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Monday, April 18, 2022

How Panera Bread Navigated Covid, the Labor Market, Inflation and More

While Panera Bread is often situated in strip malls alongside other fast casual restaurants, the company has long been a pioneer of using quality ingredients and promoting healthy choices. It was among the first companies to add calorie counts to its menus, and it maintains a “No No List” of more than 150 substances — such as high-fructose corn syrup and aspartame — that it will not use in its recipes.

Niren Chaudhary, the company’s chief executive since 2019, did not make his career working with companies with the same focus. He spent 23 years with Yum Brands, building out fast food chains such as KFC in his native India, and then was a senior executive at Krispy Kreme for six years before joining Panera, which also includes Caribou Coffee and Einstein Bagels.

Since taking over, however, Mr. Chaudhary has embraced the mission and pushed Panera to find ways to help combat climate change. The company did an analysis to understand which of its ingredients had the most impact on the climate, and is working on using more sustainable products. It is sourcing more renewable energy for company operations. It has committed to becoming carbon negative by 2050. And it has begun disclosing how carbon-intensive each item on the menu is.

“Twenty-five to 30 percent of greenhouse gas emission comes from food,” Mr. Chaudhary said. “We contribute a lot to the problem as an industry, so therefore we as a food industry have to do something about it.”

This interview was condensed and edited for clarity.


How did your childhood in India influence your career over the years?

India is a spiritual country, and it’s kind of shaped me and my very core. My philosophy is that the best way to practice spirituality is to just be a good human, and being a good human is the best form of religion. That means focusing on your actions and not being so obsessed about the outcomes. The right outcome will happen if there is sincerity of purpose. That really shaped me growing up.

How has your relationship with food changed during your time in the restaurant business?

Food is such an emotional expression and an experience of life. It becomes a catalyst to bringing people together and to create fantastic memories.

I’ve been in the restaurant business for 30 years, and have always been drawn to quality brands that are leaders in their own categories, and that focus on doing the tough things in pursuit of their core values. What’s important to me is they are the highest-quality expression of what they can do in their respective sectors.

Do you believe the international spread of the American diet has had a deleterious effect on overall global health?

In developing markets and a country like India, where organized food retail doesn’t exist, there is a mega opportunity to create high-quality, consistent food experiences that are accessible to the masses. That just doesn’t exist. And it has the other multiplier effects of improving the back end of the supply chain, creating more jobs and more educational opportunities for the youth. So I think it has a very distinctive and definitive role to play.

Of course, brands have to be responsible, have an impact agenda, to serve the communities, to be responsible, to lead on things like diet and environment and so on. If you’re not moving in that direction, you will have a limited shelf life.

And do you think the arrival of chain restaurants has been a good thing for health and diet and cuisine and culture in India in particular?

I would unhesitatingly say yes. It depends on how these global brands show up, but ones that arrive with a lot of respect for the local communities, local culture, and form a bridge with the local host country will be successful, because you’re serving a need of a consumer. And there are some other significant multiplier effects in a country like India for the economy at large. So I would say absolutely.

Panera doesn’t fit neatly into the fast casual or fast food category. How do you explain how the company is different from other restaurant chains?

We want to make this world happier and healthier because of the quality of our ingredients. The way in which we deliver it is with food that is good and also good for you, and that you feel good about eating.

A lot of Paneras are outside major metro urban centers. Are you finding that what you just described — food that is good for you and fresh ingredients — is something that now really plays to a national audience?

Undoubtedly. It is becoming a core expectation of consumers that are eating out, especially as the pandemic settles. Consumers are getting more and more conscientious about what they put in their bodies, and also about the impact their food has on the environment around us, and on the planet.

Ten years ago, we were the first brand to make transparent the calorific value of our food, and then everybody followed. Recently, we were the first brand to make transparent the carbon footprint of our food, and we’re hoping that others will follow as well.

How are you going to make food that people crave and that’s actually still healthy and has good ingredients? Those two priorities have often been at odds with each other.

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