At LRE & Co, we’ve seen this phenomenon play out across dozens of markets. It raises a fascinating question for anyone in the commercial real estate and retail development space: what is it about a new Quick Service Restaurant (QSR) opening that turns rational adults into overnight campers?
There’s something almost theatrical about a Chick-fil-A grand opening. Days before the doors swing open, tents appear in the parking lot. Families set up lawn chairs. Strangers share meals and swap stories. By the time the ribbon is cut, what started as a line has become something closer to a community, and that’s no accident.
It’s About More Than the Food
Let’s be honest, Chick-fil-A’s chicken sandwich is excellent, but it’s available 364 days a year at thousands of locations. People aren’t lining up for 24 hours because they’re starving. They’re lining up because the line itself has become the event.
Quick-service restaurant openings, especially for brands with cult followings like Chick-fil-A, In-N-Out Burger, and Raising Cane’s, tap into something deeply human: the desire to be first, to belong, and to be part of a story worth telling. These aren’t just transactions. They’re milestones.
The Psychology of the Line
Consumer behavior researchers have long documented what’s known as the “scarcity effect.” When something is new, limited, or difficult to obtain, our brains assign it greater value. A grand opening is the ultimate scarcity play; there’s only one first day, and only so many people can be first through the door.
Chick-fil-A has brilliantly formalized this impulse with its “First 100” promotion, offering a year’s worth of free meals to the first 100 customers at most new locations. The reward is generous, but the real driver is the experience. Participants often describe it as one of the most fun things they’ve done, not because of what they receive, but because of who they’re with and what they share.
Community Built Around a Brand
What separates Chick-fil-A from most QSR brands isn’t just the food or the famously courteous service culture; it’s the emotional loyalty the brand inspires. Customers don’t just like Chick-fil-A; they identify with it. That identity becomes a shared language, and grand openings become reunions of people who speak it.
This kind of brand affinity is rare and has massive implications for retail development. When a Chick-fil-A signs a lease in a new center or corridor, it doesn’t just bring traffic; it signals to the community that the area has arrived. It generates buzz that no marketing budget can fully replicate.
What This Means for Retail Real Estate
For developers and landlords, understanding QSR opening dynamics is more than a curiosity; it’s a competitive advantage. The brands that generate genuine anticipation are the ones that validate a development, attract co-tenants, and sustain long-term traffic patterns.
At LRE & Co, we pay close attention to which brands carry this kind of gravitational pull. A Chick-fil-A or In-N-Out isn’t just a food use; it’s an anchor in the truest sense. The lines on opening day are a preview of the durable customer loyalty that follows for years afterward.
The Ritual Matters
In an era of frictionless delivery and one-click everything, there’s something remarkable about people choosing to wait. The QSR grand opening line is a reminder that consumers still crave experiences, real ones, shared with others, marked by effort and reward.
That’s a signal worth paying attention to. The brands worth pursuing for your retail project aren’t just the ones with the best product. They’re the ones people show up for, tent, lawn chair, and all.