Dmnkly wrote:I've been trying to find a link somewhere, but I swear I remember hearing a radio piece once talking about how the Jimmy John's owner/founder (they may be different, now?) openly stated in an interview that the secret to their success was intentionally sacrificing quality for speed. The most important thing by far was fastfastfast, and everything else was a distant second.
Take it with a grain of salt, since I haven't been able to find his quotes in print, but I believe it.
Christopher Gordon wrote:Dmnkly wrote:I've been trying to find a link somewhere, but I swear I remember hearing a radio piece once talking about how the Jimmy John's owner/founder (they may be different, now?) openly stated in an interview that the secret to their success was intentionally sacrificing quality for speed. The most important thing by far was fastfastfast, and everything else was a distant second.
Take it with a grain of salt, since I haven't been able to find his quotes in print, but I believe it.
I don't doubt it, but isn't that de rigueur for the competitors as well?
Dmnkly wrote:I've been trying to find a link somewhere, but I swear I remember hearing a radio piece once talking about how the Jimmy John's owner/founder (they may be different, now?) openly stated in an interview that the secret to their success was intentionally sacrificing quality for speed. The most important thing by far was fastfastfast, and everything else was a distant second.
Take it with a grain of salt, since I haven't been able to find his quotes in print, but I believe it.
Dmnkly wrote:Christopher Gordon wrote:Dmnkly wrote:I've been trying to find a link somewhere, but I swear I remember hearing a radio piece once talking about how the Jimmy John's owner/founder (they may be different, now?) openly stated in an interview that the secret to their success was intentionally sacrificing quality for speed. The most important thing by far was fastfastfast, and everything else was a distant second.
Take it with a grain of salt, since I haven't been able to find his quotes in print, but I believe it.
I don't doubt it, but isn't that de rigueur for the competitors as well?
There's a part of me -- most likely incredibly naive -- that wants to believe the folks who run these places with... um... less than exemplary food have at least some small part of them that genuinely wants to make a tasty sandwich, even if that desire is slave to prep time, focus groups, culinary ignorance, incompetent staff and The Shareholders.
As I remember this Jimmy John's piece, however, the founder/owner in question was quite adamant that he didn't care about flavor at all. This is why I've been trying to find the bit in print. I'm paraphrasing, but I remember it being along the lines of "I don't care what it tastes like as long as we make it faster than anybody else, because people will eat anything as long as they don't have to wait for it."
You can see why I found this particularly galling, even in those circles.
eatchicago wrote:To me, JJ's bread makes Subway rolls taste downright artisinal. I'd honestly rather skip a meal than eat a JJ's sub. (Actually, the same goes for Subway)
LAZ wrote:eatchicago wrote:To me, JJ's bread makes Subway rolls taste downright artisinal. I'd honestly rather skip a meal than eat a JJ's sub. (Actually, the same goes for Subway)
Subway at least has a few ingredients that taste like food. (As VI put it, in the other Jimmy John's thread, "I mean at least Subway has a bunch of things to put on the sub to kill the taste.")
Jimmy John's is like eating cotton stuffed with cotton. I do not understand how they manage to make sandwiches so utterly devoid of flavor.
I remain mystified why anyone would eat at a Jimmy John's more than once.
eatchicago wrote:I'd honestly rather skip a meal than eat a JJ's sub. (Actually, the same goes for Subway)
LAZ wrote:eatchicago wrote:To me, JJ's bread makes Subway rolls taste downright artisinal. I'd honestly rather skip a meal than eat a JJ's sub. (Actually, the same goes for Subway)
Subway at least has a few ingredients that taste like food. (As VI put it, in the other Jimmy John's thread, "I mean at least Subway has a bunch of things to put on the sub to kill the taste.")
jesteinf wrote:The biggest problem I have with JJ's is that mayo is a default ingredient on their Italian sub. That's just so wrong.
Liz in Norwood Park wrote:While I have never had a Jimmy Johns,A Potbelly nor a Subway (I'm a make my own sub kinda gal) I have always wondered...is "Potbelly" the same Potbelly that started on Lincoln Avenue back in the 70's? They had some wonderful sandwiches...especially the muffeletta.
Christopher Gordon wrote:jesteinf wrote:The biggest problem I have with JJ's is that mayo is a default ingredient on their Italian sub. That's just so wrong.
That's strange. The JJ's I've patronized never add mayo(to the Vito's). I have to ask for it in packets(egads). I've found that, especially for their vinegary subs, a bit of mayo makes all the difference. Then, I'm mayo-autistic, I don't trust anyone else to apply that particular condiment to my food. I have to do it myself. I think you happened upon a heretical JJ's; call in the Swiss Guard! I would.
eatchicago wrote:Dmnkly wrote:I've been trying to find a link somewhere, but I swear I remember hearing a radio piece once talking about how the Jimmy John's owner/founder (they may be different, now?) openly stated in an interview that the secret to their success was intentionally sacrificing quality for speed. The most important thing by far was fastfastfast, and everything else was a distant second.
Take it with a grain of salt, since I haven't been able to find his quotes in print, but I believe it.
I remember the same thing. He basically said that they polled their best (frequent) customers and it was determined that they don't think JJ's has good food, just really fast food. The head of the company seemed to tacitly agree. I can't find the source either, but I remember it clearly.
To me, JJ's bread makes Subway rolls taste downright artisinal. I'd honestly rather skip a meal than eat a JJ's sub. (Actually, the same goes for Subway)
Binko wrote:I simply cannot fathom how people prefer Subway's to JJ's, but, hey, different strokes and all.
Da Beef wrote:Out of the JJs, Subway, Potbelly trio, ill take potbelly.
Pucca wrote: Just walking by JJ's the mere smell of their bread makes me want to gag.
dddane wrote:jimmy johns is one of those places i too never understood the need for ANY hype over...
(don't get me started on the little bit where they just throw in extra charges for this and that despite it not being marked as such on the menu)....
after having it a second and third time i got to realizing that the peppers are so hot you can't taste anything
Binko wrote:There were only two fast food places I would not eat as a college student: Taco Bell and Domino's. Neither JJ nor even Subway is the culinary nadir that those two places are.
dddane wrote:i wrote a review of this location on some other site.... and the owner of another JJ franchise PMed me basically saying that the owner of this particular location is an idiot.. so maybe not all JJ's are created equally