Subway is testing two premium sandwiches that could help the chain shake its perception as a place to grab a bargain-priced hero.
A 12-inch sub of carved roasted turkey is priced at $7.75 in the sales trial, and a footlong of rotisserie-cooked chicken sells for $6.75, reports BrandEating.com. Both are a marked departure from the chain’s signature offering of $5 footlongs.
Ironically, the test came to light as Subway is preparing for a modified BOGO deal on Nov. 3, National Sandwich Day. Customers who order a sub and a 30-ounce drink will be treated to a second sub at no extra charge.
The chain has struggled to boost sandwich prices beyond the $5 threshold, which it set for itself with one of the most successful quick-service restaurant campaigns of recent decades. A catchy jingle convinced consumers to sing along to commercials for the $5 footlong.
More recently, Subway has been pushing a Simple $6 deal, a bundled meal of a six-inch sub, a 21-ounce fountain drink and a bag of chips.
The new turkey sandwich features thick-cut slabs of preservative-free white-meat turkey with an oven-roasted taste, BrandEating.com reported. The website said the rotisserie-chicken sandwich features pulled chicken rather than sliced meat.
Subway has been smacked by catastrophic developments in recent months, including the death of co-founder Fred DeLuca and the public discovery that former pitchman Jared Fogle is likely going to jail for having sex with minors. It is also party to a class-action lawsuit involving anyone who bought one of its subs between 2003 and last month, a body that presumably includes millions of consumers. The plaintiffs contend that the chain’s signature footlong and six-inch subs failed to be as large as the advertising promised.
Subway proposed a settlement two weeks ago that calls for measuring the breads.
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