Propelled Brands Cuts Camp Bow Wow Startup Costs
Propelled Brands lowers Camp Bow Wow’s investment and standardizes a 6,000-sq-ft prototype to attract multi-unit growth amid a tight real estate market.
Jun 18, 2026
Propelled Brands lowers Camp Bow Wow’s investment and standardizes a 6,000-sq-ft prototype to attract multi-unit growth amid a tight real estate market.
Jun 18, 2026
Blue Bottle launches a 90-minute, machine-free Kyoto-style espresso, bottled for cold drinks across 152 cafés on June 16.
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A missing Lego Star Wars cache puts Bricks & Minifigs in court, testing franchise rules, consignment policies, and brand trust across a 300‑unit network.
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Domino’s launches a $9.99 any pizza deal, adding Parmesan Stuffed Crust through July 26, 2026, timed to the World Cup with gamified rewards and heavy ad support.
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Raising Cane’s opens a 16,000-square-foot flagship by Intuit Dome in Inglewood, blending spectacle and throughput as the chain accelerates global expansion.
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Restaurants race to modernize POS as mobile wallets surge, cloud adoption grows, drive-thru integrations expand, and costs and interoperability shape strategic selection.
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Boost restaurant revenue during FIFA World Cup 2026 with proven promotion ideas, marketing strategies, staffing tips, and match-day sales tactics.
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Discover how Via 313 and Terry Black’s Barbecue are fusing barbecue flavors and Detroit-style pizza in a bold Texas collaboration. Learn what this means for trend-focused restaurant operators.
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A warm, expert look at how mid-tier brands like Salad and Go chase Top 100 status through centralized supply, disciplined expansion, and price-conscious menus.
Photo by K8
Salad and Go sits at a quiet, almost comforting crossroads in the world of fast casual growth. In a space where bold openings often steal the spotlight, this brand seems to prefer a gentler ascent, one that favors ease, consistency, and a sense of hospitality that travelers feel after a long day. The momentum isn’t a jagged sprint; it’s a patient, steady cadence that expands a footprint while preserving the warmth of guest experience. The numbers are meaningful, but they’re also a mood: growth near 50 percent year over year, a 100-unit milestone achieved in 2023, and a May Las Vegas opening that underscored a centralized plan to speed future openings. What does this momentum whisper about the road toward the Top 100?
The ascent is anchored by leadership that understands the power of scale without losing guest trust. Since taking the helm in 2022, Morrison has carried a growth discipline refined at Wingstop and other brands. The strategy favors a centralized production model, a streamlined drive-thru workflow, and a value-driven menu capable of supporting rapid openings. It’s a blueprint built not just to add doors but to weave together unit growth with per-store economics. In that balance, the Top 100 looms as a real, reachable horizon rather than a distant milestone.

Salad and Go’s momentum is more than a headline; it’s a cohesive rhythm that signals the mid-tier cohort’s readiness to differentiate. The model, centralized production, streamlined drive-thru operations, and a price-conscious menu, offers a scalable playbook that other brands in the No. 200–151 band are studying as they chase Top 100 status. The evolution of this cohort will hinge on how quickly unit growth translates into sustainable same-store performance while real estate and operating costs are managed at scale. In that sense, the mid-tier becomes a laboratory for profitability as growth unfolds.
If the sector can convert expanding footprints into durable guest demand, the Top 100 is within reach for more brands. The playbook, centralized supply, predictable costs, and a menu that stays appealing as openings accelerate, offers a disciplined path forward. The mood is patient and practical: growth is a means to strengthen, not merely to populate, the map. For operators watching Salad and Go and its peers, the lesson is clear, scale with care, and let value do the talking as you move toward broader reach.