Emerging Brands Podcast

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 8:37:09
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

Emerging brands are redefining the restaurant business with innovation, and creativity by taking the road least traveled. We explore the trailblazers that are creating a whole new expectation in food today. This podcast is a must listen if you are just beginning your journey or a veteran seeking a new direction to success for your brand. You'll get insights, ideas and action items from the best leaders, change makers and innovators in the business, as they tell the story that has set them apart from the rest of the field!

Episodes

  • Mulberry & Vine on Transparency, the Fast Casual Space, and Expansion

    28/10/2019 Duration: 10min

    Learn about Gauthier’s background, the differences between lunch and dinner customers, and switching Mulberry & Vine to cashless service!

  • How Firebirds is Adapting to On-Demand Culture

    14/10/2019 Duration: 14min

    Learn about the chain’s sustainability efforts, commitment to reviewing and adjusting to customer feedback, and how Firebirds gives back to its community.

  • Modern Market on Scaling a Sustainable, Health-Focused Restaurant

    17/09/2019 Duration: 14min

    Learn more about the Modern Market ethos, the restaurant’s investment in innovation and local supply chains, and what lies ahead for the brand.

  • Cowboy Chicken Goes Back to the Basics

    03/09/2019 Duration: 12min

    The market is oversaturated, and differentiating your restaurant from similar concepts can be complicated and time-consuming. Cowboy Chicken seems to have unearthed the right recipe. The chain specializes in all-natural, wood-fired rotisserie chicken—unlike most chains, which offer fried chicken—paired with a wide variety of homestyle sides. Check out this episode to hear more about how Cowboy Chicken is confronting the current challenges in the industry head-on, and what lies ahead for the fast casual chain.

  • Bombay Wraps Brings Fast Casual to Indian Cuisine

    26/08/2019 Duration: 11min

    Upon moving to Chicago, Dewjee and his wife quickly discovered that the food experience they grew up with was not readily available in the city. With Bombay Wraps, they hoped to “break the misconception that Indian food or ethnic food has to be a hole in the wall.” He and his wife wanted to craft a place that offered authentic ingredients and flavor combinations in an environment that was modern, clean, and accessible to people of any background.

  • How Souvla is Revitalizing Fast-Fine Dining

    16/08/2019 Duration: 10min

    Charles Bililies, the CEO and founder of Souvla, shares his vision for the fast-fine dining restaurant on this episode of Emerging Brands. Based in San Francisco with four current locations, Souvla—a reference to the Greek word meaning “spit” or “skewer”—offers a modern version of traditional Greek gyro and souvlaki sandwiches with rotisserie roasted and naturally-raised meats, and features the only all-Greek beverage menu available in any United States restaurant. Frozen Greek yogurt is served for dessert. Listen now to learn more from Bililies on the Souvla experience and what lies ahead for the company, and check out the Emerging Brands podcast to learn about other rising brands and innovators in the restaurant industry.

  • How Hot Chicken Takeover is Reinventing the Fast Casual Experience

    24/06/2019 Duration: 11min

    On this episode of Emerging Brands, Joe DeLoss—the founder of fast casual restaurant chain Hot Chicken Takeover—discusses bringing Nashville-style fried chicken to Columbus, Ohio. Inspired by Nashville restaurant favorites Prince’s Hot Chicken Shack and Monell’s, Joe DeLoss decided to create his own hot chicken restaurant chain.Monell’s had family-style southern meals every day of the week,” says DeLoss. “You would join a table with ten other people, and I fell in love with the communal experience. Most guests walking into a fast casual restaurant don’t remember being called out or greeted—our question was, how do we build the infrastructure of our restaurant around recreating that communal experience for our guests and employees?”Over the last decade, Joe DeLoss has worked in a number of industries in an effort to create employment opportunities for people experiencing or who have experienced incarceration, homelessness, and other hardships. Founded in 2014, Hot Chicken Takeover has become a breakout brand i

  • How Starbird Chicken is Changing the Fast Food Experience

    20/05/2019 Duration: 09min

    An emerging restaurant brand has to be so much more than just an innovative food concept. Nowadays, the market is highly saturated, especially in the QSR and fast casual segments. But emerging brand concepts are outperforming the rest. They are not only doing this by resonating with customers but are also redefining the restaurant business. The California-based Starbird Chicken hasn't been just wingin' it. "Starbird Chicken is really different from other chicken concepts in that we have modernized the entire food experience. We set out to really reinvent everything from food quality, ingredients, design, and convenience in the fast-food space. We reinvented the experience for the modern consumer," says Aaron Noveshen, founder & president of The Culinary Edge, the parent company of Starbird. Noveshen hatched the Starbird concept back in 2014 with the goal to offer a “super premium fast food" experience for guests. But just because the food is served fast, doesn't mean Starbird skimps on food quality. "In t

  • How The World's First OatMeals Cafe Has Reimagined The Use of The Traditional Grain

    07/03/2019 Duration: 13min

    Samantha Stephens, chef and founder of OatMeals shares with Foodable the origins of her single-ingredient fast casual concept and how she built it from the ground up.

  • Tom Holt, Founder and CEO of Urbane Cafe

    31/01/2019 Duration: 06min

    Tom Holt, Founder and CEO of Urbane Cafe, shares insightful information about focusing on the consumer and their demands to sustain growth.

  • Joe Guith, President of McAlister's Deli

    21/12/2018 Duration: 08min

    Seasoned food industry leader, Joe Guith, President of McAlister’s Deli®, shares his ideas about the future outlook of the brand.

  • Investing in Talent Has Been Key In Tupelo Honey's Success

    22/08/2018 Duration: 09min

    Top executives from emerging brand Tupelo Honey talk on how building an engaging lifestyle brand can help you build a rockstar brand through people.

  • Hunter Pond, Founder & CEO of East Hampton Sandwich Co.

    06/08/2018 Duration: 05min

    Hunter Pond of East Hampton Sandwich Co. shares the early challenges that came with opening a restaurant brand with zero experience under his belt at the young age of 25.

  • HipCityVeg, Nicole Marquis, Founder & CEO

    15/04/2018 Duration: 05min

    Nicole Marquis, Founder and CEO of HipCityVeg, tells us how she developed her restaurant to show people that plant-based cuisine can be delicious. Her mission started when her desire to help her father fix his high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes became a debate about genetics versus diet. Nicole knew that she needed to show, not tell, her father that he could eat well and not give anything up that he loves about food, to instill a lifestyle change.

  • Steve Schulze, President and CEO of Nekter Juice Bar

    16/03/2018 Duration: 09min

    In 2010, Steve Schulze was working to become a healthier version of himself, just like everyone else. But after learning that the “healthy” juices he was drinking were actually made with additives and fillers, he knew society needed a better option for all the consumers trying to improve their lifestyles. So he began his mission with Nekter to become the “people’s juice;” affordable, accessible, and truly healthy. Now with 100 locations across the U.S., Nekter provides juices, smoothies and acai bowls, all without fillers. For less than $5, people can easily grab and drink 5 pounds of vegetables as opposed to the $8 filler juices offered at what Schulze calls “elitist juice bars.”Schulze points to his people as his best marketing strategy. He says it’s all about listening to what your consumer wants, not what you want, and consistently providing that. With the next generation looking even more intently at healthy options, Schulze is excited to see what’s next.

  • Sam Polk, CEO of Everytable

    07/03/2018 Duration: 09min

    Sam Polk was a hedge fund manager before he had, what he calls, a “crisis of conscience.” He was awakened by a number of structural inequalities he saw in our society, especially those in our food system. So he set out to confront those inequalities, first with his nutrition program Groceryships, and now with Everytable.Everytable is first and foremost a business just like Tender Greens or McDonalds. But Polk’s mission is a little loftier. Seeing that access to healthy food is scarce in underprivileged neighborhoods, Everytable strives to provide healthy options to underserved neighborhoods at truly affordable prices. Clean, vegetable-forward, culinarily-driven meals are sold at lower price points than their larger, less-healthy competitors.So how does he do it? You’ll have to take a listen to this episode of Foodable’s Emerging Brands Podcast Series for his full business model, but variable pricing plays a major role in creating profitable stores that are truly accessible to all income levels.

  • Andy Duddleston, Co-founder and Managing Partner of The Little Beet

    10/01/2018 Duration: 07min

    The Little Beet emerged out of a partnership between Andy Stern and John Rigos’ company Aurify Brands (formerly Five Points Partners) and Andy Duddleston. After a trip to LA, the team was inspired by the restaurant concept Lemonade and wanted to bring a sort of vegetable-focused healthy concept to New York. At the time, the team would look for healthy concepts in the city but could only find salad shops and wanted to provide another option in their market. Offering 11 different vegetable sides, The Little Beet has distinguished itself as a brand serving healthy and delicious vegetable-focused dishes without having to only serve salad. Consumers off all diet types can find something on their menu. The Little Beet does things “the hard way.” Using all premium ingredients and ingredients that can be difficult to source, Duddleston says “I think that’s what makes us special.” But it takes more than good food to create an emerging brand. Listen to this episode of the emerging brand series to see how The Little B

  • Scott Davis, President of Corelife Eatery

    10/01/2018 Duration: 09min

    By the time he was 24, Scott Davis was working as a manager at Au Bon Pain with soon to be CEO of Panera, Ron Shaik. He helped evolve Au Bon Pain into Panera Bread and there spent 25 years as the chief concept officer. Through his years of experience with one of America’s most widely known brands, he has learned many lessons which he carried over into his position as the president of Corelife Eatery. Some of the most important lessons being that, as a company, you must always be ready for a change. Customers are always looking for something new. Today it’s about fresh, healthy and clean. But as this new trend was coming to be, Panera and its high-quality offering noticed that while customers were coming to them for great food, they were also coming for the atmosphere. Something that hasn’t seemed to change. Listen in to this episode of Foodable’s Emerging Brands Podcast Series to hear more about what customers are looking for and how your brand can provide the best product and experience.

  • Randi Garutti, CEO of Shake Shack

    10/01/2018 Duration: 07min

    CEO of Shake Shack, Randy Garutti, has 18 years of experience with Union Square Hospitality under his belt. He’s learned directly from one of the greatest minds in our industry, Danny Meyer, and it shows in Garutti’s leadership style. As the chief executive of Foodable’s highest-ranked emerging brand, Garutti knows a thing or two about creating a successful, loved, and lasting brand. There are few key factors Garutti lives by. Firstly, Garutti believes success begins with those in leadership. To build a successful company, those guiding the way must be incredible problem-solvers with a focus and ethos aligning with the brand. Beyond that, key indicators of a successful brand include having a deep personal connection with customers, providing an array of convenient options alongside incredible service, and a commitment to improving with every step taken towards growth. Listen to this episode of Foodable’s Emerging Brands Podcast Series for more insights into how Foodable’s highest ranking emerging brand is mee

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