I have been in the restaurant business for 44 years.
Not adjacent to it. Not consulting into it from the outside. In it — on the stage, in the kitchen, in the numbers, in the hiring decisions, in the lease negotiations, in the openings and the closings and every shift in between.
The first half of those 44 years was operations. Every format. Every volume. High-traffic urban concepts and quiet neighborhood independents. Ultra-rich markets and ultra-poor communities. Full-service, fast-casual, fine dining, and everything the industry had invented between those categories by the time I had worked through most of them. I did not specialize. I did not stay in one lane. I accumulated the full width and depth of what the restaurant business actually is — not a corner of it, not a category of it, but the whole thing.
That breadth was not accidental. It was the education.
Because what the breadth revealed — what you can only see when you have worked across enough formats, enough markets, enough volume levels — is a gap. The independent operator running a full-service room in a mid-size market is running a business that requires the same operational sophistication as any concept in any market. But almost no one is teaching them the business thinking that makes that sophistication possible. They are learning the operation. They are not learning the business of the operation. And that gap — between operational competence and business acumen — is where most independent operators stop growing. We know from science that when an entity stops growing, it starts dying. The operator who has plateaued has not found stability. They have begun a decline that will not announce itself until the cost is already compounding.
I saw it everywhere. Every market. Every concept. Every operator who was working harder than anyone around them and still losing ground. Not because they lacked effort. Because they lacked the framework that converts effort into compounding results.
I had both. The operational credibility — earned across 200+ operators, 34 openings, 44 years of shifts that produced pattern recognition no classroom produces. And the business acumen — the financial literacy, the strategic thinking, the systems architecture — that most operators in this industry never develop because no one ever told them they needed it.
The consulting work was not a career pivot. It was the logical conclusion of what the ops years revealed. The gap was desperate. The need was real. And I had spent the first half of my career building exactly the tool set that could close it.
The second half has been closing it.