Behind the Numbers

How La Calle Tacos Turned Street Food Into a Numbers Machine

46 min · I går
episode How La Calle Tacos Turned Street Food Into a Numbers Machine cover

Beskrivelse

Ramon Soriano sold 4 million tacos in ten years, and he can tell you exactly what that looks like stacked, lined up, and weighed. He can also tell you how La Calle Tacos went from a 13% net profit margin to 32%. In this episode, the founder and CEO of Houston's La Calle Tacos joins hosts Marc Cohen and Rich Sweeney to break down the systems behind one of the most efficient independent operations in the business. A third-generation restaurateur who has opened roughly 80 restaurants across his career, Ramon shares the origin story (a three-month build that took nine months), how he marketed the restaurant before it had a single guest, and the food writer whose review drove 500 people through the door in a week. Then they get into the numbers: liquor cost tracked to the ounce with a 1.5% variance target, books closed five days after period end, and emergency purchases cut from 5% to under 1%. Ramon explains how he built two menus on a single line to stay efficient at any volume, why he tends to raise prices before his competitors, how he's converting a bar concept ahead of the World Cup, and why two guests recently told him ChatGPT sent them. His closing hot take cuts against the noise: keep to the basics, build around your brand, and remember it's about love. Behind the Numbers is presented by Restaurant365. Connect with Ramon on LinkedIn and find La Calle Tacos across Houston. Franchise opportunities are available now.

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28 Episoder

episode How La Calle Tacos Turned Street Food Into a Numbers Machine cover

How La Calle Tacos Turned Street Food Into a Numbers Machine

Ramon Soriano sold 4 million tacos in ten years, and he can tell you exactly what that looks like stacked, lined up, and weighed. He can also tell you how La Calle Tacos went from a 13% net profit margin to 32%. In this episode, the founder and CEO of Houston's La Calle Tacos joins hosts Marc Cohen and Rich Sweeney to break down the systems behind one of the most efficient independent operations in the business. A third-generation restaurateur who has opened roughly 80 restaurants across his career, Ramon shares the origin story (a three-month build that took nine months), how he marketed the restaurant before it had a single guest, and the food writer whose review drove 500 people through the door in a week. Then they get into the numbers: liquor cost tracked to the ounce with a 1.5% variance target, books closed five days after period end, and emergency purchases cut from 5% to under 1%. Ramon explains how he built two menus on a single line to stay efficient at any volume, why he tends to raise prices before his competitors, how he's converting a bar concept ahead of the World Cup, and why two guests recently told him ChatGPT sent them. His closing hot take cuts against the noise: keep to the basics, build around your brand, and remember it's about love. Behind the Numbers is presented by Restaurant365. Connect with Ramon on LinkedIn and find La Calle Tacos across Houston. Franchise opportunities are available now.

I går46 min
episode How a CPA-Operator Built an Accounting Firm on Top of 23 Restaurants cover

How a CPA-Operator Built an Accounting Firm on Top of 23 Restaurants

Kristen Sandhurst sits on both sides of the restaurant equation: she is a partner at Edotto, an accounting firm built to serve restaurant operators, and the CFO of an affiliated franchise group running 20 Taco John's and 3 Slim Chickens locations. In this episode, hosts Marc Cohen and Rich Sweeney talk with Kristen about what actually moves the numbers in a restaurant operation right now. The conversation covers the prime cost math that matters (sub-60% prime cost, supplies at 1.25%, repairs and maintenance at 2 to 3% for middle-aged buildings), how a 300 basis point cost of goods improvement came from getting one client to count inventory for the first time, and why an organized chart of accounts is the foundation for every financial insight that follows. Kristen also breaks down her family's tech stack journey from 20 years on Microsoft Dynamics to Restaurant365 and Paylocity, and how she has been using Claude and ChatGPT to build automations, draft legal agreements, log 70 scanned PDFs into a spreadsheet, and even build a Chrome extension to fix a clunky accounting interface, all without writing code herself. You will also hear why her group pulled AI out of the drive-thru after testing it at both concepts, where restaurants bleed money without realizing it (food cost and water bills top the list), and her hot take on unattended QSR dining rooms. Whether you operate one location or a hundred, this episode gives you concrete benchmarks, actionable workflow ideas, and a framework for thinking about AI as task replacement rather than job replacement. Hosted by Marc Cohen and Rich Sweeney Featured Guest: Kristen Sandhurst, Partner at Edotto Brought to you by Restaurant365: https://www.restaurant365.com Subscribe to Behind the Numbers on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts. Follow Restaurant365 on Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn @restaurant365.

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episode Inside a $52M Airport Hospitality Business cover

Inside a $52M Airport Hospitality Business

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23. april 202654 min
episode PK Karamchandani on Building Balance Pan-Asian Grille cover

PK Karamchandani on Building Balance Pan-Asian Grille

Prakash Karamchandani -- PK -- co-founded Balance Pan-Asian Grille in 2008 with nothing but credit cards and a college roommate. Today Balance runs four corporate locations in Ohio, generates roughly $3 million AUV per store, and carries zero debt. On this episode, PK breaks down the operational and financial systems behind those numbers. The conversation covers the badge-based pay structure that has driven a 4.6-year average hourly tenure (vs. an industry standard below 12 months), with a maximum pay rate of $24.50 per hour and a current average just over $21. PK explains how 70% of revenue flows through a proprietary mobile app with no per-order fees, how the bubble tea bar alone accounts for 20-22% of gross revenue, and how the company tracks $2,000-per-hour peak throughput and keeps labor below 24% using daily badge density data. He also talks through the indoor vertical farm in Detroit that supplies the restaurants as a separate LLC, what rising build-out costs (from under $500K pre-COVID to $800K today) mean for their expansion plans, and how usage data in Restaurant365 gave them the leverage to negotiate floor stocking agreements with packaging suppliers during the 2021-2022 supply chain crunch. Balance has maintained positive same-store sales every year since COVID. 2026 is shaping up to be the company's biggest transformation year yet, with a new app, new POS stack, new operations director, and corporate store growth back on the table.

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