• 8 months ago
Interview with Noble Restaurant Group Director of IT William Connors about how Toast has improved the industry, revolutionizing the CRM, and how to improve your tech stack.
Transcript
00:00 (upbeat music)
00:02 - Welcome to Restaurant Influencers
00:13 presented by Entrepreneur.
00:15 I am your host, Sean Walsh,
00:17 founder of Cali BBQ and Cali BBQ Media.
00:20 In life, in the restaurant business,
00:22 and in the new creator economy,
00:24 we learn through lessons and stories.
00:26 We are in Boston at the Toast Sales Kickoff,
00:30 and I have the pleasure of bringing our first
00:34 Director of Information Technology onto the show,
00:37 William Connors, Director of IT for the Nobel Group,
00:42 and you came all the way from London
00:43 just to be on the show, right?
00:45 - Yes, I did, thanks for having me.
00:47 - William, I'm so excited to have you on the show
00:49 because we have a deep thesis that runs through
00:52 not only Restaurant Influencers, but digital hospitality,
00:55 and that's how can we be hospitable in a digital world?
00:59 That's a reason why we believe in Toast,
01:01 that's why Toast is a title sponsor of the show,
01:03 that's why you and I are gonna be on a customer panel
01:06 tomorrow answering questions about Toast,
01:08 but I'd love for you to set the stage for the audience
01:11 and let us know a little bit about the Nobel Group.
01:14 - Well, the Nobel Group, if you've ever been to the UK,
01:17 and especially London, they have some very well-known brands,
01:21 Angus Steakhouse, a steak and company.
01:24 We have all the restaurants in the British Portrait Museum,
01:27 which is Ocher and Miro's Kitchen.
01:31 We also have a casino up in Blackpool called Coral Island,
01:35 and we have Alley Cat's Pizza.
01:38 - So when did you first start working for the group?
01:42 - About a year and a half ago now.
01:44 Before that, I was with Popeyes and Burger King,
01:48 and before that, I was with a UK chain called Oaxaca.
01:53 - Okay, and before we started recording,
01:55 let's start with the military bases.
01:58 So for those that are listening to the show,
02:00 Cali Barbecue, we just made an announcement recently.
02:03 We are partnering with the Navy Exchange
02:06 in San Diego, 32nd Street, so we are honored
02:09 to be able to serve our military.
02:11 We are also honored to be able to bring Toast on base.
02:14 We are gonna be in a commissary, not a commissary,
02:17 a courtyard with Panda Express, Pizza Hut, Subway,
02:23 Cold Stone, and Starbucks, and then Cali Barbecue,
02:25 which is the first family small business
02:28 that they're bringing in to this particular 32nd Street.
02:31 But for us, it's very exciting
02:33 because of the technology piece,
02:35 and you were a part of bringing technology onto base.
02:38 Can you tell us your base technology story?
02:41 - Oh yeah, well I mean, when I was,
02:45 like 20 years ago, doing installations,
02:49 I was working across the states,
02:53 working at all the different military bases,
02:55 and so I'd work at Fort Knox,
02:57 I'd work at all the Japanese bases,
03:02 and also in South Korea, like Osan and Kusan.
03:07 And yeah, they gave me a designation of,
03:12 like it was like, what do you call it,
03:16 something seven, like where you're kind of like
03:19 a civilian version of Colonel,
03:21 so I used to call myself Colonel Connors.
03:23 Like no, that's like not in front of the military,
03:26 of course, but it was great.
03:27 Like you come in, you just install
03:31 all the restaurant systems for the commissary.
03:33 - What were they on before you're bringing?
03:35 - At that time, it was a product called Micros 3700.
03:39 - Okay.
03:40 - And so now that product's been purchased by Oracle,
03:44 and now they got Symphony.
03:45 - But what were you replacing?
03:47 Was there a system, or you were putting in a system?
03:49 Like was it just a cash register?
03:51 - I think we replaced cash registers, yeah.
03:53 - That's amazing.
03:53 So you were actually laying down the foundation for--
03:56 - Yeah, that's actually a really good question,
04:00 what they had before, but thinking about it now,
04:02 they had the old, like the ones where basically
04:05 you have a static grid, and basically you press it,
04:09 like yeah, so they took those out,
04:11 they put in their first system with touchscreens,
04:16 and kitchen printing, and basically,
04:19 then they kind of evolved from there.
04:22 But yeah, it was a great experience.
04:24 When I went to the Top Gun facility
04:29 in Kunsan in South Korea,
04:32 we lived on the base, and there were lockers
04:37 with like Joker, and all these fancy names and stuff,
04:41 but all the guys look like physics professors,
04:44 because they're not the typical good-looking guys,
04:48 like Tom Cruise and stuff, they're like 5'8",
04:52 they're very thin, and yeah,
04:57 I mean, to actually fly these jet planes,
05:00 and also to, you had the B-52 bombers
05:02 that were going up at 45 degree angles,
05:04 and so the whole place would just shake,
05:06 it was pretty cool.
05:08 But yeah, it's not like the movies.
05:12 - So where, after the bases,
05:15 when did you start working for Popeyes?
05:17 - Well, that's it, so as a contractor,
05:21 I was doing base after base, and I was loving it like that,
05:24 and then they said--
05:24 - How long did these installs take?
05:27 - It was about a week per base,
05:31 so like you go in and--
05:32 - And how many food facilities on base?
05:36 - It was sometimes as high as as many as 14,
05:39 and there'd be sometimes just two or three,
05:42 but it was kind of in the good old days,
05:44 we're talking now this is like 2005, 2006,
05:49 and so they'd have like 14 servers,
05:52 and then they'd kind of test it out,
05:55 and they'd say, okay, fine, let's try two revenue centers,
05:58 and so they'd all of a sudden squeeze it all into one,
06:00 like that, it was very much fingers crossed at the time.
06:06 But now everything's cloud-based, and it's fantastic,
06:09 I mean, that's one of the best things about Toast,
06:11 is you don't need to rely on a server,
06:15 you don't need to rely on a master till,
06:17 it just works like that, which is great.
06:20 - So bring me to Popeyes, how did you get recruited?
06:23 - Well, that's it, from working in the military bases,
06:28 they said, we're sending you over to the UK,
06:32 we need you to do some work there,
06:34 and so I thought I was coming over for a week,
06:36 and basically-- - What year was that?
06:39 - That was, I guess, 2004, I guess, like that.
06:43 - And you've been there ever since?
06:44 - Pretty much, I did a couple years in the Caribbean,
06:47 contracting, like just got called away from the UK,
06:51 and then worked in the Caribbean, then went back,
06:53 and then 2009, basically the economy just stopped
06:58 for the entire world, and they said, go home,
07:03 and I'm like, well, what do you want me to do at home?
07:04 Like that, and like, well, that's it,
07:06 like we've got no work for you to do,
07:07 just go home and wait.
07:09 So I went home to Canada, and I basically got married
07:14 to my now wife, and then we said, okay,
07:18 we're gonna come back to the UK,
07:20 and you're gonna get a non-installation job,
07:24 or you're gonna, so I started doing work
07:28 for a company called QSR, which is an American company,
07:32 QSR Automations, so I basically did all the main,
07:36 like restaurant brands that at the time were very famous,
07:41 like I'm not sure how many would be famous here.
07:44 Then I went to Oaxaca, which is a Mexican-style restaurant,
07:48 which grew to about 30 sites,
07:50 and now it's back down to about 18,
07:54 and then from there, three, four years ago,
07:59 Popeyes just opened, like so, in the UK,
08:04 a company called Ring Holdings bought the franchise rights,
08:07 and so the first few that we did were absolutely manic,
08:11 like a three-hour wait.
08:13 People were just so keen on trying out
08:18 the Louisiana chicken product,
08:20 and so the same big corporation also had 120 restaurants
08:28 in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark,
08:32 so basically we did all of their IT systems,
08:36 and basically, yeah, they were running on something
08:38 that was green and black, like the old kind of Matrix stuff,
08:43 and yeah, so we took all that out
08:46 and put in modern, like TIL systems and stuff,
08:50 and from there, basically, the noble group said,
08:54 we want you to bring us up to speed
08:57 and to modernize their system.
08:58 - How did they find you?
08:59 How did the noble group find you?
09:01 - They basically, yeah, word of mouth,
09:03 like I'd seen their restaurants,
09:06 but I basically didn't really think too much of it,
09:09 but then when I started having the conversation,
09:12 I thought it was really exciting,
09:14 because Popeyes and all these things,
09:18 they have systems that's been agreed to years in advance,
09:22 so you're just basically carrying on
09:23 with the other person left off,
09:25 so the first thing we did was looking at
09:29 the IT environment.
09:34 Toast was-- - What year was this?
09:35 - This was like three years ago.
09:38 - Three years ago, okay.
09:39 - So yeah, just basically,
09:41 with Popeyes and Burger King, it was good,
09:46 but it was a big job, and yeah,
09:48 I was just keen to do something smaller, better,
09:51 and not having to deal with such a,
09:55 like I had three different bosses,
09:56 and they're saying, "Don't listen to him,
09:57 "listen to me," like that,
09:59 so the noble group, I got to just come in
10:01 and just put everything in place myself,
10:04 so we put in Toast, we've put in--
10:07 - What made you pick Toast?
10:08 - Oh, well, Toast, first of all, it's new technology.
10:13 - Were you one of the first Toast customers?
10:14 - Yes. - In UK?
10:15 - Yeah, yeah, I don't think we were the first,
10:17 but we were one of the first, and--
10:19 - How many locations did you install?
10:22 - Well, that's it, we started off with the nine restaurants
10:27 for a steak and company, Angus Steakhouse.
10:28 - Nine all at the same time?
10:30 - We did one a week.
10:31 - One a week? - Yeah, and--
10:33 - Is that your recipe?
10:35 - Well, yeah, I mean--
10:36 - Well, that's how I roll.
10:38 - It's actually pretty good, because
10:40 putting in a new Toast system can be very disruptive,
10:44 so we'd put in the system actually within a day,
10:48 and then we'd basically spend three or four days
10:51 just making sure it was fine,
10:53 and then do a day of just breathe
10:55 and prepare for the next site, and yeah, go from there.
10:58 But yeah, if the system is working well,
11:00 they don't wanna see you anyway,
11:01 they're just like, "Yeah, yeah, we're fine, good,"
11:03 and they want you at the door.
11:04 But the system was a resounding success,
11:08 and all of a sudden, we had benefits
11:12 that we weren't even really expecting,
11:15 because with the handhelds,
11:16 you're no longer queuing at the tills,
11:18 so they're like, "Oh yeah, we can actually cut our,
11:22 "like, instead of having a staff of seven servers,
11:25 "we can cut it down to six or five,"
11:28 so there's been lots of benefits that way.
11:30 But it's a reliable system, and all of a sudden now,
11:34 before we had a whole group of people
11:38 trying to number crunch and figure stuff out
11:40 with reports and stuff, to do server competitions
11:45 and stuff, saying who's selling
11:47 the most really basic questions,
11:49 and the other system couldn't do it.
11:50 So with this system, we know automatically,
11:54 like, everything, like, these are the people
11:59 that are selling, these are the people
12:00 that are not performing properly.
12:04 Like, we also were able to uncover
12:07 like some fraud here and there,
12:09 which shows that it's a good system.
12:12 And we've linked it with other things as well.
12:14 We've got a great product called Tenso,
12:16 which basically consolidates your labor,
12:18 your stock, and your ePause sales all into one platform.
12:23 We use seven rooms, so we can like, you know,
12:28 add a whole bunch of tags, so when you walk in,
12:30 we go, you know, like, "Hi, William,
12:32 "it's great to see you again.
12:34 "Your gin and tonic in the corner table is ready for you."
12:37 So like, stuff like that.
12:38 I really think that restaurants are becoming
12:42 more and more competitive,
12:43 because it's a bit of a tough market,
12:45 but the thing is, is that everyone is gonna be better
12:48 in the long run, because with the competition,
12:52 everyone ups their game quite a bit.
12:54 - Can you talk about the experience
12:57 of working with the Toast team, the team in London?
13:01 - Yeah, fantastic.
13:02 Like, it's funny, because in the past,
13:07 with my different roles, like,
13:09 there's so many times I've heard people say,
13:12 like, "All Till companies are terrible."
13:14 Like, you know, because there's kind of an animosity
13:19 with your Till provider, because, you know,
13:24 they always let you down,
13:28 they never deliver what they promise and stuff,
13:30 and all of a sudden, Toast comes in,
13:32 and polite, like, very attentive and stuff,
13:37 like, "Support, support."
13:39 You get, like, people calling on the third ring,
13:42 and they actually fix your problem.
13:44 You're not shuffled from department to department,
13:47 or, like, wait for a call back.
13:49 I mean, I was telling somebody just the other day,
13:52 like, another system that we worked with,
13:55 when you had a problem, the recording would say,
13:58 "Please have your credit card ready."
14:00 You know, like, and it's just like,
14:02 "Oh, that's, no wonder there's animosity."
14:05 But, like, Toast, categorically, absolutely,
14:09 it's a good product, it's reliable,
14:12 but the people behind it, you know,
14:14 they take special efforts,
14:15 they want to find out ways to improve your business,
14:19 but also, too, like, they hold events
14:22 where you can get together with other Toast users,
14:26 and also other, like, products that link into Toast,
14:30 you know, like HR systems, and like,
14:33 Rota, and CRM, and stuff,
14:35 and, like, you can feel a passion building in the room,
14:39 because everybody wants to do a good job, you know,
14:41 everybody wants to modernize,
14:44 and run a successful business,
14:46 but, like, I think Toast, especially in the UK,
14:50 they're riding a wave of positivity,
14:52 and also, too, their product is outperforming
14:56 what's been, you know, in place for 15 years.
15:00 - How many restaurants total in the group?
15:02 - I'd say about 18.
15:06 Like, we also have another product
15:10 that we haven't yet put in Toast,
15:11 but we're putting in very shortly called Chata Mate.
15:14 So we've got a few in the States,
15:16 we've got one in San Francisco, one in Miami,
15:20 we have one in Toronto, which is in Canada,
15:22 and they're opening up one in Atlanta.
15:26 - And those are all live on Toast?
15:28 - Well, that's it.
15:29 The first installation is gonna be with San Francisco
15:32 in about six weeks.
15:35 - And you'll be there?
15:36 - Hopefully.
15:37 Like, you know, I think it would be great,
15:39 but sometimes I think Toast is probably
15:42 a little bit too good for its own use.
15:44 They're kind of like, you know,
15:46 you can do everything remotely and stuff,
15:48 and it's true.
15:49 Like, I'm completely confident
15:51 that they don't really need me, but I'll go.
15:54 - Yeah.
15:55 - I'm happy.
15:56 I like going to exotic places like Boston
15:59 and San Francisco when I can,
16:01 but it's probably not necessary.
16:03 - Can you explain for the person that's listening
16:06 or that's watching this, kind of the tension,
16:10 that this perceived tension of staff before,
16:13 because, you know, as a restaurateur myself,
16:15 I know we told Toast, we're gonna document our unboxing,
16:19 we're gonna document our go live,
16:21 and like, even though we have cameras rolling,
16:23 like, there is this fear of what happens
16:27 if it doesn't work.
16:28 - Yeah.
16:29 - So like, you're the person that's literally in charge
16:32 of this implementation to make sure
16:34 that this fear goes away.
16:36 How do you, having done so many of them,
16:39 what have you learned through the process?
16:41 - Well, I mean, there is quite a bit of trust,
16:45 and also to, when you walk in,
16:49 you kind of come in knowing that,
16:52 like, the first couple were a bit,
16:55 it was a bit of a challenge,
17:00 because operators don't like change,
17:03 like, you know, because like,
17:04 oh, God, I gotta learn a new system.
17:05 Oh, you know, like, and it's just,
17:08 it's extra work, and it's extra stress,
17:10 and, but like, once everything went into place,
17:13 like, wow, this is pretty good,
17:14 and especially when they get the handheld,
17:17 so like, oh, so you mean I don't need
17:19 to have a separate PDQ?
17:21 And it's like, no, just do the one device.
17:23 Oh, I don't need to go to the till, like that.
17:26 And they were doing other things too,
17:28 where, okay, again, we had bad processes,
17:34 so like, every time that you made a void,
17:36 you'd have to like, open up your computer,
17:38 and type the void in Excel,
17:41 and keep a copy of the thing,
17:43 and like, literally, even myself,
17:46 I mean, I'm being a little bit diplomatic with the ops,
17:49 because I don't wanna, you know,
17:51 tread on their territory and stuff,
17:52 but I'm like, what exactly,
17:53 why are you doing all this, you know?
17:55 And they're like, well, it's because we always did it,
17:57 you know, and it's just like,
17:58 well, like, just run a report, you know?
18:01 And the same thing, they said,
18:02 well, how do I make sure that my credit cards
18:04 are balanced, and I go, well, it's an integrated system,
18:07 it's all in one, you just run the one report, that's it.
18:10 And like, with every step,
18:13 we kind of saw like, the positivity grow more and more,
18:18 like saying, oh, yeah, this is actually pretty good.
18:21 You know, like--
18:22 - Do the locations have KDSs, kitchen display screens?
18:25 - Yes.
18:26 - They, before Toast? - No, no.
18:27 - So they went from printed tickets to a KDS?
18:30 - Yeah, and the thing is,
18:33 actually, that was a bit of a struggle the first time,
18:35 because they're old school.
18:37 A lot of these guys have been doing the same job
18:39 for 20 years and stuff, eh?
18:42 So like, we actually had it so you bump the item
18:45 from the KDS, and a chit would print.
18:48 And so like, you're supposed to put the prepared dish
18:53 with the chit next to it,
18:54 so the server knows which one is which,
18:56 and they take it to the table.
18:57 So the guy bump, bump, bump, bump, and he'd bump
19:00 everything off, and he'd take the thing,
19:01 and he'd start arranging the paper,
19:03 and I was kinda like--
19:04 - Stop it.
19:05 - Yeah, that's it, I said, "Look, trust the system."
19:09 And it actually took, one of the Toast installers
19:14 was an ex-chef, and he goes, "Look, let me get in there
19:19 "with you, and I'll show you," like that.
19:20 And of course, nobody can say that paper's better
19:25 than a KDS.
19:27 It's multicolor, all of a sudden, you got your timings,
19:30 you can see your allergens in purple,
19:34 and your to-go items in orange, it's better.
19:39 As soon as the chef started seeing how it is,
19:44 and that they don't need to basically repeat
19:47 what they used to do, all of a sudden,
19:49 they're like, "Yeah, it's okay," like that.
19:51 And ever since, it's been fine.
19:54 Everyone is very happy with it.
19:57 - Can you talk about the other London restaurants
20:00 that are starting to learn about this technology
20:04 that you guys have, that are coming to reach out to you,
20:07 say, "Hey, what are you doing, why do you like it?"
20:09 I mean, are those things starting to happen?
20:10 - Yeah, and it's funny, because Toast--
20:14 - You're almost like a testing ground,
20:16 where other owners and operators come,
20:18 and they're like, "Can I touch it?
20:19 "Can I see how it works?"
20:21 'Cause we're that kind of restaurant in San Diego.
20:24 - I mean, I'm happy to share our success story
20:27 with whoever wants to hear it with Toast,
20:29 because that's it, they've done a good job,
20:32 and they deserve the praise.
20:33 It was funny, before Toast arrived to the UK,
20:38 everyone thought it was a saturated market,
20:40 saying, "Oh, there's too many till companies,
20:42 "and there's no money in it," and stuff.
20:43 And basically, despite all that,
20:47 Toast came in with a superior product.
20:50 But yeah, that's the difference
20:52 between old technology and new technology.
20:55 Old technology, it's like, "Yeah, we need a master till,"
20:57 and yeah, all this stuff.
20:59 And it's like, "No, you don't need it."
21:00 So they said, "Well, what happens
21:02 "if one of the tills goes down?"
21:03 Like, it's just like, "Oh, then just use everything else."
21:06 Like, it's all, you don't really need
21:09 any kind of redundancy that other systems traditionally use,
21:14 because yeah, it's all cloud-based,
21:17 as long as you've got a decent internet connection.
21:19 If you don't have an internet connection,
21:21 they'll still work with each other, which is phenomenal.
21:24 - How do you build a restaurant tech stack?
21:29 - A lot of effort, a lot of listening,
21:31 and quite a bit of flexibility,
21:35 because there's a lot of things on the market.
21:37 Like, everyone says, "Oh yeah, this product's better,
21:42 "this product's better."
21:43 And there was a few things that you're like,
21:47 "Okay, I was a fan of this,
21:50 "but actually this is newer and better,
21:52 "and I'll change that."
21:53 So like, you have to, what I've done is,
21:57 I've actually mapped out on a big board
22:00 how every system, like IT or otherwise,
22:04 communicates with each other.
22:06 So basically, we use another--
22:09 - Is that on a whiteboard?
22:11 - Well, actually, there's a product called Xcalitra,
22:14 and what it is is it's a webpage,
22:17 and you can just basically zoom in and zoom out
22:19 as much as you want.
22:20 But basically, once you get everything in place,
22:24 you try and establish a circular movement of data.
22:28 So you've got the customer coming in,
22:31 they're connecting to the Wi-Fi,
22:33 we're using a product now called Patronix,
22:35 which is based in Boston as well.
22:37 So basically, Toast plugs into Patronix,
22:42 and Patronix gives the vouchers,
22:44 and we're linking with another product called Feeditback,
22:48 which does feedback.
22:49 And so, once you've finished your meal,
22:52 30 minutes later, you'll get an email from Feeditback
22:56 saying, "How was the steak?
22:58 "How was William as a server?
23:01 "How was the ambience?" and stuff.
23:03 But the questions are all staggered.
23:05 But once you consolidate all those questions
23:07 on a daily basis, you've got mounds and mounds of data,
23:12 not only on the food, not only on the servers,
23:17 but on everything.
23:19 And because you've got this data to back you up,
23:21 you can actually go to a server and say,
23:26 "200 people said that you don't smile enough."
23:31 If I say you don't smile enough,
23:32 I think it's something of you and me,
23:35 but if you take the data and you use the data,
23:38 the service, all of a sudden,
23:40 the service just starts getting a lot better
23:43 because people are taking it all on board.
23:46 But that, all of a sudden,
23:48 will feed into your Google rankings
23:50 because if you have a good review,
23:53 it'll say, "Oh, you wanna share the love on TripAdvice.
23:56 "You wanna share the love on Google reviews and stuff."
24:00 So all of a sudden, your rankings go higher,
24:02 which means more people come in.
24:03 And if it's a bad review, it goes straight to the manager.
24:06 Sometimes somebody gives a bad review,
24:09 they're still in the restaurant,
24:10 so the manager can hurry over and say,
24:13 "I'm sorry, you had a bad experience.
24:14 "How can we fix this?"
24:17 And all these things plug into each other
24:20 and then basically you can use the patronix
24:23 to give vouchers to reward your staff.
24:27 You've got Tenzo that basically,
24:30 the managers use it on the floor
24:33 and they can see, okay, based on AI with the environment,
24:37 how many, like if there's a show going on
24:40 or a football match or if you have,
24:43 so all these things that say,
24:46 you should send somebody home right now.
24:47 And you're like, "Fine."
24:48 Tenzo says, "I've got too many servers."
24:51 You're gone.
24:52 And so everything is working really well.
24:55 I mean, things change.
24:59 I mean, certain things like in some of our restaurants,
25:03 the seven rooms is actually taken off
25:05 and it does really good
25:06 and we do get that automatic guest recognition.
25:08 For some of our brands, like Angus Steakhouse,
25:13 it actually hasn't taken off
25:15 because we get a lot of tourists.
25:16 So the person that's hosting is like,
25:18 "Yeah, but I don't really see the same customer
25:23 for six months at a time."
25:25 So it's not that useful.
25:27 So the thing is, so maybe that will have to change a bit.
25:31 Everything needs to be adjusting.
25:33 You need to get buy-in from,
25:35 it helps to have buy-in from the managing director.
25:38 We have our managing director's incredibly supportive.
25:41 He's like our CEO and he basically,
25:45 like Paul Stirlitz does a lot of,
25:48 he's a tech person himself, which helps,
25:52 but also too, you need like a clear communication
25:55 and buy-in from the staff.
25:56 And also you have to listen to the staff
25:58 because certain products they'll say,
25:59 "Yeah, this is amazing."
26:01 And other stuff, they'll be like,
26:02 "It's not really what we use."
26:05 So like, but you also need to constantly listen
26:09 and look for new products and adapt
26:11 and find ways to kind of up everyone's game
26:16 because you're never finished.
26:18 - That's awesome.
26:20 So every single week on Wednesday and on Friday on LinkedIn,
26:23 you, the listener, you, the viewer can join us.
26:26 You have a digital hospitality community of leaders
26:29 from all over the globe.
26:29 We wanna hear your story.
26:31 We wanna hear about your restaurant
26:32 if you're in content creation.
26:34 If you're in tech, if you're in sales marketing,
26:36 it's a chance to connect with our community.
26:38 We're grateful, William, for you taking the time today.
26:42 You were on a flight all the way from London
26:45 to come and share your story.
26:47 We believe in technology,
26:48 otherwise we wouldn't do the show.
26:49 We also believe in storytelling,
26:51 the work that you do
26:53 and that all the technology officers in restaurants.
26:57 I mean, that's one of the coolest things for me
26:59 is to see how many new people,
27:02 you've been in the game for a long time,
27:03 but how many people might see this and think,
27:06 I didn't think that I could be in technology,
27:08 but also in hospitality.
27:10 And like, that's the blending of two worlds,
27:12 digital hospitality.
27:13 What kind of plans do you guys have for this year?
27:15 Anything that you'd like to share?
27:17 - Well, we're definitely opening up some more restaurants.
27:21 That's it, we've got--
27:22 - What's the best place for people
27:23 to follow the restaurant group?
27:25 The website?
27:27 - I would say, it's funny because
27:32 we don't have a noble restaurant group website
27:35 because before the owners were like,
27:37 I don't want to be involved in stuff.
27:39 - If they need to tell us,
27:40 I need to talk to the owners and tell them,
27:42 we need to tell their story.
27:45 That's how we get more people in the restaurant.
27:46 - Well, that's it, yeah.
27:48 We're gonna grow our audience and grow our loyalty programs
27:52 and work on the repeat business using the tech as a tool
27:57 and work on the feedback.
27:59 But if anyone ever wants to come
28:05 like check us out, yeah, we've got Alley Cats,
28:09 Steak & Company, Angus Steakhouse,
28:12 Ocher and Cora Island.
28:14 And if you go there, we'll be using Toast
28:17 and you'll see all these nice products that plug into it
28:20 for hopefully a wonderful guest experience.
28:24 - That's awesome.
28:25 William Connors, if you guys want to keep in touch with me,
28:26 it's @SeanPWalchef, S-H-A-W-N-P-W-A-L-C-H-E-F.
28:31 Instagram's the easiest,
28:33 but you can connect on LinkedIn, TikTok, Facebook,
28:36 any of the platforms I'm weirdly available.
28:38 As always, stay curious, get involved
28:40 and don't be afraid to ask for help.
28:42 Thank you and we'll catch you guys next week.
28:44 (upbeat music)
28:47 (upbeat music)

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