When PDQ, which stands for People Dedicated to Quality, opened its first location in Tampa, Florida in 2011, co-founders Bob Basham (of Outback Steakhouse fame) and MVP Holdings CEO Nick Reader set out to build something different. More than a fast-casual chicken chain, PDQ was designed to embody its name through every detail of its food, service, and culture.
Today, PDQ operates over 60 restaurants across the country and employs more than 2,000 team members who share one simple mission: serve quality food fast and treat people even better.
In the second part of his conversation (you can listen to Episode 1 here) with Instant Financial CEO Tal Clark on the Instant Payments Podcast, PDQ CEO Kep Sweeney dives into what makes that mission work—from hiring managers who value empathy, to how education and technology can unlock the next generation of restaurant success.
When Sweeney talks about the quick-service restaurant (QSR) business, he doesn’t mince words. “Speed is everything,” he says. “It’s like a Formula One pit stop.”
The Need for Speed
Unlike some fast-casual chains, PDQ doesn’t take tips for its employees. For Sweeney, that decision is about efficiency, trust, and fairness.
“Tipping slows everything down, so we embed the full compensation package into hourly pay or salary,” he explains. “That doesn’t mean employees should make less. The beauty of a free market is that if we weren’t paying someone competitively, our people would just go next door.”
It’s a pragmatic model that keeps checkout frictionless and ensures employees are properly compensated without slowing down the guest experience. For a brand built on speed and quality, that balance matters.
Culture Starts with Care
Ask Sweeney what sets high-performing restaurants apart, and he won’t mention menu items or margins. He’ll talk about managers.
“When you see an employee who’s happy, they’ll always tell you the same thing: my manager cares about me,” he says. “Those managers take a personal interest in each person and their family—checking in weekly, asking how school is going. It’s not about chicken; it’s about people.”
That philosophy flows from PDQ’s founders. Sweeney recalls how co-founder Nick Reader has personally helped employees find housing and furniture when they faced hardship. “That’s the aura that defines PDQ,” Sweeney adds. “It’s empathy in action.”
He believes genuine leadership comes down to consistent, human attention. “It’s not the square footage of the office or a dollar more an hour,” he says. “It’s knowing your manager cares about you.”
Lessons from Turnaround Stories
Before leading PDQ, Sweeney helped rescue several distressed restaurant brands. His takeaway? Most companies don’t fail because of the food—they fail because of bad math.
“There are only three ways to change the outcome: corporate governance, capital structure, or operations. And most of the time, it the capital structure,” he notes. “The biggest pitfall is overexpansion. Everyone wants to be In-N-Out, but In-N-Out only opens a restaurant when they have a killer general manager. That’s discipline.”
He’s seen too many companies chase growth before they’re ready, pressured by investors or private equity mandates to open more units. “It’s not that you got over-levered,” he adds. “It’s that you had to close units. The debt and equity don’t go away—you just have fewer stores to support them.”
The Power of Range
When asked what advice he’d give to young leaders, Sweeney doesn’t mention profit margins or KPIs—he talks about learning as broadly as you can, “range” as he calls it.
“Give yourself the next ten years to learn as much as you can, and it doesn’t have to be about the restaurant industry,” he says.
It’s a lesson he’s built into PDQ’s leadership development culture. Sweeney has created internal reading lists, brought in industry speakers, and even encouraged employees to watch business masterclasses. “When your unit managers start quoting Porter’s Five Forces back at you, you know it’s working,” he laughs. “I’ve never been trained, but I’ve been educated—and I want that for everyone I work with.”
AI’s Moment
While many restaurateurs are still figuring out where artificial intelligence fits, Sweeney is already experimenting with what’s practical now.
“AI today is more valuable at the corporate level than in the units” he says. “We’re getting close to running our financial forecasts through prompts. Learning how to prompt is the most important skill for the future.”
PDQ has begun using AI for predictive sales, inventory management, and labor scheduling—often building tools in-house using systems like Claude, Manus, Grok, and Gemini. “What used to cost a fortune in analytics, we can now do internally,” Sweeney notes. “That’s a game changer.”
Putting People First—Always
Whether he’s talking about wages, leadership, or technology, Sweeney’s message never wavers: take care of people, first and foremost.
“Energy, extroversion, empathy, and pride—that’s what drives performance,” he says. “If your managers care, your people stay. If your systems work, your business scales.”
Listen to the full conversation with Kep Sweeney on the Instant Payments Podcast at instant.co/podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.