Grateful for Hospitality
Tom Harrison spent nearly three years in fintech before opening Ace Pizza in Victoria Park - one of London's hottest new pizzerias - with his partner Rachel. He joins Mason to unpack what changes when you finally own the place. How he filters the avalanche of hospitality tech pitches, why his staff get 45-hour contracts as policy, and how a 72-hour fermented dough became the pillar everything else runs through. Episode summary Tom Harrison walked away from hospitality burnt out, spent nearly three years in a fintech startup, and came back on his own terms to co-found Ace Pizza in Victoria Park with his partner Rachel. In this episode, Tom tells Mason what actually changes when you own the place. How he filters the cold-email tide of hospitality tech vendors. Why his staff are on capped 45-hour contracts as policy rather than aspiration. And how a 72-hour fermented dough became the pillar everything else hangs off. A candid look at building an independent restaurant in 2026 without selling out the values that brought him back. About the guest Tom Harrison is co-founder of Ace Pizza, the Victoria Park pizzeria he opened with his partner Rachel last July. His career spans pubs, bars, breweries and ops roles across UK hospitality, followed by nearly three years at a fintech startup building a customer success team before returning to hospitality on his own terms. Ace Pizza as a brand goes back around eight years, originating as the pizza offer at the Pembury Tavern in Hackney Downs before growing through pop-ups and residencies into a standalone restaurant. Key topics covered * What three years in tech actually taught Tom about looking after a hospitality team * Why most hospitality SaaS pitches deserve to be ignored, and how he filters the noise * Using technology to give staff more time with the guest, not less * Founding a restaurant with your romantic partner without blowing it up * The 72-hour fermented dough that underpins every Ace pizza * Pizza and cocktails as a model, not pizza and pints * Why 45-hour contracts are policy, not a target * Letting the team create cocktails inside clear brand guardrails * The 20-inch pizza as theatre and shared experience * A measured two to three site growth plan for 2027 onwards What we discussed 1. Tom's career arc from hospitality into fintech and back, and the burnout that triggered the move 2. What "value" actually meant for him - not pay, but how he was looked after 3. Three years in fintech, the comms skills he carried over, and the disappointment of no office slide 4. Why hospitality tech is finally catching up, and why Tom is hypercritical of the pitches in his inbox 5. The blue sky thinking trap when bringing startup tools into a restaurant 6. Founding Ace together - Rachel as back of house creative force, Tom as front of house 7. The Cornwall mini-sabbatical that confirmed they wanted London, and a restaurant 8. Bringing tech-world standards (contracts, capped hours, holiday) back to a hospitality team 9. The honest exit interview that called out the gap between blue sky promises and reality 10. The dough story - biga, 72 hours of fermentation, and Ace's hybrid Neapolitan-New York style 11. The Honey Pie, hot honey's slow burn from Paulie Gee's in Brooklyn to UK supermarkets 12. Pizza and cocktails as the restaurant model, and the spicy honey margarita as the signature 13. The Palmtini, the Capiche, and letting the team own cocktail R&D inside clear guardrails 14. The 20-inch pizza, the New York R&D trip, and why menu Tetris matters 15. Summer 2026 capacity, in-house marketing with Cat, and protecting the dine-in experience 16. Why people want Ace Pizza specifically - brand, neutrality, attitude, local energy 17. The next 12 months and a measured plan for two to three sites by 2027 Key quotes "We try and use technology in a way to support. I think it's really easy to get lost and say this piece of QR code, et cetera, will do everything that you want it to do. We're trying to hold on to some of the kinda more traditional ways of looking after people." - Tom Harrison "Pizza is the core for us. The dough is paramount. If we get that right, then everything kinda follows." - Tom Harrison "There's a reason more and more people are getting into pizza kitchens. It's a really good business model. And what we've chosen to do is elevate that experience and add more variety to it with the rest of the menu." - Tom Harrison "A friend of mine said it's business ownership is 80% janitor, and that really rings true some days." - Tom Harrison Key takeaways 1. Be hypercritical of every hospitality tech pitch you receive - stagger implementations in, never react overnight 2. Tech should buy your team more time with the guest, not replace human interaction with a QR code 3. The most transferable skill from tech to hospitality is hyper-comms - across email, copy, staff and guest relationships 4. Cap working hours by contract and policy, not by hope - 45-hour contracts, overtime rolled into the next week, holiday actively encouraged 5. Innovation inside clear brand guardrails outperforms top-down menu design - trust the team to create, and they will Keywords hospitality, hospitality tech, pizza, London restaurants, Victoria Park, Ace Pizza, Tom Harrison, hospitality SaaS, restaurant tech stack, opening a pizzeria, leaving tech for hospitality, fintech to hospitality, restaurant ownership, founding a restaurant with your partner, staff retention, 45-hour contracts, sourdough biga, 72-hour fermentation, Neapolitan New York hybrid pizza, hot honey pizza, Honey Pie, Paulie Gee's Brooklyn, Mike's Hot Honey, spicy margarita, Palmtini, Parmesan vodka martini, cocktails in restaurants, neighbourhood pizzeria, Hackney hospitality, independent restaurants London, Pembury Tavern, Five Points Brewery, restaurant marketing, in-house marketing, Grateful Hospitality Podcast, Grateful net, episode 3.
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