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The Biggest Shift Happening in Catering Right Now

Rebecca ConnorsJune 21, 2026

Catering is no longer just about serving meals efficiently.

Clients are increasingly evaluating caterers based on the overall experience, operational professionalism, flexibility, and memorability they bring to an event.

Expectations around events are changing. Guests now expect experiences that feel interactive, personalized, visually engaging, and worth remembering. 

As a result, modern catering businesses are being pushed to think beyond menus alone.

The industry is shifting from “food delivery” toward experience design.

Data-Informed Menus Are Replacing Guesswork

Historically, many catering menus were built primarily on chef preference or tradition. 

Today, more catering businesses are making decisions based on operational and customer data:

  • Which dishes get eaten first
  • Which items consistently return untouched
  • Which upgrades clients repeatedly select
  • Which menu formats create less waste
  • Which presentations generate higher engagement

This shift allows caterers to improve both profitability and customer satisfaction simultaneously.

Smarter menu planning also helps reduce food waste, simplify preparation, and improve operational consistency across events.

Catering Is Becoming Part of the Entertainment

Food and drinks are no longer expected to sit quietly in the background of an event.
In many cases, the catering itself is becoming part of the experience:

  • Mid-event surprise courses
  • Special designed coffee or cocktail
  • Silent dessert drops
  • Live preparation moments in front of guests

These experiences create anticipation, conversation, and emotional engagement throughout the event. This matters because events today are heavily shaped by memory and shareability. Guests may not remember every course they ate, but they often remember moments that felt unexpected, interactive, or visually memorable.

Small touches that create personalization or interaction often generate a stronger emotional connection than standard service alone.

Some caterers are even incorporating personalized visuals into drinks and desserts, using tools such as the Ripple Maker printer, which can print images, logos, messages, or custom designs directly onto foam-topped beverages – to create more customized guest experiences. 

In many cases, these types of interactive experiences can also support higher perceived value, premium pricing opportunities, stronger brand partnerships, and even help caterers attract and book more events by offering experiences that feel more unique and memorable.

Modular Menus Are Replacing Rigid Packages

Clients increasingly want customization without complexity. As a result, many caterers are moving away from rigid pre-set packages and toward modular event structures:

  • Base menus with optional enhancements
  • Interactive add-ons
  • Beverage experience upgrades
  • Late-night service additions
  • Flexible presentation formats

This approach gives clients more control while keeping operations manageable internally.

It also helps simplify approvals, pricing conversations, and event planning workflows – especially for corporate and large-scale events where flexibility matters.

Operations Are Becoming a Competitive Advantage

Operations are becoming a much bigger part of how catering businesses are evaluated.

Clients are paying closer attention not only to the food itself, but also to how professionally and smoothly the entire event is managed: Staffing coordination, service timing, ordering efficiency, scalability, and the ability to handle unexpected issues are all becoming part of the client decision-making process.

As events become larger and more complex, operational consistency is increasingly viewed as a reflection of overall event quality. In many cases, a well-organized experience leaves just as strong an impression as the menu itself.

The Event No Longer Ends When the Plates Clear

Caterers are also extending the experience beyond the event itself. 

Rather than viewing the event as something that ends once service is over, many are creating additional touchpoints through curated take-home items, post-event gifting, next-day brunch kits, intentional leftover repurposing, or simple follow-up interactions after the event.

The goal is no longer only to deliver a successful event for a few hours, but to create a longer-lasting experience that feels more complete, memorable, and valuable for both clients and guests.

The Bottom Line

The future of catering is about designing experiences that are operationally strong, emotionally memorable, and adaptable to modern customer expectations.

The caterers that stand out will likely be the ones who focus not only on the food itself, but on the overall experience they create before, during, and after the event.

 

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