快餐是健康的吗?一个特许经营是证明the Point and Profiting.Freshii is fast food's new green machine.

ByJason Daley

This story appears in theMarch 2015issue ofStart Up.

All Photos: Aaron Cobb
Sharing the health: Matthew Corrin.

Forays into healthy fast food have led to some of the restaurant industry's most embarrassing failures (see McDonald's McLean Deluxe, Burger King's Satisfries and Pizza Hut's The Natural). The common wisdom is that when consumers want something quick, they want it salty, fatty, cheesy, sugary or any combination thereof.

Accordingly, when Matthew Corrin began searching for healthful, convenient food while working long hours for Oscar de la Renta back in 2004 in New York City, he had low expectations. But he was pleasantly surprised. "I kind of became obsessed with these mom-and-pop delis in New York," he says. "They had these really good fresh-food bars. They had no focus on branding or advertising themselves as having fresh, healthy food, but they were great."

The notion that people in other cities might be searching for similar healthy options led Corrin to launch Freshii in 2005. With zero food-service experience, he opened his first unit in Toronto. Within two years, he had nine stores and began franchising. Now the concept is growing at breakneck speed, with more than 160 units in 12 countries and 120 more in the pipeline for 2015.

科林说,这个秘密是Freshii不是锡kering with burgers or subs to make them more healthful. Instead, the company offers salads, wraps, rice bowls and soups that can be customized using sauces, spices, proteins and healthy fats like avocados and walnuts to add flavor. Not that too many menu items need modifying—options like the Buffalo Salad, Teriyaki Twist Bowl and Thai Lemongrass Burrito are already pretty well-designed.

Corrin believes Freshii succeeds because it hits a sweet spot with younger consumers. "Increasingly, our customers and franchisees are Millennials, which are a great target demographic," he says. "They really care about the triple bottom line—people, planet and profits. We feed half a million people per year in Kenya through the sale of our reusable green bowls. Giving back really resonates with our customers and franchise partners."

That Millennial appeal has enabled Freshii to become a global brand. "The conversation about how to live healthy is happening among young people in Colombia, in Sweden and across the world. And that's really cool," Corrin says. "The Millennial generation everywhere has similar views, and they're constantly communicating those views in real time."

Their tastes are changing in real time, too. That's why Freshii constantly evolves its menu. "Today, we serve kale and quinoa," Corrin says. "Ten years ago it was all brown rice and spinach. And 10 years from now it will be different."

But Corrin's mission is to expand beyond a niche healthful-food market. He points out that Freshii has grown faster than Starbucks, McDonald's and Subway did in their first years, and he doesn't see why his concept can't be as ubiquitous as those brands.

"There's no reason we can't be global leaders as long as the trend for healthy eating stays on pace and as long as we can execute," he says. "We have a business model that's as attractive as brands with thousands of locations."

Jason Daleylives and writes in Madison, Wisconsin. His work regularly appears inPopular Science,Outsideand other magazines.

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