Coach Joe Austin

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Coach Joe Austin

Coach Joe Austin

@CoachJoeAustin

Christian. Father. Husband. Business Strategist. 2x National Champion Powerlifter & 7x TX record holder. 7x Football Champ. Matthew 6:33; Jeremiah 29:11.

Katılım Ağustos 2012
475 Takip Edilen14.3K Takipçiler
Coach Joe Austin retweetledi
Geekdaddy
Geekdaddy@Geekdaddy75·
Chuck Norris reading Chuck Norris facts. RIP LEGEND ⚘️
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Joe Cockerham
Joe Cockerham@JoeCockerham·
@koontzjr_ Not a wing t guy, but have run it before. Hard to get Gs to understand when to log. They get it, but I was never good at getting them to do it on the fly.
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Andrew Koontz
Andrew Koontz@koontzjr_·
Wing-T coaches on this app — I always hear that buck sweep is an “expensive” play, but have yet to hear it explained as to why it’s an expensive play. What’s the reasoning behind that claim?
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Coach Joe Austin
Coach Joe Austin@CoachJoeAustin·
@HwnElectric Can you please work on improving infrastructure? Specifically, keeping lines trimmed back from vegetation. Take a drive on Kam Hwy & you know we're one limb away from YET ANOTHER long outage. 13 years windward side. So many long outages. Please be better after this. We deserve it
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Hawaiian Electric
Hawaiian Electric@HwnElectric·
5p #OahuOutage update: All customers are urged to stay prepared for potential extended outages through the remainder of the weekend as the storm continues to make its way across the state. hwnelec.co/y9By50YujMS
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Coach Joe Austin
Coach Joe Austin@CoachJoeAustin·
Retailers, take note. Cut the customer experience at your own peril:
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

Red Robin is a case study in how to kill a restaurant chain from the inside out. In 2015, the stock hit $92.90 per share. Revenue peaked in 2017 at $1.4 billion across 573 locations. Families loved the place. Bottomless fries. Birthday parties. “Gourmet” burgers when that word still meant something in casual dining. The brand had real equity. Then management panicked about rising minimum wages and made the single worst decision in the company’s history: they fired all the bussers. January 2018. CEO Steve Carley cut bussers across every location, eliminated expeditors, and replaced kitchen managers with generic “back-of-house” roles. The logic was pure spreadsheet thinking. Labor costs were rising, so remove labor. The savings looked great in quarterly earnings. The second and third order effects were catastrophic. Tables stopped getting cleared. Wait times ballooned. Walkaways increased 85% year over year. 75% of the dine-in traffic loss came during peak hours, the exact window when the restaurant makes money. Ticket times out of the kitchen jumped a full minute on average. Customers who waited 20 minutes for a table and another 20 for a burger stopped coming back. Red Robin’s own CEO at the time, Denny Marie Post, admitted the damage was self-inflicted. And here’s the compounding problem. While Red Robin was gutting its own service model, it simultaneously launched a “Tavern Double” value menu at $6.99 to drive traffic. Orders of the cheap burgers jumped from 9% to 15% of all orders, which cratered the average check. So Red Robin was now serving worse food, slower, in a dirtier restaurant, at a lower price point. That combination is how you enter a death spiral. Meanwhile, 16% of locations were in malls. Mall traffic was already declining. Those locations saw 5.5% sales drops versus 3% at standalone stores, dragging the whole system down. Management acknowledged the problem quarter after quarter and did nothing about it for years. Five CEOs in 10 years. Think about that. The one leader who provided stability, Michael Snyder, was with the chain from 1979 to 2005. After that, it was a revolving door. Every new CEO launched a new turnaround plan. Every plan was abandoned by the next CEO. The North Star plan. The First Choice plan. New menu rollouts. Loyalty program reboots. None of it addressed the core issue: they’d trained an entire generation of customers to think of Red Robin as the place where the service is terrible. The contrast with Chili’s makes the failure even clearer. Kevin Hochman took over Chili’s in 2022 and did the opposite of what Red Robin did. He simplified the menu, invested in operations, launched a $10.99 “3 for Me” deal that went viral on TikTok, and let the food speak for itself. Chili’s just posted 31% same-store sales growth. Red Robin’s comparable revenue was down 1.2% for all of 2024. Both chains were in roughly the same position three years ago. One chain invested in the customer experience. The other spent a decade cutting it. Red Robin’s $65M market cap and Chili’s $3.3B market cap tell you which approach works. The stock went from $92 to $3.61. That’s what happens when you optimize for the quarterly earnings call instead of the customer walking through the door.

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Coach Joe Austin
Coach Joe Austin@CoachJoeAustin·
The Biblical roles of husband and wife are well defined, but often misinterpreted. What does submission and love really mean? Pastor Andy Comer has insight: youtu.be/MGeAHdkTBWY?si…
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Coach Joe Austin retweetledi
Antioch Georgetown
Antioch Georgetown@antiochgtx·
Are you ready for what's next in your life? This week's Growing Forward episode unpacks three ways to be spiritually prepared for the future!  Watch or listen on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify. tinyurl.com/2swjxyy5
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Coach Joe Austin
Coach Joe Austin@CoachJoeAustin·
1-Minute Money #8 (How to Develop Your MDP Part 5)
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Coach Joe Austin
Coach Joe Austin@CoachJoeAustin·
1-Minute Money #7 (How to Develop Your MDP Part 4)
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Coach Joe Austin
Coach Joe Austin@CoachJoeAustin·
1-Minute Money #6 (How to Develop Your MDP Part 3)
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Coach Joe Austin
Coach Joe Austin@CoachJoeAustin·
1-Minute Money #5 (How to Develop Your MDP Part 2)
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