Taco Bell Franchise Expansion in Midwest
Southpaw adds 43 Ohio Taco Bell restaurants to its impressive portfolio, highlighting franchise growth and strengthening the Midwest QSR landscape.
Jun 26, 2026
Southpaw adds 43 Ohio Taco Bell restaurants to its impressive portfolio, highlighting franchise growth and strengthening the Midwest QSR landscape.
Jun 26, 2026
Discover how Cicis Pizza's rewards program skyrocketed to over one million members in under a year, driving customer engagement and retention. See the lessons for restaurant loyalty programs.
Jun 26, 2026
Darden Restaurants surpassed $13 billion in sales, fueled by robust performance at LongHorn Steakhouse and innovative menu changes at Olive Garden. Explore the strategies driving this industry giant’s continued dominance.
Jun 26, 2026
The fallout of Pizza Hut's mandated AI delivery system rollout has ignited a $100 million lawsuit from a leading franchisee, highlighting crucial franchisor-franchisee lessons for all restaurant owners.
Jun 26, 2026
Founders Table Restaurant Group acquires fast-casual leader Hopdoddy Burger Bar, expanding its reach to over 200 restaurants and accelerating operational growth across the platform.
Jun 25, 2026
LongHorn Steakhouse surpassed $1 billion in quarterly sales for the first time, driven by strong value perception and menu innovation. Restaurant leaders can draw key lessons for thriving when consumer price sensitivity is high.
Jun 25, 2026
Inspire Brands is preparing for an IPO aiming for a $20B valuation. Discover how giants like Arby’s, Sonic, and Dunkin’ are performing as part of this dynamic portfolio.
Jun 25, 2026
Estepp Energy, known for multi-unit brands like Little Caesars, is adding PJ's Coffee to its Kentucky convenience stores, marking a strategic expansion into specialty coffee.
Jun 24, 2026
Carl's Jr. has launched a "Pass on Jack" marketing campaign rewarding loyalty members with a free Sourdough Star burger for driving past a Jack in the Box to reach a Carl's Jr. location- a direct shot at its California-based burger rival.
Jun 24, 2026
Miso Robotics has acquired Zume Pizza’s technology deck, giving new life to pizza automation and food robotics for forward-thinking restaurant operators.
Jun 24, 2026
Learn why profitable restaurants can still face cash shortages, understand the difference between cash flow and profit, and discover strategies to keep your business financially healthy.

You just crushed a massive Saturday night service. The dining room was packed from five until ten, the bar was full, and your ticket times were perfect. A few days later, your bookkeeper sends over your monthly numbers, showing a healthy, double-digit net income. You are officially running a highly profitable restaurant. But then Tuesday hits. Your payroll goes through, your main food supplier auto-deducts their bill, and state taxes are due. You log into your business bank account and your stomach drops. The account is almost empty. How is it possible to make so much money on paper, yet have barely enough cash to keep the lights on? This is the reality of cash flow vs. profit. This core disconnect is exactly why incredibly busy, critically acclaimed, and seemingly successful restaurants close their doors every single day. You cannot pay your cooks or your landlord with "profit." You can only pay them with cash. To survive and grow, you must master the mechanics behind these two very different numbers. Let’s break down exactly why the gap between your profit and your bank balance exists, and how you can take control of your money before it takes control of you.
Before we look at the leaks in your restaurant's finances, we need to establish the basic difference between these two concepts. Profit is an accounting idea. It is the core math of your Profit & Loss (P&L) statement - Sales minus Expenses equals Profit. If you sell a burger for $20, and the total cost of the beef, bun, labor, and overhead to produce it is $18, you have a $2 profit. The P&L records that $2 win the moment you ring the burger into your POS system. It simply measures if your business model works. Cash Flow, on the other hand, is the actual, physical movement of money into and out of your checking account. Cash flow cares entirely about timing. The reason profitable restaurants run out of money is that the timing of an expense on a P&L rarely matches the exact moment the cash leaves your bank account. If your cash goes out before your new sales come in, your business will suffocate, regardless of how much profit you show on paper.

Let's step off the spreadsheet and onto the floor. Here are five real-world scenarios where profit and cash flow split apart.
Restaurant businesses with strong forecasting and inventory controls are generally better positioned to manage seasonal demand fluctuations and rising supplier costs.
Now that you know where the money hides, you must actively manage the gap. Avoid these common management mistakes -
Transitioning from a profit-only mindset to a cash-flow mindset requires building new habits. Implement these routines into your weekly schedule -
Operating a restaurant is incredibly demanding, but all the culinary brilliance in the world cannot save a business that cannot make payroll. Understanding cash flow vs. profit is the ultimate key to staying open. A profitable P&L proves that your food and pricing work; a healthy cash flow ensures that you actually survive to see another service. Take control of your inventory, leverage your supplier terms, separate your tax money, and start managing the actual movement of your cash. Ready to stop stressing over payroll Tuesday and take total control of your restaurant’s financial future? Explore our library of forecasting templates, financial software guides, and expert operational tools at RestaurantAssociation.com to build a bulletproof, cash-positive business.