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Red Robin's CTO resigns in a planned transition; CFO takes interim tech oversight to sustain the North Star turnaround.
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Red Robin is navigating a tech leadership shakeup as Jyoti Lynch prepares to depart. The company disclosed in October 2024 that Lynch will resign effective October 24, 2024, but she will remain in her role through the transition and then serve as a non-employee, special advisor to help identify a successor and ensure a clean handoff. Until a permanent replacement is named, Todd Wilson, the chief financial officer, will oversee the technology organization, supported by the existing tech team. There is no change in Wilson’s compensation tied to the expanded scope. The arrangement is framed as a planned transition, not a confrontation, signaling stability as Red Robin realigns around its strategy.
Her tenure began in June 2023 when Red Robin named her Chief Technology Officer, following the arrival of CEO G.J. Hart and the launch of a five-point North Star plan designed to drive technology-enabled growth. The framework emphasized investments across menu, cooking platforms, and guest experience as catalysts for the restaurant’s digital transformation and broader operating improvements. Lynch’s timing positioned her at the center of Red Robin’s push to weave technology into the brand’s turnaround strategy. The official 8-K framed Lynch’s departure as a planned transition, not a confrontation or disagreement with the company.
So the stage is set for a controlled transition that aims to keep momentum intact while leadership shifts. The playbook calls for a steady handoff, preserving the tech trajectory and protecting the guest-experience investments Red Robin has built into its turnaround.

To understand why this transition matters, you need the backdrop. Lynch’s appointment in June 2023 placed CTO at the center of a North Star strategy designed to turn around the brand through tech, with a focus on menu, cooking platforms, and guest experience. The move highlights how digital leadership was woven into Red Robin’s turnaround plan and why her departure is assessed against continuity rather than disruption.
Red Robin’s transition is framed as a measured handover, with an emphasis on stability during strategic realignment. Lynch will step into advisory mode after the transition, and interim oversight will be exercised by CFO Todd Wilson with the support of the existing tech team. This arrangement aligns with the company’s emphasis on keeping ongoing digital initiatives on track and protecting the core technology backbone that supports both menu execution and guest-facing experiences. The disclosures note there is no disagreement behind the resignation.
Note, Lynch soon moved to another brand, taking the CIO post at Smoothie King, a reminder that digital leadership in foodservice travels across concepts as tech programs scale.
Red Robin’s official 8-K outlines a structured, multi-step transition. Lynch remains CTO through the transition period, then steps down with ongoing advisory support to identify and onboard a successor. In the interim, Todd Wilson will oversee the technology organization, backed by the existing tech team, ensuring continuity for ongoing digital initiatives and strategic programs. The filing emphasizes that Lynch’s resignation is not tied to any disagreement, reinforcing a deliberate handover rather than a crisis of leadership. This approach aligns with Red Robin’s emphasis on stability during a period of strategic realignment.
Additionally, the arrangement confirms there will be no change in Wilson’s compensation related to the expanded scope. The plan underscores continuity across critical tech initiatives—from digital ordering to back-end systems—while leadership realigns around the North Star priorities. The structure protects timelines for ongoing projects and ensures the board's governance remains steady as the company pursues technology modernization and guest-experience investments.
That steadiness matters when a brand is trying to regain momentum.
Red Robin’s communication frames Lynch’s departure in a positive light, thanking her for service and wishing her well in future endeavors. The 8-K notes that the move is not the result of any disagreement with the company’s operations, policies, or practices. Independent coverage at the time highlighted Lynch’s June 2023 arrival amid the North Star strategy and her contributions to the digital transformation that aimed to make the guest experience more tech-enabled.
In the fiscal second quarter of 2024, Red Robin reported total revenues of $300.2 million, up $1.5 million year over year, while comparable restaurant revenue declined 0.8% (excluding loyalty-program changes). The numbers show a cautious but improving revenue trajectory, even as same-store sales faced headwinds. The leadership transition sits against this backdrop, with management signaling a measured path forward as the brand continues to push digital investments and guest-centric improvements.
The numbers and statements underline a measured, momentum-focused approach.
Looking ahead, Red Robin’s North Star plan remains a central guide for how technology, menu innovation, and guest experience intersect to drive growth. Lynch’s exit, balanced by a strong advisory handoff and interim leadership, signals a deliberate approach to risk management and continuity. The trio—advisory role for the departing CTO, interim tech oversight by the CFO, and a future finance leadership transition—illustrates how Red Robin plans to keep momentum while leadership evolves.
With the late-2025 CFO departure, and Christopher Meyer stepping in as interim CFO, Red Robin demonstrates the fluidity of governance in a multi-year turnaround. Meyer brings prior CFO experience from a major hospitality group, underscoring the blend of hospitality and tech discipline the company is cultivating. If the brand keeps velocity on digital transformation and guest-centric investments, it could stabilize operating performance and leverage the repurposed technology stack Lynch helped establish.
If the strategy holds, Red Robin could stabilize and capitalize on the enhanced technology stack.