Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode, Ron Shaich, founder of Panera and chairman of CAVA, shares his journey from building Au Bon Pain into a billion-dollar empire to his current investment vehicle ACT3 Holdings. (00:00) At 71, Shaich reveals how he runs his life and businesses with the same disciplined approach, conducting quarterly personal reviews and prioritizing long-term thinking over short-term gains. (00:30) He discusses the painful process of selling off every other business concept to focus entirely on Panera, his philosophy of being "long-term greedy, not short-term stupid," and how he's now repeating the same playbook with CAVA in the Mediterranean category. (10:00) Throughout the conversation, Shaich emphasizes that profit is always a byproduct of creating better competitive alternatives, and explains why real commitment to building something great requires personal sacrifice.
Ron Shaich is the founder of Panera Bread and current chairman of CAVA, with over half a century of experience building dominant brands in the restaurant industry. He transformed Au Bon Pain from a bankrupt French bakery into a successful public company, then made the bold decision to sell off every other division to focus entirely on Panera, growing it from a small concept to a $7.8 billion company with 2,000 locations. Today, through his investment vehicle ACT3 Holdings, he uses $200 million of his own capital to build the next generation of restaurant concepts, achieving 55% returns across a nearly $2 billion portfolio.
Shaich identifies empathy as his most powerful business skill - the ability to "climb into somebody else's brain, to feel what they're feeling and to see what they're feeling." (16:15) This wasn't about market research or focus groups, but actually spending time observing customers and understanding their deeper needs. For example, at Au Bon Pain, he noticed customers asking him to slice baguettes and then pulling out their own ingredients to make sandwiches. This empathetic observation led to the realization that customers didn't want bread - they wanted the sandwich experience, which became the foundation for their transformation.
Shaich's core business philosophy centers on three words: "better competitive alternative." (53:27) He explains this means creating something where your target customer will "walk past all of your competitors" to choose you because you do it better than anyone else. This requires understanding that profit is always a byproduct - when companies focus directly on driving the bottom line instead of the customer experience, they often destroy long-term value. The goal is to become so compelling in your category that you have what he calls "the house edge."
Shaich's mantra "I'm long-term greedy, not short-term stupid" (73:59) represents his approach to building lasting value. This means making decisions that might hurt short-term metrics but create sustainable competitive advantages. He contrasts this with companies that cut labor during difficult times, which destroys the very customer experience they've worked years to build. Long-term thinking requires having the discipline to invest in what will matter in five to ten years, even when it's painful in the present moment.
Building something significant requires total commitment, and Shaich is brutally honest about the personal costs: "When you're doing anything that takes powerful commitment, that commitment owns you. You don't own it." (78:09) He acknowledges being married twice and considers it a failure, recognizing that the intensity required for building dominant companies comes with real trade-offs. This isn't about work-life balance - it's about making conscious choices about what you value and what you're willing to sacrifice, understanding that "you can't have it all."
Successful leaders must be able to think at 30,000 feet about five-year strategy while also getting into the weeds on execution details. (83:33) Shaich gives the example of discussing whether floor materials are bouncing sound inappropriately for the customer experience they're trying to create. This dual capability prevents the common pitfall where strategies fail because they can't be executed, or where detailed execution lacks strategic direction. The key is using details to extract learning and inform strategy, not just micromanaging for its own sake.