Best High-Traffic Areas in Texas to Open a Restaurant
Explore high-traffic Texas markets where restaurants can succeed by matching concepts, customer behavior, visibility, and daily demand.
Apr 30, 2026
Explore high-traffic Texas markets where restaurants can succeed by matching concepts, customer behavior, visibility, and daily demand.
Apr 30, 2026
Learn how to calculate food cost, control margins, reduce waste, price menu items, and use technology to improve restaurant profit.
Apr 29, 2026
Photo by Unseen Histories on Unsplash
A look at how U.S. brands expand through multi-unit deals, cross-border partnerships, and seasoned operators in 2026.
Apr 29, 2026
Photo by Erik Mclean on Unsplash
McDonald’s unveils six beverages across 14,000 restaurants on May 6, expanding McCafé with Refresher and crafted sodas and a new store-level beverage specialist role.
Apr 29, 2026
Explore marketing strategies for food businesses using reviews, professional photos, SEO, social media, partnerships, events, and catering.
Apr 28, 2026
Learn how to write a coffee shop business plan that covers concept, location, menu, finances, branding, marketing, and risk planning.
Apr 27, 2026
Photo by shen wenjie on Unsplash
Holiday-driven menu drops fuse nostalgia with wellness, turning menus into living calendars for fast-casual brands.
Apr 28, 2026
Photo by Abdul Raheem Kannath on Unsplash
Susannah Frost named Chick-fil-A President, joining Cliff Robinson as COO to guide domestic expansion and international growth.
Apr 28, 2026
Photo by Moon Bhuyan on Unsplash
Ghost pepper-led promotions redefine autumn menus as chains blend heat, storytelling, and seasonal collaborations to drive foot traffic.
Apr 28, 2026
Photo by Noah Martinez on Unsplash
CAVA rolls out Garlic Ranch Pita Chips with a Steak + Harissa Bowl and a refreshed Rewards program, tying flavor innovation to personalized guest experiences.
Apr 28, 2026
GoTo Foods taps Misra and Lambert to harmonize digital momentum with disciplined development across seven brands, aiming for stronger guest experiences and franchisee economics.
Photo by Diego Mattevi on Unsplash
GoTo Foods sits at a gentle crossroads, like a café just after dawn, where a quiet plan begins to unfurl. The seven-brand platform is marking a new moment by naming its first Chief Digital Officer and its Chief Development Officer, signaling a patient pivot toward digital momentum and disciplined growth. On April 13, 2026, the company announced that Biplav Misra would lead the digital charge and Tatiana Lambert would guide development strategy. The move invites guests and franchisees to lean into a shared path, one where technology and site growth work hand in hand to elevate every visit:
The appointment frames GoTo Foods as a platform company behind seven iconic brands — Auntie Anne’s, Carvel, Cinnabon, Jamba, Moe’s Southwest Grill, McAlister’s Deli, and Schlotzsky’s. The scale is tangible: more than 7,400 restaurants across all 50 states and 71 countries and territories as of March 29, 2026. A quoted line from the release emphasizes the moment: “As GoTo Foods enters its next phase, our priority is clear: disciplined growth that enhances the guest experience, strengthens franchisee returns and delivers stronger unit-level economics across the portfolio.” Omer Gajial, the CEO, stresses that Misra and Lambert will sharpen how the company grows and creates durable value for guests, franchisees, and brands. The aroma of purpose lingers as the plan begins to take shape in real, customer-facing terms:
A gentle reflection sits beneath the numbers: a platform poised to fuse digital momentum with an even steadier hand on store economics. The message is less about a sprint and more about a measured morning ritual—every guest, every operator, every brand, moving toward a cohesive horizon. The coming chapters will show whether this readiness translates into more frequent visits, brighter baskets, and steadier returns for partners across all seven brands.
The platform frame is not just a buzzword; it’s a gentle blueprint. GoTo Foods presents itself as a company built to scale across channels, brands, and geographies while retaining a personal touch in guest interactions. The leadership launch underlines a balance: guest experience and franchisee returns sit at the heart of a disciplined growth agenda, a rhythm the company says will be reinforced by digital and operating capabilities. The sense is of a kitchen prepared for a long, steady simmer—enough heat to unlock opportunities, enough patience to sustain them, and a shared belief that seven brands can sing in harmony on a single platform.
Executive framing is clear: the leadership duo will align digital and development to deliver durable value across all units. The message is not about a single market or a single channel; it’s about translating strategy into steady, visible improvements in guest engagement and franchisee economics. The café‑atmosphere of this moment belies a firm belief that the seven-brand platform can be a model for disciplined, scalable growth—one that invites partners to linger and participate in the shared success.
To the point, Misra will establish the digital infrastructure, assemble a specialized team, and craft an operating model that scales across all seven brands and across off‑premise, catering, and both owned and third‑party channels. Lambert’s development lens will guide partnerships and disciplined expansion across the portfolio. In that pairing, the guest’s seat at the table feels central—more frequent visits, stronger check growth, and a portfolio that grows without compromising the comfort guests expect from these beloved brands. It’s a quiet invitation to trust the process as it unfolds.