Shake Shack Inc. (NYSE:SHAK) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript

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Shake Shack Inc. (NYSE:SHAK) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript November 2, 2023

Shake Shack Inc. beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.17, expectations were $0.09.

Operator: Greetings and welcome to the Shake Shack Third Quarter 2023 Earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce our host, Michael Oriolo, Senior Director at FP&A and IR. Thank you, sir. You may begin.

Michael Oriolo: Thank you and good morning, everyone. Joining me for Shake Shack’s conference call is our CEO, Randy Garutti and CFO, Katie Fogertey. During today’s call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures which we believe can be useful in evaluating our performance. The presentation of this additional information should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for results prepared in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliations to comparable GAAP measures are available in our earnings release and the financial details section of our Shareholder Letter. Some of today’s statements may be forward-looking and actual results may differ materially due to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those discussed in our Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on February 23, 2023.

Any forward-looking statements represent our views only as of today and we assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements if our views change. By now, you should have access to our third quarter 2023 Shareholder Letter, which can be found at investor.shakeshack.com in the Quarterly Results section or as an exhibit to our 8-K for the quarter. I will now turn the call over to Randy.

Randy Garutti: Thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. We’re really proud of the team’s strong and sustained execution of our strategic plan. Shake Shack remains laser focused on profitable growth. This quarter, we grew total revenue by 21% to $276 million with 2.3% growth in same-Shack sales. We achieved average weekly sales of 74,000, trailing 12-month AUV across our Shacks at $3.9 million. We grew system-wide sales by 24% year-over-year to $439 million as we built Shacks across new and existing markets. Sales began the quarter strong in July and moderated a bit through the end of the quarter in September. However, October has reaccelerated with same-Shack sales over 3.5% as we increased various digital and in-Shack marketing initiatives driving October traffic well above September trend.

In the quarter, we continued to improve profitability, increasing Shack margins to over 20% again, with expansion of 400 basis points year-over-year. We grew third quarter adjusted EBITDA by nearly $16 million to $36 million, up over 80% year-over-year. And we improved our adjusted EBITDA margins by 430 basis points growing from 8.7% last year to now 13%. We also continue to grow our footprint around the globe, opening 25 Shacks in the third quarter, 10 company-operated and 15 with our licensed partners. We’re on a path to open approximately 80 Shacks this year system-wide, roughly 18% unit growth, and we are building a robust pipeline of growth in the coming years. Our licensed business continues to perform, and we see tremendous white space in this highly accretive and asset-light part of our business.

We expect to open approximately 40 Shacks this year and approximately 40 more in 2024. With a fair amount of global macro and geopolitical headwinds, we expect to navigate a more challenging environment in the coming years, and this is why we’ve built a diverse portfolio domestically and around the globe to help offset regional volatility. We’ll move deeper in existing markets with proven and newer formats like drive-through, as well as enter several new markets in the coming year. In our company-operated business, we’ve opened 30 Shacks so far this year, well on our way to open approximately 40 before year-end. Looking ahead, we have 20 Shacks under construction, and if you recall, last year we had a much more heavily weighted fourth quarter.

We’re really proud of the team for better executing a balanced year with a strong class of 2023. And our 2024 pipeline is solid as we target approximately 40 new openings next year. We’re also working through new prototypes for the long-term, with a 2024 target to bring down our net investment costs by about 10% from today’s average cost. Now, let me give you an update on how we’re tracking on our strategic plan. Our first priority has been on recruiting, rewarding and retaining a winning team. And similar to what we reported last quarter, we’ve achieved some of the best turnover and retention numbers we’ve seen, and we’re generating more than twice the team member applicant flow compared to last year. Not only our team members staying longer, competitive wages are also attracting more candidates, which is contributing to better operational execution and profitability in our Shacks, this commitment to our workforce remains unwavering, and we’re constantly exploring avenues to enhance their experience and provide more opportunities for career growth within the company.

Our second priority is a relentless focus on our guest experience. We continue to execute a broad culinary strategy of improving our core menu while delivering exceptional LTOs that keep operations running smoothly and efficiently. In July, we offered our Bourbon Bacon Burger, which sold out quickly. At the start of August, we pivoted to marketing a core menu favorite our Avocado Bacon Burger and Chicken Sandwich, before launching our Hot Chicken and Spicy ShackMeister Burger at the start of September. And while guest reception for our current hot menu has been solid, we do have a tougher compare towards the end of the quarter as we lapped last year’s launch of our Hot Ones LTO, which started off especially strong due to the very high number of media impressions we received with that partnership.

We’ve also been featuring Spicy Fries, one of our strongest fry LTOs to-date. Our Lemonade lineup, featuring Harvest Berry, Cherry Hibiscus and Kiwi Apple, has also resonated well with guests. As we look to the rest of the fourth quarter, we’re excited about additional brand building opportunities in culinary, including our Holiday Shake lineup that just hit Shacks yesterday. We’ve teamed up with Universal Studios for their launch of the Trolls 3 movie, Trolls Band Together and we’ll be serving a series of shakes based on characters in the movie, highlighting Poppy’s Sugar Cookie complete with blue and pink cotton candy topper that resembles the iconic Troll’s hair, Branch’s Chocolate Peppermint and Viva’s Cinnamon Roll. This is our first national offering in partnership with a movie and we’re excited for these delicious and fun shakes just in time for the holidays.

Many of our Shacks are proximate to movie theaters, giving us the opportunity to benefit and play a unique role in partnering with films. And we have an engaging marketing strategy lined up around Trolls, including both messaging, advertising and many Shacks as well as social media activations. Some of our Shacks will even have special activations for kids this coming weekend, including glitter bars, coloring stations and photo booths. Our third priority, our targeted development strategy and improving returns on our Shacks. Our recent openings have performed well, including a number of drive-throughs as we continue to learn more about what makes an optimal Shake Shack drive-through site and build out. We opened four more drive-throughs in the quarter and one in October through Washington State, Utah and Texas, bringing the total to 21 company-operated.

We continue to score well with our guests on overall satisfaction and order accuracy, and we’re proud to win an Innovation by Design award from Fast Company, highlighting our team’s work. That said, we know in drive-through and in-Shacks generally, some of our biggest areas of improvement remain consistency, speed and throughput. And this is going to be a big focus for our designs and operational improvements through 2024. Our licensed business showed strong performance overall in the quarter as we opened our first resort Shack in the Bahamas at the Atlantis with a dramatic format that includes a full service bar. Later in the quarter, we opened our second Shack within Incheon Airport in Seoul and we continued deepening our footprint in China.

Our domestic license Shacks performed well by continued strength in U.S. airports and the opening of four more domestic roadside Shacks, which we believe can be a growth opportunity for us. We remain highly confident in the long-term trajectory of our licensed business, but we do expect that geopolitical pressures and uncertainty, namely in the Middle East and Asia, could present pressures into the fourth quarter and into 2024 in terms of our number of openings and sales. Our fourth priority, driving more profit in our Shacks. The team is doing really great work focusing on the profitability opportunities in our restaurants. We expanded our third quarter restaurant margin by 400 basis points year-over-year to 20.4%. Our second consecutive quarter where our restaurant margin grew back above 20%, showcasing the continued progression of our strategic priorities.

We’re winning share in our own more profitable channels and our kiosk rollout has made our best channel even better from a profitability and guest experience perspective, there are many pressures that lay ahead including an unknown consumer backdrop and beef inflation. However, we are focused on driving continued improvements that help us outperform historical patterns in light of these cross currents. And finally, the fifth pillar of our plan. As we build an enduring business, we are committed to investing with discipline. We’re deploying capital towards strong returns in four main areas building Shacks, updating current Shacks, investing in digital infrastructure and structuring our home office capabilities to support our restaurants. We’re moving purposefully to address opportunities in the supply chain operations, leveraging G&A and long-term cost-to-build.

We remain committed to reducing build costs next year by about 10% as well as preopening costs by at least 10% per Shack. As we continue to lead with discipline and capital allocation in 2024 and beyond. We’re excited to see our strategic plan driving improvements as we continue the evolution of Shake Shack. We remain one of the fastest growing publicly traded restaurant companies and we’re growing profitably while strengthening our brand and our opportunity ahead. I’ll now hand it off to Katie to share more about the details of the quarter and expectations for the fourth quarter.

Katie Fogertey: Great. Thank you. Good morning. We’re pleased with the company’s performance in the third quarter as we drove a material 400 basis points of margin expansion and grew adjusted EBITDA by more than 80% year-over-year to 13% of total revenue. That’s a 430 basis point improvement versus last year’s levels. While industry trends remain challenging, we built our 2023 priorities as a roadmap to deliver improvements in our profitability and cash flow even against a less certain consumer spending backdrop and ongoing inflationary pressures. Our momentum has picked up in October with 3.5% same-Shack sales and approximately flat traffic, a meaningful improvement since September and we are strategically executing opportunities to drive profitable traffic growth across our Shacks.

Onto our third quarter results, total revenue was $276.2 million, up 21.2% year-over-year, driven by strong performance in new Shack openings system-wide and positive same-Shack sales. We grew system-wide sales by 24.3% year-over-year to a record high of $438.9 million. We ended the quarter with 495 Shacks system-wide, up 23.1% year-over-year with approximately 40% of our system-wide sales in the quarter generated by our licensed business and about 60% from our company-operated Shacks. In license, we are executing ahead of plan and are pleased with the many strong recent Shack openings as we entered new markets and deepened our presence in existing markets. In the third quarter, along with our licensed partners, we opened 15 new Shacks growing our total license Shack count to 215.

We grew sales by 30.1% year-over-year to $173.9 million. We’ve opened 39 Shacks in our license business year-to-date, and we’re targeting opening about 40 in fiscal 2023. On the company-operated side, we grew Shack sales 20.7% year-over-year to $265 million, supported by 10 Shack openings, including four drive-throughs plus the continued strong performance of recent NSOs and 2.3% year-over-year growth in same-Shack sales. Our sales cadence in the quarter resembled more of a normal return to pre-COVID seasonality than we’ve seen in recent years, with a stronger July then softening in August and September. Pre-COVID September sales typically fell seasonally from August levels around back to school. In more recent years, traffic patterns between August and September have been more muted, but beyond seasonality that was more pronounced in our urban Shacks, we are also navigating a backdrop of consumer spending pressures on restaurants broadly, on top of other macroeconomic factors.

We’ve also faced some headwinds from weather through the quarter with a particularly rainy East Coast and the hurricane in Southern California, which we believe together represented a loss of approximately $500,000 in sales. We lapped some digital marketing promotions from last year and comped over the highly successful Hot Ones LTO at the end of the quarter. But importantly, we are encouraged by the momentum we saw in October. Despite transitioning from high single-digit to now low single-digit menu price, October same-Shack sales grew 3.5%, with approximately flat traffic and positive same-Shack sales growth both in-Shack and in our digital business. Traffic also improved in all of our regions compared to September levels, with the strongest improvement seen in our Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions.

October AWS of 74,000 grew 1.4% year-over-year. We continue to drive more guests back to in-Shack dining, and we’re also leaning into various strategies in marketing and operations to navigate these uncertain macro waters, with opportunities to pulse on value-added offers in our own and third-party digital channels. We’re still focusing on our premium ingredients and delivering hospitality as well as further optimizing our four-wall performance. We’ve seen strong returns from our free Friday promotion and our afternoon Happy Hour BOGO shakes, plus we’ve had opportunities to dive deeper in select markets with performance marketing strategies, all of which are driving traffic and sales into our own channels. We grew third quarter Same-Shack sales for our in-Shack channel by approximately 9%, with benefits from high-single digit menu price, continued tailwinds from our Kiosk retrofit program and positive traffic growth.

A cook in a busy kitchen preparing a delicious cooking of burgers and fries.

Mixed headwinds improved sequentially from the second quarter aided by strong demand for our premium sandwich and spicy fry offerings. Kiosk sales now represent well over half of our in-Shack sales and are up more than 140 basis points year-over-year. Kiosk is our highest margin channel and we remain very pleased with the at least high-single digit checklist we’re seeing with this order mode versus traditional cashier sales in the Shack. We’re also testing some new capabilities to continue to drive enhanced upsell in this channel, which is now our largest order mode across our company operated store based. Net stronger in-Shack trends helped offset some of the pressure from seasonality and lapping digital promotions driving a positive 2.3% Same-Shack sales and negative 4.2% traffic.

Shack level operating profit was $54 million, or 20.4% of Shack sales. That’s 400 basis points better versus last year despite continued inflationary pressures across our four-wall P&L as we delivered the strongest flow through our restaurants have seen in over two years. Food and paper costs were $77.2 million, or 29.1% of Shack sales, down 180 basis points versus last year and up 10 basis points versus the second quarter. Blended food and paper inflation rose mid-single digits year-over-year led by beef up low-double digits and continued inflationary pressures in buns, chicken, plus fry costs up more than 15% year-over-year. Paper and packaging cost decreased low-single digits year-over-year as we benefited from a lower degree of off premise mix.

Last quarter, we shared that our supply chain team was working on opportunities to help offset persistent inflationary pressures. From adding new vendors to improving freight, we have already identified and are executing against some of these strategies. Most of these cost savings will come later in the fourth quarter and into 2024, but we are deep in a body of work to identify additional areas for continued and meaningful improvements through 2024 and beyond. Labor and related expenses were $76.2 million, or 28.8% of Shack sales down 60 basis points versus last year and up 10 basis points quarter-over-quarter. We continue to leverage our labor strategies that we outlined last quarter, including improved forecasting and labor scheduling and driving broader Kiosk adoption.

You might recall that we, as well as the broader industry faced some very real staffing pressures in the second half of last year. We have a significantly improved staffing backdrop here today with the best hourly and manager retention that we’ve seen in years. But even with this more pronounced seasonality pressures in the quarter and a marked improvement in staffing levels with just more people available for shifts, our new scheduling capabilities and management have allowed us to be more efficient with our labor usage. We are proud of the progress here, but it’s also important to note that we have delivered this improvement despite the many headwinds that add to our overall labor costs including the larger degree of team members needed to support our dining rooms with the return of in-Shack traffic and our commitment to improving the guest experience as well as the significant wage investments we’ve made in our team members.

But importantly, we’re not resting here. We expect to continue to show benefits from these improvements in labor strategies that set our team members, our managers and our Shacks up for success in the coming years with improvements on deployment, refinements to the order journey, and more scalable and consistent processes. As we scale, we have a greater diversity of formats from larger drive-throughs to streamlined food courts and a variation in menu and channel mix across our restaurants on top of efficiencies like Kiosk, it’s the right time to refine and evolve our labor model as well as a broader staffing and deployment standards. This work is rooted in, in time, in motion studies and various variables that will help us to staff to best optimize the unique needs of each of our Shacks.

This will give our operators much improved tools and we will update you as we test and roll this new staffing system out to the Shacks this quarter and into 2024. We plan for this methodology to also enhance how we train and open our Shacks and reduce the overall drag on our P&L from new Shack openings as we aim to reach optimal profitability at a much faster pace than today’s performance. Other operating expenses were $37.3 million, or 14.1% of Shack sales down 120 basis points from the third quarter of 2022. Our strategy to reduce R&M expenditures has lowered this expense per store week by $300 year-over-year. We also benefited from lower delivery commission expenses per store week as more guests returned to in-check dining but we’re anticipating that delivery sales will pick up in the fourth quarter in line with recent historical patterns.

Occupancy and related expenses were $20.3 million or 7.7% of Shack sales down 20 basis points from last year’s levels. All in, we are very pleased with the level of margin improvement we delivered in the quarter and we continue to build back our profitability, which is vital for our long-term growth. G&A was $30.9 million, excluding $200,000 in severance costs, G&A was $30.7 million, or 11.1% of total revenue, 70 basis points favorable to last year. We showed strong leverage on this line in the quarter with G&A ex-severance expense up just 14.1% year-over-year versus total revenue that grew 21.2% year-over-year and system-wide sales up 24.3% year-over-year. We continue to believe that we have a meaningful opportunity to make greater investments in our direct marketing spend to drive sustainable long-term traffic growth.

As we continue to show progress in leveraging home office G&A investments, we’ll look to open up additional funds to invest in strategies to drive traffic while also still delivering on our strategic priorities to invest with discipline and enhance our cash position. Preopening costs were $5 million in the quarter, up 63.4% year-over-year as we opened 10 Shacks in the quarter versus only two in the third quarter of last year. We are seeing higher preopening expenses per Shack due to an increase in labor expenses, other operating expenses and occupancy. A majority of preopening expense is non-cash – of preopening occupancy expense is non-cash rent. We’re seeing higher costs here driven by extended opening timelines. We’re also experiencing elevated labor and other operating expenses most of which are impacted by development pipeline pushes around items including utilities and availability of critical equipment needed at the end of a project that can cause unanticipated delays in opening.

We have plans in place around development, training and operations to get tighter on execution here as we target lowering our preopening expenses by at least 10% per Shack in 2024 versus this year’s levels and further opportunity to lower these costs in the coming years. With a combination of strong four-wall performance and disciplined spending in G&A and other places, we grew adjusted EBITDA by more than 80% year-over-year to $35.8 million, or 13% of total revenue, up from 8.7% of total revenue last year. In the quarter, depreciation was $23.1 million, up 24% year-over-year as we continued to invest in new Shacks in our business. We realized net income attributable to Shake Shack Inc. of $7.6 million, or $0.19 per diluted share. We reported an adjusted pro forma net income of $7.5 million, or $0.7 per fully exchanged and diluted share.

Our adjusted pro forma tax rate excluding the impact of equity based compensation was 12%. Finally, our balance sheet remained solid with $285 million in cash and cash equivalents and marketable securities at the end of the quarter, a decrease from $295.2 million in the prior quarter, representing a material improvement in our cash usage versus last year despite having opened more than twice the number of Shacks by the end of the third quarter compared to last year. In fact, our third quarter CapEx declined 3% year-over-year to $38.3 million with Shack CapEx representing the majority of the spend followed by our IT spend. We invested more to maintain our Shacks as our early generation fleet ages and completed the bulk of the expenses around the Kiosk retrofit program.

These investments were somewhat offset by a lower degree of CapEx investments in our digital business as we scale our current offerings and leverage in-Shack dining experiences. In the last few years, our CapEx has been elevated due to the higher costs for new Shack builds, heavy investments to build our digital platforms as we went from effectively no digital sales pre-COVID to approximately 30% of our business currently and we executed a number of special projects including the rollout of our Kiosk retrofit program. But we’re committed to bringing the net cost to build of our 24 class down by about 10% next year as a starting point and we’re also finding efficiencies in other areas of CapEx spend, including IT. Now onto guidance, which reflects the degree of uncertainty around the spending outlook and inflationary headwinds.

This range does not reflect any unknown additional delays to our development schedule or any changes to the macro landscape beyond what we are experiencing today. For the fourth quarter, we guide total revenue of $276.25 million to $281.75 million with $10.25 million to $10.75 million of licensing revenue, approximately 14 company operated openings, approximately five licensed Shack openings and for Same-Shack sales to be up low-single digits year-over-year with low-single digit menu price and relatively consistent mixed trends in the fourth quarter as we had in the third. Our guidance for the full quarter to achieve low-single digit Same-Shack sales assumes we return to more typical seasonality patterns in November and December. While we’re not providing guidance beyond the fourth quarter just a reminder that we will lap the popular White Truffle Burger LTO starting in February.

This was our most expensive LTO ever and drove traffic, so lapping it will likely be a headwind to our traffic price and mix. We have a strong LTO lineup planned for next year. However, we’re going to be keeping an eye on this tougher compare. We’re guiding 4Q restaurant margins to be approximately 19%. Our guidance for the fourth quarter is a material improvement from historical seasonality and reflects the least amount of menu price we have carried since early 2021 despite ongoing inflationary pressures. Historically, our fourth quarter average weekly sales have been the lower end of seasonality and Shack-level operating profit margins have compressed by approximately 300 basis points versus the third quarter. Our fourth quarter guidance reflects food and paper inflation to be up mid-single digits year-over-year driven by beef up mid-teens.

We expect labor inflation to be in the low-single digit range year-over-year. Our full year 2023 guidance calls for total revenue of approximately $1.08 billion, growing about 20% year-over-year, Same-Shack sales to grow by mid-single digits with high-single digit price, we expect licensing revenue to reach $40.5 million to $41 million, restaurant margins of 19.7% to 20%, that’s 220 basis points to 250 basis points improvement from last year’s levels. We guide 2023 G&A of $125 million to $128 million. This is absent the $3.5 million in non-recurring costs that are excluded from adjusted EBITDA year-to-date. At the mid-point G&A would be 11.7% of total revenue that’s approximately 90 basis points of leverage versus 2022 levels. Other guidance points, we are lowering our equity-based compensation expectations to approximately $16 million, guiding pre-open to be $17 million to $19 million, depreciation of $88 million to $93 million and adjusted pro forma tax excluding the impact of equity-based compensation to be 16% to 18%.

Altogether, based on our performance so far this year, we are raising our fiscal 2023 adjusted EBITDA to $125 million to $130 million representing approximately 70% to 80% growth year-over-year. Thank you. And I’ll turn it back to Randy.

Randy Garutti: Thanks, Katie. I want to end today’s call with a moment of celebration as well as sharing our focus heading into 2024. Last week, our team celebrated the opening of our 500th Shake Shack globally. On behalf of our entire team past, present, and future, this milestone means so much to us, and the organization is incredibly excited for the possibilities that lay ahead. Now, here’s a quick snapshot of where the team is aligning our focus and strategic plan for 2024. First, our core focus will be on delivering a consistent guest experience. We know our guests love the Shack. Our next phase of growth has to be more consistent and we’ll be working to improve throughput, speed, and consistency across all our Shacks, focusing on a back to basics operation strategy of excellence in every interaction.

Second, we’ll grow sales and strengthen our brand. As we’ve grown Shacks to 33 states and 18 countries and with many more to come, our brand is incredibly strong. And in 2024, we’ll focus on driving that brand even further and deeper around the globe, connecting with our fans in new ways that can drive traffic, sales and brand awareness. Third, we’ll continue our journey to making Shake Shack even more profitable. We remain committed to improving Shack margins in the next year to expense discipline in all areas of the company, including G&A and to ensuring profitable growth as we scale. We’ll be honing in on near and long-term strategies to scale our supply chain, improve our labor and efficiency in Shacks, improve our throughput to maximize peak sale hours and improve profitability across channels.

We believe there are several opportunities to continue to grow long-term profitability, we’re doubling down on those strategies to execute in 2024 and beyond. Fourth, we’ll optimize and improve how we build in open Shacks. While retaining the exceptional experience Shake Shack is known for. We’re on our way towards new prototypes and standards throughout our future Shack classes that are lower costs over time and create an improved guest and team member experience while driving strong returns on capital. And finally, we will continue our lead focus on developing and rewarding high performing teams. Our people lead everything we do, every burger, every interaction and every feeling that Shake Shack creates and we’ll continue to invest in them.

Team’s looking forward to what’s ahead and we hope we see you soon for a hot chicken and a troll shake this holiday season. With that, operator, we’ll go ahead and open up the call for questions.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: Thank you. We’ll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Brian Vaccaro with Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Brian Vaccaro: Thank you and good morning. I had two questions just on the development side kind of from two different angles. First, you talked about opportunities to improve operations throughput, et cetera, that you’ll be studying as you go through 2024. Could you add any further context just on where some of those opportunities might be? Perhaps you could comment on maybe how much variability there is in the system today. Maybe the gap between the most efficient units to least efficient units, of course, for controlling for sales, maybe just start there if we could.

Randy Garutti: Yes. Thanks, Brian. Look, there’s a lot we’ve always – it would relatively still a small company, right? We’re just around 300 company operated restaurants not quite in the United States. And over that time, you end up with various eras of kitchen design and of overall restaurant design. Where we’re headed is a kind of two pronged approach. We’ve got to look at the continued build of the Shack of the future, bringing down that cost and really aligning on the best longer term kitchen design. Most of our opportunity will come through how we move food through our kitchen and the flow of expediting how we make things is not going to change, right? We have standards of our premium ingredients and the way that we cook that we expect to continue, but we can do it faster, we can do it better, we can do it with a greater sense of urgency more often.

And it takes for us, some of the steps of focus, number one, making it – making throughput and speed. This has not been things that has been our core focus in the past. And I think it’s the thing that operations and our teams are really working on right now to say, hey, it’s going to be about this in 2024. It’s going to be about every second of the day watching this, making sure we’re consistent. And knowing that a Shake Shack guest can count on what they’re going to get when they come. And we know there’s variability. I don’t think there’s an easy way to answer to the second part of your question, which is, well, is it about sales? Is it about lower sales versus higher sales? I mean, anyone who’s worked in restaurants their whole life can tell you the easiest thing in the world to do is run a busy restaurant.

The hardest thing to do is one, one that’s sometimes busy and not busy other times. And so I don’t think there’s an immediate correlation other than we’ve got to have the right staffing models, Katie talked a lot about that, which we are continuing to get better at. And we’ve got some new systems that we’re putting in place from a lot of learning and work through this year. Making sure we’ve know aces in places, as we call it, and the team’s doing the right thing at the right time. So I think there’s just a ton of opportunity there. It’s where we’re going to focus and we’re just going to continue to look at everything we can to simplify where we can and move our guests through a consistent experience. And that is kind of – that is what you heard very clearly today, is what we are focused on for next year.

Brian Vaccaro: All right, that’s great. And thinking about the second lens, sort of the opportunity to lower development costs an expected 10% decline in 2024 is a nice down payment. But I’m assuming there was only so much you could do given the lead times on pipelines, et cetera. I guess looking out a few years beyond that, is there any way to ballpark a reasonable expectation on where your net development cost could land three years from now. Is low twos reasonable, maybe sub-two? Is there any way to dimensionalize that or too early at this point?

Randy Garutti: Well, I think what we’re going to guide to is what we’ve said today, which is we think this year was the high water mark. We believe we can take that down by about 10%. There’s a number of ways we’re going to do that, right? It starts with format, choice and design. We’ve got new prototypes for our drive through. We’ve learned so much with the 2021 that are open and more and we know we can take down those costs. We’ve designed that new prototype. We’re going to begin to build it. But that takes time. As you said, the restaurants will open next year in 2024 were designed in 2022, identified in 2021 in many cases and you’ve got to catch up to that backlog. You can’t just tomorrow change and put together a new prototype.

There will be elements of cost savings that you’re going to start to see in 2024, which is what we’re committed to with our 10% decline. As we look ahead, we’re committed to continuing to take that down. What we got to make sure though is that we continue to balance the formats, right, as we learn to build drive throughs, those are more expensive. They will get less expensive for us as we build a better prototype. But we believe that that should be some part of our class as we move forward. And we’ll keep doing that opportunistically. As we build our core Shacks, the kind of Shacks that you know for the majority of the things we’ve built over time, we believe we have opportunity to bring those down and that’s what our classes in 2024 and as we look ahead to 2025 and getting a strong pipeline, we’re committed to continuing that work.

And look, what’s unknown is continued inflationary pressures. We’re finally starting to see, I would say, a little bit of lightning on the contractor side of the pressures that you were really hard to build restaurants. You follow all these companies, everybody’s still in the same thing. There are literally still today restaurants where you’re struggling to get the final HVAC equipment or electrical panels and those things. I expect those pressures to lessen quite a bit in these coming years and hopefully that’ll help us towards these goals. So yes, you hear our commitment loud and clear. We’re not going to give a number of pass next year. And by the way, I want to call out too, we also talked about preopening costs. We know, that’s a number we’re focused on that we can and will do better next year and believe there’s opportunity beyond that as well.

Operator: Our next question comes from Sara Senatore with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Katherine Griffin: Hi, this is Katherine Griffin on for Sarah. Thanks for the question. I think, first, I just wanted to ask about some of the restaurant level margin components in the third quarter, specifically, on restaurant other operating expense, looks like that was down year-over-year as a percent of sales. So curious how much of that was leveraged in restaurant sales versus delivery, which I think has higher margins. And then also just on food margins a little bit better than expected, is that a function of sales mix or commodities a little bit more favorable?

Katie Fogertey: Great. Hi. So on other OpEx, we did have a lower – we did have a benefit from a lower delivery mix in the quarter, but we also had some pretty good savings on things like R&M and lower T&E expenses, which contributed to that outperformance in the quarter. We’ve been just doing a lot in line with our strategic plan with better managing that expense line in our restaurants from not only improving the profitability in our third party delivery channels, but also through R&M strategies of replacing equipment that was aging and more expense discipline within our restaurants, just showing some nice performance on that side. On the food side, we did have a benefit from higher menu price. I will say, though, that beef inflation did pick up, especially towards the end of the quarter, and that is one that we are watching here as we’ve guided for kind of mid-teens level of inflation into year-end.

Katherine Griffin: Great, thank you. And then, Katie, I actually was curious about some of your earlier comments just on scaling some of the digital investments that you’ve made. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more just about the timeline, I guess, how long it’s taken to achieve some of those, like, scale benefits from investments. And then how do you measure return on investment for some of that – for those digital initiatives?

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