September 26, 2012

Buc-ee’s Gives Consumers Two Reasons to Shop: #1 and #2

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Buc-ee’s, the c-store and gas station operator with 26 locations in the Central & Gulf Coast region of Texas, gets a lot credit for its offerings and prices, but it’s famous for its bathrooms.

Some of its popular, irreverent billboards along Texas highways emphasize the chain’s expansive and quirky food selections such "Ice, Beer, Jerky: The 3 Food Groups" and "Eat Here. Get Gas." But many play to the bathroom theme. Near the Louisiana border, a billboard reads: "Only 262 Miles to Buc-ee’s. You Can Hold It." Some more common ones include: "Restrooms So Clean We Leave Mints In the Urinals," and "The Top Two Reasons to Stop at Buc-ee’s: #1 and #2."

Arch Palin and Don Wakes opened their first c-store in Lake Jackson, TX in 1982 and had apparently always made a commitment to spotless bathrooms. But the reputation didn’t start building across the state until the first over-sized flagship store opened in 2004 in Lulling, TX. The store became a roadside institution, selling its celebrated caramel and butter glazed corn puffs named "Beaver Nuggets," 18 kinds of homemade fudge, hunting supplies, smoke pits and souvenir T-shirts and bumper stickers along with gas, beer and soda.

[Image: Buc-ee's]

But the largest chatter became its extra large and super-clean bathrooms that were also featured in its several larger destination stores opened in the years ahead.

"These are the restrooms. Texas sized restrooms, Buc-ee’s style." Mr. Palin recently told Austin YNN. "This is something you’d expect to find in a really nice hotel, maybe in someone’s home."

In a recent article on the chain, The Wall Street Journal said Mr. Aplin "realized the traveling public would drive a little farther for the promise of a super-scrubbed restroom, after his decision to splurge on bathrooms won Buc-ee’s a cult following."

The paper was profiling Buc’ees’ largest store that opened in New Braunfels in May 2012 measuring 67,000 square feet. The location features 60 gasoline pumps, 80 soda dispensers, 31 cash registers along with "84 gleaming toilets, each with its own dispenser of hand sanitizer and shined at all hours by a small army of attendants."

The New Braunfels store’s bathrooms also recently landed as a finalist for Cintas’s annual America’s Best Restroom Contest, the only retailer to make the cut. According to the contest website, "Customers making a beeline for the bathroom at Buc-ee’s say this Texas-based business flushes the competition when it comes to clean! Offering up some of the most spotless loos in the Lone Star State, the Buc-ee’s brand of convenience stores knows firsthand that clean bathrooms mean big business!"

Discussion Questions

What role do restrooms play in the customer experience at retail? Can restrooms be marketed as a competitive point of difference by other retailers as done by Buc-ee’s?

Poll

9 Comments
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Dan Berthiaume
Dan Berthiaume

For a retailer serving “on the go” customers who may be traveling a long distance, such a gas station/c-store, having a clean, comfortable bathroom can be a huge competitive advantage. I’m not sure about directly marketing this type of thing, however, perhaps encouraging customers to mention it on social media reviews would work better than an ad touting the hygiene of your toilets.

Tom Redd
Tom Redd

#1 – Today and going forward, retailing is all about personalization. Each shopper sees or interprets an element of the retailers’ space as something done just for them. This includes restrooms.

#2 – As baby boomers age, the restroom is more important than ever before and can help place a retailer top of mind when this segment of shopper is out to spend.

#3 – Last, people always talk about nice bathrooms in hotels. Why not talk nice bathrooms at the store?

Okay, cut the bathroom talk!

Kenneth Leung
Kenneth Leung

For the hospitality industry where food consumption or long distance travel is involved, clean bathrooms are a must for the brand in terms of employee and customer safety. I think the one chain who has been doing it the longest without marketing it is McDonald’s. Pretty much known globally for its consistency of product and customer experience, it always includes a standardized, clean bathroom.

Tony Orlando
Tony Orlando

I can not stand dirty bathrooms, as I’m sure no one else can either. There is no excuse for this, as customers want clean facilities from front to back.

It may not bring extra business, but customers will talk to their neighbors if the bathrooms are bad.

Lee Kent
Lee Kent

I have never been to a Buc-ee’s nor seen their billboards but…if I had, I would have ‘held it’ just to get a look. Great ad gimmick that works for their niche and could work for other fast food, hospitality brands.

Mel Kleiman
Mel Kleiman

Bathrooms play a major role. But you don’t get clean restrooms at all hours of the day unless you have management that truly cares about the details.

At Buc-ee’s that detail is about everything they do will be done at the highest level possible.

That starts with hiring and retention of great employees who want to be a part of something special. Managers who are held accountable and hold themselves accountable all the way down to the front line.

David Livingston
David Livingston

As a person who spends about 100 nights at a hotel a year, traveling around North America, I know who and who doesn’t have a nice bathroom. Definitely having a good bathroom reputation will help business. My favorite is Woodman’s supermarkets which have twelve rolls of toilet paper in each stall.

Craig Sundstrom
Craig Sundstrom

I was actually in New Braunfels last year and I’m sorry to report that this particular attraction didn’t grab my attention (or if it did, it didn’t keep it). So based on this scientific sampling, I’ll have to say the strategy is ineffective…seriously though, I’d rate clean restrooms like any other selling point — from 24hr service to having 365 kinds of barbecue sauce — it probably gets notice, and it might bring people in, but it won’t keep them there.

John Crossman
John Crossman

I wasn’t as aware of this until my wife and I started having kids. With a wife and two daughters, I am now well aware of the retailers with clean bathrooms. They typically prefer that we stop at Publix. Yes, I think this is a competitive point for retailers.

9 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dan Berthiaume
Dan Berthiaume

For a retailer serving “on the go” customers who may be traveling a long distance, such a gas station/c-store, having a clean, comfortable bathroom can be a huge competitive advantage. I’m not sure about directly marketing this type of thing, however, perhaps encouraging customers to mention it on social media reviews would work better than an ad touting the hygiene of your toilets.

Tom Redd
Tom Redd

#1 – Today and going forward, retailing is all about personalization. Each shopper sees or interprets an element of the retailers’ space as something done just for them. This includes restrooms.

#2 – As baby boomers age, the restroom is more important than ever before and can help place a retailer top of mind when this segment of shopper is out to spend.

#3 – Last, people always talk about nice bathrooms in hotels. Why not talk nice bathrooms at the store?

Okay, cut the bathroom talk!

Kenneth Leung
Kenneth Leung

For the hospitality industry where food consumption or long distance travel is involved, clean bathrooms are a must for the brand in terms of employee and customer safety. I think the one chain who has been doing it the longest without marketing it is McDonald’s. Pretty much known globally for its consistency of product and customer experience, it always includes a standardized, clean bathroom.

Tony Orlando
Tony Orlando

I can not stand dirty bathrooms, as I’m sure no one else can either. There is no excuse for this, as customers want clean facilities from front to back.

It may not bring extra business, but customers will talk to their neighbors if the bathrooms are bad.

Lee Kent
Lee Kent

I have never been to a Buc-ee’s nor seen their billboards but…if I had, I would have ‘held it’ just to get a look. Great ad gimmick that works for their niche and could work for other fast food, hospitality brands.

Mel Kleiman
Mel Kleiman

Bathrooms play a major role. But you don’t get clean restrooms at all hours of the day unless you have management that truly cares about the details.

At Buc-ee’s that detail is about everything they do will be done at the highest level possible.

That starts with hiring and retention of great employees who want to be a part of something special. Managers who are held accountable and hold themselves accountable all the way down to the front line.

David Livingston
David Livingston

As a person who spends about 100 nights at a hotel a year, traveling around North America, I know who and who doesn’t have a nice bathroom. Definitely having a good bathroom reputation will help business. My favorite is Woodman’s supermarkets which have twelve rolls of toilet paper in each stall.

Craig Sundstrom
Craig Sundstrom

I was actually in New Braunfels last year and I’m sorry to report that this particular attraction didn’t grab my attention (or if it did, it didn’t keep it). So based on this scientific sampling, I’ll have to say the strategy is ineffective…seriously though, I’d rate clean restrooms like any other selling point — from 24hr service to having 365 kinds of barbecue sauce — it probably gets notice, and it might bring people in, but it won’t keep them there.

John Crossman
John Crossman

I wasn’t as aware of this until my wife and I started having kids. With a wife and two daughters, I am now well aware of the retailers with clean bathrooms. They typically prefer that we stop at Publix. Yes, I think this is a competitive point for retailers.

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