Yahoo Finance Presents: Dunkin' Brands CEO Dave Hoffmann

In this episode of Yahoo Finance Presents, correspondent Brian Sozzi speaks with Dunkin' Brands CEO Dave Hoffmann about the impact coronavirus is having on the companies franchise owners and employees.

Video Transcript

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BRIAN SOZZI: All right, I'm joined by David Hoffman, the CEO of Dunkin' Brands. David, good to see you.

DAVID HOFFMAN: Yeah, great to see you, Brian.

BRIAN SOZZI: Even though it's remote and virtually, good to see you nonetheless. So you guys are fresh off your first quarter. Take us through the business a little bit. We're seeing a lot of different trends throughout the restaurant industry. We've had a lot of restaurants store closures, but some stores are open and delivering. What does it look like from the Dunkin' perspective?

DAVID HOFFMAN: Yeah, Brian, you know, prior to the crisis, as you know, we were headed towards our best quarter since 2013 with positive traffic. And then once the crisis hit, we just went inward, and we started to really focus on simply just doing the right thing for our franchisees, our suppliers, our brand employees, our restaurant employees, our guests. And that was a big part of what we were focused on.

And look, everything then started to gear towards the safety and security of our crew and our guests. And so we've, you know, we've made a brand standard, gloves, masks, plexiglass guards, as well as we just shipped infrared thermometers to every restaurant in the US this past week to be prepared.

And then, you know, on the franchisee side, great franchisees. And we've really rallied around each other. But we made the restaurant easier to operate, very flexible on hours of operation. Very flexible on limited menu. We call the limited menu Essentials or Essentials Plus that they could pull down.

And then, as you know, a big focus was then around the financial health of the franchisees and their liquidity. And so we extended payment terms on a lot of items related to, you know, the franchise fees and the marketing fees, just to make sure that all three legs of the stool-- the franchisees, the brand, and our suppliers-- were strong during all of this.

BRIAN SOZZI: Dave, any sense on when your restaurants and some of your bigger markets like New York City will get to reopen?

DAVID HOFFMAN: Yeah, we're starting to see more openings every day. So today, 90% of our restaurants are open on the Dunkin' side and the Baskin side. And, you know, that 10%, which is under 1,000 today, a lot of universities, a lot of transportation hubs, and then in New York as well. So temporarily closed today, but we're seeing more and more openings in the New York area, where it's been, you know, the hardest hit.