AmericanMusic/Events/Other

***** THE DUPREES *****

Posted on January 14th, 2013 · American Coconut Creek Music/Events/Other · 7 Comments »

***** THE DUPREES *****

Wanna know something, that almost nobody else knows?

The Duprees…the mega 1950’s- 1960’s “Doo Wop” group who have sold millions of records- is going to perform a FREE SHOW at the Seminole Coconut Creek Casino on Thursady Night–February 14, 2013 in NYY Steak’s bar-lounge.

Trust Jeff Eats on this one, The Duprees are fabulous. I’ve seen the group’s show a number of times and these guys are about as good as it gets. A real class act.

So…if this “stuff” is your bag, you now know about something that hasn’t been “announced” yet.

One other thing, Whitestone Band—one of South Florida’s premier 1950’s-1960’s cover bands is gonna play sets before and after the show.

I gotta tell you, the Seminole Coconut Creek Casino has really-cooked up a dynamite event for its players.

Just so you know, Jeff Eats and Mrs. Jeff Eats are planning on attending this one.

See you there!!!

AmericanDessertsFast FoodMusic/Events/Other

***** 2013 BaconFest Florida *****

***** 2013 BaconFest Florida *****

Got–what should be a really cool outdoor event for you guys…”2013 BaconFest Florida” which will be held at the Seminole Casino Coconut Creek on February 23, 2013.

Literally, I just got the details from the Casino on this thing…the press release is printed below.
Just so you know, Jeff Eats has seen both The Bacon Brothers Band and The Dan Band—and both groups are dynamite. Throw in the food component of this “deal”–some great weather and you got a terrific-dirt cheap (25 bucks) event in the making.

I’ll now let you read the “details.”
*****
Seminole Casino Coconut Creek is Calling All Bacon Lovers for its 2013 BaconFest Florida on Feb. 23
Featuring Performances by The Bacon Brothers and Comedic Entertainers The Dan Band

COCONUT CREEK, Fla. – Making its debut in the Sunshine State, the 2013 BaconFest Florida, hosted by Chef Todd Fischer from Discovery’s Destination America network show, ‘United States of Bacon,’ will take place at Seminole Casino Coconut Creek on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at 6 p.m. This event will feature performances by The Bacon Brothers and The Dan Band with frontman Dan Finnerty, who is most recognized as the wedding singer from Old School. Tickets are $25 and can be purchased at Ticketmaster.com. BaconFest has become a highly popular event held annually in cities such as Chicago, New York, and Kansas City.

This outdoor concert will be a bacon-lover’s paradise, filled with free food sampling from a variety of vendors offering a bacon-inspired twist on fare from 20 South Florida restaurants. BaconFest will also feature a chef throw down competition with celebrity judges for the best bacon recipes in two categories – ‘Sweet’ and ‘Savory’, as well as a number of fun bacon-related activities. Festival-goers will also enjoy carnival games and a ‘Hog’ bike show. Tickets include all the delicious indulgences you can eat, with drinks available for purchase. Fans can follow all the updates on Twitter via #BaconFestFL.

The Seminole Casino Coconut Creek is opening the event to restaurants/catering companies to participate in this event, with something ‘savory’ or ‘sweet’ made with bacon. Participants will be provided with bacon with which to create their BaconFest fare. For information on how to participate, email info@thebuzzagency.net.

Fittingly, Kevin and Michael Bacon, known as The Bacon Brothers, will headline the evening and perform some of their greatest hits. Long before Kevin launched his prolific stage and screen career, and before Michael became known as a go-to composer for film and television, they were just two brothers from Philadelphia born nine years apart. Now, The Bacon Brothers have celebrated over 17 years as a band and released six albums laden with their trademark gritty rock and a touch of Philly soul.

Their most recent album, New Year’s Day, kicks off with its title track that draws upon Kevin’s experiences but is not directly about him. The infectious second track “Go My Way,” with its laid back, shuffling soulful groove, was also written from a character’s perspective. Having played with the same crew of musicians for all of the band’s existence, the brothers agree that the band is just as much a part of the whole endeavor as the two frontmen. In fact, each member of the band produced a couple tracks each for New Year’s Day.

The Dan Band, a comedy band from Los Angeles created by actor and comedian Dan Finnerty, will also be on hand to entertain the crowd. Finnerty caught America’s attention as the foul-mouthed wedding singer in the hit film Old School, performing his now-infamous rendition of “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” as well as his other appearances in Todd Phillips’ movies Starsky & Hutch and The Hangover.

What started as a joke for Finnerty singing “I Am Woman” at a karaoke bar has spiraled out of control into The Dan Band – a cult hit that has garnered rave reviews from The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, Variety, Rolling Stone and Entertainment Weekly. Their TV concert special “The Dan Band: I Am Woman” was executive produced by Steven Spielberg, and the group has appeared on numerous television shows such as Jimmy Kimmel Live, Ellen, The Tonight Show, Last Call with Carson Daly and many more.

The Dan Band plays to sold out crowds across the country and has released two albums, The Dan Band Live followed by Ho – A Dan Band X-Mas, and is currently working on a third with Comedy Central Records titled The Wedding Album.

BaconFest Florida is strictly for guests age 21 and over. Tickets start at $25* and are available at http://www.ticketmaster.com/Baconfest-Florida-tickets/artist/1813999. *Additional fees may apply.

About Seminole Casino Coconut Creek

The all-new Seminole Casino Coconut Creek is South Florida’s hottest place to play. With its recent $150 million expansion, the entertainment destination now features 65 table games of live Blackjack, Baccarat, Pai Gow Poker, Let it Ride and Spanish 21 plus a High-Limit area and lounge on a 100,000-square-foot casino floor. The new second floor non-smoking Stax Poker Lounge offers high stakes no-limit action including Texas Hold ‘em, 7-Card Stud and Omaha Hi Lo tournaments. More than 2,300 Las Vegas-style slots include Wide-Area Progressive Jackpots and Mega Jackpots. Three new restaurants – the upscale NYY Steak, Sorrisi Italian Restaurant and the New York-style 1st Street Deli – join the award winning Fresh Harvest, Nectar Lounge and Sunset Grill. Taking total guest enjoyment to a new level is The Pavilion, a 1,200-seat concert venue, and the revolutionary Player’s Club showcasing an innovative and immersive experience eliminating wait times. An environmentally friendly garage with solar energy and green art technology offers 2,400 covered parking spaces. An adjacent transportation hub is outfitted with valet service and a bus lounge for ultimate comfort and guest convenience. Open 24/7, 365 days, Seminole Casino Coconut Creek is located at the corner of U.S. 441 (State Road 7) and Sample Road at 5550 NW 40 Street. For more information, call 954-977-6700, visit us online at www.seminolecasinococonutcreek.com or www.facebook.com/seminolecasinocococreek. Follow us on Twitter @SemCasinoCoCo.

AmericanMusic/Events/Other

***** TASTE OF CORAL SPRINGS 2013 *****

Posted on January 11th, 2013 · American Coral Springs Music/Events/Other · 15 Comments »

***** TASTE OF CORAL SPRINGS 2013 *****

Got a terrific “charity event” for you guys to attend-TASTE OF CORAL SPRINGS 2013.
Great food, great music/entertainment, worthy charitable organizations.
Past “Tastes” have been extremely well attended.
Trust Jeff Eats on this one—based on the restaurants and bands participating—you will have an absolutely fabulous time.
Just so you know, Jeff Eats and Mrs. Jeff Eats are planning on “being there.”
*****
Event Details:

Date: Tuesday, February 26, 2013- 6:30 to 9 p.m.
Title: Taste of Coral Springs
Tickets: $40-$75.
Please note this a 21+ event.
Purchase your tickets online at www.TasteofCoralSprings.org

Don’t miss your chance to spend a spectacular evening with 750 of your closest friends and bring some Rock N Roll excitement to life with fabulous cuisine from local restaurants and caterers, 75+ wines and spirits, silent auctions, featured entertainment and 60’s themed décor. Fabulous open-air layout with a huge dance floor.

Previous Taste of Coral Springs events have contributed over $323,000 to worthwhile charities including Junior Achievement of South Florida, YMCA of North Broward and the Coral Springs Cadet Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol.

Address:
Coral Springs Center for the Arts 2855 Coral Springs Drive
Coral Springs, FL 33065
For more information contact:
Taste of Coral Springs Committee at 954-341-7191

AmericanSubs/Salads

Hungry Bear Sub Shop (Miami)

Posted on January 7th, 2013 · American Miami Subs/Salads · 2 Comments »

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***** Hungry Bear Sub Shop, 3399 Northwest 72nd Avenue, Miami, Florida 33122, (305) 592-2515 and 10521 Southwest 109th Court, Miami, Florida 33178, (305) 595-8385.

Jeff Eats knows and you guys know that “sub” joints are a dime a dozen down here in South Florida…Like anything else, you got some great ones, some good ones and some crap ones. Well! Hungry Bear Sub Shop is one of the great ones. Just so there is no confusion, there are 2-of them in Miami. Now nothing for nothing, Jeff Eats recently “tried” the 10521 Southwest 109th Court outpost—so I can only talk-on that one…

Now for background noise—I’m going to assume that you guys know exactly what this joint looks like and how it works. For you folks who just came in from Venus or Mars—handful of tables, order at/pickup at the counter—sign board with loads of small/large hot and cold subs, handful of salads/sides.

Sampled “items” included…honey mustard chicken sub, tuna salad sub, cheese steak sub, cheese burger sub. As I intimated about 9 seconds ago, Hungry Bear Sub Shop makes some absolutely dynamite subs. Real-nice crispy sub bread and the “fillings” were all delicious.

You guys do know that this food “reviewing” business is 1000 percent subjective…What Jeff Eats might like–you guys might hate and vice versa. So–I’ll leave it up to you to decide if the right “call” was made here.

Hungry Bear Sub Shop is open Monday-Saturday 10am-8pm and Sunday 10am-5pm.

ChineseFast FoodJapanese

Lee’s Chinese Food Take-Out (Miami)

Posted on January 5th, 2013 · Chinese Fast Food Japanese Kendall Miami · 6 Comments »

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***** Lee’s Chinese Food Take-Out, 7102 Southwest 117th Avenue, Miami, Florida 33183, (305) 271-4891.

Got a real-good Chinese takeout joint for you guys who live/work in Kendall…Lee’s Chinese Food Take-Out.

Let me make this one short and simple…

Jeff Eats has eaten his fair share of South Florida Chinese food—and Lee’s Chinese has to be rated as one of the best Chinese takeout joints that I’ve had the pleasure to come across.


The other evening Jeff Eats and Mrs. Jeff Eats visited with some friends “down” in Kendall—we picked-up some stuff from Lee’s Chinese…won ton soup, egg rolls, pan fried dumplings, bbq ribs, roast pork fried rice, beef with oyster sauce, shrimp with black bean sauce, honey garlic chicken, roast pork lo mein, mushu chicken—now nothing for nothing, I’m telling you that Lee’s Chinese food was right up there with best of breed. Look! Jeff Eats was born in Brooklyn in 1949—and as a result, I am an absolute expert on what constitutes good-great New York-Jewish Chinese food. For the record, from 1949-1991 Jeff Eats fressed (non Jews look-it up) his way through “countless” Brooklyn-Queens-Manhattan-Long Island Chinese joints–so I “say” I know my stuff…and I am telling you, that Lee’s Chinese is real-good. For those looking for some sort of pecking order…my favorites were the egg rolls, pan fried dumplings and the honey garlic chicken—that said, every dish was delicious.

While I’m pontificating here…You guys do know, that there really is no such thing as “bad” Chinese take-out, don’t you? This kinda food is just a matter of incremental degrees. A liter of Coke and a plate loaded with Chinese stuff in front of a tv—and there really isn’t too much to bitch about, is there? Be honest, who here hasn’t eaten cold Chinese food right out of the frig the next morning–or for that matter, just combined Chinese left-overs and then reheated for 90 seconds in the microwave? Everybody does it…and unless you’re from Mars or something, the “next” day stuff always tastes great.

Anyway…before I go off on another Chinese tangent—let’s just say that Jeff Eats really enjoyed Lee’s Chinese Food.

You can check menu/prices at www.leeschinesefood.com.

Lee’s is open Monday-Thursday 11:30am-10pm, Friday-Saturday 11:30am-11pm, Sunday noon-10pm.

Music/Events/Other

***** What Are Your Favorite Lunch Joints? *****

Posted on January 2nd, 2013 · Music/Events/Other · 41 Comments »

***** What Are Your Favorite Lunch Joints? *****

Real simple…What are your favorite South Florida –Lunch Joints?

Music/Events/Other

***** YOUR FAVORITE DIET *****

Posted on December 31st, 2012 · Music/Events/Other · 14 Comments »

***** YOUR FAVORITE DIET *****

The “holidays” are almost behind us (pun intended).

What’s your favorite diet?

AmericanSeafood

Fish Shack (Pompano Beach)

Posted on December 28th, 2012 · American Pompano Beach Seafood · 12 Comments »

fish shack

***** Fish Shack, 2862 Northeast 17th Avenue, Pompano Beach, Florida 33064, (954) 586-4105.

Jeff Eats recently “discovered” an absolutely amazing “mom & pop” fish joint…Fish Shack in Pompano Beach.

Wanna talk hole-in-the-wall? The joint is located in a miniscule bombed-out strip center…maybe table seating for 20 and 5 at the bar. Fish Shack’s menu is loaded with fish-stuff…that said, it has hamburgers, chicken breast sandwiches, wraps, salads and chicken wings for the non-fish eaters that may-be in your party. Outrageously delicious reasonably priced…blackened red snapper–grilled yellow fin tuna–conch fritters–fried oysters–cheeseburger–shrimp burger.

Every so often Jeff Eats comes across an absolute HOMERUN…Fish Shack is a GRAND SLAM!

Like I said a few seconds ago…hole in the wall, fabulous food.

I highly recommend that you try Fish Shack. The bet here–you won’t be disappointed.

Fish Shack is open Monday-Saturday 11am-9pm, closed on Sunday.

AmericanBBQFast FoodLatin

Paradero Original (Fort Lauderdale)

Posted on December 27th, 2012 · American BBQ Fast Food Fort Lauderdale Latin · 2 Comments »

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***** Paradero Original, 3335 East Oakland Park Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33308, (954) 514-7585.

Got an absolutely terrific– order at the counter/pickup at the counter barbecue joint for you…Paradero Original in Fort Lauderdale. Handful of tables inside/a couple of tables outside, that’s it!

You can check menu/prices at www.paraderooriginal.com.

Let me start by saying that Jeff Eats absolutely loved this joint.

Paradero has a real simple menu…St. Louis cut spare ribs, bbq chicken, 6-sandwiches, 1-soup, 1-salad, french fries/sweet potato fries/onion rings—end of story!

A recent outing had Jeff Eats “sampling” ribs, chicken, pulled pork sandwich, french fries, sweet potato fries…Now, trust me here—everything and I do mean everything was delicious.

For those who may-be wondering, Paradero is doing “smoked-stuff”… that said—Chinese rib aficionados and Tony Roma/Bobby Rubino “fans” will find the food just-fine…not too much smoke and a real nice sweet-tangy sauce.

This hole-in-the-wall is an absolute must try…Just that simple!

Paradero Original is open Monday-Saturday noon-9pm, closed on Sunday.

AmericanFast Food

Gyrene Burger (Naples)

Posted on December 26th, 2012 · American Fast Food Naples · 23 Comments »

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***** Gyrene Burger Company, 51 9th Street South, Naples, Florida 34102, (239) 263-4110.

Got a real interesting fast-food/takeout-only burger joint for you…Gyrene Burger in Naples.

Last week–I tried Gyrene out and its burgers/french fries were absolutely delicious.

Printed below is an article that Jeff Eats “borrowed” from the Gulf Coast Business Review…very- interesting story about Gyrene.

You can check Gyrene’s menu/prices/details at wwwgyreneburger.com.

For those interested in this “stuff”…What’s your take on this business and prospects?

*****

Burger Hustle

By: Jean Gruss | Editor/Lee-Collier

November 02, 2012

Tom Monaghan’s Gyrene Burger delivers hamburgers in less than 10 minutes from two stores in Naples.

Can the man who built Domino’s Pizza do the same with hamburgers?

Tom Monaghan, who founded Domino’s Pizza with one store and sold the restaurant colossus in 1998 for a reported $1 billion to Bain Capital, recently launched Gyrene Burger, promising 10-minute delivery of hamburgers.

Now a Naples resident, Monaghan is starting out modestly with two Gyrene Burger stores in town. But watch out, because Monaghan believes the chain could eclipse Domino’s. “There’s that kind of potential, maybe even bigger,” he says.

The trick is to make and deliver a great-tasting burger to customers within a mile-and-a-half radius of the store in less than 10 minutes using mopeds and bikes. Recently, one of the stores in Naples averaged eight minutes. “If I know anything, it’s how to deliver food fast,” Monaghan says.

Gyrene is the nickname for a U.S. Marine and the employees dress the part in military fatigues. They run out of the store, jump on their scooters and salute customers on delivery.

Monaghan has a bigger vision than eclipsing Domino’s success. He hopes that Gyrene Burger grows to the point where it can help fund Ave Maria University in eastern Collier County. Initially, a portion of the royalties will go to fund the new Catholic university, but Monaghan has plans to will it to the foundation he created for that purpose.

Monaghan says he’s grown tired of raising funds for the university, which he funded with the Domino’s fortune in partnership with Barron Collier Cos. “Maybe I can make more money than I can raise,” he says. “One of the things I really missed was the income.”

Monaghan says Microsoft founder Bill Gates called him a couple years ago to join the club of billionaires who plan to give their fortunes away to charity after they die. “I’ve already given 95% away,” he told Gates, fulfilling a vow to give his fortune to Catholic charities.
“He’s very competitive, and so I think he got real bored after he sold his company,” says Gary McCausland, Gyrene’s chief operating officer and the man who oversaw Domino’s international expansion.

Monaghan, 75, fit and trim from daily Stairmaster workouts, intends to grow Gyrene Burger by selling franchises when the two Naples stores become profitable. “We still haven’t got the volume,” he says. “We’d probably have to do 200 burgers a day.”

Delivery giant
Monaghan started Domino’s with one store in Ann Arbor, Mich., in 1960 after serving three years in the U.S. Marine Corps. By the time he sold it in 1998, Domino’s had 6,250 stores and ranked as the world’s largest pizza-delivery chain. At one point, Domino’s was opening three stores a day.

When he started Domino’s, Monaghan says he wasn’t sure pizza would be successful and he considered delivering hamburgers instead. “It was going to be my backup if pizzas didn’t work,” he recalls.

Now, more than 50 years later, Monaghan plans to do with hamburgers what he did with Domino’s. Except now he plans to do it faster.

The key to Domino’s success was free delivery of a tasty, hot pizza in less than 30 minutes. Because it takes less time to make a hamburger than a pizza, Monaghan says his employees can deliver a hot burger within a mile-and-a-half radius in 10 minutes. He estimates it takes about four minutes to cook and assemble the burger and another four minutes for delivery. Like Domino’s, delivery is free.

Back in 1960, pizza wasn’t as popular as it is today and free delivery in 30 minutes was unheard of. Likewise, people today aren’t accustomed to having a hamburger delivered to them free in less than 10 minutes. “Educating the customer is the biggest challenge,” Monaghan acknowledges.

Gyrene Burger has no dine-in seats or tables. Most of its business will be delivery, though it does sell carryout. Monaghan reasons that employees can’t take care of dine-in customers and deliver at the same time. More people are picking up carryout orders than he prefers, but Monaghan thinks 90% of more of the orders will eventually be delivery.

If anyone knows the formula for consistency and fast delivery, it’s Monaghan. “Tom legitimized the delivery business,” says Paul Roney, the former corporate treasurer of Domino’s and now executive director of the Ave Maria Foundation. “He always comes up with a little bit of a twist, like the 30-minute guarantee. That’s part of his thinking and leadership: He’s such an out-of-the-box thinker.”

To consistently accomplish those delivery times, Monaghan had a relentless focus on operations. “He was the best Domino’s pizza manager in the company,” says McCausland. “He made a million pizzas himself.”

Monaghan emphasized timeliness through a variety of incentives. For example, he sponsored competitions with prizes such as a Rolex watch for the fastest pizza maker. The company had a Driver of the Week program that rewarded speedy delivery.

In his autobiography, Pizza Tiger, Monaghan explains his reasoning: “The idea of stressing 30-minute delivery grew out of my insistence on giving customers a quality pizza: It didn’t make sense to use only the best ingredients in our pizza if the product was cold and tasteless when the customer got it.”

Top executives weren’t exempt from being timely. McCausland remembers being late for his first executive team meeting and Monaghan telling him: “You’re 12 minutes late, get up and get out of here and set your watch 10 minutes fast and you won’t be late.”

On another occasion, Monaghan chided McCausland after ending a jog after 58 minutes that they planned together to last 60 minutes. “We’re a time-sensitive company,” McCausland recalls Monaghan telling him. “If you think 58 is 60, how I can I trust you to get delivery times right?”

At Gyrene Burger, Monaghan urges employees to hustle for every order, even it it’s the only one. He personally showed them how to run out the door. “Treat every order as if it’s the first in the rush,” he says. “Everyone who works here has to run a mile in 10 minutes.”

Profitable management
Monaghan’s ability to help others achieve great things is a big reason Domino’s became the powerhouse in pizza delivery. Indeed, Monaghan’s Gyrene Burger business card has “Buck Private” as his title, not CEO. Buck private is the lowest rank in the Marines. “The boss is a servant,” says Monaghan. “That’s why I’m a buck private.”

“I’m big on incentives,” says Monaghan, whose Domino’s store managers earned 30% of the profits on top of their salary. “Domino’s looked like Mary Kay,” he says.

The profit-and-loss statement is posted in every store. “I share financial information with employees,” says Monaghan, whose openness is unusual for a privately held company. “They want to be in on things.”

Monaghan speculates why most privately held businesses don’t share financial information with their employees: “Most businesses are embarrassed to show profits because of how low they are,” he says.

Monaghan always makes sure to chart a path for employees to climb. “Everybody who works here has a ladder,” he says. “I like growth from within.”

For example, in the early days at Domino’s, the company was in danger of losing valuable employees who had become successful managers. So Monaghan devised a system that rewarded franchisees for training managers to become storeowners themselves.

After requiring successful candidates to manage a store for at least one year, employees could open their own franchise. The franchisee who had trained them was then eligible to earn a percentage of the royalties from the new owner.

At Gyrene Burger, Monaghan says he’ll seek out Marine Corps veterans to operate new stores, and he’ll help them finance the acquisition of their stores. “What they have is more valuable than money,” says Monaghan, who has started to advertise the franchises in a magazine for Marine Corps veterans.

The Marine Corps teaches many of the same management skills that Monaghan emphasizes, such as attention to detail, cleanliness and hustle. He’ll ask veterans to put about $15,000 to $25,000 into the business and Monaghan says he’ll finance the rest.

Monaghan estimates a franchisee can get into business for about $150,000, depending on the amount of work that needs to be done for a location. There is a franchise fee of $25,000 and royalties of 6.75% of sales, with 1% going to the Ave Maria Foundation. Monaghan estimates the store’s break-even point is $500,000 in sales.

The menu isn’t elaborate, but neither was Domino’s. Gyrene only offers two kinds of hamburgers ($5.99), French fries ($2.29) and water or Coke/Diet Coke ($1.15). “It’s a pretty simple operation,” Monaghan says.

Monaghan says he’s not in a big hurry to franchise. He wants to make sure every detail of the operation works smoothly before growth can occur and avoid some of the near-corporate-death mistakes he made when he was growing Domino’s. “I’m not going to get ahead of myself,” he says.

Management tool: JP&R
To evaluate employees and their supervisors at Domino’s Pizza, Tom Monaghan instituted what he called the Job Planning and Review (JP&R) system.

An employee fills out a form before sitting down with his manager. Monaghan required this once a month from all his executives when he was building Domino’s Pizza and all employees had to go through this exercise at least once every three months.

The form asks the employee to describe in his own language his job functions or tasks. Monaghan says that’s the best way to find out if an employee understands what he’s supposed to be doing.

On the same page, the employee writes what the manager or the company is supposed to do to help him do his job better. This eliminates many of the petty grievances and helps managers and employees focus on solutions.

The form also asks employees to list goals for the month ahead and how he plans to achieve them. Monaghan says that builds self-esteem as employees achieve the goals they set and helps managers establish accountability.

The final part of the form is for the manager to fill out and share with the employee. The manager rates the employee and the employee has room for comments if he disagrees with the evaluation.

“It’s a great management technique,” says Paul Roney, the former corporate treasurer of Domino’s. “It helps eliminate surprises in both directions.”

Monaghan went further with top executives. Roney says Monaghan asked for the three or four things he had done each day in the form of a daily report. “When I first heard this I thought this is crazy,” Roney says.

But Roney says he learned to appreciate the daily reports he sent to Monaghan. “It’s a communication mechanism, and it’s a way to get constant feedback,” Roney says. “It’s helpful because it makes you think about what you accomplished.”

Management by Tom

Tom Monaghan grew Domino’s Pizza from a single store in Ann Arbor, Mich., in 1960 to a delivery giant with 6,250 stores when he sold it in 1998. Along the way, Monaghan created management tools that helped him grow the company to such lofty heights. These were gleaned from a recent interview with the Business Review, colleagues from Domino’s and his autobiography, Pizza Tiger.

– Build dreams by setting exciting goals. “Goals must be exciting or people won’t be motivated to strive for them.”

– Goals must be specific. “If a goal is specific, it is easy to communicate to others. This is important, because when you’re dealing with a corporate goal, you have to sell it to the people who can help you achieve it. They have to understand exactly what the goal is, they must believe it can be done and they must be convinced that it can be done by them.”

– Communicate goals. “When you tell someone else what your goal is, it gives you reinforcement, added incentive to accomplish it.”

– Work through others. “I realized right at the beginning that I had to do things through other people, and I always tried to hire people who were smarter than I was.”

– Practice defensive management. “Defensive management means taking care of the business you have. I’ve always said that if you just take care of every single customer, your business will grow by 50% a year … that’s it. You don’t need any sophisticated marketing programs. The solution is simple and it’s right before your nose.”

– Write it down. Monaghan always carries a yellow legal pad to list ideas and the pros and cons for each one. “I sometimes compare my brainstorming on paper to the drilling of oil wells. My lists are wells, and every once in a while I hit a gusher.”

– Stay focused. Monaghan says he was successful because he focused on pizza, dropping sandwiches from the menu early in his career. “I’m a firm believer in keeping a business simple.”

– Don’t operate in the Ivory Tower. Get into the stores. Get out of the office. Visit with customers, employees and partners. “I’ve always said that our best ideas come from drivers — they’re out making contact with customers, and they’re usually young and have a fresh vision of how things can be made to work better. We want to share those visions, and any others we can get, all the way up the line.”

– Pay attention to the details. Monaghan likes to quote former Detroit Tigers Manager Sparky Anderson: “It’s the little things that win pennants.” Monaghan was known to show franchisees how to clean a store himself during surprise visits.

– Plow profits back into the business. Monaghan always invested profits back into the stores to focus on the long-term prospects of the business, often sacrificing his own income for that purpose.