, adding
more than 1,000 in-store restaurants and building a network of companies to
provide more of its 7-Eleven brand prepared foods.
“And we’re launching the egg
sandwiches,” Mr. Dacus said. They are, he noted, the top item purchased by the
millions of American visitors descending on Japan each year and visiting
7-Eleven stores.
The sandwiches are made with the
fluffy Japanese “milk bread,” and a team in Texas worked with Japanese
suppliers to learn how to produce it in the United States. Milk bread and
Japanese mayonnaise give the egg sandwiches “the heavenly pillow thing,” Mr.
Dacus said.
Seven & i’s new fresh-food push in
the United States orients it squarely in a place already stocked with
competition.
“Prepared food is increasingly what
sets different convenience brands apart,” said Jeff Lenard, a vice president at
the National Association of Convenience Stores. Prepared goods have relatively
high profit margins, particularly important for convenience stores that face
declining sales of traditional staples, including tobacco and gasoline, Mr.
Lenard said.
In the United States, 7-Eleven is the
biggest convenience store chain, but the market is fragmented. Tens of
thousands of store operators compete for fresh food, not only with one another
but also with fast-food retailers.
Mr. Dacus, 64, has worked in retail
for more than three decades. He was on the Seven & i board of directors
when he was tapped to spread overseas the qualities that make 7-Eleven so loved
in Japan.
In the past, he said, “we took a
low-risk, low-return approach.” Management was too focused on Japan and too
hands-off with operations in other countries. “We could have been much more
aggressive,” he said. “The flip side of that is there’s that much opportunity
out there for us as we shift our focus.”
Industry experts and Mr. Dacus
acknowledge, however, that there are a number of reasons the Japanese
convenience store model cannot easily be replicated in the United States.
Two decades ago, the Japanese
convenience store FamilyMart tried to introduce its concept to the West Coast,
but the business struggled to adapt. The company found it difficult to convince
Americans that a convenience store could be more than a gas station selling
snacks. By 2015, all the stores had closed.
Challenges include the difficulty of
transporting fresh food to locations in the United States far from city
centers. In Japan, the average convenience store receives multiple fresh-food
deliveries per day. Beyond that, “it’s the ways in which they maintain stock
and freshness, attention to detail,” said Gavin Whitelaw,
executive director of the Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies at
Harvard.
In the United States, “this would
require a conceptual shift,” Mr. Whitelaw said. Japanese convenience stores
have been more successful with their food offerings in urban centers in places
like South Korea, mainland China and Hong Kong, he said.
In recent years, Seven & i has
made progress in the United States as well, but “it’s not like ‘I need to go to
7-Eleven for the food,’” he said. “The challenge is moving out of the
metropolitan penumbra.”
In the United States, Mr. Dacus said,
fresh food often means hot food that can be frozen and cooked on site,
eliminating the need for multiple daily deliveries. He added that the company
could draw on a Japanese-style model of having closer ties to its food
suppliers to improve products in response to what customers want.
Mr. Dacus believes he so far has
successfully communicated the plan. Now, for investors, he said, “I need to
show them the money.” Concrete results in markets like the United States, he
hopes, will help push up the share price of Seven & i, which is still down
around 11 percent since Couche-Tard abandoned its bid for the company in July.
This is a necessity given the
challenges Seven & i faces at home.
In Japan, the shrinking and rapidly
aging population makes it difficult not only for 7-Eleven but for all
retailers, said Jusuke Ikegami, the dean of the Waseda Business School in
Tokyo. Expanding domestically would most likely mean moving into lower-population
areas, where profits are smaller.
The company also faces growing
competition from Lawson, a convenience store that is popular among younger
generations and backed by the Japanese corporate giant Mitsubishi, Mr. Ikegami
said. For Seven & i, “I would recommend that they focus on the U.S.,” he
said.
Mr. Dacus said he had often heard that
growth in Japan was over. But the demanding nature of consumers in Japan
“forces you to innovate,” he said. “From my perspective, that’s a real big
benefit to the global growth, because we can take stuff that we use to succeed
here and take it global.”