Waterloo Region Record

Subway may name first non-family CEO ever

Sandwich shop’s search for new leader may force franchise to appoint outside leadership

- LESLIE PATTON

Subway Restaurant­s, facing a deepening sales slump and historic retrenchme­nt, has another task ahead of it: finding a new leader.

Chief executive officer Suzanne Greco stepped down and will officially retire on June 30, the company said earlier this month. While there’s an interim CEO in place, the franchisin­g giant is likely to — for the first time in its history — choose someone who’s not a member of the DeLuca family. But enticing an outsider to lead the beleaguere­d chain won’t be easy.

“In terms of getting a Cadillac CEO, I personally don’t think that will happen until the family ownership recedes,” said John Gordon, principal at Pacific Management Consulting Group, an adviser to restaurant­s and franchisee­s.

The Connecticu­t-based company is famously private, and has mostly kept quiet over the years. Co-founder and longtime leader Fred DeLuca made Subway largely into a family business. Greco, his sister, took the reins when DeLuca died in 2015. Its board is insular with most directors either related to DeLuca or Peter Buck, Subway’s other cofounder. Board members without a Buck or DeLuca name have served for 20 years or longer, according to the company’s latest franchise disclosure document.

DeLuca opened the first Subway in Bridgeport, Conn., in 1965 with a loan from Buck. By 1974, they had expanded to 16 shops, and DeLuca started franchisin­g. Now, all locations are owned and operated by franchisee­s, some of whom would like a change.

“If people have only grown up at the company, they have the blinders on,” said Keith Miller, who owns three Subways in the Sacramento, Calif., area. “Franchisee­s want to see someone who can engage with them and listen to them because they have so much risk.”

Subway has begun bringing in outsiders.

Last year, it named former consultant Len Van Popering, who worked for Arby’s and Logan’s Roadhouse, as vice-president of global brand management and innovation.

Changes are already afoot with Trevor Haynes serving as interim CEO. He recently promoted James Walker, previously from the hamburger chain Johnny Rockets, to vice-president of North America. And Ian Martin, another outsider who joined in December, was promoted this month to lead Subway’s internatio­nal efforts.

“The search is underway for a new CEO,” Haynes said May 10 in an internal memo obtained by Bloomberg News.

“Until then, I look forward to working with you to deliver results for both the brand and our franchisee­s.”

The company hasn’t released details about how it’s carrying out the search or when it may conclude.

Times have been tough for franchisee­s, who own and operate all of Subway’s 43,600 restaurant­s around the world. Last month, Greco told Bloomberg News in an interview that the company expects about 500 U.S. closings this year as it faces more competitio­n and heavy discountin­g by other fast-food chains.

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