Why Many F&B MSMBs Are Busy Surviving, Not Scaling
Prabu Nusantara

Why Many F&B MSMBs Are Busy Surviving, Not Scaling

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Running a small food business in Jakarta is often described as a story of resilience. Long hours, endless hustle, and the ability to “keep going” are seen as proof of success. But when you actually talk to micro, small, and medium businesses (MSMB )owners, resilience isn’t something they’re proud of. It’s something they have to do.

In January 2026, Populix spoke with four F&B business owners across Jabodetabek—a café owner, a home-based bakmi seller, a frozen food shop owner, and an F&B brand builder. Their businesses were different, but the reality they described was very similar:

  • Nothing in their business ever feels stable.
  • Prices change faster than menus can be adjusted.
  • Competition grows faster than customer loyalty.
  • Trends disappear before investments have time to pay off.

One café owner told us that the biggest challenge wasn’t quality or effort—it was sameness. Surrounded by many similar coffee shops, the café struggled to stand out. Working harder didn’t solve the problem. Things only started to feel more under control after the owner clearly redefined what made the café different and brought in outside help to structure the business.

A bakmi seller faced pressure from a different angle. Ingredient prices kept going up, but raising menu prices felt risky. In a neighbourhood full of similar sellers, even a small increase could send customers elsewhere. So instead of adjusting prices quickly, margins were absorbed. Stress built up. Every day became a careful calculation.

For a frozen food shop owner, survival came from listening closely. Customers requested certain products, and they were stocked the next day. Inventory wasn’t just stock—it was insight. Simple discipline, like separating business money from personal money, helped keep the business running.

Meanwhile, a more established F&B owner shared a surprising view: 2024–2025 felt tougher than the pandemic years. Consumer spending slowed, trends cooled, and growth plans had to be put on hold. Expansion was no longer the priority. Staying alive was.

MSMB Indonesia
Source: Freepik

Across all these stories, one pattern stands out: MSMB owners are constantly reacting to price changes, new competitors, shifting demand, and uncertainty. From the outside, this looks like resilience. From the inside, it feels exhausting. And this is where many small businesses become vulnerable.

Most MSMB owners understand their customers intuitively. They interact with them every day. But when it comes to bigger decisions, many are still forced to rely on guesswork:

  • Which menu items should stay or go?
  • Which price points still make sense?
  • Which customers are actually worth focusing on?
  • Which differentiation really matters—and which doesn’t?

This is where small, proper market research can make a real difference. Not large, expensive studies—but focused, practical research that helps business owners:

  • Understand what customers truly value
  • See how they compare with competitors
  • Test ideas before spending time and money
  • Make decisions with more confidence, not just instinct

For MSMB, market research isn’t about being “sophisticated.” It’s about reducing uncertainty. When decisions are based on real insight—even simple ones—business owners can stop constantly reacting and start choosing their next move more clearly. And, in a market as competitive as Jakarta’s F&B scene, that clarity often makes the difference between businesses that just survive and those that quietly grow.

Want to understand MSMB better?

Whether you’re an MSMB owner looking to make smarter decisions or a company that wants to understand the MSMB segment more deeply, Populix can help. With experience in researching MSMB across industries, Populix helps brands, institutions, and organizations uncover real insights into how small businesses think, operate, and make decisions.

Sometimes, a little clarity is all it takes to move forward with confidence.

Writer’s bio

Prabu is an experienced qualitative researcher with over 13 years in the consumer research industry. His expertise lies in healthcare and UX research, driven by a passion for understanding and improving the consumer experience. Prabu holds a master’s degree in social psychology of health and is also a cancer survivor. In his free time, he volunteers as a patient advocate and navigator for cancer patients, bringing his professional expertise and personal experience to support others on their healthcare journey.

Related article: 7 Data-Driven Reasons to Enter the Indonesian Market

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