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Sweetgreen’s Jonathan Neman on Using Tech For Customer Experiences
Sweetgreen’s Jonathan Neman on Using Tech For Customer Experiences
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Jonathan Neman had no industry experience when he set out to create a healthy, accessible restaurant.
The Sweetgreen co-founder and CEO joined dot.LA co-founder Spencer Rascoff at the 2022 dot.LA Summit to discuss how the fast-casual restaurant chain has grown from one location in Washington D.C. to 180 restaurants with a $2 billion market cap.
Neman credits part of that growth to the technology Sweetgreen began integrating in 2013 when the company first introduced a mobile app for ordering. This concept was relatively new at the time. In addition, Neman said building up its in-house tech team to serve customers helped Sweetgreen scale by allowing a new way for customers to engage with the brand.
“We see technology as a wedge and an accelerator for our business,” Neman said. “It's really important to how we bring our experience to life, both in the back of the house and from a consumer perspective.”
But the pandemic forced Sweetgreen to reconsider how it engages customers, especially after the company’s profits dropped by 80%. Sweetgreen began to pivot away from its traditional urban market and look toward the suburbs—a long-term goal it was forced to accelerate.
“We knew over time most of the business is going to be in the suburban sprawl of America,” he said.
Rascoff said the way Sweetgreen connects with consumers in the long term had bucked some trends within the restaurant industry. The industry is notoriously difficult to succeed in, particularly as trends fall out of fashion.
“Sometimes these food trends sort of flame out,” Rascoff said. “One thing that fascinates me about Sweetgreen is the strength of the brand.”
Neman said the brand’s success stems from its refusal to focus on one specific item—menus and ingredients change seasonally and geographically. Committing to customer experience on top of fresh ingredients has helped Sweetgreen’s longevity.
“It's more about this general promise than it is about one specific dish,” he said. — Kristin Snyder
dot.LA's 2022 Summit took place at the iconic Petersen Museum on Friday. Read takeaways from all the panels on our collection page. Among the highlights:
- Julia Boorstin on why VCs should stop undervaluing women-led startups.
- 'You Fail a Lot': Former Dodger Shawn Green on how sports prepared him to become an entrepreneur.
- Nextbite CEO Alex Canter on how he built a foodtech startup from his family's beloved, century-old deli.
- Three startups talk about what they mean by 'metaverse', and how they're building an accessible version of it.
The three finalists included Whiz Girls Academy, Akenta Health and Foundry Six. Akenta, which serves U.S. Latinos by connecting patients Latinos by connecting patients with bilingual doctors through its telehealth service and digital platform, came away the winner.
Micro-influencers — creators with followers that range from 1,000 to 100,000 — are gaining ground with companies as a way to save on costs while getting more content for their brands. We look at what it takes to make it as a niche influencer.
Santa Monica-based LootMogul received fresh funding for its sports metaverse platform, while Hackman Capital Partners closed its HCP Studio Fund. Here's a look at the L.A. startups that raised capital this week.
The public fast-charging network for electric vehicles added consumer technology executive Tanvi Chaturvedi as chief revenue officer. Meanwhile, Huupe, the creator of the smart basketball hoop, appointed a new chief technology officer.
- According to a widely-shared report from Forbes, TikTok’s parent company ByteDance had plans to monitor the locations of specific American citizens.
- Starlink’s satellite internet service has become a vital communication took for the Ukrainian military, but according to Wired, it’s utility largely relies on the personal whims of its mercurial CEO and founder, Elon Musk.
- Esports and entertainment group FaZe Clan announced a new partnership with Xfinity which will include a string of music and gaming events hosted for college students along with original digital content.
- Smart wallet developers Kudos Technologies raised a $7 million seed fund round, led by Patron.
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