The bestselling business book from award-winning restauranteur Danny Meyer, of Union Square Cafe, Gramercy Tavern, and Shake Shack
Seventy-five percent of all new restaurant ventures fail, and of those that do stick around, only a few become icons. Danny Meyer started Union Square Cafe when he was 27, with a good idea and hopeful investors. He is now the co-owner of a restaurant empire. How did he do it? How did he beat the odds in one of the toughest trades around? In this landmark book, Danny shares the lessons he learned developing the dynamic philosophy he calls Enlightened Hospitality. The tenets of that philosophy, which emphasize strong in-house relationships as well as customer satisfaction, are applicable to anyone who works in any business. Whether you are a manager, an executive, or a waiter, Danny’s story and philosophy will help you become more effective and productive, while deepening your understanding and appreciation of a job well done.
Setting the Tableis landmark a motivational work from one of our era’s most gifted and insightful business leaders.
Considered by the New York Times to be "the greatest restaurateur Manhattan has ever seen," Danny Meyer is CEO of the Union Square Hospitality Group. His restaurants have won an unprecedented twenty-one James Beard Awards. His book, Setting the Table, was a New York Times bestseller.
The state of mind at which I finish this book is awash in two dichotomous realities: utter relief, in what has been a persistent journey to finish something so tepid and platitudinous in delivery; and a misplaced sense of pompous accomplishment in doing so. Thus defines the broad crux of my review.
My main aim was to glean some unique insight into management and professional success. I think the restaurant place is an astute metaphor for all business; stress, pressure and human relationships define them. Meyer also published this book years ago, at which time some of his insights would have been less mainstream or common-sensical, with the right amount of experience. But overall, I felt his book was filled with a variety of very political "glittering generalizations" - statements that everyone can agree with, and make him look good.
His attempts to make the book more colorful or personal made the first half of the book almost comical. It was not altogether sensual; he seemed to list off his gastronomical experiences, or lay out personal stories in almost a rosy-colored, Hollywood-fairytale kind of way, rather than emphasize the grit and the grime. Maybe I want to have my cake and eat it too, but I felt he overcompensated for this watered-down, neatly packaged storytelling by extending the personal narrative pages beyond what it should have lasted.
I did not feel that Meyer assessed much of substance until the second half of the book, or more specifically page 139, when he actually put a number in print: "The 51 Percent Solution". That's when he began to apply his vast experience to something useful and formulaic, to be passed on to the eager reading audience.
Overall, this book was a useful reminder, not a novel discovery. It made me hungry for French quiche and schnapps, even if I were imagining Meyer's incredibly white teeth across the table from me.
not poorly written at all, and in fact pretty engaging. i just cant stand danny meyer. basically, if you have a cool 500k of daddy's $$$ and know some shady real estate agents in nyc, you can own a restaurant too!!!
Long considered the modern-day bible of the service industry, Danny Meyer's memoir is the tale of his professional life from the first restaurant he launched to the nine concerns he was running at the writing of this book. Those familiar with dining out in Manhattan will have heard of Union Square Cafe, Gramercy Tavern, and Eleven Madison Park. Lesser known but just as successful were Tabla (Indian cuisine), Blue Smoke (barbeque), Jazz Standard and The Modern (located within the Museum of Modern Art). He is also the engine behind the burger joint Shake Shack, and Hudson Yard Catering. What all of these culinary enterprises have in common, beyond their success and surprising longevity, is that they were designed to put Mr. Meyer's philosophy of hospitality into play.
The man is not driven by the dollar, not in the short-term anyway. He has passed on any number of opportunities to turn a quick buck on his brand. He selects his public relations appearances and restaurant tie-ins with great deliberation. I am, at present, unaware of a mogul alive today who curates his corporate presence with a more fastidious eye. Reputation is a chief concern here, yet Mr. Meyer's focus constricts even further. What means the most to him, and what he has striven throughout his professional life to perfect, is the quality of an experience.
He does not limit this to guests at his restaurants, although they take the most visible portion of his concern. He is also determined to provide a productive experience for those he employs, an entrepreneurial edge for his suppliers, a tangibly-beneficial relationship to the community-at-large, and a secure (if sometimes long in coming) return for his investors. Now, we can all smile in a cynical sort of way and say, hey, that sure looks good on paper, but the fact is Danny Meyer has managed to accomplish all of this in the real world; on the heels of every single risk he took, and on the floor of his every restaurant. And that's nothing short of impressive.
In Setting the Table he tells us exactly how he's done it, from beginning to end. He shares what is important to him, what made a difference, where he sometimes failed, and the few regrets he retains. This is an easy read, and an interesting one, if a trifle self-congratulatory at times. Should you possess a clientele, find yourself working in a service industry, or plan on starting a business you would like to see succeed? Here's some required reading.
I don't think I will ever find a business book that is as great as "Good to Great" but this book is definitely up there in my top two or three. This is an easy to read, and if you love food, gripping book about how to open, develop, grow, evolve, design, run and have fun in a restaurant. Bu it goes way beyond restaurants.
In his introduction Danny says, “In the end, what’s most meaningful is creating positive, uplifting outcomes for human experiences and human relationships. Business, like life, is all about how you make people feel. It’s that simple and it’s that hard.� The rest of the book is all about how he does/did that. There are many lessons in this book that are 100% applicable to libraries.
It is full of gems, those things that you know that you know but you can’t quite nail them down. You can tell that he has spent a lot of time (years) thinking about his philosophies and methods and because of this he has been able to put them into the book in an understandable and interesting way. By the end of this book I not only wanted to (and will) eat at every one of his restaurants, but you want to be his friend. Here is a man who loves life, people, and food. His heart is in the right place and his actions speak as loud, if not louder than his words.
Shira and I actually ate at his first restaurant, The Union Square Café, a few years ago on a visit to New York. Shira still talks about the melt in your mouth Ahi Tuna and Wasabi mashed potatoes. I still remember being amazed that we walked in without a reservation and were seated at a wonderful table. It has remained one of our favorite experiences in New York and now I know why!
A successful restaurant owner shares his philosophy on how to run a successful business and motivate employees similar to the "lead with luv" techniques that were used at Souththwest Airlines, prior to the retirement of Herb and Colleen. Even if you are not in the restaurant business you can learn the difference between good customer service and true hospitality!
i was given this book by the business investor-partner of the restaurant where i currently work bc he and the other owner/investors hero worship this dude and his whole 'hospitality' approach to business. frankly, they can have it. this guy name-drops like a true Manhattan-ite to try to gain credibility, brags about meeting his first chef while in a fist-fight with a customer over their preferred table, and generally comports himself as though he reinvented the wheel when it comes to restaurants and their operation. it's neither charming or nostalgic, which is the tone he seems to be going for in the two chapters that i struggled to finish. what he really did was force Open Table on the majority of the restaurant business, which has been nothing but detrimental to small, privately owned restaurants outside of big cities (and inside them, too), underpay all of his back-of-house staff and then start the 'service included' nonsense to put the burden of giving that back-of-house staff a (much deserved) raise on the front-of house-staff instead of out of his own multi-million dollar pockets, which in turn cost him all his good front-of-house staff (he's since abandoned he practice bc DUH, it didn't work *newsflash*). and now he's heavily invested in the reservation system Resy (so clever) which doesn't cost the restaurant money to use bc Resy tracks the users internet habits (all of them) and sells that money to the highest bidder on the back end. this guy didn't invent hospitality in business - companies and businesses have been practicing good hospitality for eons because they really do care about their customers, instead of seeing them as an endless supply of profit and marketing data. so this guy and his dumb book can get bent. the people i work for and their idiotic business practices annoy me endlessly, just like this stupid book did, and i'm at a loss as to why i bothered to have this book under 'currently reading' for as long as i did. in conclusion, be nice to your customers bc it's just basic human decency, and for heaven's sake, pay your staff a respectable, deserved wage or don't go into business. thank you, i'll be here all week - try the veal, and don't forget to tip your waitress.
Danny Meyer’s New York restaurants survived through 9/11, the downturn of 2008 and not only survived but thrived. How he does it is something every person who deals with customer service should read. He talks about training, hiring the best fit, not necessarily the best qualified, how to maintain your vision when the whole world is telling you you’re wrong and what is important to him in maintaining the high quality he is known for. It takes a while to get into the meat of the book, but once you do you’ll want your own copy so you can make margin notes and put sticky notes everywhere you find a gem.
He calls what he does “enlightened hospitality� but it is actually awesome customer-focused quality service which he implements in a way that might not be what you think would work, but it does. Even the blurb at the front gives a few hints about the wisdom you’ll find inside: “Hospitality is when something happens for you. It is absent when something happens to you. These two concepts � for and to � express it all.� “Shared ownership develops when guests talk about a restaurant as if it’s theirs. That sense of affiliation builds trust and invariably leads to repeat business.� � Err on the side of generosity: You get more by first giving more.� “Wherever your center lies, know it, name it, believe in it. When you cede your core values to someone else, it’s time to quit.�
One of my favorite quotes from inside the book is: “Service is the technical delivery of a product. Hospitality is how the delivery of that product makes its recipient feel. Service is a monologue � we decide how we want to do things and set our own standards of service. Hospitality, on the other hand, is a dialogue� It takes both great service and great hospitality to rise to the top.�
I loved this book. For all human resource managers and customer service representatives this should be a must read for you.
Toot Toot!! That's the sound of Danny Meyer tooting his own horn for 300 pages. Meyer clearly knows what he's doing and has done an impressive job creating his restaurant empire, but I had a hard time connecting with his "lows" and learning lessons of how he overcame them. The best lesson of the book is the importance of investing in the community you serve; I had no idea the impact he had on Madison Sq. Park and Union Square.
I am a huge fan of Danny Meyer and I like most of the book, but then began to get very bored very quickly. I am not sure I even finished it. It does give you good insight into his hospitality philosophy which I admire.
4.5 stars. Second book in a mandatory new joiner book club at work, and my favorite of the two so far. Thoroughly enjoyed on a few levels. Aside from being fascinated by Danny Meyer’s background in the travel industry and the subsequent inception of his legendary restaurants, reading about his leadership style and his approach to management (and hospitality!) while knowing that my founders purposefully picked a book that aligned with their own values made me feel jazzed to be where I am.
His whole vibe is great. He almost seems like a too good to be true businessman and human? Idk.
One tiny and random thing that really struck me was mention of all of the behind-the-scenes play making that he conducts at his restaurants. The level to which he engineered the seating charts after looking at the reservations for the night really made me wonder how many chance encounters may not have actually been so serendipitous.
I also love his take on collecting dots. Alwayyyyyz be collectin�
I don’t know how it took 5 years from my first USHG visit to get and read this book. I also can’t remember the last time I read a book where almost every chapter elicited some visceral emotion, let alone a “business� book.
I have so many fond memories of USHG, both solo and group dining. (I really appreciated Danny Meyer’s acknowledgment and treatment of solo diners early in the book!) And it was amazing to relive those memories through the origins of the group’s principles � the principles that would turn into the generous and graceful hospitality that every patron never fails to receive there.
The last line hit home as it echoes what my friend Kartik and I said once at the Modern bar: “when people choose to become regulars at Union Square Cafe or Gramercy Tavern or Eleven Madison Park or Tabla or Blue Smoke or Jazz Standard or The Modern, or our museum cafes, or at Shake Shack, or Hudson Yards Catering, they’re telling us, ‘This is the place that makes me feel I’ve come home.’�
Of course, at this point, I am superbly biased! I’m so lucky to have stumbled into USHG and the friend group that led me to it.
This book was such a pain in the ass to finish. It was so repetitive and there were literally typos
His empire building seems to have gone so smoothly� it’s like he sanded down his entire career so that it’s smooth like a baby’s bottom. As a result this felt so self-helpy. Is this a self-help book? A business book? Or a memoir? I don’t know. It’s like a long form LinkedIn post.
His concepts are useful and they’re ultimately pretty simple, but he took forever and did a lot of self congratulation along the way
Normally, I enjoy biographies, especially when they're read by the author. If I didn't have to finish listening to this for work, it would've dropped into my abandoned pile faster than a hot potato.
Meyer has some valuable points on hospitality and service, but they are drowned out by an intense amount of context and promoting his business-portfolio. It was like looking for gems in mud.
1) I would've preferred more specific case studies THAT GET TO THE POINT. This felt like reading Henry James, where one sentence lasts for a paragraph.
2) This could've been summed up in an article or blog post
3) Where are your employees' stories? (The best parts were the examples that centered around the day-to-day.)
What's more, the amount of white male privilege and classism was almost nauseating. (I say as a middle class, white enby librarian.) If he included more discussion of these topics, he'd be demonstrating his values more than talking about them. (In my opinion.)
My opinions are informed by a profession where it is predominately white and female, with men in positions of power. In my workplace, I am fortunate to work with some amazing people every day, with women/femmes [ I'm not 100% of how they identify] in the director, assistant director and supervisor roles.
One of the best business books I've read so far. Danny Meyer, a great restaurateur with a huge legacy of high-class restaurants shares his business and leadership mindset from a hospitality point of view. I think the same mindset applies to any kind of business. I'd recommend it to anyone who is interested in becoming a better leader and building great teams, not only to the ones in the hospitality industry.
Although I got tired and a bit bored by the finish I gained a respect and admiration for the expertise and dedication of Danny Meyer. It bodes well for the success of Shake Shack.
This book was published pre financial crisis of 2007, pre pandemic, pre social media - but, with that being said, the basis of this book is hospitality. And that is something that is almost timeless.
Yes this book could benefit with coping with modern times - maybe an anniversary special with one or two more chapters. But all in all a lot of great take aways for restauranteurs and other business working in hospitality alike.
I saw complaints that this book is written by someone who came from a privileged background; and be that as it may, I’ve witnessed a lot of people with money completely miss the mark when they open a restaurant. It’s more impressive how hands on he decided to be in his businesses, very refreshing - especially reading this book as someone who has worked in restaurants!
The book may have started off slow but I’m glad I kept reading. My first thoughts were, this guy cannot teach me anything as he doesn’t know what the heck he’s doing. However, as I continued to read I thought, perhaps it’s not what you start off knowing but what kind of a person you are inside that allows us to learn from our mistakes and make us better because of it. Meyer really grew with his business. He analyzed and perfected his business as he went along and luckily made immediate changes so as not to pull him down but to build his business up. He built a team by “allowing them to be seen and heard.� I felt I was able to watch his career grow from a young inexperienced lad grow to an astute businessman. How fun is that?
I’d be interested in knowing if he has a training manual in place because some of the mistakes his staff made would have been easily avoided with the use of a training manual.
I started reading this book based on a VC's recommendation and express admiration of Danny Meyer. I loved the storytelling and arc with which Danny leads. As I've seen with books from other entrepreneurs, this book mixes a personal story, beliefs, and best practices they followed in their business. Inevitably all leaders focus on management which even Danny does in this book. Some exceptional concepts that I took away from this book are finding the north star of a business, in Danny's case it was "Enlightened hospitality". Gems like "If you'd like to grow then learn to let go", the principle of "Whoever wrote the rule" and "Write the last chapter of the story" will remain etched in my mind forever. Needless to say, having dined in Gramercy Tavern, it was a thrill to read the story of its origin. A must-read.
This is pretty light on any of the blood and guts behind the scenes of the restaurant business but does have its points in terms of the psychology of customer interaction and the selection of employees for your business. Meyer's 51 percent rule of hiring people who bring a greater share of emotional skills vs a lower share of technical skills (which can in most cases be taught and learned) is something of wider use beyond the food business.
For a grittier, albeit fictionalized, view of the Union Square Café group see Stephanie Danler's .
I appreciate the pro-hospitality message of this book, but it's about a hundred pages too long and somewhat repetitive.
When the author talked about his privileged upbringing, he seemed rather humble and down to earth. But when he detailed the openings of each of his restaurants and other various business events, the book began to feel like a really long, boring, arrogant commercial.
Meyer is obviously a foodie, and there are many foreign food terms, especially wine names, that I had no idea how to pronounce. If wine and fine dining is your thing, you'll probably enjoy this.
There is some profanity and a story about a woman's cleavage that I could have done without.
If you want to read an extremely boring memoir of Danny Meyer, this book is for you. If you have taken even a high school level business class, please don’t waste your time.
For the entire first half of the book, every sentence starts with “I”�. Dude shut up and teach me something useful.
Unexpected to enjoy this as much as I did. Just the part on how to work with customers (the 5 A's) made the book worthwhile. Overall a great per-page book and as a non-New Yorker I probably underappreciate Meyer's work.
Once you get past the obscene amount of privilege in the opening chapters and get to how hospitality is the beating heart of Meyer's businesses then this book becomes an excellent read. As a hospitality professional of 10+ years, I'd recommend this to anyone looking to step out on their own.
Took my time with this book. Now I understand why this is Bill Gurley’s favorite book. This is not about how to start a restaurant in NY. It is about how to create a “hospitality driven� environment. Could be teams, company and culture. Highly recommend!
Everything about this book is inspirational - how to treat people, how to build a community, how to build trust and through that, how to build a business