Panera founder to step down as CEO; company buys Au Bon Pain | Inquirer Business

Panera founder to step down as CEO; company buys Au Bon Pain

/ 10:49 AM November 09, 2017

In this April 12, 2017 photo, a passer-by walks near an entrance to a Panera Bread restaurant in Natick, Mass. In a deal announced on Wednesday, November 8, 2017, Panera Bread said it is buying bakery chain Au Bon Pain to boost its presence in airports, hospitals, and colleges. (AP FILE PHOTO)

NEW YORK — Panera Bread founder Ron Shaich is stepping down as CEO, and the company is buying Au Bon Pain, bringing together two chains the executive helped build.

The companies did not disclose on Wednesday how much Panera was paying for Au Bon Pain, an acquisition that is seen to boost the presence of Panera at airports, hospitals, and colleges. Those are places where chains like Starbucks and Dunkin’ Donuts are strong.

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Shaich, 63, will be replaced as CEO on January 1 by Blaine Hurst, who oversees Panera’s restaurants. Shaich, however, would stay on as Panera’s chairman, and would continue to work on the chain’s strategy and future acquisitions.

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Shaich said on Wednesday that he is not exactly stepping out, as he is actually “more broadening.” He also said it was “too early to comment” on how Panera would use Au Bon Pain, or whether the brand would continue.

It has been a year of change for Panera. In July, it was bought and taken private for more than $7 billion by JAB Holding Co., a European company that controls Krispy Kreme, Peet’s Coffee, and other chains.

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At the time, Shaich said, he would not be leaving the CEO post.

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“They’ll need to carry me out with my boots on,” he told The Associated Press in April. But in a statement on Wednesday, Shaich called it “the right time for me to step down as CEO while still staying involved in the business.”

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He would have more time to work with Panera’s owners on deals, like the Au Bon Pain one, and focus on his personal investments, though he declined to say what those were.

Shaich created Au Bon Pain Co. with a partner in 1981. It became a public company in 1991 and Au Bon Pain bought a bakery two years later that was renamed Panera. Au Bon Pain was sold off in 1999 so that the company could focus on Panera.

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St. Louis-based Panera now has more than 2,000 restaurants and employs about 100,000. Boston-based Au Bon Pain has about 300 locations. The deal is expected to close by the end of 2017.

Andrew Alvarez, a food industry analyst at IBISWorld, said the deal would help Panera better compete with the coffee chains that have locations in similar places as Au Bon Pain.

Both Panera and Au Bon Pain sell sandwiches, soups, salads and baked goods. In recent years, Shaich has been tweaking Panera’s menu to appeal to Americans who are increasingly looking to avoid processed food.

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At the start of the year, Panera said it removed artificial preservatives, sweeteners, flavors and colors from all its food. In March it began selling drinks, such as plum ginger hibiscus tea, as an alternative to the more sugary soda it sells.        /kga

TAGS: Business, Dunkin’ Donuts, Krispy Kreme, Starbucks

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