QSR brands have something most industries would like to have: customers who come back often.
A bank may hear from a customer a few times a month. A retailer might see the same customer every few weeks. But a restaurant can be part of someone’s weekly routine, sometimes multiple times in the same week. That creates a very different kind of customer relationship because the brand is not waiting months for another signal. It can see what someone orders, when they order, where they order from, how often they come back, and how those habits change over time.
That frequency is a real advantage. It gives QSR brands more behavioral data, more purchase context, more loyalty signals, and more chances to understand what a customer may want next. But it also creates a different kind of responsibility. When you have permission to communicate with someone several times a week, the cost of being irrelevant goes up.
That is the part I think QSR marketers need to look at more closely.
Generic Messaging Has a Real Cost
In our recent benchmark analysis of QSR customer engagement, one pattern stood out: brands that rely heavily on generic, broadcast-style messaging are not just getting lower engagement. They may be spending down the customer database they worked hard to build.
The math is fairly simple. In QSR, journey-based emails had an unsubscribe rate of just 0.06 percent. Broadcast emails had an unsubscribe rate of 1.49 percent. Generic emails in QSR also drove unsubscribes at a rate 15 times higher than what we saw in banking, financial services, and insurance.
A 1.49 percent unsubscribe rate may not sound large when it is written as a percentage. But on a list of 500,000 customers, one broadcast send can cost a brand more than 7,000 subscribers. Send that kind of message often enough, and the damage compounds quickly.
Those customers are not just disappearing from a spreadsheet. They are people who once gave the brand permission to reach them and then decided the messages were no longer worth receiving.
I do not think most marketers intend to create that outcome. More often, the pressure is practical. There is a sales target to hit, a promotion to move, a slow daypart to support, or a new menu item to announce. Sending one more blast can feel like the fastest lever available. The problem is that the lever has a cost, and in a high-frequency category, that cost shows up faster.
Relevance Depends on the Moment
QSR customers are more sensitive to noise because the relationship is more immediate. If a bank sends a generic update, it may be mildly annoying. If a restaurant sends a generic offer right after someone has already eaten, or promotes something they never order, it feels disconnected from the moment. If that keeps happening, the customer learns to ignore the brand. Eventually, they opt out.
This does not mean QSR brands should communicate less. It means the communication has to be closer to the customer’s actual intent.
The same benchmark data shows how much performance changes when messages are tied to behavior. Behavior-based emails in QSR had an open rate of 50.41 percent, compared to 14 percent for broadcast emails. That is not a small improvement. It suggests the customer is not rejecting communication from the brand. They are rejecting communication that does not match the moment.
A reminder based on a past order, a follow-up tied to a loyalty milestone, or a message connected to a customer’s normal purchase pattern can feel useful. It solves a real problem, often a very immediate one. Someone is hungry. Someone is near a store. Someone is deciding what to order. In that context, the message is not an interruption. It can be a service.
Push Should Behave Like a Utility
Push notifications show the same pattern. Behavior-based push notifications in QSR saw a 5.71 percent click-through rate, compared to 1.29 percent for broadcast push. The channel itself is not the issue. The use case is.
Push works well when it acts like a utility: order updates, time-sensitive reminders, location-based messages, or useful nudges that help the customer do something faster. It works less well when it becomes another billboard on the phone. This is where many QSR brands have to be careful. Because push feels immediate, it is tempting to use it for every promotion. But immediacy cuts both ways. A relevant push notification can help. An irrelevant one can train the customer to turn notifications off.
That last part matters because push permission is hard to earn back. Once a customer disables notifications, the brand loses one of its most useful channels for communicating in real time. The short-term campaign may still get sent, but the long-term relationship becomes weaker.
In-App Messaging Is Still Underused
In-app messaging may be the most interesting part of the data. Journey-based in-app messages in QSR had a 24.78 percent conversion rate, roughly 12 times higher than general in-app messages at 2.06 percent. And yet in-app is still the least used channel among QSR marketers, with nearly one in five not using it at all.
I understand why this happens. In-app messaging is easy to get wrong.
When a customer opens a restaurant app, they are usually there to complete a task. They want to order lunch, check a reward, reorder something they liked, or see when their food will be ready. If a brand interrupts that flow with a generic promotion, it creates friction. A customer trying to order food does not need another ad in the way.
But if the message helps them complete the task, the dynamic changes. A loyalty reminder that says they are close to earning a reward, a relevant upsell based on what they are already ordering, or a nudge that makes the next decision easier can feel like part of the experience rather than a separate campaign layered on top of it.
That may be why journey-based in-app performs so differently. The customer is already in a high-intent environment. The brand does not have to create demand from scratch. It has to avoid getting in the way.
The Real Question Is Discipline
The larger lesson across the data is not that QSR brands should stop sending messages. It is that each channel has to be used with more discipline.
Email can support behavior-based follow-up and timely offers. Push can act as a utility. In-app can support loyalty progression and ordering decisions. Most QSR brands already have many of the signals needed to do this well. They know what customers buy, when they buy, where they are, what rewards they care about, and how their behavior changes over time.
The harder part is not collecting more data. It is using the data with enough restraint.
There will always be a reason to send one more broad campaign. Some of those campaigns may even produce a short-term lift. But if the cost is a shrinking reachable audience, then the tradeoff has to be taken seriously. A customer database does not regenerate automatically. Once customers unsubscribe, mute notifications, or stop opening messages, the brand has to work much harder to earn that attention back.
I am still not sure every QSR brand is looking at unsubscribes this way. They are often treated as a campaign metric, something to monitor after the send. But in a high-frequency category, unsubscribes are also a signal of customer trust. They show whether the brand is earning the right to keep communicating.
QSR brands have frequency, intent, and first-party data working in their favor. Those are real advantages. But they only hold if customers continue to welcome the relationship.
Every message spends a little bit of attention. The question is whether it gives enough value back.
About the Author
Ravi Dodda is the Founder and CEO of MoEngage, an insights-led customer engagement platform.
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