Get All Access for $5/mo

You Won't Guess Which Pizza Toppings Could Boost Sales the Most Hello, lobster and prosciutto. A new report finds that bold flavor mashups can help pizzerias boost sales.

By Kate Taylor

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Shutterstock
Pizza

What's your pizza order? Plain cheese? Pepperoni? How about lobster, hot Italian sausage and prosciutto with ricotta cheese?

A new study by global marketing company Affinnova sheds light on the toppings that could help pizza chains boost sales. The conclusion: bold flavor combinations will grab customers' attention without cannibalizing sales of more classic toppings.

Affinnova surveyed customers' preferences for dozens of cheeses, sauces, crusts and topping possibilities, producing more than 2.5 billion potential pizza concept combinations. The optimized pies were then tested against in-market specialty pizzas.

The three top-performing pizzas demonstrate that customers are craving some weird flavor mashups. Customers loved the lobster, hot Italian sausage and prosciutto pizza, the BBQ chicken pizza with cilantro and the three-meat pizza with the unexpected trio of sweet Italian sausage, meatballs and buffalo chicken.

Related: Canadian Pizzeria Generates Buzz With $450 Pie

"Marketers invest millions of dollars and months of development creating great tasting food products, but taste really doesn't matter if you can't drive trial purchases," Waleed Al-Atraqchi, CEO of Affinnova, said in a statement. "To drive trial purchases a new product must first create an expectation of a great tasting flavor – or an anticipated taste – with the consumer."

The combination of bold flavors is one way to heighten consumer expectations. For example, when measured individually, customers ranked the ingredients in the lobster, prosciutto and sweet Italian sausage pizza in the middle-of-the-pack. However, the combination of the three piqued consumer interest, with the pizza surging to the top of pack.

Even better for pizzerias, Affinnova reports that intense flavor mashups help boost incremental sales without taking sales away from existing products. The study suggests adding a lobster, prosciutto and spicy Italian sausage pizza to Papa John's menu would deliver a 70 percent incremental boost to the pizzas included in the report.

Zany favors and culinary mashups have been dominating the food landscape in recent months. Taco Bell's Waffle Taco and KFC's Chicken Corsage are blowing up social media. Meanwhile, Boston Pizza made waves with the Pizza Cake and Steveston Pizza set records with its $450 lobster and cod pie. Perhaps it is time for the major pizza chains to notice the trend and start mixing up their toppings.

Related: Like It or Not, 'Pizza Cake' Could Soon Be a Thing

Kate Taylor

Reporter

Kate Taylor is a reporter at Business Insider. She was previously a reporter at Entrepreneur. Get in touch with tips and feedback on Twitter at @Kate_H_Taylor. 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

Is One Company to Blame for Soaring Rental Prices in the U.S.?

The FBI recently raided a major corporate landlord while investigating a rent price-fixing scheme. Here's what we know.

Side Hustle

This Former Starbucks Employee Started a Side Hustle That's Making More Than $70,000 a Month — and He's Not Done Yet

When Tom Saar moved to New York City, he spotted a lucrative business opportunity.

Business News

Amazon Has a Blank Book Problem: Buyers Report Receiving Fakes of Bestselling UFO Book

The book looked fine on the outside, but the inside was out-of-this-world.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Paramount Leadership Alludes to Layoffs If Merger Does Not Go Through

Paramount is awaiting approval on its merger with Skydance Media from majority shareholder Shari Redstone.

Business News

Microsoft Reportedly Lays Off Over 1,500 Employees in Cloud Sector as Partnership with OpenAI Strengthens

Alphabet also reportedly laid off employees from several teams in Google's cloud unit last week.