Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Healthy fast-casual restaurant chain | NYC-based expansion | Farm-to-table positioning | Nutritionally-focused bowls and salads | Growing consumer health demand
Dig — originally Dig Inn — was founded in 2011 in New York City by Adam Eskin to make vegetable-forward, farm-sourced fast casual food accessible to urban workers. The concept is built around seasonal menus designed by a chef team, with whole vegetables and grains as primary ingredients and meat treated as a secondary component. Dig sources directly from regional farms and publishes sourcing relationships on its menu boards, a transparency stance unusual for the fast casual category.\n\nDig's menu is organized around build-your-own plates with a rotating selection of market vegetables, proteins (chicken thighs, salmon, meatballs), and grain bases (farro, rice, lentils) that change with the seasons. Open kitchens make scratch cooking visible to diners, reinforcing fresh-preparation positioning. Dig also operates Dig Acres, a working farm in upstate New York that feeds directly into restaurant supply chains and serves as proof of its farm-to-table sourcing claims.\n\nDig operates approximately 30 locations concentrated in New York City, with restaurants in Philadelphia and Boston targeting urban office markets with high lunch traffic. The brand navigated significant headwinds from pandemic-driven collapse in office lunch demand. As return-to-office patterns stabilize, Dig's positioning — nutritionally dense, seasonal, vegetable-forward fast casual — aligns with durable consumer trends toward health-conscious weekday eating and reduced meat consumption.
Nestlé (SIX: NESN) #1 US frozen pizza at $1.5B+ retail sales; rising crust technology and "It's Not Delivery" positioning competing with Red Baron and Tombstone for premium frozen pizza market.
DiGiorno is Nestlé's (SIX: NESN) flagship premium frozen pizza brand in North America — the #1 frozen pizza brand in the US by revenue — known for its rising crust technology and the iconic "It's Not Delivery, It's DiGiorno" marketing campaign that established frozen pizza as a legitimate pizza delivery alternative rather than a lesser substitute. Launched in 1995 by Kraft Foods (acquired by Nestlé), DiGiorno generates an estimated $1.5+ billion in annual US retail sales across its original rising crust, stuffed crust, croissant crust, and ultra-thin crust varieties in grocery freezer aisles nationwide.
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