How Sweetgreen Became A $1 Billion Salad Start-Up

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
  • Sweetgreen is now the restaurant world's first "unicorn," valued at over $1 billion. Started by three college friends out of their dorm room at Georgetown University, the salad company has 91 locations with more in the works and is vying to become the digital food platform of the future.
    Introducing The Upstarts, a new series about the companies you love that came out of nowhere and are now everywhere.
    Sweetgreen is the first-ever unicorn salad start-up, luring lunchtime lines across the country with its millenial- and Gen Z-friendly $12 salads. Now, the brand that brought the farm-to-table trend to fast-casual dining wants to be "the Starbucks of salads."
    "If I had told you 25 years ago, when Starbucks only had a few locations, that someday it would be a global phenomenon … nobody would have believed that. ... But, that's what happened," Sweetgreen investor and billionaire Steve Case told CNBC. Today, Starbucks has a market value of nearly $90 billion. "And so that's what we feel with Sweetgreen."
    Like Starbucks, Sweetgreen started with a single store.
    The brand was founded in 2007 after then-Georgetown students Jonathan Neman, Nicolas Jammet, and Nathaniel Ru (who met in an entrepreneurship class) got tired of the unhealthy and uninspiring food options around campus and decided to do something about it.
    "The most delicious food, the coolest food … was all the least healthy," Jammet tells CNBC Make It. "None of them made us feel that good, and we wanted to solve that problem."
    Neman, Jammet and Ru, all now 33, settled on the concept for Sweetgreen - fast but healthy meals that taste good and feature ingredients from local farmers - before they'd even finished taking their finals, and they hosted taste tests of future menu items with other students in Jammet's dorm room.
    "We even had these little anonymous surveys people could fill out," Jammet tells CNBC Make It. (An early iteration of the chain's Guacamole Greens salad was the most popular dish then, he says, and it remains one of the store's biggest fan favorites.)
    The friends raised over $300,000 from 50 investors - mainly family and friends - and three months after graduating, opened the first Sweetgreen in a 560-square-foot shack near the Georgetown University campus.
    The bathroom was bigger than the kitchen, Ru and Jammet remember. "We really had no idea what we were doing," Jammet says.
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    How Sweetgreen became the Starbucks of salads with a valuation of over $1 billion | CNBC Make It.

Комментарии • 649

  • @aroundNYC
    @aroundNYC 5 лет назад +1714

    I've never heard of this company until today.

    • @limmel3588
      @limmel3588 5 лет назад +9

      Same

    • @itzelcanada133
      @itzelcanada133 5 лет назад +5

      Same

    • @Avoug
      @Avoug 5 лет назад +8

      Well, now we have!

    • @zuki9425
      @zuki9425 5 лет назад +38

      maybe its only in places which have upper middle class who can afford it

    • @shadowmaxeomoz
      @shadowmaxeomoz 5 лет назад +19

      that's your CNBC marketing for you! go make them rich..... XD

  • @jfatsnorlax
    @jfatsnorlax 5 лет назад +633

    Okay but is it still a startup if its eleven years old?

    • @cerebrumexcrement
      @cerebrumexcrement 5 лет назад +50

      They’re still taking loans from investors who have cash to burn, so technically, yeah.

    • @Biskwyy
      @Biskwyy 5 лет назад +19

      @Fajitahmed
      That's false. You don't take loans from selling stock, the company sells stock and need not return. The proper term is capital financing.
      Loans are either from issuing bonds or taking loans from financial institutions.

    • @timmylehynokungbowa2229
      @timmylehynokungbowa2229 5 лет назад +8

      @@Biskwyy
      But we know this startup isn't getting loans from investors. They're getting cash equivalent investments.
      The startup word is just overused.

    • @hnktan
      @hnktan 5 лет назад +2

      @@timmylehynokungbowa2229 the don't make a profit so the are star up

    • @DoctorFashion
      @DoctorFashion 4 года назад

      I never had their salad but RUclips gifted me with a voucher for their delivery to try it out and I still haven’t used it .. I definitely want to try it soon !

  • @jimmynguyen8452
    @jimmynguyen8452 5 лет назад +474

    Now I just wanna know what their marketing team do to garnish the attentions of all these celebrities. These guys are geniuses, no cap

    • @lbn4847
      @lbn4847 5 лет назад +27

      its somewhat organic but the sauces are key because they make the salad sooo good. also the name is cute and clean.

    • @zerohour2703
      @zerohour2703 5 лет назад +18

      1 billion dollar for making salad i smell money laundry

    • @unvraigabonais8559
      @unvraigabonais8559 5 лет назад +3

      @@zerohour2703 😏....

    • @bendover2425
      @bendover2425 5 лет назад +9

      Pls don’t say no cap lol

    • @anamira2908
      @anamira2908 5 лет назад +4

      Healthy food thats it

  • @shychick96
    @shychick96 5 лет назад +153

    First food video I watched that didn’t make me crave the food

    • @manujohn99
      @manujohn99 4 года назад +1

      Why not?......you all wanted chicken in it???

    • @joshualebowitz
      @joshualebowitz 3 года назад +1

      Truly admire their business success, but they don’t serve anything appetizing. Understand your point.

  • @fartexpertable
    @fartexpertable 5 лет назад +442

    I feel like the word “Start Up” is being used way too loosely nowadays, because it was initially used for technology companies. They should call this a "chain", which is what it is, a restaurant chain.

    • @germainrodriguez5230
      @germainrodriguez5230 5 лет назад +7

      I agree. I'm hearing it very often

    • @facundomiranda3391
      @facundomiranda3391 5 лет назад +26

      The Word CEO too... Everybody wants to be the ceo of something now... Media always makes everybody behaves like stupids

    • @emilclaudell
      @emilclaudell 5 лет назад +12

      While it is used a lot, I think it can be used broader than simply tech. I think it's fine to use it to describe a young company :)

    • @facundomiranda3391
      @facundomiranda3391 5 лет назад +11

      @@emilclaudell i think that the point is not about the word "Start Up" but the fact that now everybody want to start a company , for the sake itself , and the majority ( obviously ) fail. And the media try to sell you that being a billionaire is easy and everyone must do it

    • @TheNotSoGreatGatsby
      @TheNotSoGreatGatsby 5 лет назад +12

      a start-up refers to pretty much any young business that has the ability to scale in a prospective manner. Opposed to a small business which doesn't have the same element of scalability etc.

  • @KPlyf
    @KPlyf 5 лет назад +179

    Buy organic produce from farmer's market and wash it well... You will have good salad for less...

    • @marishkaspirit
      @marishkaspirit 4 года назад +5

      True. People want even salad made by someone else. Because of lazyness partly, even salad takes a bit of time and effort. Look at ready cut fruits or bread. The more made, the less time you spend on it. We live at such speed, no body has time to put energy even in the food. Which is really sad.

  • @wdai03
    @wdai03 5 лет назад +973

    This is so weird. They sell salad and they're talking about blockchain and DNA testing?

    • @ladhkay
      @ladhkay 5 лет назад +140

      tech is in everything. get with it or be left behind

    • @spinLOL533
      @spinLOL533 5 лет назад +37

      they also need Ai or they are going to fail the crunchy water skynet

    • @bratwurstmitbiryani
      @bratwurstmitbiryani 5 лет назад +114

      they are overdoing it. They are fitting problem to technology and not technology to the problem.

    • @spinLOL533
      @spinLOL533 5 лет назад +12

      Bratwurst mit biryani indeed consumers won't give 2 shits about a blockchain network connected to crunchy water

    • @fr0stmourn3
      @fr0stmourn3 5 лет назад +26

      @@bratwurstmitbiryani No they aren't. A lot of people cannot eat certain foods and don't know it. 23&Me for example alerted me that my DNA is impacted negatively by certain foods. This company knowing this data would allow them to cater specific recipes to the user essentially creatubg a personalised menu that benefits and is tailored to their health.

  • @holdupnow2326
    @holdupnow2326 5 лет назад +227

    This company want their customers DNA to customize which foods you should be eating. 🤔

    • @zerohour2703
      @zerohour2703 5 лет назад +23

      1 billion dollar for making salad i smell money laundry

    • @neo69121
      @neo69121 5 лет назад +24

      @@zerohour2703 i smell a jealous loser

    • @UnbreakableRukawa
      @UnbreakableRukawa 5 лет назад +18

      @@neo69121 who gets jealous watching people eat a bunch of leaves? 🙄

    • @neo69121
      @neo69121 5 лет назад +4

      @@UnbreakableRukawa youd be surprised

    • @jorgearmandorodriguezrodri1740
      @jorgearmandorodriguezrodri1740 5 лет назад +11

      I smell theranos 🤣🤣

  • @ezzie7933
    @ezzie7933 5 лет назад +222

    I was totally down with it until homie said he wanted customers' DNA info wtf

    • @curlyhairdudeify
      @curlyhairdudeify 4 года назад +2

      @Anonymous LOL, plants provide probiotics.

    • @gianni.santi.
      @gianni.santi. 4 года назад +2

      DNA info for customization of the salad
      basically automating a nutritionist's job

    • @KPlyf
      @KPlyf 4 года назад +4

      Never ever divulge more than necessary.. never know what these maniacs are upto.

    • @shivkrishna7706
      @shivkrishna7706 3 года назад +2

      It's a difficult time for brick and mortar businesses like SweetGreen & WeWork. The only way they can get investments from VCs is if they are able to get data of the customers they are catering to. That's why you would see any businesses set up in these times using these words, it might be just a ploy to lure in more investments.

  • @joelfooxiangjie
    @joelfooxiangjie 5 лет назад +135

    The story: "hey, let's see if we can exit and cash out before the next recession when people start asking why they're paying $14 for a salad."

    • @laur-unstagenameactuallyca1587
      @laur-unstagenameactuallyca1587 4 года назад

      LMAO

    • @jolank
      @jolank 4 года назад +6

      I'd like to say this is going to be another WeWork case... But you ca't underestimate the ludicracy of American young overprivileged class.

    • @catpirk
      @catpirk 4 года назад

      oop too late

  • @oSJmee
    @oSJmee 5 лет назад +40

    Salad is like Coffee, a product with a giant margin. 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @Luvurself87
    @Luvurself87 4 года назад +11

    One of the very few places that I actually like eating salad from. Their dressings are the best, especially that lime cilantro one. 😋😋

  • @indriahappy1627
    @indriahappy1627 5 лет назад +64

    Elevent years ago? They build work so hard. Bless them

  • @tourist06
    @tourist06 5 лет назад +171

    This video didn't meat my expectations

  • @inw527
    @inw527 5 лет назад +25

    I feel like they can only sell in New York and California

  • @shankardas6938
    @shankardas6938 5 лет назад +547

    It amazes me people can't make there own salad.

    • @_Wai_Wai_
      @_Wai_Wai_ 5 лет назад +35

      American style salad is crap, lettuce is crap. Give me stir fried chopped garlic with spinach, with olive oil and sauce.

    • @robearhong
      @robearhong 5 лет назад +102

      Amazes me how people still don't know the difference between they're, their, and there. But I'm sure yours was a type-o =)

    • @aroundNYC
      @aroundNYC 5 лет назад +16

      ​@@robearhong STFU

    • @Oscar4u69
      @Oscar4u69 5 лет назад +13

      @@aroundNYC FU

    • @aroundNYC
      @aroundNYC 5 лет назад +2

      @@Oscar4u69 any time and place

  • @fvenf2kbl1xdwxz30
    @fvenf2kbl1xdwxz30 5 лет назад +14

    1:46 the one thing they all had in common. Their shoes!!

  • @bascal133
    @bascal133 5 лет назад +45

    Hundred and $350,000 from family and friends THATS privilege, someone with he same great idea and less means would not have been able to grow this company.

  • @mikealpert4690
    @mikealpert4690 5 лет назад +49

    People want to feel so important and lavish. It's just a salad. Why can't they just make their own salad? It's literally the easiest thing to do right under making your own cereal.

    • @nialante2848
      @nialante2848 5 лет назад +4

      mike alpert lol it’s our generation smh

    • @queentargaryen2801
      @queentargaryen2801 5 лет назад +10

      It would be more expensive if we were to recreate the same exact salad considering we’d have to buy every single condiment and ingredient.

    • @j.a3889
      @j.a3889 5 лет назад +3

      Some people are busy.

    • @curlyhairdudeify
      @curlyhairdudeify 4 года назад +5

      @@queentargaryen2801 Really, a bottle of ranch, some nuts, and a bag of mixed greens? Really that's more expensive than buying it ready made at $14 dollars. Wow.

  • @laurenconrad1799
    @laurenconrad1799 4 года назад +8

    I eat tons of sweet green, but I’m not trying to be trendy or hip. I just want a healthy meal that I don’t have to cook. 🤣

  • @manifestseven4060
    @manifestseven4060 5 лет назад +21

    These are the most filling and satisfying salads I’ve ever had. Worth the price, they STUFF your bowl

    • @jaykay5086
      @jaykay5086 5 лет назад

      Only salad I really like

  • @vickyalexandersieto
    @vickyalexandersieto 5 лет назад +140

    conclusion? american eat overprice salad?

    • @grayonthewater
      @grayonthewater 4 года назад

      Bacchanalia racist. Also one of the founders is not white if you noticed

  • @maleniecedeno1322
    @maleniecedeno1322 4 года назад +6

    I have worked for sweetgreen & I regret working here! The company only cares about making money but treat all employees like crap

  • @RoddieSimmons
    @RoddieSimmons 10 месяцев назад +1

    WoW, I didn't know much about Sweet Green, but that first "shack like" location in Georgetown is a very familiar landmark.😎

  • @wannadare2730
    @wannadare2730 Год назад +2

    Omg. They have great salads. I, literally, just ate a harvest bowl. That's my favorite. 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰

  • @bluerationality
    @bluerationality 4 года назад +10

    Throw in a lot of buzzwords, throw in “local” or something that feels fuzzy and good, and overprice it. Brings in Millenials (I am one too) like crazy.
    Fn blockchain lol

  • @haikalt.9279
    @haikalt.9279 5 лет назад +19

    this isn't weird.
    they even pay $1000 for 'apple'

  • @pedrohernandezjr4340
    @pedrohernandezjr4340 5 лет назад +51

    Wow, 1 Billion valuations, that's when you know we're in a tech bubble. Recession is going to hit hard.

  • @Tinfed
    @Tinfed 5 лет назад +93

    Amazing. I will never know how people see opportunities like this.

    • @ajitnairk010
      @ajitnairk010 5 лет назад +23

      Successful people are always looking for opportunities to help others. Unsuccessful people are always Asking, 'What's in it for me?' - Brian Tracy
      Simple. Find an idea to make life better for people around u. U have ur business. Cheers 🍻

    • @terriesmith8219
      @terriesmith8219 5 лет назад +9

      @@ajitnairk010
      Aaahhhh...you mean like how Elizabeth Holmes was helping everyone with her company "Theranos"? Lmao🤣😆😂😂
      Or Bernie Madoff??
      Or Lehmen brother??
      Or wall street during the 2008 crisis??? 🤣😆😂😂😂

    • @ajitnairk010
      @ajitnairk010 5 лет назад +2

      @@terriesmith8219 . Well, they were so much into helping themselves only. So the results are obvious.

    • @ericdave5786
      @ericdave5786 4 года назад

      I totally agree with you, ask any reasonable investor or a business book, agriculture isnt a stable mrket to invest in...especially easily perishable goods like vegetables.

  • @WelfareChrist
    @WelfareChrist 5 лет назад +4

    I live in Hawaii on Oahu. They should open one here, so many delicious plants grow well here, they’d have an awesome menu.

  • @Manish_Kumar_Singh
    @Manish_Kumar_Singh 5 лет назад +28

    Call me old-school but I still think food's primary purpose is to curtail hunger.

  • @006haloman
    @006haloman 5 лет назад +18

    I’ve never heard of this company until this video.

  • @deandredeshong7287
    @deandredeshong7287 2 года назад +3

    Buying Sweet Green shares every week. Such a hidden gem. Thanks to the CEOs and their team for creating tons of jobs all over in many different ways.

    • @livingalone5737
      @livingalone5737 2 года назад +1

      But they r losing money..

    • @deandredeshong7287
      @deandredeshong7287 2 года назад +2

      @@livingalone5737 They were losing money because during the lockdown because too many of their restaurants were closed and they didn't offer indoor dining, but that's changed this year, just wait until they report their earnings for the upcoming quarter, you're gonna be surprised. Many workers are back in the offices and they order tons of salads from Sweet Green, it's a great reopening play.

    • @grantr1556
      @grantr1556 Год назад +1

      How’d that work for you…

    • @deandredeshong7287
      @deandredeshong7287 Год назад +1

      @@grantr1556 I'm still adding shares each week, it's a good reopening play, all of the locations in the Bay Area are busy. All Sweet Green has to do is mimic where Shake Shack puts stores at, wherever there's a Shake Shack at, it's usually an upscale type of area or high income area.

    • @dh-uo4lt
      @dh-uo4lt Год назад

      Yikes! Maybe shouldve waited for $CAVA

  • @SyruhmZ
    @SyruhmZ Год назад +1

    EVERYTIME I EAT HERE I FINALLY FEEL NORMAL ON EARTH THANK YOU TO THESE YOUNGSTERS FOR PUTTING REAL FOOD IN ROTTEN NYC

  • @wh7824
    @wh7824 5 лет назад +2

    I am not from the US, but Salad Stop is quite doing well in SEA countries, and they are just like Sweetgreen.

  • @mariacontreras7947
    @mariacontreras7947 4 года назад +5

    Love this! Wishing this company more success!

  • @islandbee
    @islandbee 5 лет назад +17

    They mentioned blockchain and cashless. But do they accept bitcoin?

    • @KPlyf
      @KPlyf 4 года назад

      Cashless society is not good. Too much tech dictating our lives isn't right.

    • @islandbee
      @islandbee 4 года назад

      @@KPlyf - Fiat currency is what's bad. Not decentralized currencies.

  • @missn2021
    @missn2021 4 года назад +3

    Good for them and also such a healthy alternative that is not harming people while being produced. Good job.

  • @w1d3r75
    @w1d3r75 4 года назад +5

    I'd love to know where my food and products really come from

  • @ivanohemartin
    @ivanohemartin 5 лет назад +5

    I sold 0.00000001% of my zero revenue company for $100. Call me a unicorn too!

  • @ilove2929
    @ilove2929 5 лет назад +13

    There is a hope for american diet afterall. Glad that did it ❤👏 keep it up

    • @curlyhairdudeify
      @curlyhairdudeify 4 года назад +1

      Really, you call that hope. A corporation feeding you??? Nanny-state

    • @gavip24
      @gavip24 2 года назад

      @@curlyhairdudeify all corporations feed u. The farmers are slaves to monsanto

  • @avayu2289
    @avayu2289 4 года назад +7

    I think it’s great! We need more food company that cares about people’s nutritional needs and health instead of just selling cheap addictive toxins like alcohol,drugs and sugar and chemical soaked ingredients!

  • @nicoyou11
    @nicoyou11 5 лет назад +2

    It's all about customer experiences! Switzerland is welcoming you for your first international expansion!

  • @alpham2914
    @alpham2914 5 лет назад +4

    Here eating salad while watching this...

  • @orangejmoothies
    @orangejmoothies 5 лет назад +3

    Tbh has anyone in these comment been here? Becuase i have, TONS of times in LA. There salads ARE GOOD and ARE friggin delicious and i havent seen a salad place like them in a while.
    They dont just sell those iceberg lettuce terrible salads for “Free”.
    Maybe you think they’re overpriced but in la, they are perfect for that whole scene. And the food is good. Maybe not hte most healthies (they cook all their rice with tons of oil and same with their veggies). But it’s dang delicious and the service is also fantastic.

    • @Juwar1974
      @Juwar1974 5 лет назад +1

      Stop being lazy and make your own fucking salad. Has society gotten to the point where they can't make a God-damn salad?

    • @terriesmith8219
      @terriesmith8219 5 лет назад +1

      I cook at home. It's much healthier and it saves me money so I can live a debt free lifestyle. So I can use all the money I've saved in purchasing more houses and rent it out to millenials who spends $15 for a salad.

    • @orangejmoothies
      @orangejmoothies 5 лет назад +1

      Lol of course it’s better to cook n eat at home. That applies to all food not just salads~
      Tbh i dont remember these salads costing $15 at all...maybe there was a price hike that i dont know about! Either way more power to you for doing what you want to do!

    • @j.a3889
      @j.a3889 5 лет назад +1

      @@terriesmith8219 Some millenials who buy $15 salads are also living a debt free lifestyle. Some people prefer using their time to make millions rather than spend that time making a salad. It is good to cook at home especially to those who enjoy making their food. But not all people are the same. Don't judge others who prefer buying food rather than making them.

    • @terriesmith8219
      @terriesmith8219 5 лет назад +1

      @@j.a3889
      Are you a millionaire?
      And I can judge anyone I want. It's called free will.
      If you don't like it, then take a hike or go pound sand.
      I don't tell you want to do, so who give you the right to tell me who I can and cannot judge??

  • @funny-video-YouTube-channel
    @funny-video-YouTube-channel 5 лет назад +5

    Salad Unicorn *OR* health unicorn ?
    It's all health related. People want to be more healthy by eating healthy food.
    MCDonaldo can learn from that. People want healthy food !

  • @yawobengasante7618
    @yawobengasante7618 5 лет назад +7

    Difficult to come by good content like this one RUclips...trust me I have searched..please don't discontinue this series

  • @sibashispatra7074
    @sibashispatra7074 5 лет назад +2

    Nobody could ever thought about this kind of start-up touched $1billion 😱

  • @yugiohpokemon5285
    @yugiohpokemon5285 5 лет назад +105

    Salads are usually free at any restaurant

    • @ladhkay
      @ladhkay 5 лет назад +29

      not these kind. Keep enjoying ur bland olive garden free salad

    • @yugiohpokemon5285
      @yugiohpokemon5285 5 лет назад +8

      @@ladhkay you can spend less money and make better shit at home but millennials cant cook because of their short attention spans

    • @logoutyaphone
      @logoutyaphone 5 лет назад +16

      Yeezy why are you going so hard for these salads in the comments 😂?

    • @aceofspades1217
      @aceofspades1217 5 лет назад +9

      I feel you but that’s iceberg salad usually with just some shredded carrots and (hopefully) grape tomato. Not quite the same as an actual premium salad.

    • @user-td7xf3gz4l
      @user-td7xf3gz4l 5 лет назад +1

      @@logoutyaphone lol

  • @barnscorp2784
    @barnscorp2784 4 года назад +1

    Simple ideas are the best 🤷🏾‍♂️♥️

  • @chhive
    @chhive 5 лет назад +2

    If it can withstand the next recession, then it will be the true unicorn.

  • @nicoleg8137
    @nicoleg8137 4 года назад +5

    I’d love to work with a forward thinking company like this

  • @alphabryan4703
    @alphabryan4703 5 лет назад +3

    I was thinking of this the other day why no one has made a healthy food/salad fast food restaurant type place

  • @Outcome_Agent
    @Outcome_Agent 4 года назад +1

    I've had this in DC. I had it mostly because there wasn't much else to eat. It's expensive, very limited seating but it's healthy.

  • @jonathanedward5062
    @jonathanedward5062 5 лет назад +4

    Love this series!

  • @dim9753
    @dim9753 5 лет назад +2

    Tbe comments are so surprising. I can but refuse to replicate their salads at home. Some ingredientes they roast' others they pickle, they chop them in difderent ways for multiple textures, the seasoning in their grains is on point ans their dressings are the sh*t. I make salads at home but don't have the time to make them as elaborate. Sweetgreen is an honest company and their product is real good. Quit hating.

  • @everhirstseyt2667
    @everhirstseyt2667 5 лет назад +64

    Taking $$ from your foolish peers. Ultimate score!

    • @zerohour2703
      @zerohour2703 5 лет назад +4

      1 billion dollar for making salad i smell money laundry

  • @boundless8951
    @boundless8951 5 лет назад +2

    I love sweet greens because finally there’s fast food that’s healthy and yummy

    • @alfredoalcantar8691
      @alfredoalcantar8691 4 года назад

      Samantha Schumann there is no such thing is healthy fast food

  • @celestema2506
    @celestema2506 5 лет назад +5

    People get this conception that salads should be cheap if not free, but eating healthy is expensive in the US. I have not liked any kind of salad until Sweetgreen. I was very skeptical of their price and still am. I go there once a while when I need to load my body up with veggies. Yes it's expensive, but my body feels better than eating that pasta plate which costs even more. Also their portions are big enough that I get full with two thirds of the salad.

    • @Mwoods2272
      @Mwoods2272 5 лет назад

      Celeste Ma Ever thought about going to the grocery store, buying veggies and making your own salad.

    • @celestema2506
      @celestema2506 5 лет назад

      ​@@Mwoods2272 Yes, but it's not economic for me. I eat salads once or maybe twice a week. I like brussles sprouts, squash, tofu, and BBQ chicken in my salads, which all require cooking. All these together would require at least half an hour of work. The next week, some veggies will have gone bad and I will need to replace. Plus I've no idea how to make delicious salad dressing. No, the ones I get from a grocery store don't taste good. If I do the calculation, that's at least $20 upfront cost to make a salad or two, then time to throw them away.
      My point is, Sweetgreen is the only one in the market that makes delicious salads. That's why they are free to inflate the price and people still buy from them. Once more restaurants step up and create the competitions, Sweetgreen will have to lower their price to keep the customers.

    • @Mwoods2272
      @Mwoods2272 5 лет назад

      @@celestema2506That's cool! I'm not too picky. I get the ready made salad kits 2 for $5 at the store and similar to you just add chicken.

    • @celestema2506
      @celestema2506 5 лет назад

      @@Mwoods2272 I used to always go to Wendy's to get their half apple pecan salad for $5. But for some reason, the salad hasn't tasted the same the past year and the veggies look 2 weeks old. Sad

  • @avrahamavraham5977
    @avrahamavraham5977 5 лет назад +5

    What a Total BS I wonder how much CNBC got for just commercial

  • @blue280485
    @blue280485 5 лет назад +3

    Wow the Chipotle of Salads🥗
    New billion dollar business idea in food business, is to come up with the next Chipotle of...🤔

  • @yoyobad9729
    @yoyobad9729 4 года назад +3

    $13 for a salad. It cost 10 cents to make. You do the math.

  • @liolio4198
    @liolio4198 2 года назад

    Always busy during the lunchtime

  • @apollowins2760
    @apollowins2760 5 лет назад +1

    I'm proud to be a member of Sweet Green

  • @gregcleveland6270
    @gregcleveland6270 4 года назад

    Love it...and to think I've been to the very first one, plus MANY others. Great stuff. Now, time to come to Novi, Michigan!!!

  • @CC-si3cr
    @CC-si3cr 5 лет назад +7

    I have always wanted to see a healthy, fast casual salad spot, but I wanted their price point to mirror the Dollar Menu @ McDonald's. $13-$17 for a salad at lunch every day is pretty pricey. If a person spends $15 a day just on a salad @ lunch that ends up costing $300 a month! JUST ON SALAD!! Is it even possible to find a really good $2 salad???

    • @willie2235
      @willie2235 5 лет назад +3

      No, and it shouldn't be possible. How could a business possibly produce a local organic high quality salad for you at two dollars....? Slave labor?

    • @adityaruparel3320
      @adityaruparel3320 5 лет назад

      It's possible. It's called making it yourself.

    • @meghanlouise95x
      @meghanlouise95x 5 лет назад +1

      As someone who frequents sweetgreen about 3x week (there is one across from my office as well as by my apt), their salads are SO good. You’ll be hard pressed to find another fast casual joint with such fresh ingredients. I spend a mint on it but as the guy in the video was saying, I don’t mind pulling from my clothing budget or other discretionary spending for it. Also, recreating their salads at home can be time consuming and expensive still. Personally I’m not a fan of iceberg lettuce and tomatoes like a lot of people in these comments seem to be.

  • @ThePolskiKuba
    @ThePolskiKuba 5 лет назад +5

    I really like them being bound to local doctrines and thus serving the local food producers and consumers and their marketing works, (that's what you get when you pay these people tons of $$$$), but I dislike their obsessive millennial tech focus. When you're pitching to investors you're telling about your future plans and I'm not sure if their ABC - AI, Blockchain and Ceasar Salad- will be living up to the hype created - if any, at all.
    AI could be interesting in suggesting personalized options of course and to predict food orders. There's a potential great use case.
    Blockchain has been the biggest fad in recent years and it does have use cases for payments, tracking and supply chain, but placing the trust issue on your food producers is like engaging with a party that you don't trust by definition. Why would food producers want to compromise their food quality? Of course they wouldn't, because they care about their produce - they're high end crop farmers.
    I'm also not sure what value it would give to your users, as they already know that their veggies are coming from local farms.
    I don't see it working out anytime soon and I'm pretty sure that investors just got extra triggered by the supposed tech to be involved. Either way, they're very inspiring entrepreneurs and I wish them all the best, including more affordable prices for the main public.
    P.S If anyone knows about their blockchain plans, please update me.

  • @MommaKnowsBestest
    @MommaKnowsBestest 5 лет назад +85

    Everyone is a billion dollar startup 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄

    • @zerohour2703
      @zerohour2703 5 лет назад +5

      1 billion dollar for making salad i smell money laundry

    • @MommaKnowsBestest
      @MommaKnowsBestest 5 лет назад +4

      @@zerohour2703 oh for sure. Or someone is cooking the books.

    • @dkiperman
      @dkiperman 5 лет назад +1

      They're a billion dollar start up because the company has been valued that high by actual private equity companies.

    • @MommaKnowsBestest
      @MommaKnowsBestest 5 лет назад +1

      @@dkiperman so all made up?

    • @dkiperman
      @dkiperman 5 лет назад +8

      @@MommaKnowsBestest the value of everything is made up. The value of a home when it hits the market is pretty much what someone is willing to pay for it. The value of this startup is based on what these private equity companies say it is valued at. The value is roughly tied to the company's projected future net income. Of course it is made up. That's how every company is valuated. Welcome to planet Earth.

  • @Rabbittomaru
    @Rabbittomaru 5 лет назад +1

    If you guys come to Indonesia, we have a dishes which already start the _green living_ for a long time.
    You may search it, #lotek #gadogado #karedok
    😊 *Go Green!*

  • @petermichelen3431
    @petermichelen3431 5 лет назад +6

    did my mans just slip in there he's using DNA data to design salads?

  • @japanwithMaikin
    @japanwithMaikin 4 года назад +2

    According to CNBC all start ups are 1 billion dollars company. What a way to do paid ad campaign

  • @houchi69
    @houchi69 5 лет назад +32

    Had a Sweet Green upstairs of where I work. Price is simply too expensive for something that are not that special. It is nothing but a snobby food for the self-entitled generations.
    I also do not believe that they actually offer benefits for all of their employees.

    • @sasukeuchiha998
      @sasukeuchiha998 5 лет назад +1

      Less of a snobby food for an entitled generation and more like selling your ideals and beliefs back to you in a marketable product. A lot of companies targets both sides of the spectrum to make you "feel" good.

    • @terriesmith8219
      @terriesmith8219 5 лет назад +5

      That's why young people are broke and doesn't live a debt free lifestyle, because they're paying $10/$12 for a bowl of salad. Lol

  • @hatedumb
    @hatedumb 5 лет назад +7

    Trading green dollar for green leaves 🤣🤣

  • @alejandrarodriguez2374
    @alejandrarodriguez2374 2 года назад +2

    What's great with Sweetgreen is the customer support they have, specially via chat and email...

  • @HeyitsKimberlee
    @HeyitsKimberlee 5 лет назад +2

    I do love sweet green!

  • @GurpreetKaur-hj9xg
    @GurpreetKaur-hj9xg 4 года назад +2

    They should have drive thru salad pickup service. Why salads are so expensive? Big salad shouldn't cost more than $5. Who wants to spend $8 for a salad?

  • @tuts351
    @tuts351 4 года назад +2

    Lol did they just name Corey Booker ?😂

  • @aleechaadams2691
    @aleechaadams2691 5 лет назад +3

    It's my FAVORITE PLACE❤

  • @anniemars7438
    @anniemars7438 5 лет назад +1

    never heard of this place until now

  • @spinLOL533
    @spinLOL533 5 лет назад +7

    Tè food exists for blockchain for food I dont think consumers care about where their crunchy water comes from lol

  • @eagillum
    @eagillum 5 лет назад +5

    You forgot to say if they still get along.

  • @jaapspruitenburg6625
    @jaapspruitenburg6625 3 года назад +2

    Wow this is what market innovation looks like. A salad bar where you can stand in line to get a salad instead of sitting and ordering it for a same price at your table.
    Another company where you don't buy the product but the promise you are belonging with the cool dudes driving on skateboards through the office... And when they got your trust they are happy to sell your data and interest through their 'personal shopping experience'. When people are investing such numbers you'll know it isn't about the front house of that they are selling.
    Luckily wouldn't make any chance in europe, salad bars where they don't need any info about you, having fresh products sell salads for less.

  • @coinparadise
    @coinparadise 4 года назад +1

    I LOVE❤SWEETGREEN

  • @conthought8256
    @conthought8256 5 лет назад +1

    300 million + population
    And an innovative/quality product lead you to be a billionaire 💪

  • @3Hellokittykitty
    @3Hellokittykitty 5 лет назад +1

    I never heard of this health chain restaurant , but here in NOLA we have "city greens"

  • @kingthame
    @kingthame 2 года назад

    What I'm seeing from so many of these businesses is they grow out of hype. Marketing here I come.

  • @Dudububu57
    @Dudububu57 5 лет назад +2

    So plant base foods costs more than agriculture meat in America?
    Their profit margin must be OP

  • @dominicdannies7482
    @dominicdannies7482 5 лет назад +1

    Saw that title and immediately couldn't stop thinking of Chamath Palihapitaya ....

  • @dollydisclaimerh
    @dollydisclaimerh 4 года назад +3

    so 3 privileged white guys had rich families who gave them 300k...

  • @alich9554
    @alich9554 5 лет назад +8

    Amazon will buy them just like they did with Whole Foods

  • @jaykay5086
    @jaykay5086 5 лет назад +3

    I first had it in 2017. It's so good! And I feel healthy when I have it. I need one near me!!

  • @Phlegethon
    @Phlegethon 4 года назад +22

    I just saw a video about why millennials can’t afford houses

    • @gavip24
      @gavip24 2 года назад

      Why because they eat sweetgreen? Honey we are out here affording sweetgreen and owning multiple properties as millennials.

    • @jewslikefunk
      @jewslikefunk 2 года назад

      @@gavip24 What are you, nuts? I am a millennial and like many others struggling far less knowing that I will never be able to own a house on my salary.

  • @TheDoomburger
    @TheDoomburger 5 лет назад +6

    this only works with americans..

  • @BellaDivaKP
    @BellaDivaKP 5 лет назад +3

    But there was a salad chain in the 2000s that went out of business 🤷🏾‍♀️ Souper Salad 🤔

  • @Oscar4u69
    @Oscar4u69 5 лет назад +10

    i see it being just a fad, like very other trend that becomes famous quickly

  • @user-xi1fj9wl9w
    @user-xi1fj9wl9w 5 лет назад +5

    10usd for a salad?

    • @Juwar1974
      @Juwar1974 5 лет назад

      @Mrs.2Pac/Freddie Mercury That's because at the time people were comparing burritos to the image of a burrito they knew at the time. Small thin burritos like the kind they served at Taco Bell. But chipotle's were three times fatter and stuffed more shit in the burrito. I've had a Sweetgreen salad. It's good, but I can make that myself. And tbh, it ain't worth $10-12.

  • @jamjamc
    @jamjamc 4 года назад +1

    This is totally not related but Nathaniel is so cute, he looks half Asian, half french

  • @andreahernandez1250
    @andreahernandez1250 5 лет назад +1

    I work for sg, I love it.

  • @sg6390
    @sg6390 4 года назад +2

    Startup Bubble.

  • @ceal4046
    @ceal4046 4 года назад +1

    I'd love to know how this business is doing now that a ton of their customer base are now working from home.