

The Hospitality Hangout | Restaurant Industry Trends & Hospitality Leaders
Michael Schatzberg & Jimmy Frischling - Hospitality Insiders | Expert Strategies & Trends.', Hosts: Michael Schatzberg and Jimmy Frischling | Branded Hospitality Media, Hospitality Insiders | Michael Schatzberg & Jimmy Frischling | Branded Hospitality Media
The Hospitality Hangout is where the restaurant industry gets real.
Hosted by Schatzy, the Restaurant Guy, and Jimmy, the Finance Guy, this funny, unfiltered hospitality podcast dives into restaurant trends, food service innovation, hospitality technology, and the investment strategies shaping the future of the industry.
With decades of hands-on experience operating restaurants and structuring capital markets deals, these two bring real-world insight from the kitchen to the boardroom. They connect the biggest operators, boldest founders, and sharpest investors in hospitality for conversations you won’t hear anywhere else.
Each week you’ll hear from C-suite restaurant executives, franchise leaders, emerging brand founders, hospitality tech innovators, and private equity investors who are building the next era of food and hospitality.
Expect insider stories, sharp opinions, real numbers, and plenty of laughs. No fluff. No corporate spin. Just honest conversations about what is actually happening in restaurants and food service.
If you care about scaling restaurants, raising capital, building brands, or staying ahead of hospitality trends, this is your show.
Grab a drink, pull up a chair, and let’s talk shop.
Welcome to The Hospitality Hangout.
Hosted by Schatzy, the Restaurant Guy, and Jimmy, the Finance Guy, this funny, unfiltered hospitality podcast dives into restaurant trends, food service innovation, hospitality technology, and the investment strategies shaping the future of the industry.
With decades of hands-on experience operating restaurants and structuring capital markets deals, these two bring real-world insight from the kitchen to the boardroom. They connect the biggest operators, boldest founders, and sharpest investors in hospitality for conversations you won’t hear anywhere else.
Each week you’ll hear from C-suite restaurant executives, franchise leaders, emerging brand founders, hospitality tech innovators, and private equity investors who are building the next era of food and hospitality.
Expect insider stories, sharp opinions, real numbers, and plenty of laughs. No fluff. No corporate spin. Just honest conversations about what is actually happening in restaurants and food service.
If you care about scaling restaurants, raising capital, building brands, or staying ahead of hospitality trends, this is your show.
Grab a drink, pull up a chair, and let’s talk shop.
Welcome to The Hospitality Hangout.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 15, 2022 • 39min
Optimizing the Customer Experience | Season 6, Vol. 5: GoTab
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy'' and Jimmy Frischling “The Finance Guy'' chat with Tim McLaughlin, co-founder chief executive officer of GoTab, Inc., about technology that can optimize daily operations, while improving communication between restaurant operators and their guests. McLaughlin talks about his background, he says he has been developing software since he was young and then he went to school for mechanical engineering. McLaughlin says, “I co-founded GoTab in 2016. We've taken many turns and twists as hospitality has in the last five years for those who know, started in payments ordering and then we're a full system now. Our real focus instead of being like most POS, we are focused on making the guests have a better experience as well as the operators.” McLaughlin shares the evolution of GoTab, saying that in 2016 you were able to pay your tab by entering a code, in 2017 you were able to do it with a QR code. He adds, “our whole goal was to turn tables faster. As many hospitality tech companies want to do is get guests in, get them out, take their money as fast as you can. It turns out we couldn't really get enough traction with that but that's what we've seen overall is it just doesn't solve enough problems.” GoTab then added ordering and they kept expanding and filling in the gaps. QR codes have been around for some time, McLaughlin says GoTab thinks of QR codes as a point in space. He says, “a QR code is unique all throughout your restaurant. It could even be in a hotel next door but that lets us know where you're standing or where you're sitting or maybe laying. I don't know but the point is that we know where you are which means we know what menus you can access, who you are and what's available at that time. How long it's going to take to get it to you and as a result we can then start optimizing a lot of things in the kitchen.” Frischling asks McLaughlin to explain what he means when he says to think of the kitchen like a factory. He says that you should optimize for production, speed, quality and efficiency and have a process. GoTab eliminates a lot of the work with the software, letting chefs and cooks focus on making food. To hear more about the solutions GoTab can bring to the operators, including wrong orders and communication, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout on Spotify.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Feb 8, 2022 • 42min
The Current State of the Delivery Market | Season 6, Vol. 4: Lunchbox
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy'' and Jimmy Frischling “The Finance Guy'' chat with Nabeel Alamgir, chief executive officer and co-founder of Lunchbox about the current state of delivery and what the future will look like for restaurants. Alamgir who is on the 2021 Forbes list 30 under 30, is the co-founder of the digital ordering and marketing platform Lunchbox. The operating system for managing a restaurant's entire digital experience. Alamgir talks about starting as a busboy at Bareburger when he came to the United States and how he loved the industry, working his way up to chief marketing officer before he launched Lunchbox. Alamgir discusses how Lunchbox recently has raised fifty million dollars in Series B funding so his food technology company can accelerate product research and development as well as expand teams. Alamgir says he wants to do three things with the capital, one is to push the Lunchbox agenda, building a digital storefront and make sure it’s incredible looking, two is to build more engagement tools that can convert third party sales into first party, three is to bring in the best talent in the world to the Lunchbox team. The company brought on a new executive to the team, chief operating officer, Kieran Luke from the General Assembly. Lunchbox is about to release the first Metaverse restaurant, fully walkable. You can go anywhere and order food, it will be sold on OpenSea on the blockchain, says Alamgir. Alamgir talks about the partnership between Lunchbox and Olo saying he is excited to partner with them and be part of their ecosystem. Adding, they are excited to elevate their design and elevate their marketing as well. They've paved a way for companies like us to exist so we're pumped to work together.Frischling asks Alamgir what the current state of the delivery market is looking like from a growth perspective and he says, they are studying companies in China, specifically BingoBox. It is a convenience store with no staff that is entirely automated and compares it to Amazon Go. He adds, “our prediction is it'll be seventy five percent delivery and the rest will be in store. The number of seats you have within your restaurant is limited. You know it's fifty to hundred but the number of people you can feed around your community is a lot more. More importantly, right now, it's a sign of shame if you have a second brand out of your kitchen. It means you're not doing well.” Alamgir goes on to say that it is a stigma that is not real and in the future that will be how you run and optimize a kitchen to be efficient. To hear more from Alamgir about branding, marketing and the Lunchbox vision, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout on Spotify. Click here for more recovery and relief information for restaurant, hospitality and food service operators.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Feb 1, 2022 • 39min
The Convenience of Curbside | Season 6, Vol. 3: Curbit
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy'' and Jimmy Frischling “The Finance Guy'' chat with Scott Siegel, co-founder and chief executive officer at Curbit, about the continued critical component of pickup and takeaway in the restaurant business. Siegel talks about his background in commercial real estate, representing restaurant owners and how finding locations for their business inspired the development of Curbit. He realized that drive-thrus were a difficult asset to come by and he wanted a solution that would allow his clients to compete and level the playing field. Siegel says, “You know that my mind was racing. It was like I was thinking about all the challenges with curbside pickup, you know you get dedicated parking spaces, there's all this negotiation around getting the spaces and it was like why can't a car just arrive in a parking lot, show up, and have somebody walk food out to their car in less than two minutes.” He adds, “I've had this sort of burning desire to solve, to address a problem and help the industry and it was a light bulb moment for me.” Siegel shares the original idea of Curbit saying, “so the the sort of the genesis of Curbit occurred before the pandemic, a lot of people think wow, you guys, you came up with timing so great, you know with with what's happening and sort of this demand for curbside, this was in 2019 when the company formed.” Siegel addresses order timing and says Curbit takes the signals from the kitchen display system, digests everything that is happening in real time. Curbit will now communicate that information to the guest. This system makes it a guided journey from checkout to handoff, managing the guest’s arrival expectation and experience.“If I have a crappy pickup experience, I'm not going to return, but if all of a sudden, it's seamless, it's smooth, it's easy, it's frictionless, I'm going to come back,'' says Siegel. He adds that Curbit is really loyalty, it is about creating an experience that the guest wants to return more frequently. To hear about Curbit’s partnership with QSR Automation and the data that they use, and the demand consumers have for curbside pickup, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout on Spotify. Click here for more recovery and relief information for restaurant, hospitality and food service operators.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Jan 25, 2022 • 38min
Reducing Waste With Reusable Packaging | Season 6, Vol. 2 : Dispatch Goods
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy'' and Jimmy Frischling “The Finance Guy'' chat with Lindsey Hoell, founder and chief executive officer of Dispatch Goods about how restaurants can help reduce waste with reusable packaging. Hoell had a career in cardiac surgery first on the clinical side and then started selling the equipment in Hawaii. She is a surfer and was confronted by plastic pollution in her favorite surf breaks. Hoell got involved with Surfrider Foundation’s program called Ocean Friendly Restaurants where they helped restaurants transition to more sustainable practices. She says Dispatch Goods was created because of her love for surfing. Hoell describes Dispatch Goods by saying “we are a reverse logistics infrastructure that's supporting circular packaging. What that means is we're kind of like recyclers just we reuse instead of send stuff to another country to hypothetically be recycled but probably not.” She adds, “And what we started to build is essentially a curbside and business collection system for reusable goods and that we process more locally and which also reduces the carbon footprint of travel and process and then we basically redistribute packaging and other items back to businesses. We started with the restaurant industry because that's generally consumers' number one waste related pain point is food packaging so that's how we got there.”Dispatch Goods has launched on the East Coast. Hoell says, “we're not doing home collection yet. That's something that will be building out but navigating the kind of complexities of apartments is a new challenge. And I would say that there's probably just more people eating kind of on the go and where they put things on the go than in San Francisco where food's generally going to either offices or homes. So the home collection piece we're going to need a much more kind of robust collection system, so that's one piece that we're working on right now.”Dispatch Goods partners with restaurants to offer food to customers in completely reusable packaging. Hoell says, “so Dispatch really, we've thought about this from both the end of life as well as like the beginning of life, the entire process. And why reuse is really the clear solution and not just from a sustainability standpoint but we think about the customer experience, restaurants take so much work and care into preparing meals and we just don't think that the trash that you're eating out of represents the quality of the food. So that's another place where we think reuse really has an opportunity to have an off-premise experience that's much more closely in line with what the dine in experience would be for customers.” To hear Hoell’s insights on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) and Dispatch Goods’ partnership with DoorDash, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout on Spotify.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Jan 18, 2022 • 33min
Using AI to Achieve Consistent Service | Season 6, Vol. 1: Agot.AI
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy'' and Jimmy Frischling “The Finance Guy'' kick off season six and chat with Evan DeSantola, Co-Founder & CEO at Agot AI about using AI to achieve consistent service.DeSantola and his co-founder Alex Litzenberger met at Carnegie Mellon University when they had come up with the idea for Agot AI. They had noticed the advances in computer vision perception technologies were not being commercialized. DeSantola says, “so when we left CMU we figured hey we know that this is a really ripe area for innovation in the computer vision space and we just kicked it off.” He adds, “we're just excited to bring this technology to scale across multi-unit foodservice.”DeSantola explains how it works, “So our system, we just put cameras over the line and we watch what's being prepared.” He adds, “we just flag different operational issues that could potentially emerge in foodservice whether this is an employee getting to send out an extra chalupa, to perhaps certain operational practices not being performed to the best way that they could be.” Agot AI’s Kitchen Awareness platform captures meal orders from in-store, online, or drive-thru and their Interventional Order Accuracy technology identifies items being prepared and issues real-time correction alerts to line workers ensuring items are ingredient accurate and bagged correctly.“We're tracking from the beginning to the end of every single meal item. As they're going in the bags as all the ingredients are going on these individual meal items as they go out to the customer and that really allows us to provide a ton of different effective points to provide value for the restaurant,” says DeSantola.Frischling asks DeSantola how accurate Agot is in picking up order discrepancies and he says, “so with our technology franchisees can reduce the majority of their order errors with almost no changes to the current off flow. So the exact reduction is going to differ brand to brand and it's mostly dependent on compliance of fixing these errors as they go out the door. But we're talking near zero employee error rates as opposed to the current error rates that we're having and that's for napkins, that's for pickles, that's for drinks.” Adding, “It's just about what's in camera view.”To hear how Agot AI can improve labor performance, employee training, plus recruitment and retention, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout on Spotify. Click here for more recovery and relief information for restaurant, hospitality, and foodservice operators.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Jan 12, 2022 • 40min
LIVE FROM CES IN LAS VEGAS
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout podcast, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy” and Jimmy Frischling “ The Finance Guy” were on the road and live at CES Las Vegas, where they chat with Michael Wolf, founder, chief executive officer, and editor in chief at The Spoon, Picnic’s founder and chief executive officer, Clayton Wood, Steven Sperry, co-founder and chief executive officer at Minnow and Ritukar Vijay, founder and chief executive officer at Ottonomy, Inc., about the show and food-technology being highlighted at CES. Wolf stops by to discuss The Spoon getting involved in CES with the focus of food technology. They talk about the three panels, how food and cooking will change the future, the future of meat, and welcome to our food robot future. Wolf says, “I think there's lots of whitespace opportunity with bringing innovation to food.” As far as the future, Wolf says, we will see food becoming a platform and it will be getting bigger and bigger over time. Picnic founder Clayton Wood stops by for his second time on the podcast. Wood talks about Picnic’s food automation system preparing pizza at the show with their partner Sodexo. Wood is a panelist on the welcome to our food robot future panel and addresses automation for restaurants. Wood says there are a lot of new entrants in the space and it is still not well understood but it is not about stealing jobs. The Picnic system and the systems like it allow operators to operate profitability and make working conditions better. Sperry checks in to chat about the show and people’s reaction to the Minnow Pod. He says, we are in the middle of a revolution in the food industry, and the entire food ecosystem is being redesigned from food production to how food is prepared and more. Sperry talks about the opportunity in terms of delivery and robots. “If food is cheaper to have delivered and it’s better quality than you can make yourself, a lot of people are not going to make their own food,” says Sperry. Ottonomy founder Ritukar Vijay stops by to chat about contactless deliveries with autonomous robots, and about being the world’s first to offer autonomous deliveries at airports. They talk about Ottonomy’s partnership with Presto to offer robot-powered curbside pickup. Vijay says the buzz on the floor at CES is that labor shortages are redefining how food tech is happening and this is an exciting time for food technology. To hear more from all of the guests that stopped by to chat with Schatzberg and Frischling at CES Las Vegas, check out this episode of Hospitality Hangout.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Dec 28, 2021 • 40min
AI in Your Restaurant | Season 5, Vol. 12: Valyant AI
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout podcast, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy” and Jimmy Frischling “ The Finance Guy” chat with Rob Carpenter, founder and chief executive officer at Valyant AI about automated order taking for quick service restaurants. Carpenter says, “There's a little bit of a labor crunch out there, one point seven million unfilled positions across the hospitality industry right now. So what we do is stick revolutionary cutting edge technology into your restaurant, greets customers, answers questions, takes the customer's order and then submits it directly into the point-of-sale system. Making the operators and the employees' lives easier and along the way what we see is anywhere between a five percent to twenty percent increase in top line revenue. So if you're doing one to two million a year you can add twenty percent to your top line overnight. While solving the labor problem.”When asked about where the idea of Valyant AI came from, Carpenter says, “so the core initial idea for Valyant which we will eventually get to is the idea of automating customer service in physical locations. So what the very first version of Valyant’s product was effectively a holographic employee. So imagine a transparent OLED display which is effectively a piece of glass merged with a flat screen tv and we render a five and a half foot tall digital person and her name was Holly and she could blink her eyes and lean in and the idea was that she could carry on a conversation with you.” Carpenter talks about there not being holographic employees or automated customer service available in many places because the technology is extremely hard. They pivoted the business saying they would need to solve the problem of conversational AI in order to bring a holographic employee to market. Carpenter says, “we've effectively spent the last four and a half years hyper focused on solving conversational AI and right now it's for restaurants. Eventually we want to roll it to hospitality in general and then we would look to in the future to take it to additional industries beyond that.” To hear Carpenter breakdown how the AI translates for the customer in a drive-thru, and how Valyant AI can help address the labor crisis that hospitality is facing, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout. Click here for more recovery and relief information for restaurant, hospitality and food service operators.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Dec 21, 2021 • 32min
Embracing and Adopting Tech | Season 5, Vol. 11: Hatco Corporation
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout podcast, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy” and Jimmy Frischling “ The Finance Guy” chat with David Rolston, president and chief executive officer at Hatco Corporation about automation and efficiency in foodservice equipment. Rolston has an engineering background and has been with Hatco for twenty seven years. Hatco was the first to recognize the need to sanitize dishware and developed the technology to do so. Hatco, now one hundred percent employee-owned company, designs equipment for foodservice, including warming, holding, and cooling equipment. Shatzberg asks about the company getting into automation and efficiency, Rolston says, “now it's all about labor savings and so these electronic eyes really aren't much of a labor savings but they were meant to be an energy savings device, so that we're basically looking across the surface of a heated surface, see if there's any food there and if there's no food there we turn the heaters down. It's a very simple concept.”Rolston says when asked about Minnow, “We got into lockers before Covid, we were fortunate that we had started focusing on this area prior to Covid hitting because it became a big deal and during that process we started to see ads for Minnow lockers and we thought oh my gosh, there's another competitor from outside the industry and you know, just one more person we got to deal with as far as competition.” “We realized there was tremendous synergy here because they had great depth in both industrial design and the software that was going with this system.” Rolston shares that Hatco is manufacturing Minnow lockers. In terms of robotics, Rolston says, “you know you can have an actuating lever that pushes a burger off a conveyor or onto another conveyor and these days I think more about automation than I do robotics and to me automation is a broader category that includes software and I see software adoption tremendously throughout our business and restaurants. When you think about something as simple as POS adoption I mean, what restaurant doesn't have a POS these days whereas you go way back they didn't have that and the savings that has brought us is tremendous. So I think software adoption is a no-brainer for restaurants and for manufacturers.”To hear Rolston’s insights on the hospitality industry's adoption of technology, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout. Click here for more recovery and relief information for restaurant, hospitality and food service operators.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Dec 14, 2021 • 56min
BRANDED FROM THE ROAD AT RLC
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout podcast, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy” and Jimmy Frischling “ The Finance Guy” were on the road at the Restaurant Leadership Conference in Arizona. Schatzberg and Frischling chat with Steve Heeley, chief executive officer at Pokéworks, Dirk Izzo, president and general manager at NCR Hospitality, Sterling Douglass, co-founder and chief executive officer at Chowly,Inc., and Alan Hickey, co-founder of VROMO. Heeley from Pokéworks stops by and talks about being back in person at the Restaurant Leadership Conference. He talks about technology innovation and technology consolidation. Pokéworks started in 2015 in New York City, the company started franchising in year two and has eight company stores, seventy franchised locations and is in twenty states plus Mexico. Fresh seafood sales have increased by sixty percent and Heeley says that Pokéworks has felt that momentum. He says, “I think people are eating more plant-based, more clean proteins, and you know seafood particularly, raw seafood is very clean protein and people are more conscious of their health but they also want to know where their food comes from.” Izzo has been running the restaurant business for the last two years at NCR Hospitality. He chats with Frischling and Schatzberg about servicing over one hundred thousand restaurants as well as NCR’s Aloha restaurant POS system and their cloud-based solution product Silver. Izzo talks about being back at RLC, what’s new in the hospitality space for NCR, and where the restaurant industry will be in two years. Chowly’s co-founder and CEO, Sterling Douglass stops by to talk about what’s new. Douglass says, “it’s whatever is new that’s helping restaurants adopt new technology, so you know we talked a lot about virtual restaurants at our last show, our partnerships with C3 helping restaurants get more brands and more concepts generating more dollars in their unutilized kitchen space.” Adding, “That's been awesome for us the last couple of months. We've been able to launch tons of new restaurants on this, and it's really helped a lot of these restaurants increase that monthly revenue five, ten, twenty, thirty thousand dollars a month which has been great.”Hickey, CCO and co-founder of VROMO, a software built to optimize delivery operations, talks about the conference and the adoption of technology. He also chats about what's new at VROMO saying, the big news is that VROMO has been working on building an ecosystem and an infrastructure that’s going to support restaurants and they will be putting their software into restaurant delivery companies. To hear more from all of the guests that stopped by Hospitality Hangout at the Restaurant Leadership Conference check out this episode. Click here for more recovery and relief information for restaurant, hospitality and food service operators.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Dec 7, 2021 • 38min
The Current State of the Restaurant Industry | Season 5, Vol. 10: Informa’s Restaurant & Food Group
In the latest episode of Hospitality Hangout podcast, Michael Schatzberg “The Restaurant Guy'' and Jimmy Frischling “The Finance Guy'' chat with Sam Oches, Editorial Director at Informa's Restaurant & Food Group.Oches, who started out as a reporter but had never worked in the restaurant space, this past May became the Editorial Director at Informa where they cover restaurants, supermarkets, food management, hospitality news, and recently added podcasts. Oches talks about how he ended up in the restaurant space saying, “I'm a drummer, I've been drumming since I was twelve, I was a musician and you know look when I went to college I wanted to be a journalist. I went to Ohio University, it's got a great journalism program and look you know at that age everybody wants to be the next you know, great Rolling Stone’s contributor.” Adding, “I was the luckiest man in the world to find a job at a restaurant trade publication which was QSR and a week after I graduated college, I joined the team.” Oches shares his thoughts on hospitality and says, “I think the best part of my job is the people. I think you know the reason I'm the luckiest man in the world to end up in this industry as you guys well know and this is hospitality. The best part of hospitality is the people and the work you get to do in meeting new people, interesting people and interesting people who have big ideas.” Frischling asks Oches about the current state of the industry and he says, “I think about the state of the industry is its creativity. I said I got into this industry in the great recession and so I watched firsthand as the fast casual industry emerged back then, added this need to adapt to the state of things back in 2008, 2009, and 2010, you know there was an incredible amount of creativity that came in that season which was primarily I think around culinary and menu and it was this idea that fast casual is going to do something a little bit better.” He adds, “because of the pandemic I think what we're seeing is that same sense of creativity. But it's really more oriented around operations and this was obviously by necessity. It was forced innovation that restaurants had to adapt or die and I've been just blown away by the flexibility of the industry of restaurant operators to be able to ride with all the changes that have come in the past eighteen months.” To hear from Oches about technology in the restaurant industry, tune into this episode of Hospitality Hangout podcast on Spotify. Click here for more recovery and relief information for restaurant, hospitality and food service operators.This syndicated content is brought to you by Branded Strategic Hospitality.
Episode Credits:Sponsored by: DirecTVProduced by: Branded Hospitality MediaHosted by: Michael Schatzberg, JImmy FrischlingProducer: Julie ZuckerCreative Director: Adam LevineShow Runner: Drewe RaimiPost Production: GrodMediawww.thehospitalityhangout.com Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.


