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Panera Deems Pay-What-You-Want Location A Success

By JIM SALTER   05/16/11 10:53 AM ET   AP

CLAYTON, Mo. -- Rashonda Thornton looked up at the menu on the wall, ordered a Caesar salad and dropped a $10 bill in a box. Pretty generous, considering the meal at Panera Bread Co.'s cafe in the St. Louis suburb of Clayton sells for less than $7.

It was a year ago that Panera converted the Clayton restaurant into a nonprofit pay-what-you-want restaurant with the idea of helping to feed the needy and raising money for charitable work. Panera founder and Chairman Ronald Shaich said the cafe, operated through Panera's charitable foundation, has been a big success, largely because of people like Thornton.

"Sometimes you can give more, and sometimes you can give less," said Thornton, a teacher's assistant. "Today was one of my 'more' days."

Panera, based in suburban St. Louis, has long been involved in charitable giving, donating millions of dollars and giving away leftover food to the needy. But Shaich sought more direct involvement.

"We were doing this for ourselves to see if we could make a difference with our own hands, not just write a check, but really make a contribution to the community in a real, substantive way," Shaich told The Associated Press.

What developed was the largest example yet of a concept called community kitchens, where businesses operate partly as charities. Panera's success in Clayton has led it to open two similar cafes – one in the Detroit suburb of Dearborn, Mich., and one in Portland, Ore. It plans to add a new one every three months or so.

The majority of patrons pay retail value or more. Statistics provided by Panera indicate that roughly 60 percent leave the suggested amount; 20 percent leave more; and 20 percent less. One person paid $500 for a meal, the largest single payment.

"From the day it opened, the community has just gotten stronger and stronger in their support of this," Shaich said. "They got that this was a cafe of shared responsibility."

The Clayton restaurant could pass for any of Panera's nearly 1,500 cafes. Soft jazz plays as people chat quietly. Men in suits sit at a table next to women in tank tops. Fresh breads and pastries entice from behind a glass counter. The smell of coffee fills the air.

The differences are subtle. Signs explain the pay-what-you-can concept, encouraging charity. One thing Shaich learned was those signs tend to go unnoticed, so cheery employee Terri Barr greets everyone at the door and spells it out.

The biggest difference is at the checkout. The menu board lists "suggested funding levels," not prices. Payments go into a donation box, though the cashiers provide change and handle credit card payments.

Nicholas James, 34, visiting from California, seemed a bit puzzled as a cashier walked him through the process, before stuffing $15 in the donation box to cover lunch for his friend and himself. The payment was right at the suggested cost.

"I think it's great," James said. "I would much prefer to give this place my money."

Not everyone is so generous, but that's OK with Brooke Porter, who manages the restaurant. She knows that times are still hard for many. She has seen families down on their luck come in to celebrate birthdays with a meal they normally couldn't afford. A teacher laid off after 25 years stops by on his way to job fairs. He can't afford to pay much but makes up for it by volunteering at the store.

"If a man in a suit and tie leaves a dollar for a $10 meal, that's fine," Porter said. "We don't know his story."

Only a few take advantage of the system – "lunch on Uncle Ron" as Shaich calls it. He still fumes over watching three college kids pay $3 for $40 worth of food. Generally, peer pressure prevents that sort of behavior, he said.

"It's like parking in a handicapped spot," Shaich said.

Overall, the cafe performs at about 80 percent of retail and brings in revenue of about $100,000 a month. That's enough to generate $3,000 to $4,000 a month above costs, money being used for a job training program for at-risk youths.

"We took some kids that typically wouldn't be employable, didn't know how to work in society," Shaich said. "We gave them a combination of job training and life skills." The first three graduates of the program are starting jobs at other Panera restaurants.

Shaich admitted he didn't know how the pay-what-you-want experiment would pan out. He said the success should send a message to other businesses to put faith in humanity.

"The lesson here is most people are fundamentally good," Shaich said. "People step up and they do the right thing."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST FOOD

CLAYTON, Mo. -- Rashonda Thornton looked up at the menu on the wall, ordered a Caesar salad and dropped a $10 bill in a box. Pretty generous, considering the meal at Panera Bread Co.'s cafe in the St.
CLAYTON, Mo. -- Rashonda Thornton looked up at the menu on the wall, ordered a Caesar salad and dropped a $10 bill in a box. Pretty generous, considering the meal at Panera Bread Co.'s cafe in the St.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
writeon1
Pundit in my own mind
09:32 PM on 05/17/2011
Great idea. I would much rather donate in this manner than have someone hanging outside the grocery store selling their overpriced candy or bugging me by phone. This way it is our choice to walk in and donate. http://newsy1.wordpress.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Montana 123
Mama to Three Little Monkeys
06:42 PM on 05/17/2011
I like St. Louis Bread Company (which is called Panera now). I have always have excellent service and great food. I need to stop by the Clayton location. Haven't been there yet.
03:45 PM on 05/17/2011
the food is OK, but way , way , way too salty
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GraphicMatt
Somebody make me a sandwich!
10:15 AM on 05/17/2011
I was a GM for a Panera. I wouldn't say it was a great company to work for, but I will say that they are certainly a charitable company. Every night all the left overs were picked up by a local charity.
03:41 PM on 05/17/2011
I worked for Panera also and I agree that it is not the greatest to work for but the charity work is great. I helped with a lot of community outreach and donation. They should have more pay-what-you-want stores
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Republican = FAIL
08:36 AM on 05/17/2011
I would rather see them take donations and then cut prices across the board.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marian Howard McNeeley
06:06 AM on 05/17/2011
You put a smil on my face. Thanks for sharing this with us.
12:19 AM on 05/17/2011
This article made my day. Amid all the stories about war and rape and murder, there is always that one story that makes the bad things a little easier to deal with. This was that story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Erica McClellan
"We are sorry, your micro-bio did not meet our gui
11:31 PM on 05/16/2011
As long as the get-overs don't start abusing it, it's a wonderful idea!
10:45 PM on 05/16/2011
Genius! More businesses should do this, and I bet they'd be surprised at the profit.
05:32 PM on 05/17/2011
They are not after profits. It is the idea. Most people will do the right thing. I always offer homeless people food not money, "I'll buy what you want at the store" I am willing to buy you food, but not give you money for alcohol or drugs. When some one accepts the offer I am pleased, but suprised at how many turn the offer down.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mspat44417
Rock it if ya got it...Music
10:15 PM on 05/16/2011
I love Panera...Their food is great... This is a great concept...Lets hope more companies will follow in their foot steps and do the right thing...We all know other companies can afford it if they want to..Hopefully they will...and stop being greedy and give back... Come on Mcdonalds.Taco bell, Burger king and others lets go!!!!
09:50 PM on 05/16/2011
AWESOME!
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DanoX
I'll be your snack-pack baby!
08:56 PM on 05/16/2011
They have great food! Glad to know they are a charitable company too, makes the food taste even better!
08:36 PM on 05/16/2011
What a beautiful thing. I think I would donate more then the suggested just because it went to a good cause. Very touching. Im not surpeised at the college kids feeling entitled. Typical of youth. I think their parents never tought them better. But I also guess they didnt have much money to spare themself. After all the BYOB parties can be costly.
fredgladys
Your Micro-bio is empty, I know, stop nagging.
06:49 PM on 05/16/2011
I think that most people are honest and generous, the ones that aren't are usually in the minority. It's a great idea and I hope it goes well.
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Stilyagi
Making a board with a bigger nail in it.
03:44 PM on 05/16/2011
It's a crying shame that I don't live in Clayton, MO. 'Cos if I did, Panera would be bankrupt in about a week. You've heard of a "dollar store"? For me, Panera would be "a penny store". And every day would be "It's everything for a penny day". I'd bring my family, my friends, their families, their friends... and we'd have the most fun and the most food a penny can buy. And there wouldn't be a legal thing they can do about it. The only drawback is Panera would have a "Closed For Business" sign in a week's time, and we would not be able to TAKE ADVANTAGE of the free grub forever. Sorry, I mean the "pay what you feel" grub.

I'm not "the rest of us". Rather, I'm the person people think of when they say "You're ruining it for the rest of us".
08:38 PM on 05/16/2011
You are honest,pathetic yet honest.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Greg 135
One of the millions
08:40 PM on 05/16/2011
OMG your post was too funny. "It's everything for a penny day" literally had me laughing out loud. Thanks!