Shake Shack’s CFO talks 1,500-unit goal, drive-thru and restaurant optimization
A sign marks the entrance of a Shake Shack restaurant on May 06, 2022 in Chicago, Illinois. · Restaurant Dive · Scott Olson via Getty Images

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When Shake Shack went public in 2015, it set the ambitious goal of reaching 450 company-owned units. Now, with roughly 330 company-owned U.S. locations, it aims to more than triple that count by reaching 1,500 units.

The chain is pursuing growth in suburban markets, an area of focus since it debuted its first drive-thru in 2021. Shake Shack is exploring small-format locations, as well. The company, which targeted $2.8 million to $3.2 million in average unit volumes in 2015, now boasts $4 million AUVs among company-operated restaurants open for two years.

The once New York City-only chain is seeing vast opportunities all around the country and the world.

“We’re able to have extremely strong unit economics and AUVs in urban markets, in suburban [markets], East Coast, West Coast, middle of country, in the South,” Katie Fogertey, Shake Shack’s CFO, said at the ICR Conference earlier this week.

Restaurant Dive spoke with Fogertey at the event to discuss how the chain determined it could reach 1,500 units, how boosting operational efficiency will help it reach that goal and how the chain is thinking about small-format locations.

Editor’s note: This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

RESTAURANT DIVE: How did you determine you could reach 1,500 company-owned units, up from your original goal of 450?

KATIE FOGERTY: That 450 target was given at a time when the company only had a handful of restaurants, and a lot of them were new restaurants. So we had 31 open at the time of the IPO. Less than half of that was actually in the comp base, meaning they were open two years or more, and had proven, stabilized financials. Many of those were in New York City. There was actually a big question at the time of whether this company could expand outside of core markets like New York City. The format was pretty standard across the board of these large flagship-type places that were in heavy tourist, heavy foot traffic areas.

Over the past 10 years, we now have drive-thrus, we have small formats and are spread into suburban markets. This strengthened our ability to go outside of New York to California to Florida, to really a lot of pockets across the country, and have very strong returns.

We’ve also invested a lot in data and analytics to really understand our business, and we’ve built a great development engine that leverages all of the unique things about what makes Shake Shack work and what doesn’t. We’ve been able to leverage that on top of also all the profitability and improvement plans. We’ve expanded margins by 700 basis points over the past four years. All of that together has given us so much confidence and precision with where we think we can go.