By Julie Jargon 

Greg Creed had a successful run heading Taco Bell, the U.S.-focused chain famous for fast-food indulgences like Doritos tacos. Now, as the incoming chief executive of parent Yum Brands Inc., he will face bigger challenges, from assuaging Chinese consumers' food-safety concerns to persuading young people around the world that fast food can be fresh and healthy.

The Australian-born Mr. Creed, a 20-year Yum veteran who is scheduled to take over from longtime CEO David Novak on Jan. 1, said the fast-food industry is undergoing a revolution in which young customers are questioning the integrity of their food and demanding freshly made products.

In his first interview since he was tapped to be CEO in May, Mr. Creed said Thursday that Yum has the potential to double its global restaurant count to 80,000 in the next 20 years. But he added that the company has to overcome the idea of fast food as fuel and "transcend" the industry by showing customers its food is fresh.

"We have to clean up our menu labels. What people want are things on labels that they can pronounce," Mr. Creed said. "We have to pull preservatives out." He added that all Yum's chains, which also include KFC and Pizza Hut, are working on such efforts, though he cautioned that "it's going to take us a few years."

Mr. Creed's comments echo those of McDonald's Corp., which said Wednesday that it's rethinking the use of preservatives and is reviewing its recipes and cooking techniques to better satisfy demands for fresher food. On Wednesday Carl's Jr. announced the launch of a new grass-fed, free-range beef burger that is free of added hormones, antibiotics and steroids. And Chick-fil-A Inc. says it is phasing out all chicken raised with antibiotics over five years.

Mr. Creed, 57 years old, said that he'd eventually like Pizza Hut and Taco Bell to switch to hormone- and antibiotic-free beef but that it will take other big players in the industry to get on board to increase the supply of those products.

The incoming CEO's most pressing priority involves food-quality concerns in China, a vital market where Yum has been grappling with a sales slump for two years. In late 2012, Chinese media alleged that a KFC supplier used growth hormones and antibiotics to help chickens grow faster. Yum defended its safety practices, but the chain's sales were pressured for more than a year as fearful consumers stayed home or switched to competitors.

Yum had said that 2014 would be KFC's "bounce back" year in China. Sales improved in the first half, following menu adjustments and an advertising campaign emphasizing food safety. But in July, Chinese media reported that a Shanghai supplier had intentionally sold expired meat to Yum and other fast-food chains in China and sales began to slide again.

Yum said Tuesday that it expects same-store sales in China this year to decline by a mid-single-digit percentage, dragging down per-share earnings growth for the company to the mid-single digits. In October, Yum had lowered its forecast for per-share earnings growth to between 6% and 10% from at least 20%. On Thursday, Yum said that November same-store sales in China are expected to be down 15% but sales should improve in December.

The volatility has led some analysts to speculate that Yum could spin off its China business--a notion Mr. Creed didn't entirely dismiss. "There are no plans today to spin off China or do anything structurally with China," Mr. Creed said. "Getting China back on its feet is really our focus," he added, though he also said, "I would never say never."

KFC plans to give local markets in China more autonomy in offering menu items and setting prices because consumers in large cities have higher incomes and different food preferences than those in smaller cities. KFC is also adding offerings like premium coffee, and it plans to use more Chinese celebrities in its ads, roll out free Wi-Fi at its restaurants and reinvigorate its children's menu.

Fixing the China business is a tall order for an executive who has spent most of his career in Australia or in Taco Bell's mostly U.S. business.

Mr. Creed, who was appointed Taco Bell's CEO in early 2011, is credited with pushing the chain's successful Doritos Locos Taco product and driving sales during late-night and breakfast periods. In the fiscal third quarter, Taco Bell posted 3% growth in same-store sales, driven by breakfast sales and an operating-profit increase of 14%.

Mr. Creed isn't a stranger to food-quality issues. Shortly after he became Taco Bell's CEO, a lawsuit alleging that the chain used more filler than meat in its tacos triggered widespread negative attention. Mr. Creed's swift defense included full-page newspaper ads and YouTube video appearances defending the products, which he said consisted of 88% beef--along with water, oats, spices and cocoa powder--not the 35% beef content the suit claimed. The suit was ultimately withdrawn.

Mr. Creed said that the demand for fresh, high-quality food from customers--especially those from their midteens to mid-30s--is a global phenomenon. Yum's Pizza Hut brand just embarked on a major effort to better appeal to this age group with a new menu boasting premium ingredients like Peruvian cherry peppers, new flavors and crusts, lower-calorie pizzas and more customization options.

The Pizza Hut relaunch also extends to the uniforms employees wear in the restaurants, which include T-shirts and jeans, and a more interactive way to order online or on mobile devices in English or Spanish.

Emphasizing food quality can also affect restaurants' layout. Taco Bell has an open-kitchen restaurant in Bangalore, India, where customers can see their food being prepared through a glass window. Mr. Creed said the company plans to open another open kitchen in Chicago next year.

Write to Julie Jargon at julie.jargon@wsj.com

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