463: Developing your personal Brand with Carey Bringle

463: Developing your personal Brand with Carey Bringle

Author: Inspiring interviews with todays most successful restaurateurs 2-days a wee April 11, 2018 Duration: 1:23:14

 

In this episode with Carey Bringle, we discuss:

  • What BBQ means to Carey; fellowship.
  • Transparency with why and how you do things and not letting the critics get to you.
  • Mentoring someone to the point where they can go out and start their own then and helping them when the time comes.
  • Starting your restaurant as a side hustle or hobby, and slowing scaling into full time.
  • Being patient for the right location.
  • Finding partners/investors who believe in you and give your free range.
  • Learning from your failures.
  • The risk of not having a back up plan.
  • Developing your personal brand.
  • Networking and strategically aligning your personal brand with other brands that are doing well.
  • Going to other successful restaurateurs for advice when starting your restaurant.
  • Taking the time to figure out the numbers before you open.
  • Sharing your knowledge with those looking to open a restaurant.
  • Making your guest feel like they are a part of the family.
  • Starting a restaurant spending every day doing every job and slowly creating trust, and systems to empower your tea m and slowly remove yourself from the day to day.

A Nashville native with deep-seated roots in West Tennessee BBQ culture, Carey Bringle developed an appreciation for 'BBQ at a young age. He would spend much of his young adult live being mentor by uncle, Bruce Bringle, and competing as a champion BBQ'er. Bringles famous Peg Leg Porker opened in 2013 to offer Peg Leg Porker sauces and rubs, a new line of professional-grade home smokers, and Peg Leg Porker Tennessee Straight Bourbon Whiskey and of course, some damn good BBQ. On top of all of this Carey recently started his on podcast. Peg Leg Porker Live from the BS corner.

Show notes…

Favorite Success Quote or Mantra.

Opportunity comes often. It knocks as often as you have a trained ear to hear it, a trained eye to see it, a trained hand to grasp it, and a train head trained to use it.

 

Today's Sponsor

Sourcery allows you to streamline and digitize your entire Accounts Payable operation. Digital invoicing, backed with human verification, will save you countless hours of work and increase AP accuracy. Say goodbye to your file cabinets and enter the digital world.

Kabbage. Apply for up to 250,000 of funding through Kabbage, and you'll get a $50 e-gift card when you quality. Get started!

 

Knowledge bombs

  1. Which "it factor" habit, trait, or characteristic you believe most contributes to your success?

    • Being true to himself.
  2. What is your biggest weakness?

    • Loud mouth.
  3. What's one question you ask or thing you look for during an interview?

    • Look for fun people.
  4. What's a current challenge? How are you dealing with it?

    • Focusing on the most important things, and not spreading himself too thin.
  5. Share one code of conduct or behavior you teach your team.

    • Treat everyone like family.
  6. What is one uncommon standard of service you teach your staff?

    • Share the tips with everyone.
    • Thats not my job doesn't exist.
  7. What's one book we must read to become a better person or restaurant owner?
    GET THIS BOOK FOR FREE AT AUDIBLE.COM 

  8. Share an online resource or tool.

  9. What's one piece of technology you've adopted in your restaurant and how has it influence operations?

  10.  If you got the news that you'd be leaving this world tomorrow and all memories of you, your work, and your restaurants would be lost with your departure with the exception of 3 pieces of wisdom you could leave behind for the good of humanity, what would they be?

    1. Cant never could.
    2. Be honest and true to yourself.
    3. Work your ass off.

Contact Info

@Peglegpoker

/peglegporker

www.peglegporker.com

Thanks for Listening!

Thanks so much for joining today! Have some feedback you'd like to share? Leave a note in the comment section below!

If you enjoyed this episode, please share it using the social media buttons you see at the top of the post.

Also, please leave an honest review for the Restaurant Unstoppable Podcast on iTunes! Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! They do matter in the rankings of the show, and I read each and every one of them.

And finally, don't forget to subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates.

Huge thanks to Carey Bringle for joining me for another awesome episode. Until next time!

 

Restaurant Unstoppable is a free podcast. One of the ways I'm able to make it free is by earning a commission when sharing certain products with you. I've made it a core value to only share tools, resources, and services my guest mentors have recommend, first. If you're finding value in my podcast, please use my links!

Eric Cacciatore sits down with the people who actually run the show in the world of food service. Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore is built on conversations with established restaurateurs and seasoned professionals who have navigated the intense realities of the industry. Twice a week, these interviews dig past the surface, focusing on the tangible details of leadership, team management, and effective marketing that separate a thriving venue from a struggling one. You’ll hear firsthand accounts of what worked, what didn’t, and the often-overlooked decisions that shape a restaurant's path. This podcast serves as a direct line to collective experience, whether you're dreaming of your first opening or steering a multi-location group. The dialogue is practical, centered on the daily grind and long-term strategy needed to build something lasting. For anyone invested in the business of hospitality, these regular episodes compile a vital resource, turning shared insights into actionable knowledge for your own journey.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 1000

Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore
Podcast Episodes
1157: Damian Sansonetti, Chef/Owner of Chaval and Ugly Duckling [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 2:02:55
Damian Sansonetti is the Chef and Co-Owner of Chaval and Ugly Duckling, both located in Portland, ME. Damian is the husband of previous guest Ilma Lopez, who was featured on episodes 1148 and 1156. Damian's father was a…
1154: Emily Curry, Co-Founder, GM, & Head of Marketing at Big Trouble [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:35:59
Emily Curry is the Co-Founder, GM, and Head of Marketing at Big Trouble, located in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Emily began working in restaurants in the early 2010's, when she was in her very early 20's. She worked at Sou…
1153: Robert St. John, CEO of New South Restaurant Group [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:44:51
Robert St. John grew up in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. At age 19, Robert entered the restaurant industry at a delicatessen where he became the manager. During his very first shift at that job, he decided that he wanted to…
1152: Fred Langley, CEO of Restaurant Systems Pro [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 54:53
Fred Langley is the CEO of Restaurant Systems Pro. Fred got his first job in the restaurant industry at the age of 12 as a dishwasher. He worked his way up the ranks and became a restaurateur, opening his first restauran…
1151: Jason Sobocinski, President and Co-Founder of Haven Hot Chicken [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:15:42
Jason Sobocinski is the Co-Owner and President of Haven Hot Chicken. Jason grew up loving food and business. He got two degrees, travelled the world, then returned to New Haven, his hometown, and opened his first busines…
1150: David Vargas, Chef/Partner at Vida Cantina [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:40:01
David Vargas was previously on the show for episode 755 back in 2020. David Vargas is a chef who co-owns Vida Cantina, a Mexican restaurant in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He is also a partner in Ore Nell's, a Texas BBQ re…
1149: Deb Simmons, Owner of Cake. Vegan Bakery [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:46:56
Deb Simmons went studied nutritional science and biology in college and went on to work with Americorps and the Peace Corps. When she left those jobs, she started working in restaurants in the seacoast NH area. She worke…