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Chain Innovators: Saladworks

Saladworks has tossed together a fresh concept that during the past two years has kicked off national expansion, unveiled a new look, expanded its array of toppings, switched out its beverage program, and tackled new product development that fits its "tossed to order" service model.

SaladworksBeyond its crisp new design, which the chain calls Saladworks 3G, the changes made are more tweaking than groundbreaking, says president Paul Steck, but they're delivering positive results. Fountain beverage units were removed, for instance, and replaced with bottled beverage display cases that have driven sales and increased check averages. The salad case was reconfigured, too. "In new stores we have a customized case that holds up to 52 toppings. In existing stores, we remodeled the interior of the case to replace round crocks with square melamine ones," Steck says. "It allowed us to increase our toppings by 15 percent to 20 percent and add some upscale options such as tofu, edamame, haricots verts, and some new chicken and turkey items."

Saladworks also found a better way to prepare its Fusion Sandwiches. It switched to conveyor ovens and now runs meat and cheese components through on separate halves of the bread, open-face, before topping them with cold items from the salad case. The change reduced sandwich prep time from 2.5 minutes to 45 seconds, more in line with its tossed-to-order salad throughput.

Those ovens are also being used to test a new pizza product. Like the salads and sandwiches, they're made to order with topping selections from the salad case. Made-to-order soup is in test, as well.

Fast Facts

  • Year founded: 1986
  • Headquarters: Consohocken, Pa.
  • Menu specialties: "Fanatic'ly fresh" menu of salads, wraps, soups, fusion and Panini sandwiches.
  • Service model: Quick-casual; take-out, delivery
  • Units: 92 at end of 2010, all but three franchised
  • 2010 sales: $63,511,751
  • Projected 2011 growth: 12.3 percent increase in revenue, 27 percent increase in units
  • Key expansion markets: Southern California; Austin, Texas; Baton Rouge, La.; Boston; North Carolina; Brooklyn, N.Y.; Washington, D.C.; Annapolis, Md.; northern Virginia; Chicago; New York.
  • Typical location: Downtown locations, strip mall, shopping mall, transportation centers
  • Average unit size: 1,700–2,300 sq. ft. (except mall or transportation locations)
  • Average kitchen space: 30 percent of total square footage, except mall or transportation locations
  • Average covers per day: 250–300
  • Average check: $10.65
  • Total equipment investment per unit: $112,350–$136,000
  • Total unit cost: $343,802–$494,027 (includes franchise fee of $30,000–$35,000)

Key Players

  • Founder, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer: John Scardapane
  • President: Paul Steck
  • Vice President, Finance: Rich Palladino
  • Vice President, Franchise Development: Jason Mattes
  • Vice President, Brand Services: Jena Henderson
  • Smallwares & Equipment Dealer: Singer Equipment Company
  • Food Distributor: U.S. Foodservice
  • Architect: InterArch, Mt. Laurel, N.J.

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