McDonald's Deluxe line explained

The McDonald's Deluxe line was a series of sandwiches introduced in the early to mid 1990s and marketed by McDonald's with the intent of capturing the adult fast food consumer market, presented as a more sophisticated burger for adult tastes.[1] The sandwiches sold poorly and the entire line was discontinued on August 18, 2000. The Deluxe series was a marketing disaster and is now considered to be one of the most expensive flops in McDonald's history.[2] [3]

History

The line was first introduced in 1991 with the McLean Deluxe; the Arch Deluxe was introduced in May 1996 and the others on September 27, 1996. Except for the McLean Deluxe, all sandwiches were developed by McDonald's executive chef Andrew Selvaggio.[4] [5]

Advertising

McDonald's budgeted at $100–150 million (USD) for the introduction of the line and contracted the Minneapolis-based ad firm of Fallon McElligott to oversee the roll out of the project.[6] The original advertising for these products took the form of children criticizing the new adult oriented sandwiches and Ronald McDonald doing more adult themed things, such as going dancing at a nightclub or playing golf.[1] [3] The firm went so far as to commission the Columbus, Ohio-based Fahlgren ad firm to create a complete set of music designed specifically for the radio ad campaigns. The new tunes were designed to appeal to an 18- to 34-year-old demographic.[7] Further ads were created by DDB Worldwide.[1]

In promotional materials for these products, all employed a similar logo that featured a different color in the background.

During this time period, the Crispy Chicken Deluxe and the Fish Filet Deluxe along with the Grilled Chicken Deluxe and the Arch Deluxe were sold only in Canada, the United States, and United States territories, while the McChicken and Filet-O-Fish continued to be sold in the rest of the world. However, by 1998, the Crispy Chicken Deluxe and Grilled Chicken Deluxe were renamed the "Crispy Chicken Sandwich" and "Chicken McGrill" respectively, while the Fish Filet Deluxe and Arch Deluxe sandwiches were being increasingly discontinued at more locations throughout 1998 and 1999, until the Fish Filet Deluxe and Arch Deluxe were finally taken off the menus on August 18, 2000.

Product variants

All sandwiches were served on a bakery style roll and featured better quality ingredients, such as whole leaf lettuce and sliced tomatoes.[4]

Burgers

Chicken

Fish

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chief of McDonald's Defends Arch Deluxe to Franchisees . Glenn Collins . . 1996-09-19 . 2008-01-15 .
  2. Web site: HowStuffWorks "5 Failed McDonald's Menu Items". HowStuffWorks. 20 October 2008.
  3. Web site: Lessons from marketing flops. . Mark Kassof . Kassof.com . June 1997 . 2008-01-15 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071223001224/http://www.kassof.com/insights/ri-su97f.htm . 2007-12-23 . dead .
  4. Web site: [//www.mcdonalds.com/a_now/deluxe_line/sandwiches McDonald's new Deluxe line ]. McDonald's Corporation . WebArchive.com . 1997-10-13 . 2007-10-06 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/19971013041324/http://www.mcdonalds.com/a_now/deluxe_line/sandwiches . October 13, 1997 .
  5. Web site: McDonald's: When the Passion is Gone, the Profits are Over . Wally Bach . MondayMemo.com . 2003-03-17 . 2007-10-06.
  6. Web site: With a new sandwich and a $200 million campaign, McDonald's tries to win back older diners. . Glenn Collins . . 1996-05-10 . 2008-01-15 .
  7. Web site: Arch Deluxe sizzles to retro funky sound created by Circa . Carrie Shook . Business First of Columbus . 1996-01-14 . 2008-01-15 .
  8. Web site: Fast Food Lightens Up But Sales Are Often Thin . Anthony Ramírez . The New York Times . 1991-03-19 . 2007-10-06.