Welcome back to Turning the Table.
Adam Lamb:This is episode one 10, Building Highly Effective Hospitality
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Adam Lamb:We are not only the most progressive restaurant podcast, but one of the
Adam Lamb:fastest growing ones now breaking the top 100 business podcasts
Adam Lamb:charts in both the UK and Australia.
Adam Lamb:We'll have our guests on Doug Newhook, , Chop House, and Corporate
Adam Lamb:Ryan Dodge of a Lifetime Fitness.
Adam Lamb:But before we bring them on, I want to introduce my cohost,
Adam Lamb:Jim Taylor Benchmark Sixty.
Jim Taylor:Hey Adam how you doing?
Adam Lamb:am very, I'm very good.
Adam Lamb:And a quick shout out to some of our faithful listeners, such as
Adam Lamb:Patrick McClury, Allison o Larry Creon, Shane LOLer Bing, Oliver,
Adam Lamb:Jessica, Laura, Dustin, oer, Chris.
Adam Lamb:, That's or Brady Sloan . And we've got Doug Newhook joining our stream
Adam Lamb:and today's question is how to build a highly effective hospitality team.
Adam Lamb:We're probably gonna go in a lot of different places.
Adam Lamb:Jim, what do you think is kind of up for you as a question about this topic?
Jim Taylor:Well, I mean, it's.
Jim Taylor:I, there's so many different places we could start.
Jim Taylor:One of the things that I'm, I'm actually looking forward to having
Jim Taylor:some discussion about today is I had a conversation with a guy yesterday who
Jim Taylor:was talking about his belief is that you can lead from one of two places.
Jim Taylor:You can lead from love or you can lead from fear.
Jim Taylor:And he was like, There's nowhere in the middle.
Jim Taylor:It's love or fear.
Jim Taylor:And that hit me really hard and has stuck with me.
Jim Taylor:And so I think we'll end, end up in some interesting discussion about one
Jim Taylor:of those, or both of those types of you know, opposite ends of the spectrum today.
Jim Taylor:So, looking forward to the discussion.
Adam Lamb:Yeah.
Adam Lamb:And the other thing it just seems like I, I don't know if it's just weird
Adam Lamb:timing, but over the last several days I've gotten quite a few comments
Adam Lamb:and direct messages a, around this.
Adam Lamb:This viewpoint that some hospitality professionals have that basically
Adam Lamb:wanna shit on everybody that's coming up in the industry.
Adam Lamb:And everybody's kind of jumping on that bandwagon that they don't have the
Adam Lamb:right work ethic and yada yada yada.
Adam Lamb:And I've never believed that that's true.
Adam Lamb:Because we've been dealing this, you know, probably I I, as far as I know since
Adam Lamb:the eighties and I know chef Ryan had.
Adam Lamb:An industry interesting comment that, you know, this has been
Adam Lamb:going on for centuries and has its roots in the masculine feminine.
Adam Lamb:So without any further ado, I want to add both Chef Ryan Dodge and Doug Newkirk.
Adam Lamb:Yeah,
Doug Newhook:for the record.
Doug Newhook:gents I haven't seen that man's face about 52 pounds ago was last time I saw.
Adam Lamb:I, I, I know he's your, Yeah, we can hear you.
Adam Lamb:Perfect man.
Adam Lamb:I know he's, He's a large presence in your life.
Adam Lamb:So I really appreciate the fact that, again, you're, you yoked him up.
Adam Lamb:So Doug I wanna start with you because I had a conversation with
Adam Lamb:Chef yesterday and he mentioned this uneven equation, like how to balance
Adam Lamb:the equation with hospitality teams.
Adam Lamb:And the first thing that popped up into my head was, you know, what's the difference
Adam Lamb:between motivation and inspiration?
Adam Lamb:Because you've got teams that you lead.
Adam Lamb:. Doug Newhook: Mm-hmm.
Adam Lamb:. Well, I mean, there's a couple of different components.
Adam Lamb:Motivation is obviously personal to that, that individual, right?
Adam Lamb:You gotta dig a little deep to find out what gets them out of bed.
Adam Lamb:You gotta dig a little deep to find out what are the things
Adam Lamb:that kind of excites them.
Adam Lamb:And, and, and ironically, when I do my hiring process, I actually go right
Adam Lamb:into that and I, and I really try to, Understand these people from the minute
Adam Lamb:I meet them and I don't wanna understand them inside of a restaurant, I wanna
Adam Lamb:understand them in their real life.
Adam Lamb:So the things that motivate them aren't the service aspect
Adam Lamb:of inside of a dining room.
Adam Lamb:It's not the cocktails that they're pouring, it's, it's the things that
Adam Lamb:they do outside of that establishment.
Adam Lamb:So they're able to bring a hundred percent of themselves into the room.
Adam Lamb:So I start, the minute I meet people, my interview process starts with
Adam Lamb:making it a conversation about them.
Adam Lamb:And I want to know everything I can about them with within a
Adam Lamb:certain parameter so that I could inevitably use that to help them grow.
Adam Lamb:Nine times outta 10.
Adam Lamb:People don't even know that they have that ability.
Adam Lamb:They just, they just start talking.
Adam Lamb:And then there's the folks that tell you that they do meditation, you ask 'em
Adam Lamb:about it, and then they kind of say, Well, I'm gonna, And then there's the folks
Adam Lamb:that tell you, I like, I like to read and I read 13 books in the last month.
Adam Lamb:And then you start talking about a book that they love, and then
Adam Lamb:you're always able to reference that sort of dialogue later.
Adam Lamb:Excellent.
Adam Lamb:Chef, the question as you popped off was insofar as your professional experience.
Adam Lamb:What's the difference between motivation and inspiration?
Ryan Dodge:Wow, what a profound question.
Ryan Dodge:. Mm-hmm.
Ryan Dodge:, I've wrestled with this notion quite a bit recently in my own career.
Ryan Dodge:However, I would state that there's two words that I hear that I,
Ryan Dodge:they're like trigger words for me.
Ryan Dodge:Mm-hmm.
Ryan Dodge:, and one is excited.
Ryan Dodge:And the other one is frustrated.
Ryan Dodge:They're like trigger words because I find that there's a great deal of
Ryan Dodge:presentation of what the potential opportunity looks like that people
Ryan Dodge:get quote unquote excited about.
Ryan Dodge:Then there's the follow up to excitement, which feels like a
Ryan Dodge:juxtaposition, which is frustration and the reason that the frustration.
Ryan Dodge:is there is because the pitch that they were given that they were excited
Ryan Dodge:about isn't what it actually is, and I think that it does people a
Ryan Dodge:disservice to over bill the profound lessons that will be learned within
Ryan Dodge:hospitality or within this industry.
Ryan Dodge:As easy or something that's gonna come, like a light strike of lightning to them
Ryan Dodge:in any circumstance, or elevate them immediately without putting in the work.
Ryan Dodge:And I don't think that we honestly do a good representation of allowing the
Ryan Dodge:process of work and allowing the process of learning to be a part of what we're
Ryan Dodge:sincerely selling in this industry.
Ryan Dodge:And so I would say the difference between motivation.
Ryan Dodge:motivation.
Ryan Dodge:You can motivate someone with money.
Ryan Dodge:You can motivate somebody financially.
Ryan Dodge:You can motivate them with a future place in their career.
Ryan Dodge:If you do this, you'll earn that.
Ryan Dodge:Inspiration is living and demonstrating the example, showing what's possible.
Ryan Dodge:Inspiring that if I actually participate, listen and.
Ryan Dodge:I can achieve what this person is able to achieve through sheer
Ryan Dodge:grit will and determination.
Ryan Dodge:And so I think that motivation can be manipulation.
Ryan Dodge:Inspiration is genuine and authentic.
Ryan Dodge:. Adam Lamb: That's, that's pretty juicy.
Ryan Dodge:And Jim, you know, you've spent 20 years, you know, building highly effective
Ryan Dodge:teams for one of the most progressive restaurant companies in Canada.
Ryan Dodge:What's your take on it?
Jim Taylor:Well, how do I follow up with said
Jim Taylor:. Adam Lamb: I mean, that's, You
Doug Newhook:gotta dig, you gotta dig deep, jim,
Jim Taylor:that's, that's bang on, right?
Jim Taylor:I mean, I think we talked about this on one of the other One of our other
Jim Taylor:discussions, Adam, about the idea that, and I was challenged with this by a mentor
Jim Taylor:of mine years ago that basically said if the people you work with don't love
Jim Taylor:coming to work with you specifically, You're not gonna be successful.
Jim Taylor:And so I think there's a combination of being able to, you know, motivate people
Jim Taylor:in a, in a genuine way and being able to inspire people to want to try to do more.
Jim Taylor:That kind of comes along with that.
Jim Taylor:But that, that thought process of when they see my name on the schedule
Jim Taylor:running the shift, or when they know that I'm the general manager of the
Jim Taylor:restaurant or whatever that might be, if they're not excited about
Jim Taylor:that part, about working alongside, then there's a gonna be a problem.
Jim Taylor:That became a filter for me through my whole career and, and you know, still
Jim Taylor:does around, if people don't love working with you, then you're gonna have a
Jim Taylor:problem because it changes For me, it changed the way that I asked questions,
Jim Taylor:gave feedback, promoted people, hired people, terminated, I mean, everything.
Jim Taylor:Right?
Jim Taylor:It was, and actually the challenge at the beginning was, B posed me in a way
Jim Taylor:where I actually had to terminate somebody one day when I was a fairly new manager.
Jim Taylor:And this mentor of mine said, You know, I bet you can't.
Jim Taylor:Well, maybe not, I bet.
Jim Taylor:But I challenge you to go into that conversation with that person, with
Jim Taylor:the intention that when you're con, when you're finished with that meeting
Jim Taylor:where you're terminating this person's employment, that they stand up, they
Jim Taylor:shake your hand and they say thank you.
Jim Taylor:And for me, I was going.
Jim Taylor:How is that even possible?
Jim Taylor:But I think that, anyway, that became a filter for me for my whole career
Jim Taylor:around motivating, trying to motivate and inspire people to have a positive
Jim Taylor:work environment and enjoy working
Adam Lamb:with the people they work with.
Adam Lamb:So did that person get up and shake your hand at the end of that meeting?
Jim Taylor:Actually, we're, we're still friends.
Adam Lamb:Yeah.
Adam Lamb:, you know, I've, I've always felt that you know, A termination can be an
Adam Lamb:absolute positive action for both.
Adam Lamb:Not only the person that's being terminated, but also the crew.
Adam Lamb:And walking into that particular situation as a positive thing, as
Adam Lamb:opposed to a negative thing can often shift the energy as well.
Adam Lamb:Yeah.
Adam Lamb:And chef, I wanted to come back to you because yesterday you said something
Adam Lamb:about this unequal equation that really kind of rocked me a little bit
Adam Lamb:and had me thinking about it all day.
Adam Lamb:And I want to be conscious of, you know, our time, but I think it
Adam Lamb:really would serve this conversation for you to kind of go into that
Adam Lamb:a little bit, if you're willing.
Ryan Dodge:Absolutely.
Ryan Dodge:Adam, if you could jar my memory a little bit.
Ryan Dodge:We were talking about a lot and we were kind of talking about it
Ryan Dodge:I think before, but maybe set the table for me cuz I can go along.
Adam Lamb:It was, it was about you.
Adam Lamb:Kind of leads back to what you were saying about us have doing a poor job at
Adam Lamb:communicating effectively what a life in this industry could look like and that
Adam Lamb:we haven't done a very good job at being able to communicate effectively that, you
Adam Lamb:know, there's a certain amount of maturity that comes when you're 20 years in.
Adam Lamb:That you're not gonna have in the first five or 10 years.
Adam Lamb:And how that maturity shifts your outlook, not only as you as a professional, but the
Adam Lamb:way you're connecting with everybody else.
Adam Lamb:And you were talking about, you know, climbing this mountain of, because
Adam Lamb:you motivate currently how many people are under that you are responsible for
Ryan Dodge:in your business.
Ryan Dodge:During the summer, it was this ti it was like up to 3,500 employees across
Ryan Dodge:the country and in Canada, but it.
Ryan Dodge:It was significant.
Ryan Dodge:We have a, we have an additional business that we offer outside of, in
Ryan Dodge:our pools, but I think I'm, I think I'm grasping and I can kind of put
Ryan Dodge:myself back into that conversation.
Ryan Dodge:Mm-hmm.
Ryan Dodge:, I think that we have created somewhat of a lopsided scenario within our industry.
Ryan Dodge:And that is we, we have such a, a vast swath of different.
Ryan Dodge:Offerings.
Ryan Dodge:I mean, you look at everything from grocery to fast casual to fine dining.
Ryan Dodge:These one off locations, these corporate locations, these, these places that
Ryan Dodge:do the same sandwich, day in, day out, the same salad, day in, day out.
Ryan Dodge:And essentially when we go to hire a lot of the time, what we've
Ryan Dodge:created is we've created a margin.
Ryan Dodge:Profitability margin that is so narrow and we can only afford labor.
Ryan Dodge:At a really opening rate.
Ryan Dodge:I mean, it is, it is a disservice because we can't afford a lot of
Ryan Dodge:the experience or quality experience that comes in time with the industry.
Ryan Dodge:And as you acquire more experience, you grow.
Ryan Dodge:So we, we bring in a very base level, entry level experience, which ultimately
Ryan Dodge:leads to what's popular, which is.
Ryan Dodge:The fast casual simplicity is make it simple, stupid Doug, new hook term
Ryan Dodge:monkey with a football like that.
Ryan Dodge:Easy . And it's really dumbed down really the, the.
Ryan Dodge:Other proposition of the dining etiquette for people to endure those experiences
Ryan Dodge:and say, I wanna stay in this industry.
Ryan Dodge:I wanna stay doing this.
Ryan Dodge:We've done.
Ryan Dodge:Industry a disservice because there's no attraction, there's no future,
Ryan Dodge:there's no feeling of tangible.
Ryan Dodge:Like I've acquired a new skill that I want to grow off of where you can
Ryan Dodge:take it to another environment where people like myself and you guys have,
Ryan Dodge:have grown our, our livelihoods or our, in, in this industry where we've
Ryan Dodge:had experiences in the, the highest level, Milan, you name it, across the
Ryan Dodge:country, across the, the, the world and experience those kind of experiences.
Ryan Dodge:That that isn't being realized in this kind of modern quick service,
Ryan Dodge:fast casual environment that is, is showing people what other, We talked
Ryan Dodge:about this to a length yesterday, and I think maybe this is where you were
Ryan Dodge:taking me, was like mentorship, somebody that you learned under, somebody
Ryan Dodge:that you learned this skill, The etiquette, the verbiage, the technique.
Ryan Dodge:I mean, when I watched Joon and, and Julia Child, I imagine.
Ryan Dodge:No one in, in this generation's interested in listening to these two people like
Ryan Dodge:fumble through this old classic technique and, and building a bouquet garney
Ryan Dodge:and spiking pearl onions with clothes.
Ryan Dodge:I mean, I, I don't, It's, it's gone, It's lost.
Ryan Dodge:Completely lost in translation.
Ryan Dodge:Shit.
Ryan Dodge:Comes in a bag and you heat it in a microwave.
Ryan Dodge:Mm-hmm.
Ryan Dodge:, like, I don't, I'm not getting juiced up by, . Yeah.
Ryan Dodge:Yeah.
Ryan Dodge:That the bare minimum.
Adam Lamb:Doug, I think, Do you mind if I touch on No, please.
Adam Lamb:I was gonna, I was gonna kick it to you cuz I think he's singing your song
Doug Newhook:well.
Doug Newhook:Yeah, he is.
Doug Newhook:And, and I think what, you know, DOJ and I had the pleasure of working
Doug Newhook:with each other for quite some time.
Doug Newhook:And the first time we met, you know, we're talking about an
Doug Newhook:executive chef who obviously we spoke about for 3,500 team members.
Doug Newhook:The first time we met he was in the inside of the kitchen and I was in the.
Doug Newhook:That was the very first time we met.
Doug Newhook:So here you have somebody who's worked his tail off from the ground up,
Doug Newhook:still throwing on the apron, still working the line with the team, still
Doug Newhook:getting to know their names, and then remembering them when he comes back.
Doug Newhook:You know, I think one of the things that we have done a poor job as an
Doug Newhook:industry is that we don't make the.
Doug Newhook:The roles that we hold look good.
Doug Newhook:And it's something that do, and I used to say all the time, like, you
Doug Newhook:know when, when you have a leader or a manager or somebody in the zone who
Doug Newhook:just doesn't enjoy it and just allows their mental state to take over, they're
Doug Newhook:not glorifying the role and making it attractive to the people that may
Doug Newhook:have it in the back of their head.
Doug Newhook:Hey, I think I'm gonna be good.
Doug Newhook:One of the things that Dodge and I used to really just bring to the table was
Doug Newhook:like, you gotta figure out a way to navigate around yourself so that you can
Doug Newhook:make this feel and look appealing to not only, you know, the, the team members,
Doug Newhook:but the, the customers or the members.
Doug Newhook:And then internally it's gonna make you feel good in the long run cuz
Doug Newhook:you know, you do, there's a certain component of acting and fake it till
Doug Newhook:you make it that you have to provide.
Doug Newhook:But there is a level of, in order to motivate or inspire someone, You gotta,
Doug Newhook:you gotta battle through the adversity and you gotta make it look good.
Doug Newhook:And then you got a guy like Dodge, who at any level of his career, slaps
Doug Newhook:on an APR and, and goes into the back and stands next to the, the, the guy
Doug Newhook:that just started two days ago and remembers his name two months later.
Doug Newhook:And that's a certain thing that a lot of people, when they get to a certain
Doug Newhook:level, they won't even think about the na, the apron, the name tag, the uniform,
Doug Newhook:and him, And I remember we drove up to Boston four hour car drive from new.
Doug Newhook:And we just spent two days working his own with a bunch of kids from Massachusetts
Doug Newhook:and it was the greatest two days ever.
Doug Newhook:He was on the line, I was in the front.
Doug Newhook:We were just doing our thing and, but what that brought was a level of
Doug Newhook:inspiration to the people around us.
Doug Newhook:I mean, there's a guy that we worked with that day who's currently a
Doug Newhook:director of operations with, with Ryan.
Doug Newhook:So I think that there's a certain level of ownership that managers and leaders inside
Doug Newhook:of these four walls need to understand.
Doug Newhook:You gotta figure out how to make it look good if you want to grow people with you.
Doug Newhook:And then ultimately, It's gonna help you battle through those tough times.
Adam Lamb:There's a lot to chew on and, and just what both of you guys have said.
Adam Lamb:And for me, it comes down to.
Adam Lamb:You know, what does it look like to model mature professionalism for people
Adam Lamb:who are actually looking for that?
Adam Lamb:Because I get that, you know, there's always gonna be a dishwasher
Adam Lamb:or a pantry person who's very comfortable being a pantry person
Adam Lamb:and does a great job in that space.
Adam Lamb:And how do you make them feel as, as valuable as say, you know, the sous
Adam Lamb:chef or the first cook who's the sharpest knife in the, in the drawer,
Adam Lamb:but might be, you know, Exhibiting some uninitiated behavior, right?
Adam Lamb:Mm-hmm.
Adam Lamb:and might need to have somebody pull him underneath his wing and say,
Adam Lamb:Hey it's time to smarten up brother.
Adam Lamb:Cuz you know, your skill's only gonna take you that far.
Adam Lamb:Mm-hmm.
Adam Lamb:chef.
Ryan Dodge:You know, these are great topics.
Ryan Dodge:I think Doug, what you referenced in our experience together is amazing.
Ryan Dodge:And I know this, I know that when I come into a space, That my personality
Ryan Dodge:and my ability to connect and my knowledge, it's, it looms large
Ryan Dodge:in a way that can create a vacuum.
Ryan Dodge:And so what I have learned to do is I've learned to have my own.
Ryan Dodge:So I, I, I a hundred percent agree with that.
Ryan Dodge:Listen, if somebody's completely satisfied, In their life, and they're
Ryan Dodge:satisfied in their hours that they work and they're consistent in their job.
Ryan Dodge:And the only time that you need to like really check in on them is just in
Ryan Dodge:passing because they've got it on lock and they're not looking for anymore,
Ryan Dodge:which I've had those employees and I, and I love them, and they're the backbone.
Ryan Dodge:They're the under, they're the underdog, like superheroes of our industry.
Ryan Dodge:People don't see that, don't, don't, aren't looking for accolades, but
Ryan Dodge:you, you find a way to include them in your own journey and in your own life.
Ryan Dodge:And I think that for me, continuing to be curious, continuing to be
Ryan Dodge:a seeker and an understanding of different concepts, different.
Ryan Dodge:Process different for me recently, and I've shared this with you in, in Adam,
Ryan Dodge:you and I connected on this experience where you did 75 hard and had this
Ryan Dodge:profound kind of you doing 75 hard.
Ryan Dodge:And sharing that experience with somebody, like in the process of the Daily Connect
Ryan Dodge:and where you're at with that, we, we have no idea how impactful that is for
Ryan Dodge:that person to think about their own life and outside of work, what's important
Ryan Dodge:and the value that they take forward and challenging themselves to do other things.
Ryan Dodge:And I think that my personal, what I've been successful with Feeling successful
Ryan Dodge:with, with myself is continuing to grow.
Ryan Dodge:And as I grow, I can observe around me an environment that's created, that's
Ryan Dodge:a nurturing environment for others
Adam Lamb:to grow.
Adam Lamb:And so what I'm hearing you say is, you know, in that process of growth, you're
Adam Lamb:actually sharing that with people that you're elbow to elbow with and Yeah, I.
Adam Lamb:Connected to the point or to the fact that this sounds like a lot of back of
Adam Lamb:the house stuff, but everything we're talking about is applicable to the front
Adam Lamb:of the house, the back of the house at, at a unit level, at a corporate level.
Adam Lamb:Jim, I see, I see the wheels turning.
Adam Lamb:I'm interested in your feedback about what you're hearing.
Adam Lamb:Well, it, it
Jim Taylor:sounds like, and you know, not to put it back on, on Chef
Jim Taylor:Dodge, but I'm, I'm curious, you, you mentioned this looming large thing and.
Jim Taylor:. You know, I know from when I first started in restaurants that there
Jim Taylor:were, I looked at some of the people that I worked with that were in, you
Jim Taylor:know, positions of responsibility or in management or ownership, and I
Jim Taylor:thought like, you know, I was hooked on the industry at that point already.
Jim Taylor:So I looked at these people thinking, A, I want to be like that, and B,
Jim Taylor:I'm terrified of this person or this image, or whatever it might be.
Jim Taylor:Whether it was the chef or the owner or something.
Jim Taylor:Right.
Jim Taylor:So I'm actually curious about how.
Jim Taylor:With 3,500 employees.
Jim Taylor:I mean, if I'm a new employee in your environment, I'm terrified.
Jim Taylor:Right.
Jim Taylor:Just knowing that.
Jim Taylor:Mm-hmm.
Jim Taylor:How do you, how do you bring that down?
Jim Taylor:What, what do you have actual go to things that you try to do to,
Jim Taylor:you know, soften that experience for people so they don't tiptoe
Ryan Dodge:around you?
Ryan Dodge:I love that question.
Ryan Dodge:As far as tiptoeing around me, one of the things that I think.
Ryan Dodge:Our responsibility as the elder statesmen of the industry is to demonstrate
Ryan Dodge:health in a way that has long since been forgotten in our industry.
Ryan Dodge:Our burnout rate for our you know, look across our, the scope of our.
Ryan Dodge:Industry and look at the amount of people who are just burnt, crispy when you allow
Ryan Dodge:a lot of the toxicity of the environment.
Ryan Dodge:Which is a relentless environment.
Ryan Dodge:It is a nonstop environment.
Ryan Dodge:You may turn off the gas, but you it's, it's something that's
Ryan Dodge:coming for you every time.
Ryan Dodge:And it goes to the front.
Ryan Dodge:It goes to the back.
Ryan Dodge:There's theft, there's an, there's relationships, there's harassment,
Ryan Dodge:there's, I mean, you name it, we, we deal with every element of life
Ryan Dodge:from human resources to internal.
Ryan Dodge:Problems and, and we deal with people as they come.
Ryan Dodge:They, they don't necessarily leave their shit at the door.
Ryan Dodge:And so one of the most difficult things I think for us is these
Ryan Dodge:elder statement is to remain humble.
Ryan Dodge:And the story that you were talking about, Adam, I believe you mentioned it
Ryan Dodge:or touched on it, is like, I started in the dish room, I remember at 14 years
Ryan Dodge:old in the pizza place coming in, getting trained in by a guy who, who was more
Ryan Dodge:interested in smoking heaters on the back dock than doing any of the dishes.
Ryan Dodge:And I remember thinking, Man, that that's gross and I don't wanna do dishes.
Ryan Dodge:And I remember.
Ryan Dodge:All the waitresses and waiters and people coming back that were like looking at
Ryan Dodge:me like, Aren't you gonna do the dishes?
Ryan Dodge:And I was like, Not only am I gonna do the dishes, but I'm gonna
Ryan Dodge:fucking throw down on this space.
Ryan Dodge:Like I'm gonna make it so that you wanna come back here.
Ryan Dodge:I'm gonna make it so that this is the coolest little area to hang out.
Ryan Dodge:Not, not that back dock.
Ryan Dodge:We're all used , so.
Ryan Dodge:There's an unhealthy aspect to the industry that's almost encouraged, whether
Ryan Dodge:that's the alcoholism, the drugs, the, you know, some of my best experiences where
Ryan Dodge:my, my, my experiences with those things.
Ryan Dodge:Don't get me wrong, I wanna acknowledge that that's a rite of passage.
Ryan Dodge:I believe in some certain, in a certain . Thank you realm.
Ryan Dodge:I mean, it's a R of passage.
Ryan Dodge:I don't want to be over, over like, Saying that I'm judgemental
Ryan Dodge:toward that at all because I'm not.
Ryan Dodge:I'm actually, I encourage everyone to experience what the industry is so that
Ryan Dodge:they know that there's a future beyond it.
Ryan Dodge:Because the burnout ratio, again, like I said, is high and it is in every
Ryan Dodge:aspect from dive bars to American standard cuisine to the fines.
Ryan Dodge:Five star Michelin restaurants from standards to execution to just the
Ryan Dodge:overall amount of hours of sleep you get from being on your feet for 16 hours.
Ryan Dodge:I mean, you're looking for the, you're looking for the pill,
Ryan Dodge:you're looking for the relief.
Ryan Dodge:And I get it.
Ryan Dodge:Once you graduate from that and you can find like health and
Ryan Dodge:balance within boundaries that you create, you trust other people.
Ryan Dodge:Because what I've done in that looming large piece that you were just touching
Ryan Dodge:on and I wanna address is, If I'm there, like all, eventually people will be like,
Ryan Dodge:Well, he's here so he'll take care of it.
Ryan Dodge:He has the answer.
Ryan Dodge:So it's almost as if I'm keeping them from making the mistake or making the
Ryan Dodge:decision, or learning how to make a solution oriented decision on the spot.
Ryan Dodge:Because if I'm there, then my voice is gonna be louder than everybody else's.
Ryan Dodge:My solution's gonna be the stamp.
Ryan Dodge:I, I've been here, I I have this, You need it and it's your turn.
Ryan Dodge:And so you graduate to a, from a certain level.
Ryan Dodge:And if you don't trust people, then you don't allow.
Ryan Dodge:If you don't trust that, they're gonna fail and figure it out from the failure
Ryan Dodge:which is in, which is our industry.
Ryan Dodge:And a nutshell, failure and figuring it out.
Ryan Dodge:Go give somebody a rib eye and tell 'em to cook a medium rare for the first time.
Ryan Dodge:It doesn't.
Ryan Dodge:They don't know New York strip versus rib I versus filet versus
Ryan Dodge:terrace versus short ribs.
Ryan Dodge:Like they don't know these techniques.
Ryan Dodge:They gotta teach 'em.
Ryan Dodge:So how they get, and we gotta trust 'em.
Ryan Dodge:That's a big risk for us.
Ryan Dodge:That's cost.
Ryan Dodge:So we wanna overman this solution all the time because we don't wanna risk it.
Ryan Dodge:But then we never move forward and they don't grow and we continue to kind of have
Ryan Dodge:that looming where that looming figure.
Ryan Dodge:We should be a looming figure in that.
Ryan Dodge:What would he do based off of what I've seen, but allow them to grow and learn.
Ryan Dodge:Well put,
Adam Lamb:And again, I wanna be conscious of our time because this show is meant
Adam Lamb:to not only talk about the issues that are going on, but also to offer some
Adam Lamb:concrete steps that an operator can take back into their operation this weekend.
Adam Lamb:So I want to kind of end our conversation because I know that there's just so
Adam Lamb:much more to be talked about which is why, you know, I think Jim and.
Adam Lamb:Love to have you guys back for, you know, part two and part
Adam Lamb:three of this conversation.
Adam Lamb:Absolutely.
Adam Lamb:But if each of you were to give one particular tip that's worked for you,
Adam Lamb:maybe somebody's got an operation, they're short staffed, people are
Adam Lamb:starting to get burnt you can feel the threads starting to spin apart.
Adam Lamb:What's one or two actions that they can actually take going back
Adam Lamb:in and pulling everybody together if, if only for the short term.
Adam Lamb:Knowing the risks the problems.
Adam Lamb:I spoke to Scott Turner yesterday from Aden Hospitality where he's telling
Adam Lamb:me that the, the energy crisis in England is so bad that these coffee
Adam Lamb:shops are going from $2,000 a month in energy costs to 9,000 if they can
Adam Lamb:find, And these guys are like, I, you know, I'm losing $4,000 a month.
Adam Lamb:I might as well just close my doors.
Adam Lamb:Mm-hmm.
Adam Lamb:. So there's a lot going against us.
Adam Lamb:There always has been.
Adam Lamb:Doug, what's one or two things that you could probably offer that might
Adam Lamb:prove beneficial to bringing everybody together, if not in service to the
Adam Lamb:mission and ins, service to one another?
Adam Lamb:I, I
Doug Newhook:mean, like, like Don said earlier, I like to simplify things.
Doug Newhook:So in, in, in real summary, I make sure that I treat every
Doug Newhook:single person like a human being.
Doug Newhook:I know everyone's.
Doug Newhook:I want to look at them dead in their eye.
Doug Newhook:I wanna say 'em.
Doug Newhook:Thank, Thank you for doing their job.
Doug Newhook:I thank them throughout the experience.
Doug Newhook:If I'm an owner and I have satellite places, I'm gonna make sure my
Doug Newhook:management team knows their names.
Doug Newhook:Every single person's name shakes, every single person's hand when
Doug Newhook:they get there says goodbye to every single person when they leave.
Doug Newhook:A lot of people just sneak out the back door and they're.
Doug Newhook:And the reality is, I think that we have to start going back to humanity.
Doug Newhook:Treat people like humans.
Doug Newhook:Just be kind and be friendly.
Doug Newhook:It's not gonna pay your rent quicker, but it's sure is, sure is.
Doug Newhook:You're gonna make a, the environment better for those folks inside.
Ryan Dodge:Chef,
Adam Lamb:as you're gazing out your window, he's gonna get a haku
Doug Newhook:ready.
Doug Newhook:Adam, get ready.
Doug Newhook:That'd be good.
Ryan Dodge:Well, no, I, I So you, you gave an example of a situ.
Ryan Dodge:and if I were to give any advice to somebody going through what
Ryan Dodge:you were talking about, the thread or being, you gotta, you gotta
Ryan Dodge:pull the team together in a way.
Ryan Dodge:I, I think that the group as a whole, none of, none of any of us do anything
Ryan Dodge:in this industry by ourselves.
Ryan Dodge:We have to have an entire.
Ryan Dodge:Staff moving in the same direction.
Ryan Dodge:If we have this, this wide scope of people on every position, they
Ryan Dodge:have to be moving toward the same.
Ryan Dodge:They all have to move this direction toward the, toward the same target.
Ryan Dodge:And if they don't know the ob, they don't know the obstacle.
Ryan Dodge:If they're not aware that we're up against prices that are gonna erode our
Ryan Dodge:margin, that may potentially keep us from having a business at all, then then.
Ryan Dodge:For whatever reason, they're just kind of going to continue
Ryan Dodge:to go through the motions.
Ryan Dodge:But if you can, you gotta be able to share in a way that doesn't
Ryan Dodge:create fear or create competitive nature within the group, but you've
Ryan Dodge:gotta be able to be transparent.
Ryan Dodge:And I think the transparency of what we're all up against is one of the,
Ryan Dodge:being vulnerable to the transparency, not being a victim to it, but bringing
Ryan Dodge:everybody in so that they can offer up what their solution is, be heard by the
Ryan Dodge:group without judgment, without fear.
Ryan Dodge:And if that's something that you're able to do and you have a group of
Ryan Dodge:people that are actually able to sit in a room and have a conversation, and
Ryan Dodge:this is an investment, again, like I said, you got, if you're gonna make
Ryan Dodge:an investment in energy, you better make an investment in your people.
Ryan Dodge:If the people that are working together can't communicate in a room talking
Ryan Dodge:about what we're up against, then they sure shit aren't gonna be able to do it.
Ryan Dodge:When the, when the fire is on and when the orders are coming in, how are you gonna
Ryan Dodge:be able to do it then if you can't do it?
Ryan Dodge:So I would bring the people together.
Ryan Dodge:I would offer up what we're up against.
Ryan Dodge:I would allow them to understand and articulate back what's at stake
Ryan Dodge:and what are we gonna do about it.
Ryan Dodge:And I would empower them and give them the autonomy to make a decision that
Ryan Dodge:moment, whether they're gonna go into this thing with me, or if they're gonna
Ryan Dodge:hit the street now because we are not going into this thing with weak links.
Ryan Dodge:We're going into this thing or we're not.
Ryan Dodge:You're with me or you.
Ryan Dodge:And I think it's that easy.
Ryan Dodge:I think people get to make the choice.
Ryan Dodge:We're desperate.
Ryan Dodge:If we let people come in that are dragging us down, we're desperate.
Ryan Dodge:We've given up.
Ryan Dodge:So you're either gonna go in this weekend and fight with a group of people that
Ryan Dodge:are there to fight with you, that have your six, you're 12, you're three,
Ryan Dodge:you're nine, or you're going in blind.
Ryan Dodge:And if you don't have Hammerhead 360 peripheral, then you're gonna get.
Adam Lamb:Head on, head on, head on a swivel head on a swivel chef.
Adam Lamb:Are you hiring
Adam Lamb:? Jim Taylor: You move to,
Adam Lamb:come work with you.
Adam Lamb:That brings up a great point because I asked Chef yesterday are you on social?
Adam Lamb:And he said, No.
Adam Lamb:And he said, That's deliberate.
Adam Lamb:I don't want any distractions.
Adam Lamb:But it begs the question, Chef, if someone wants to get a hold of you, even just to
Adam Lamb:follow up this conversation, how do they.
Doug Newhook:Reach out to me.
Doug Newhook:I'll get, I'll pass it off.
Doug Newhook:Just
Ryan Dodge:kidding you, , your phone's gonna blow up.
Ryan Dodge:I'm a bit of a, I'm a bit of a enigma in that sense.
Ryan Dodge:I, I, my energy is, I'm very selective with my energy and I've
Ryan Dodge:been irresponsible with it in the past, and I've been, it's been taken.
Ryan Dodge:Not with any, without any, I mean, it's lessons of life and so I think
Ryan Dodge:that there's a great social connection that's happening through these different
Ryan Dodge:places, but you can get ahold of me.
Ryan Dodge:And my name is Ryan Dodge, and you can, I, I guess that I, I'm not on anything
Ryan Dodge:other than LinkedIn, but yeah, to your point, you can get ahold of Doug, but
Ryan Dodge:I, I literally intentionally do that.
Ryan Dodge:I'm not trying to personify some sort of fraud, and I, and I worked
Ryan Dodge:for Gary Danko back in the day, and one of the most profound things, we
Ryan Dodge:went to the Masters of Food and Wine.
Ryan Dodge:It was the 21st annual Masters of Food and Wine in Carmel,
Ryan Dodge:California, and it was the last one.
Ryan Dodge:That they did and it was a great experience and it was
Ryan Dodge:early in the days of Top Chef.
Ryan Dodge:Do you guys know the show?
Ryan Dodge:Top Chef?
Ryan Dodge:Sure.
Ryan Dodge:Mm-hmm.
Ryan Dodge:. There was a contestant that had gotten booted from Top Chef early in the, like,
Ryan Dodge:first or second season that was there, and literally was making a fool of themselves.
Ryan Dodge:And I'll never forget coming off of the initial, like we did a
Ryan Dodge:cooking demonstration for Gary's lobster, Chef, Chef Deco's lobster
Ryan Dodge:dish in front of 500 people.
Ryan Dodge:He was signing autographs.
Ryan Dodge:And then I went into the kitchen and I literally set the tone for that day of
Ryan Dodge:how we were gonna do 500 plates of this lobster dish with a bunch of volunteers
Ryan Dodge:and interns and different things.
Ryan Dodge:But I, I will never forget that night as we were talking, cuz I was watching
Ryan Dodge:this person make a fool of themselves.
Ryan Dodge:And I said, Hey, you know, What do you think of that show?
Ryan Dodge:Top Chef?
Ryan Dodge:And he said, you know, Dodge, I, I try to avoid too much television.
Ryan Dodge:I try to avoid too much of this these things that are asked to me because if I
Ryan Dodge:don't have control over my editing, then I may be giving off the wrong impression.
Ryan Dodge:And so that kind of stuck with me.
Ryan Dodge:And so I like to have control over my, my editing.
Ryan Dodge:So I, I don't have.
Ryan Dodge:Somebody else influencing my, or taking out of my message out of
Ryan Dodge:the, the intent of the narrative.
Ryan Dodge:So, Well, it's also,
Adam Lamb:it's also, you know, a great exercise in creating healthy boundaries as
Adam Lamb:well, which something, you know, a lot of folks, including myself in the industry.
Adam Lamb:Haven't really, haven't really exercised , you know, what a
Adam Lamb:healthy boundary looks like.
Adam Lamb:But that, that'll be a topic for another show, cuz I know if I throw
Adam Lamb:that out there, We'll keep going.
Adam Lamb:Yeah.
Adam Lamb:But Jim, I wanted to finish with you and perhaps share one or two tips
Adam Lamb:that can actually keep, you know, can actually bring a team back together.
Jim Taylor:Well, you know, there's so many places we could go here again.
Jim Taylor:Right.
Jim Taylor:And, and, Chef Dodge.
Jim Taylor:I mean, I can't thank you enough for all of this insight because you're,
Jim Taylor:you're clearly incredibly passionate and, and very good at what you do.
Jim Taylor:I think it's really, I could listen to you talk all day.
Jim Taylor:Hopefully we get a chance to do this again.
Jim Taylor:But, you know, I think that I've had some interesting conversations
Jim Taylor:in the last few days, you know, with everything from corporate to
Jim Taylor:single unit restaurant operators.
Jim Taylor:. It's really interesting as we head into the fall and into the winter
Jim Taylor:in some, you know, parts of the world that this employee retention
Jim Taylor:thing just doesn't go away.
Jim Taylor:And it's actually, I think in some markets getting harder.
Jim Taylor:And you know, we say retention is the new cool all the time, but a lot of people
Jim Taylor:have been starting to say back to me, it's not new and we need to find better
Jim Taylor:ways and continue to build on this, you know, take good care of your people.
Jim Taylor:And so, you know, going into the weekend, It's always like Chef Dodge has said
Jim Taylor:a few times, it's, you know, if people aren't with you when you're going into
Jim Taylor:the fire, you're, you're in trouble.
Jim Taylor:And the fire starts probably around 5:00 PM tonight, Thursday evening.
Jim Taylor:Right.
Jim Taylor:So, you know, I think just as much as we can influence the industry
Jim Taylor:to just find ways to take better care of the people that are in
Jim Taylor:it, inspire them, protect them.
Jim Taylor:It can be, as the four of us know, a pretty awesome career,
Jim Taylor:if you can, you know, figure out how to navigate through it.
Jim Taylor:So start the weekend off right.
Jim Taylor:I.
Adam Lamb:Yeah, I, I couldn't agree with you more.
Adam Lamb:And it can be as simple as, you know, getting everybody together in
Adam Lamb:a standup first thing in the morning.
Adam Lamb:And chef, to your point, you know, this whole transparency
Adam Lamb:and vulnerability thing, because they're looking for the humanity.
Adam Lamb:They're looking for the emotional cues on how they're supposed to react to their
Adam Lamb:environment and to be able to stand up and say, you know, I thought I knew what
Adam Lamb:the hell I was doing, but you know, I, I, I don't like, I think I have an idea,
Adam Lamb:but I need, but I actually need you.
Adam Lamb:You have a seat at the table, and I know that we're gonna be going into
Adam Lamb:this over the course of the weekend and we're gonna be hanging on by our
Adam Lamb:fingernails, but the dust is gonna settle.
Adam Lamb:And if we're not together then you know, it's gonna be much harder on everybody.
Adam Lamb:So I couldn't agree more transparency, vulnerability, having these conversations.
Adam Lamb:And again, to reference a lot of the, the recent studies, especially
Adam Lamb:during the great resignation, one of the top two reasons that people chose
Adam Lamb:to leave their current position was communication or lack their of mm-hmm.
Adam Lamb:like, treat me like goddamn human being.
Adam Lamb:Man.
Adam Lamb:I'm not just a pair of hands, I'm not a shift on a schedule.
Adam Lamb:I have other things going on in my life and I'm not sitting here
Adam Lamb:trying to encourage people to.
Adam Lamb:You know, ex accept unreasonable accommodations from their staff because
Adam Lamb:it comes down to we're in service.
Adam Lamb:Mm-hmm.
Adam Lamb:. But grounding that in a, in a respectful and I say, you know, a sanctified way
Adam Lamb:cuz what we do really is really is a special thing and there's not a lot
Adam Lamb:of people that are called to this.
Adam Lamb:So the people who are called, I think we owe it to them to.
Adam Lamb:To be as humble and to be as transparent and vulnerable to them to know
Adam Lamb:that, you know, as you progress in your career, you'll also see this.
Adam Lamb:And so we've gotten some really great comments from folks Darren chimed in.
Adam Lamb:Agreed.
Adam Lamb:If you have a great culture, one of support, respect, and
Adam Lamb:opportunity, you'll not struggle.
Adam Lamb:Valentine said, I agree with Ryan on humility.
Adam Lamb:Humility PAs a way to learn about people around you, feeling experienced
Adam Lamb:shames another great conversation.
Adam Lamb:Thanks.
Adam Lamb:So there is definitely.
Adam Lamb:There's definitely an ear for this type of conversation, so
Adam Lamb:I just wanted to say thank you.
Adam Lamb:I know that we're over time, but I wasn't gonna stop it because God juicy.
Adam Lamb:And I look forward, we look forward to having you both back.
Adam Lamb:And I just can't tell you how grateful you know, speak for Jim, how grateful
Adam Lamb:we feel that you took the time out of your day to be with us and to share
Adam Lamb:your experience and your wisdom.
Adam Lamb:So thank you very.
Adam Lamb:Thank you.
Ryan Dodge:And that, yeah, the feeling's mutual.
Ryan Dodge:I love what you guys are, are trying, The word that you're getting out
Ryan Dodge:here is, is getting appreciated.
Adam Lamb:Thank you very much.
Adam Lamb:Really welcome your comments, suggestions, and smart ass remarks.
Adam Lamb:We're gonna listen to 'em all and reply to 'em.
Adam Lamb:So thank you very much, folks.