Browns Restaurants Explained

Browns Brasserie & Bar is a British chain of restaurants owned by Mitchells & Butlers, with sites mostly located in the south of England.

Browns was the first hospitality venture established by Jeremy Mogford, who in 1973 invested £10,000 (of which £2,500 was borrowed from his father) in the first Browns Restaurant and Bar in Brighton, East Sussex. He established a chain of seven restaurants, mostly in university towns such as Bristol, Cambridge and Oxford, with an annual turnover of £15 million. In 1996, Mogford sold the Browns chain to Bass Brewery for £35 million.[1]

Mogford was regarded as one of the industry's best and most enlightened employers, which was reflected in a low staff turnover rate. He and his restaurants were used as a case study in a hospitality and entrepreneurship textbook illustrating commitment to employees.[2] In addition, Browns was profiled in a widely used capacity management study by Deterministics Inc. for Cornell University's Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly journal.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: This Is Oxfordshire - 14 Dec 1999 . archive.thisisoxfordshire.co.uk .
  2. Book: Williams . Claire . Morrison . Alison . Rimmington . Mike . Entrepreneurship in the Hospitality, Tourism and Leisure Industries . limited . 1999 . Butterworth-Heinemann . Oxford . 0-7506-4097-9 . 16. 1. publ., [Nachdr.]..
  3. Web site: Applying Capacity-management Science . Cqx.sagepub.com . 1999-06-01 . 2015-02-01.