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How Richard Hauck and Joseph Saccone cooked up a winning culture to fuel growth at the Hyde Park Group

By Patrick Mayock


Smart Business Cleveland | August 2008

Page 1 of 4


More than two decades ago, Richard Hauck and Joseph Saccone were working at a chic rooftop restaurant in an upscale hotel. The restaurant typically drew a steady following of local gourmands, so the two were no strangers to a hectic dinner rush. On one particular night, a sudden maelstrom of guests and orders sent the kitchen into an uncharted state of pandemonium.

“I remember the place got packed,” Hauck says. “The kitchen got swamped, and the dishwasher was swamped. Dishes were stacked up everywhere.”

Abandoning his post as maitre d’, Hauck rushed into the fray to help. He had witnessed lesser chaos in the restaurant industry before, and he was no stranger to rolling up his sleeves and lending a hand. When he entered the kitchen on this night though, he saw something that caught him by surprise: “I went back into the dish room, and I saw the company’s vice president, who was there with his wife and family having dinner, back there with an apron on washing dishes. He just took his sport jacket off and threw on the apron and started working like that’s the most important thing to get done.”

When you’re trying to establish a culture of excellence, Hauck and Saccone say you have to be willing to do whatever it takes to get the job done. Just as that vice president stepped away from his own plate to wash everyone else’s, you can’t hesitate to step in and serve as an example for your internal constituents.

That’s something the duo has tried to do since founding their own restaurant group in 1988. From the day their first Hyde Park Prime Steakhouse opened in Cleveland, the partners and owners have chipped in at every level of the company to contribute to an unflappable culture of success.

“It’s really just leading by example,” Saccone says. “It was whatever it took — washing dishes, cleaning up after people in the bathroom — whatever needed to be done. It really started off early, setting the standard that we were going to be above and beyond the best we could possibly be and showing it by example.”

That philosophy became even more pronounced as the partners expanded their business into 10 new markets and under two new brands. Today, Hyde Park Group’s revenue is in excess of $40 million per year, while averaging 15 percent growth during the past 10 years.

Here’s how Hauck and Saccone made sure their culture was cooked to perfection before serving it up in new markets.

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