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Operator
Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to Potbelly Corporation's second-quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Today's call is being recorded. (Operator Instructions)
On today's call, we have Bob Wright, President and Chief Executive Officer; Steve Cirulis, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Adiya Dixon, Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary of Potbelly Corporation.
At this time, I'll turn the call over to Adiya Dixon. Please go ahead.
Adiya Dixon - SVP, Chief Legal Officer, Chief Compliance Officer and Secretary
Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our second-quarter 2024 earnings call. By now, everyone should have access to our earnings release and accompanying investor presentation. If not, they can be found in the investors tab on our website.
Before we begin our formal remarks, I need to remind everyone that certain comments made on this call will contain forward-looking statements regarding future events or the future financial performance of the company. Any such statements, including our outlook for 2024 or any other future periods, should be considered forward-looking statements within the meeting of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are not guaranteed of future performance, nor should they be relied upon as representing management's views as of any subsequent date. Forward-looking statements involve significant risks and uncertainties, and events or results could differ materially from those presented due to a number of risks and uncertainties.
Additional detailed information concerning these risks regarding our business and the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the forward-looking statements and other information that will be given today can be found under the risk factors heading in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which are available at sec.gov.
During the call, there will also be a discussion of some items that do not generally accepted accounting principles or GAAPs. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in the appendix to the press release, an investor presentation issued this afternoon, both of which are available in the investors tab on our website.
And now I'll turn the call over to Potbelly's President and CEO, Bob Wright.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you, Adiya. Good afternoon and thank you for joining our call today. I'm proud of the hard work and dedication of our over 5,000 team members. The entire Potbelly team is committed to our mission to delight customers with great food and good vibes on our journey to be the most loved sandwich brand in every neighborhood.
Despite the challenging macro environment, we maintain focus on executing our winning strategy, emphasizing what we control to continue growing Potbelly. Our customers, our associates, and our franchisees are the people that matter most to our success. We have an incredibly strong brand and a company that understands the power of growth, regardless of the environment.
During the second quarter, we grew same store sales 0.4% as we continue to face a changing consumer dynamic, similar to what you've heard from many others in the industry. While our growth was less than envisioned, we continue to take traffic share from the broader fast casual industry and grew our top line despite macro pressures.
Second, we expanded shop margins, again, representing the 13th consecutive quarter year over year margin expansion. Finally, we added four new shops in the quarter to go along with our franchise commitments to open 22 additional shops. Early Q3 sales patterns suggest the consumer is still pressured and is managing their restaurant spend carefully primarily by trimming visits in favor of grocery. As I look ahead, however, I've never been more confident in the future of our brand.
My confidence is rooted in our outstanding people and our strategic and executional focus, particularly in three main areas. Number one, our customers love potbelly food and service, as well as our ongoing efforts to help them with value. Number two, our digital channels, including our perks loyalty program, continue to prove that we can drive growth through these channels. And number three, the increasing momentum of our franchising and new shop development efforts.
I'll expand on these factors beginning with our food, service, and values supported by effective marketing. Delighting our customers is always the foundation for sales growth and I'm very pleased with our strong shop operations and the continued progress of our marketing initiatives that together fuel our traffic-driven sales growth strategy.
We see the results in our overall customer satisfaction scores as well as continued improvement in customer ratings of our food, speed, accuracy, and friendliness. Of course, the best thing we market is our amazing food and our culinary innovation efforts continue to deliver a pipeline of exciting menu items that demonstrate our commitment to quality, crave ability, and relevance.
During the second quarter, we reintroduced the Chicken Cordon Bleu Sandwich by adding it to the underground menu, rolled out successful LTOs to celebrate summer with the Jalapeño Popper Chicken sandwich and American Apple Pie Shake. Our most loyal customers continue to tell us that our focus on food is one of the reasons they keep coming back.
To maintain the excitement among our guests, we kicked off third quarter with the introduction of the Blueberry Muffin Cookie and the Farmhouse Chicken Sandwich. As we move through the remainder of the year, you should expect to see additional limited time only offers, including our hot, oven-toasted sandwiches, our fresh baked daily cookies and hand dipped shakes.
Importantly, as we discussed last quarter and has become readily apparent across the restaurant industry in recent months, today's consumers more than ever are looking for value when they choose to eat out. The first element of our five-pillar strategy has always been great food at a good value, and we're constantly working to further amplify our value options. It's important that our customers know we understand their situation and that we're working to help in every way we can.
During the second quarter, we tested everyday value combo meal deals to help provide our more price-conscious, infrequent customers with the opportunity to continue to frequent our shops. The testing revealed a clear winner. The $7.99 skinny combo not only responds to our customers cravings for Potbelly, but also, we've given our less frequent price conscious guests a great reason to keep us in their eating rotation while simultaneously protecting our margins.
Starting in late July, we expanded the $7.99 everyday value combo, which includes a turkey, ham, or chicken skinny sandwich with chips and a drink across nearly all of the system. Customers have already told us how much they appreciate our efforts to help them with everyday value. In fact, we saw a seven-point lift in value scores and a five-point lift in return intent among those that ordered the $7.99 combo. Not only that, the $7.99 combo is shown to drive both incremental sales and profitability as it continues to build usage.
We're proud to have added this new option to our menu in addition to the everyday value already available with our meal deal and our pick your pair options to further support our customers during these challenging economic times. In addition to our everyday value efforts, we continue to see significant success with digital promotions, including perks-only promotional activity to drive value, brand affinity, and frequency.
So turning to the Potbelly digital experience, for the quarter, our digital business represented approximately 40% of our total shop sales, an increase of approximately 200 basis points versus last year. As we've mentioned in recent quarters, we continue to see a shift within our digital mix to Potbelly-owned channels. In fact, during the second quarter, expansion of Potbelly-owned channels represented the entire 200 basis points of year-over-year improvement in our digital mix.
As customers progress through our digital funnel, ultimately becoming Perks members, we see increased frequency almost immediately. Over the past three years, we've been improving and enhancing our digital capabilities and expect digital and Perks to remain a driver of the business going forward. Recall in January, we further strengthened our digital platform with the launch of our enhanced Potbelly Perks loyalty program.
Our new program is performing exactly as expected with customers redeeming coins for a balance of the 12 menu items available and in alignment with their purchase patterns. Perks continues to be a key piece of our strategy in driving our growth and celebrates what our customers love the most about Potbelly, great food. While we continue to provide our customers with options on how they can consume our food, be it on premise, off premise, digital or in person, we believe the ongoing transition of more of our business to Perks will only further benefit us in the long term, driving closer connections to each and every customer.
I've mentioned how pleased we are with our digital growth, recognizing that we believe we can continue to leverage what we control. Perks member acquisition continues to grow quarter over quarter and year over year. Importantly, as well, once our customers join our Perks program, we see year-over-year growth in transactions and engagement from every consumer segment.
Put simply, our customized communication to our various Perks customer cohorts is driving them to ever more loyal and frequent relationships with the brand. Finally, in addition to the broad-based everyday value efforts I've already mentioned, our digital channels are an incredibly effective and efficient way to deliver value enhancements to our most loyal customers, not only through the intrinsic value of their accumulated coins, but through spot promotions that can activate their engagement and drive sales.
Despite Potbelly digital experience already being a consistent and significant area of growth for us, we are not standing still. When customers utilize our digital platforms, it not only ensures a better experience, but it also allows us to more effectively communicate with and market to them. We maintain an extensive roadmap of digital enhancements aimed at continually improving our potbelly digital experience to best suit customers needs, expectations, and reduce friction, while driving potbelly brand awareness, customer engagement, and business results.
Now let me update you on our franchise growth acceleration initiative. During the second quarter, we continue to make significant progress across all phases of our unit growth funnel. Less than three years ago, I shared a vision of Potbelly growing to a 2,000 unit brand in the US, primarily through franchising.
We're well on our way. We already have 663 open and committed shops as of the end of Q2. So far this year, we've opened a total of nine shops with further acceleration expected, which I will touch on in a minute.
Franchise recruitment and lead generation continues to build, especially with our in-market and in-person recruiting efforts. Importantly, we're moving those franchise candidates to franchisees through deal signings as well. We're pleased to increase our total year-to-date shop commitments to 54, an increase of 22, relative to last quarter.
Our second-quarter commitments include a deal that will bring Potbelly to the state of Georgia for the first time with an agreement in the Atlanta market. These new agreements reflect the continued strength of our franchising efforts across the Southeastern US over the last two years. And as I said, we now have 663 open and committed shops across 33 total franchise groups. And I'm proud to say that our franchisees are meeting their development commitments, which strengthens our expectations of continued growth through the remainder of 2024 and 2025.
Lastly, with our ongoing acceleration of shop openings, I mentioned we open an additional four shops during Q2 for a total of seven openings year to date through the second quarter. We're also proud to announce that we've opened two additional units already in the third quarter. With our current development pipeline, we expect to double Q2 openings in Q3 for a total of eight new shops, with further acceleration in Q4. We currently expect to open a total of at least 30 new shops in 2024 and we already have visibility to the 2025 opening pipeline with more to come.
While it's still early, we're very pleased with our performance of our new 2024 shops. I'm proud to say that on average, these shops are not only outperforming their sales forecasts, but their average weekly sales surpasses the system average. We're not simply opening shops. We're opening successful shops. The success of these shops is a sign that our market planning and real estate systems are working. Of course, we expect this unit level success will further accelerate growth as we sign even more commitments to the pipeline, further increasing our confidence in our ability to reach our 2,000 unit potential.
With that, I'll now turn the call over to Steve to detail our financial performance for the second quarter.
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Thank you, Bob. Good afternoon, everyone. Revenues in the second quarter were $119.7 million, with company revenue of $115.5 million, lower year over year, driven by the short-term impact of last year's refranchising. Contrast that with our franchise revenue of $4.2 million, up 117% relative to the second quarter last year, driven by a 53% increase in franchise units. As a reminder, we are de-emphasizing the sale of our company shops through refranchising, given our strong pipeline of deals in new markets.
Average weekly sales were approximately $26,110, and system-wide sales were approximately $142.3 million. Same-store sales were up 40 basis points in the quarter. This on top of positive same-store sales of 12.9% in Q2 last year. As Bob mentioned, we continued to take traffic share from both the broader restaurant industry, as well as the fast casual segment during the quarter.
Turning to expenses, food, beverage, and packaging costs were 27.1% of shop sales, a 90 basis point improvement versus the prior year period. This was driven by a combination of commodity deflation and a modest pricing action in the quarter.
Labor expenses were 28% of sales, a 240 basis point improvement versus the prior year period. This improvement is attributed to the ongoing optimization of our hours-based labor guide and improvement in overtime management and hours of operation adjustments.
Occupancy was 10.9% of sales, a 40 basis point increase versus the prior year period. This was predominantly due to an increase in variable rent charges, as many shops with those types of lease arrangements like airports continue to outperform prior year.
Other operating expenses were 18.4% of sales, a 160 basis point increase versus the prior year period. This was predominantly due to increased brand fund expense and utility rate increases. Overall, shop level margins in the second quarter were 15.7%, an increase of 130 basis points year over year.
General and administrative expenses were 8.3% of system-wide sales, largely in line with the year ago period.
Second-quarter adjusted EBITDA was $8.5 million, or 7.1% of total revenue. The year-over-year increase driven by the 130 basis point improvement in shop-level margins and continued strong performance of our franchise shops and ongoing disciplined management of G&A.
We reported net income of $34.7 million for the quarter, driven by a $31.3 million benefit from the release of most of the company's tax valuation allowance during the period. The change in the valuation allowance is the result of our recent profitability and our expectation for continued, sustainable profits moving forward. The release of the valuation allowance allows us to record $31.3 million of deferred tax assets on our balance sheet, which will be used to satisfy a substantial portion of our future cash taxes, bringing up additional capital to reinvest in our business.
Adjusted net income was $2.5 million, a $0.5 million increase versus the prior year period. As we announced on our last earnings call, our Board authorized a $20 million share repurchase program driven by their confidence in the sustainability of our cash flows as a franchise business model.
During the second quarter, we purchased approximately 86,000 shares of our common stock, for a total of approximately $700,000. We are excited to be able to use this additional lever at our disposal to help drive long-term shareholder value.
Incorporating our year-to-date results with the category outlook for the remainder of the year, we expect our Q3 performance to land in the following ranges: same store sales growth of negative 3.5% to negative 1.5%; adjusted EBITDA of between $6.5 million and $8 million.
For the full year 2024, we have updated our same store sales guidance to negative 1.5% to positive 0.5% and our adjusted EBITDA to between $27 million to $30 million. As a reminder, the impact of refranchising on our adjusted EBITDA growth rate is most pronounced in the first three quarters of 2024, as 25 of our 34 refranchised sales to date occurred in the second half of 2023. In addition, as Bob previously mentioned, we anticipate opening at least 30 new shops for 2024.
With that, I'll turn the call back over to Bob.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you, Steve. I'm excited for what the future holds for Potbelly. The second quarter represented yet another step in our transition to a franchise-led growth story as we group comparable restaurant sales, expanded restaurant margins for the 13th consecutive quarter, and continue to grow our open and committed shop count.
As we move forward, I'm confident that our customers love of our food, the continued strength of our digital channels, and the success of our recent shop openings will allow us to capitalize on the immense opportunity ahead of us. We're proud of what we've accomplished thus far, and I can assure you we're only getting started.
In closing, I'd like to thank all our Potbelly team members, from our frontline associates, to our support center employees, and of course, our franchisees and their teams for their hard work and commitment to making Potbelly the most loved sandwich brand in every neighborhood.
With that, we're happy to answer any questions. Operator, please open the line for questions.
Operator
(Operating Instructions) Mark Smith, Lake Street Capital.
Alex Sturnieks - Analyst
Hey guys, this is Alex Sturnieks on the line for Mark Smith today. Thank you for taking my questions. First one for me is largely around the consumer. You know, last quarter you mentioned that frequent visitors were visiting less. I'm just kind of curious, did that persist this quarter or, you know, did you kind of retain more of that from the everyday value combo meals that you rolled out this quarter?
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah. Thanks, Alex. Good to talk to you. I think what we saw is a little bit of a continuation from our discussion in Q1, it is those less frequent consumers and they're less digital, they're less loyal. So because of that digital disconnection, it's harder for us to get to them. And that's why we shared last quarter that we intended to test some everyday value options.
Something you can make sure is present all the time, things you can market and merchandise in the shop for those infrequent customers that are coming in. And as we told you in the prepared remarks, by the end of the quarter, we had discovered which of the ones that we tested was driving the business the most for us, the $7.99 skinny combo. You get one of those turkey, hammer, chicken sandwiches, chips, and a drink.
And I think what customers are looking for is they're looking for a meal that's in the sweet spot of what they can afford to continue to go out to lunch and not start making decisions to trade to the refrigerator, to grocery, but they don't want to compromise on getting a whole lunch. And so the fact that this is a full combo makes a lot of sense.
Look, we still grew sales in the quarter, you know, at 0.4%. And, you know, the full impact of the $7.99 combo was not really fulfilled in Q1. But the other piece of it, as I mentioned, on the frequent side are more digital customers. We continue to drive growth on that side of the business. We're very pleased with our ability is stay connected with those customers, offer them not only just the intrinsic value of the Perks loyalty program, the coins, and that new program we put into place in Q1, but then some spot promotions that help them with that too.
Those most loyal customers or more frequent customers also, they're the ones that really like the LTO innovations and the food innovation that we bring. Because they're familiar with the brand and they like to explore our menu a little bit, so that's helped them too.
But yeah, look. It's that customer, and they're not just -- I want to be clear that our insight doesn't suggest they're pulling back visits from Potbelly. What we're seeing is that they're pulling back visits period, at lunch and a little bit at dinner too, because they're just trying to manage their overall restaurant spend, and then doing it with shaving transactions.
And our goal with $7.99, which we're pleased with, was to give you a very good option to trim that visit from somebody else and not put ourselves in a position where we're overly promoting the brand and creating some profitability challenges. So, yeah, I'm really pleased with what we've discovered with that combo meal.
Alex Sturnieks - Analyst
Got it. Yeah. That makes sense. That's a lot of help. And just the last one for me, and you guys kind of introduced this the last quarter, but the new prototype, 1,800 square foot store size, you opened one in Arkansas this quarter, I think. Just kind of curious what's the puts and takes maybe the learnings from this. And then, if you have in mind an ideal mix of this to the traditional store size, kind of at the 1 and 10 product 1 and 5. Anything there?
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah. Look, prototype is the template for all new builds going forward. Now, the reason we only had one last quarter is because some shops that were in the pipeline had already been through design engineering and permitting, and you don't want to waste time to go re-permit those. And to be clear, the 1,800 square foot is a targeted square footage. We know that the brand can deliver everything we're looking to deliver at 1,800 square feet.
Honestly, we've got some franchise locations later this year that are 1,600 square feet. So we can go smaller. In some cases, franchising may go a little bit bigger. That one in Arkansas, we're very, very happy with. It's just like the others that I spoke about on average, but very happy with the sales there.
And I'm really happy with the way the prototype look came together. What it does, aesthetically, is as we build more and more and more, you're going to see this become the standard. But it really preserves what's so special about Potbelly's atmosphere, but it does it in a more efficient way, fewer seats, matches our digital business mix today, and actually accentuates a few things that we think are so important to the brand; the stove, the drinks, not only the grab-and-go drinks, but our drink station.
The varied seating, we've held many of the custom items that make Potbelly so special; those things that we produce uniquely for each shop when it opens. So a lot of that has been preserved, but it's more efficient. And I think I was clear last quarter, but just to remind you, that square footage, if the average unit in our legacy system is 2,300 feet. For a franchisee that's targeting lease spaces that are 1,800 feet, that 500 square feet can be tens of thousands of dollars a year in occupancy costs that just go away. And that is an occupancy advantage that just keeps on giving to those franchisees when they open.
Alex Sturnieks - Analyst
Got it. Hey, thanks for taking my questions today.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah, thanks for being with us.
Operator
Todd Brooks, The Benchmark Company.
Todd Brooks - Analyst
Hey, thanks, good to talk to you both.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
You too, Todd.
Todd Brooks - Analyst
A few quick questions to lead off and then a couple bigger picture ones. Steve, is there a way that you can decompose the four tenths of a percent same store sales of us kind of traffic versus price versus next?
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Yeah, sure. Let me start with price. That's always the easiest thing to begin with. We had about 4.3% of gross price for the quarter. About 1 -- sorry, about 2.5% of that was carry over, and then we had 1.9% that we introduced with a pricing action in P2 and then we had one at the end of the quarter in P7 to get this to the 1.9.
We saw about half of that come to us in check, right? So 4.3% in check -- or sorry, in gross price, but a little over 2% in average check for us, which leaves you with traffic, obviously, and the traffic was down for us a bit. And what we always like to look at as we've compared ourselves to fast casual is are we doing better even in a tougher environment. And yes, for another quarter, we did better on traffic than did fast casual.
There's a little bit of mix shift down there too. We saw some things that we've already called out in prior calls with some customers moving to different sizes on our menu down from the bigs. Of course, our $7.99 combo that features a skinny plays a part in some of that mixed shift as well as some of the discounting that we did in the quarter. We are proud of the fact that even in this environment we were able to put forth a same store sales game when a lot of folks are struggling out there.
Todd Brooks - Analyst
Absolutely. Do you want to take the opportunity and we can frame it a couple ways. One, do you want to talk about the quarter to day commentary that kind of frames up the same store sales guidance that you provided for Q3? Or do we want to attack it maybe another way talking about, you're delivering more value? But I mean, Subway's rolled out, I think a $3 meat tube now for people. So, competitive value as well. And as you've settled on the $7.99 for the combo, we feel good about that value, but just wondering about competitive pricing actions and potential impact on the business.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Todd, I think those are great companion questions. Steve can tackle the guidance piece of it, because I think that's important how we're starting the quarter. And then I can pick up on the competitive piece, because there's a lot going on in the competitive space, for sure.
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Sure, like Q3 is started out a little softer than we would have wanted and there's a few factors at play. I think the beginning of the quarter had a slightly different dynamic as it relates to the fourth of July for us. So, fourth of July was on Thursday this year, which meant that the weekend that everybody usually travels really was in P7 for us this year when it was more in P6 last year. So that had a dynamic relation to the comp.
And Hurricane Barrel affected us a bit. We have 20 some Houston shops. And for the period, it was 75 to 80 basis points drag on the comp. So those were headwinds that we started out with right away.
Also, we're still building that $7.99 combo deal. It's where, as Bob mentioned, it's performing well and it continues to build. So that's something that we're looking forward to seeing. So the consumer environment is something that's not lost on us. And so what's reflected in the guidance is not a change, a material change in that behavior. But we've got a situation where we feel like we're highly competitive with our value, we're highly competitive with our LTOs that are coming out.
And of course, that Perks program is really going to help us move through the quarter. And if you look at our full year guidance, you'll see that we've got a positive same-store sale at the high end of that range. So that just gives you a sense for the kind of confidence we have in the way that the business is going to move and improve as we hit Q4 and the latter part of the year.
Undaunted by what's happening out there, because we feel like we've got the right kinds of tactics, not just to kind of make sure that we're competitive here and building the business back to positive same-store sales, but also ultimately we get judged on profitability. And so that EBITDA number that we've guided you for the year is also something we're confident in.
Even with stock for sales, you can see we have the ability to kind of manage margins really well, not just at the shop level, but also at the company level as we control some expenses along the way. So, look, it's not going to be an easy back half of the year. But I think we've got a strong management team and a great plan to get after it, not just within the environment that we're in right now, but to continue to build against the long-term growth plans that we've set out.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Todd, if I can build on that, I think that there's a couple of things in the guidance too that we have not factored in a significant shift in consumer behavior. And there's a lot to be read that there's some reasons to believe maybe that is the case later in the year. We're not counting on that. We don't like to build into our guidance things that we haven't tested.
And that $7.99, as much as we like it, we've already screened 20 more everyday value ideas that could be companion ideas. We get a lot of credit from our customers for Pick Your Pair. $7.99 fits nicely into that type of everyday value because it builds on the menu. It makes sense to our customers who may already order skinny sandwiches or see that chips in a drink that they can make a meal deal out of.
And then when it comes to what's going on competitively, something that we know from all of our experience on this team, there are things you can do that are far more aggressive. But the risk to the profitability, and also as we become more and more of a franchise organization, the risk to franchisee adoption really goes up as you get more aggressive, especially if you just, on its face, discount core menu item to a different price.
And we see a lot of that out there. The transactional break even on those types of deals tend to be very high. And if you don't have millions of dollars to spend, and I mean maybe tens of millions to spend on television to try to get that traffic to break through that break even, it can be a very bad idea for the P&L and it may not get you the sales you need even to get back to even. So we've been very careful with that.
I mentioned in our remarks that $7.99 works really well for our customers. It works well for us too. And I think that's why you're not seeing us do some of the super aggressive ideas that some others are. But I also mentioned these things, people seem to really recognize when you're doing something that helps them out.
To get a seven-point bump in value and a five-point bump in intent to return off of a single price-pointed combo like we've gotten is not something I've seen very often in my career. And it didn't take us cutting the price in half to get there. It just really broke through that starting place, where someone says, this is something I'll come back for on the day where I may be the day before my payday instead of the day after I got paid.
Todd Brooks - Analyst
Yeah, no, that's great to hear the lift you got. And then one final one, I'll jump back in queue. We've got another quarter of history behind us with the new Perks reward tier structure. Are you finding -- and I know we had good redemptions at lower tiers, surprisingly good at that 200- and 300-coin level, early out of the gate. What I'm wondering is, is you're seeing those customers redeem at that level? Are you getting enough data to point to them continuing to redeem to that level that that's enough for them from a value standpoint and they're happy to get a free cookie after 300 coins and they're happy and they'll keep visiting and keep -- actually are you seeing evidence of the frequency benefit of the lower reward tiers? I guess that's a more succinct way to ask it.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
We really are and it's very interesting how different customers using the new program to their advantage. Some of our most frequent customers are the ones that only get cookies. They almost kind of have this position that I'm coming all the time anyway, but this is like a free dessert when I come back. And others are saving up for their sandwich. It is still entrée, it still skews more entrees than it does desserts and sides, which is what we expected.
The mix on the redemption is almost exactly what we expected it to be. But when you go a layer deeper and you look at the individual consumer behaviors, you can see that they're dialing it in to fit their personal preferences for their visit patterns. I mentioned in the remarks too, we continue to see growth in member acquisition and we continue to see growth in the penetration of those Perks transactions.
But something new that I shared this quarter is we've divided those Perks customers up into frequency cohorts. And as you might expect, people first enter the program, they're not nearly as frequent as when they've been in the mature relationship with us for maybe a year or longer, whatever the number is. I'm using that as an example, not a specific marker of time.
But across those cohorts, all of them, have increased transactions and frequency. So we're bringing people into the Perks program at rates and growing year over year and quarter over quarter. And once we get them into the program, we're advancing their frequency regardless of the level that they may be at when they enter. So we're just really pleased.
The last thing I'd say is the frequency overall per Perks consistently delivering what we have seen in past quarters. So even as it's growing, we're getting the frequency on average that we want out of those groups.
Todd Brooks - Analyst
That's all great color. Thanks for sharing that, Bob.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah, my pleasure.
Operator
Matt Curtis, William Blair.
Matt Curtis - Analyst
Hi, good afternoon. Just on the third quarter comp guidance, which obviously includes the slowdown you saw in July, maybe I could just ask you to approach it in a different way. Could you walk through what's happening with traffic and ticket as you move from the second quarter to the third quarter? I mean, is most of the slowdown related to letting some price roll off the menu, or is it more driven by the step down in traffic?
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Yeah, thanks, Matt. It's honestly a combination of both. We have -- if you look at in Q3, our carryover drops from 2.5 in Q2 to 1.4 in Q3. So, that's part of it for sure. But there is softness that we see in traffic as well. So, I think what we're able to do though is think about what we want to do with price. We've always discussed pricing as a way to outrun inflation in terms of its increases, and we've seen some really I think beneficial commodity numbers and some labor inflation lower than we thought.
So we have another price increase planned for Q3, but honestly we're contemplating whether or not we need it at all as we want to continue to kind of see the business and meet the customer where they are. So it's not one of those things where we've seen traffic fall off to the extent that pricing isn't helping us a bit. So it's a combination of the two.
Matt Curtis - Analyst
Okay, so assuming you do go ahead and take that price increase in the third quarter, can we expect your price benefits in the third quarter to remain at that four-point-something level, I think you said 4.3 in the second quarter, or would it fall into the three-point-something range?
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Yeah, it'd be in that low-four range.
Matt Curtis - Analyst
Low-four range, okay. So shifting over to something else, with the unit development guidance for this year being lowered, could you tell us what you're seeing in the franchise pipeline and how you'd expect the ramp to be in franchise development in 2025? I mean, what I'm getting at basically is, do you see right now the potential to move back into double digit franchise unit growth territory next year?
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah, I'll be brief because I want to be clear. Yes, absolutely. What we're seeing, we had talked about the 30 shops that we could see in the 2024 pipeline. I was really clear in the last quarter that you never know how some of these things move depending on an issue with the water line or whatever, and then there were 10 more that we saw that were potential.
Those 10 didn't go away and there are others beyond those, but I know we've stated our long-term growth algorithm would be low double digit CAGR unit growth rate. We do not expect to wait beyond 2025 to get to that number. I think what we can see in our pipeline, we're looking at 10% growth or better next year.
And you know, this is just building momentum. That's the other reason I tried to be clear with what we're seeing in Q3. If we open four in Q2, we can double that number in Q3. You don't have to double it, but you nearly double it again in Q4, and that's that picking up of momentum.
And the reason we believe in those things is because we can see every layer of the systems that we're providing the support for the franchisees to get there. Yeah, I -- look, the long-term growth of the brand is still something that has us all super excited about the future and unit growth development is not an exception.
Matt Curtis - Analyst
Okay, great. Thanks for clarifying that. And last one for me, I guess, on the combo meals, I mean it's good to hear you're getting some traction with the value combos. But with the other value ideas you've screened, I think, Bob, you mentioned you've screened 20 more if I heard that right. Does that imply that you may expand your value offerings in the second half of the year?
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
That's exactly what I'm implying, Matt. Thanks for clarifying. What I wanted to make clear when we were answering the previous question is that we did not make any success in any of those expanded value offerings into our guidance. Because until they've been tested, we're just not comfortable betting on that.
So we do have things that we're working on that we believe can set us up to beat our own trajectory this year, but we've really got to get to work and get those things done. I'm actually pretty excited about some of the things that were in that screening. And we screen them, of course, with customers, and the customers were very excited about some of the things that are in there.
So yeah, you should expect to see us do some more and do some of it rather quickly, to be honest with you.
Matt Curtis - Analyst
Okay, sounds good. Thanks very much.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
You're welcome.
Operator
Jeremy Hamblin, Craig Hallam.
Jeremy Hamblin - Analyst
Thanks, and congrats on that execution on a tough environment. I want to just come back to I think, for sale, sorry, I missed the beginning part of the call. But in in terms of just watching out can you remind us how your compares are in Q3, whether or not July '23, I think might be your toughest comparison monthly lap of the quarter. But just how we can think about that in terms of you know kind of thinking about from here you know your expectations for comp levels to re-accelerate or what you're looking for in terms of getting to your guidance?
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Yeah, sure. I think -- look, last year was a was a good year for us in terms of comp, but it started to normalize in the back half of the year. So you're right. We see kind of Q3 as our as our peak of in last year.
And so what will be helpful for us is certainly that relaxation a bit, but the way that we start to think about comps, and we mentioned that in our prepared remarks is on a two-year basis. So, if we look at even quarter two, I think we mentioned in the prepared remarks, we're at the end of 12-9 on a two-year basis, which relative to, I think, some of the other things that are going on in the market, it's a pretty strong performance.
I think one of the other things that is important to note if we look at sort of Q3 and a two-year basis. If we're guiding at guidance range, we're still doing over 3% same store sales comp. And then similarly, into Q4, it's positive. Outright, if you kind of look at the full year; but on a two-year basis, you're still north of 3% as well. So the environment's different this year than it was last year, of course.
And as Bob discussed, we've got a lot of firepower that we're deploying against the back half of the year. And the comps that we've put into the guidance, just to remind everyone, reflect not a material change in the consumer environment and we don't have all the things that we discussed completely tested. So there's a lot of potential here in the back half of the year for the comp, which is why if you look at the range, we've got our sites set on a positive comp for the full year. w
Jeremy Hamblin - Analyst
Got it. So, but July is the toughest monthly lap of Q3?
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
I believe that's right. Yes.
Jeremy Hamblin - Analyst
Okay. And then just moving on in terms of thinking about the unit openings, you've got nine shop opening year to date of which I think seven franchise to company. Can you help us think about the progression of that here in Q3 in terms of expectations and then into Q4?
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah, thanks. And you've got that right. We have shared before that we would keep a company development somewhere along the way if it made strategic sense or if it were a special site of some kind. I think you saw we made news with the opening in the Pentagon that that would have been a very difficult opening to do through franchising. And we were so excited to get started with the military. I was actually at that grand opening shops performing very, very well.
But going forward, we opened four in the quarter. We opened three in Q1. We're anticipating eight in Q3, and the remainder will be in Q4. So it's kind of a steady pattern of acceleration.
And we expect all the other ones that we can see in the pipeline in 2025. Obviously, we just keep getting farther and farther ahead of our own pipeline.
The other qualitative commentary I offered was, our franchisees are on track with their development schedule. That's a major sign of optimism for us in the ability to continue to be on track. And just as importantly, the shops that we're opening are averaging better than anticipated. So that's really important to us.
Franchisees offer us their own forecast of what they expect to do. And we're seeing our new openings beat their forecast and beat the system average. So our ability to open new shops that are on time and performing as well as we'd like them to perform and we expect them to perform, it just bodes really well for the future.
Jeremy Hamblin - Analyst
Great. Last one for me. On your progress on labor, really nice execution there in terms of thinking about sustainability of that here as you progress. And I think you still have probably some other initiatives that you're working on in that particular category of expense. Just any additional color you might be able to share and thinking about that on a go forward basis?
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Sorry, you're breaking up on that question for me. I don't know if Bob, he was for you as well. If you could repeat it.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah, I heard part of it related to labor. Go ahead, Jeremy.
Jeremy Hamblin - Analyst
Yeah, sorry. So I was saying great execution in Q2 on labor. I know you have probably some additional initiatives that you're still working on, but wanted to just get a sense for sustainability of that. You noted that the labor costs were a little bit lower than you expected, but you know, where you kind of where you go from here and the ability to sustain that?
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
Yeah, sure. (multiple speakers)
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Okay, sorry. Go ahead, Steve.
Steven Cirulis - Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President, Chief Strategy Officer
No, thank you for that. Sorry, it was a little choppy on my end. But listen, we're we're proud of the way that we were able to manage labor in Q2. And a lot of these things are ongoing efforts. You know, we had a 240 basis points improvement in labor versus last year. A lot of that driven by efficiency work from our ops team and our COO, our hours-based labor guide, we continue to find new ways to wring efficiencies out of that.
We also optimized some of the overtime spend that we saw. We also added some new effect from trimming and optimizing some of our hours of operation, where we were having inefficiencies in our labor. That was well over half of the benefit that we saw in the quarter. We had some, because we had slower sales, obviously we had less of a bonus accrual there as well.
So those things will continue to pay dividends into Q3, but we'll also even get better at them. I think we've had several quarters in a row where we said, hey, our hours based labor guy, we continue to get efficiency out of that. So we expect to do that as well.
And when we brought on Pat Walsh as our Chief Human Resources Officer last year, he has created a lot of programs at the field level to help us optimize things like training and efficiencies in hiring, and things that also give us just a benefit overall on the on the labor side. So those are additional things that are going to play into our favor throughout the year.
So, it is not a one-time benefit. We don't expect on expanding and working harder to continue to get labor optimization.
Jeremy Hamblin - Analyst
Yeah, great. (multiple speakers)
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks for the only thing I'd love to -- Jeremy, thank you. The only thing I would add to that, because as you know as an operator at heart where I grew up as you want to keep watching the customer experience when you're managing the labor, the third rail, of course, is to start to take it out of the experience itself. And that's why we added in our prepared remarks to speed, taste, friendliness, overall satisfaction, both with digital and within shop orders, all improving. And so that's really the best combination.
We're able to be more efficient. And there's always a systems layer, gets kind of boring, start looking at wage management and keeping turnover down and all those things that give us that stability. But yeah, I think -- but for a little bit of that bonus tail wind, we'd love to start writing those checks again. That still gives us a lot of leverage just with the brand now.
Jeremy Hamblin - Analyst
Got it. Thanks. Good luck the rest of the year.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of today's question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Mr. Bob Wright for closing remarks.
Robert Wright - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thank you, Operator, and thank you all again for your time this evening. We look forward to talking to you again soon. I hope you all have a great night.
Operator
This does conclude today's program. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect at any time and have a wonderful evening.