Wawa, Looking Ahead, Plans for as Much Convenience as It Can

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Wawa's mascot peeks through the drive-thru window at a Wawa store.
Image via Jessica Griffin, The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Wawa's Wawa's Mascot Wally Goose serves coffee to Jim Pilla (left) at Wawa’s first drive-thru store.

Wawa is doubling down on its status as a convenience store, allowing customers to avoid the store completely, writes Christian Hetrick for The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Customers can order on their phone, have coffee brought to their cars, use a drive thru, get hoagie home delivery, and if you have to go inside, use a self-checkout kiosk.

The effort toward convenience makes sure Wawa keeps up with shopping trends that were accelerated in the pandemic.

“Go back 20 or 30 years and Sears was a beloved brand,” said Jim Morey, Wawa’s chief brand officer, referring to Sears bankruptcy status. “They didn’t adapt and change, and that’s going to happen to anybody. So, one of our values is being able to embrace change.”

Self-checkout kiosks showed up during the pandemic and got customers through the store faster and more socially distanced.

The machines are now in more than 60 stores.

Morey says workers are still needed, especially since the food preparation end is a growing part of Wawa’s operations.

“We need more labor than ever,” Morey said. “And we’re always going to have somebody that’s going to be there to check out our customers.”

Read more at The Philadelphia Inquirer about Wawa’s efforts to make their brand even more convenient.

From the Wawa test kitchen here’s Farley Kaiser, Wawa’s corporate chef, explaining to an out-of-state news team about Wawa food.

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