Today’s interview is with Will Beckett of Hawksmoor, a rapidly growing restaurant brand in London, and follows on from my recent interview: Customer service, people and how caring does scale – Interview with Gary Vaynerchuk #1aDayQandA
It was when they ranked No. 36 in the Sunday Times’ 100 Best Small Companies to work for in 2012 that I decided I’d like to find out more about what makes them tick and what makes them so successful.
This interview makes up number forty-eight in the series of interviews with authors and business leaders that are doing great things and helping businesses innovate, become more social and deliver better service.
Here’s the highlights from the interview I did with Will:
About Will (bio taken from a recent piece in The Caterer and Hotelkeeper)
Will Beckett (right in the picture) and Huw Gott (left in the picture) co-own the Underdog Group, which owns and operates four Hawksmoor steak restaurants in London. The group’s turnover for 2011 was £10.6m, up from £3.7m in 2010
Friends since the age of 11, Beckett and Gott first teamed up to open Shoreditch bar the Redchurch, in London in 2003. Beckett was studying for a masters in modern history at UCL at the time while Gott had managed to convince a friend to part with £100,000 to set up a business and, needing help, asked Beckett to assist. The pair formed the Underdog Group in the process and the Redchurch soon became a popular local haunt in east London.
Initially scared by the prospect of doing food, the pair were tempted into a full F&B offering at their next site, Green and Red, also in Shoreditch, following a trip to Mexico together. On their return they found authentic Mexican food hard to come by in London so decided to do it themselves, opening the bar and cantina in 2005. Next came gastropub the Marquess Tavern in London’s Islington in 2006, before the pair launched the restaurant with which they were to become synonymous – Hawksmoor, which opened in London’s Spitalfields later that year.
This was followed up by a second site in London’s Seven Dials in 2010 and Guildhall in 2011 – during which time the group jettisoned Redchurch, Green and Red and the Marquess to concentrate on Hawksmoor – before the pair added a 60-cover bar to their Spitalfields site and a fourth restaurant in London’s Piccadilly in 2012.
As well as proving very capable restaurateurs, the pair have also become highly regarded employers, and take pride in their position of 36th in the Sunday Times Best Small Companies to Work For 2012 list.
If you are in London you should check out one of the four Hawksmoor restaurants. You can also follow and connect with Will on Twitter @HawksmoorLondon.
Photo Credit: Lynn Friedman via Compfight cc
9 Comments
Hello Adrian
Thanks for this, I had not even heard of this company or the two guys running it. There are the folks who talk about employee empowerment. And what they mean is that the employees are still in jail. And the jail is a little bigger, a little prettier. Then there is real employee empowerment. The kind where employees were never empowered because their power was never taken away in the first place!
What spoke to me were the following points, in particular:
– Hawksmoor wanted to go the other way and recruit people that were different but that all worked to the same standards.
– If you work for the company you are, essentially, ask to come and be a good version of yourself.
– That means that each table in the restaurant will get a slightly different customer experience dependent on the waiter/waitress they get but the standards will be the same.
– That has helped Hawksmoor attract and retain great people
– Will believes that Hawksmoor’s primary role is to make sure their staff are happy and their staff’s primary role is to make sure that the customers are happy.
– A key part of Hawksmoor’s culture is the saying “Work hard and be nice to people”
– The restaurant industry is littered with examples of businesses that do one of those things but not both. They are trying hard to do both.
Of these what I found interesting was the point about customers getting a slightly different customer experience at each table as the people serving them have their unique ways of being/showing up in the world. Why interesting? Because I have never bought into the consistency argument that just about everyone bangs on about. As a human being I get bored with consistency, I like variety, I welcome the right degree of novelty as long as that novelty is pleasing in some way. I like good surprises and I suspect that you do too.
Maz
Hi Maz,
I am really pleased that this interview resonated with you, as it did with me. What I love about doing these interviews is uncovering ‘gems’ of businesses and ‘gems’ of business practice. No theory just stuff that is working in the real world. It’s a fun thing to do but I also learn a huge amount every time I speak to an innovative and successful entrepreneur.
Thanks again for your comment it makes what I do worthwhile 🙂
Adrian
Adrian / Maz, I read the article and liked exactly the same point
That means that each table in the restaurant will get a slightly different customer experience dependent on the waiter/waitress they get but the standards will be the same.
Though my interpretation was different. I absolutely buy into the consistency arguement. Though here the consistency isn’t in the service, it is in the attitude.
A thought provoking post
James
Thanks James,
Like I replied to Maz, I am consistently amazed at some the findings that I am able to discover and share in doing these interviews.
Adrian
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