By Evie Liu
Wendy's has got a new head as it tries to reverse years of weak sales, falling traffic, and investor frustration. It will be a challenging job.
The burger chain on Wednesday named restaurant veteran Robert Wright as its new chief executive, replacing interim CEO Ken Cook. Wright previously served as Wendy's chief operating officer and most recently led sandwich chain Potbelly, where investors credited him with improving operations and accelerating digital sales growth.
Wendy's had been searching for a permanent CEO for a little over 10 months. The search began in July 2025 after then-CEO Kirk Tanner left the company to become CEO of Hershey. Wendy's immediately appointed CFO Ken Cook as interim CEO while launching what it called a "comprehensive search process" for a permanent replacement.
The relatively long search reflected how difficult the job had become. Wendy's has struggled with declining same-store sales as inflation-weary consumers pull back on restaurant spending and increasingly gravitate toward either aggressive value offerings or stronger premium brands. Wendy's has often found itself stuck in the middle.
In the first quarter, U.S. same-store sales fell 7.8% from a year ago. Investors are questioning whether Wendy's can keep pace with rivals like McDonald's and Burger King. The company has also been pressured by high beef costs and other inflationary input, with earnings falling to 12 cents per share from 20 cents a year ago.
Wendy's shares have declined 65% over the past three years, leaving the company increasingly vulnerable to activist pressure. Earlier this month, Nelson Peltz's Trian Fund Management was reportedly exploring options for a potential take-private deal. Peltz, Wendy's chairman and longtime largest shareholder, has argued publicly that the stock is undervalued.
Still, taking Wendy's private would not solve the company's underlying problem: consumers are no longer entirely sure what Wendy's stands for.
For years, Wendy's tried to balance its premium positioning with value pricing. But the fast-food market has become increasingly polarized. Rivals like McDonald's are leveraging their scale to dominate the value positioning, while faster-growing chains like Chipotle Mexican Grill and Cava have benefited from stronger brand identity and more modern consumer appeal.
Wendy's is now in an uncomfortable middle ground. The company recently called 2026 a "rebuilding year" and launched a turnaround effort known as "Project Fresh," aimed at improving value perception, simplifying promotions, remodeling restaurants, upgrading operations, and introducing more menu innovation.
Investors will watch how Wright executes those plans in the coming months, especially the progress of store remodeling. Wendy's announced plans in February to close 5% to 6% of its U.S. restaurants in the first half of 2026. Management has said many locations were outdated.
The company also needs to reposition its value perception as consumers become increasingly sensitive to prices. Wendy's itself has acknowledged that it relied too heavily on temporary promotions instead of building a clearer and more consistent everyday value strategy.
Long term, the company could also expand its beverages and snacks menu, modernize the digital ordering system, and enhance personalized loyalty programs. Wendy's has already invested in some of those areas; the question is whether it has moved aggressively enough.
Wright needs to convince consumers that the burger chain still offers something unique in a crowded fast-food market besides nostalgia.
Write to Evie Liu at evie.liu@barrons.com
This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 20, 2026 16:28 ET (20:28 GMT)
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