PQV - Price Quality Value

Food Truck on the Lot: Convenience vs PQV

Food Truck on the Lot: Convenience vs PQV

Spring has officially arrived, and with it comes one of the little perks of the season at FDXFR — the occasional food truck rolling onto the lot. Even though you still have to pay, it’s still convenient when you don’t feel like leaving campus for lunch.

So of course, I had to try it.

The Order

I ordered a burger and added bacon and jalapeños.

When the total rang up, the price landed at $17.

Come on mane.

Even with the add-ons, that price immediately triggered my PQV radar.

For those who follow the blog, you already know the formula:

PQV = Price • Quality • Value

And unfortunately this one missed the mark.

PQV Rating

⭐️⭐️½ out of 5

Not because the food was bad — it wasn’t.

The burger came hot off the griddle, which is always a good sign. Fresh hot food goes a long way with food trucks. But when we evaluate the meal through the Price-Quality-Value lens, the numbers just didn’t add up.

Honestly, even $14 would have felt too high for what was on the plate.

The Fry Situation

Now here’s where things got interesting.

I didn’t even order fries, but somehow they came with the meal. Maybe they were included in the combo — I’ll have to double-check the menu.

But here’s the real issue.

They were store-bought crinkle-cut fries.

For a $17 meal, that just doesn’t cut it.

If you’re running a food truck and charging premium prices, you have to elevate the experience. One easy upgrade would make a huge difference:

That alone would take the fries from basic to something memorable.

The PQV Benchmark

Here’s the bottom line.

If this meal had been $10, it would have landed squarely in the PQV approval zone.

At that price point, the convenience, the hot food, and the portion size would all make sense.

But at $17, expectations rise — and the meal simply didn’t rise with them.

The Silver Lining

Now here’s the funny part.

Experiences like this always get my wheels turning.

Because when I look at a setup like this, I can’t help but think:

Yeah… I could definitely do this.

Not knocking the truck — they’re out there doing their thing — but it also shows how much room there is to stand out if you focus on flavor, freshness, and real PQV balance.

One Last Thing

If I ever roll out a truck of my own, there’s one thing that will be non-negotiable.

No generator noise.

Nothing ruins the food truck vibe faster than a loud generator rattling in the background.

Electric power setup all the way.

Clean. Quiet. Professional.

Final PQV Verdict

Convenient location.
Hot food.
But the Price-Quality-Value balance just wasn’t there this time.

Final Rating: ⭐️⭐️½ / 5

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