Page 1 of 3
Introduction to Management Case Study: Mixed Fortunes at Domino’s
This case study is based on a compilation of investigative reports by Fairfax media.
Names of franchisees and employees have been changed.
Domino’s is an Australian pizza chain with a network of franchises and over 600 retail stores
nationally. It has been hailed as a success story since it was listed on the Australian Stock
Exchange in 2005. In just over a decade, Domino’s shares have surged more than 2500 per
cent, making it one of the best performers on the market and making a lot of people wealthy.
In 2016 the company generated total revenue of $939,976,000.
Background of Domino’s
Domino’s has the world's biggest pizza menu with more than 200,000 options, helping
boost Domino’s sales to more than 90 million pizzas annually with a guarantee to
deliver pizza within 15 or 20 minutes for an extra cost. Domino’s business model is based on
franchisees growing sales, not profit, with head office taking a royalty from every sale as
Australians chomp through 1 million of its pizzas every week. Stores are bought and sold on
a multiple of these sales, not on profit. The more stores in the network, means more sales
are generated, which results in more profits for head office.
While the business is built on selling affordable pizza to the masses, with Group Chief
Executive Officer (CEO) & Managing Director Don Meij Domino’s has transformed into one
of Australia's most intriguing tech companies with operations in New Zealand and Europe.
Drones, cutting-edge IT, fast pizzas, happy franchisees and happy workers are all part of
the Domino’s image. CEO Meij “lives the job” often working undercover in the stores to keep
abreast of activities at the store level. To help managers keep track of their best and worst
performers, Domino’s rolled out a new in-store computer system. The screens, which
everyone in the store can see, constantly update statistics such as the average order size for
each employee and how long it's taking to get a pizza out the door. Store managers get a
quarterly bonus based on how much they improve store earnings.
Domino’s selects its franchisees carefully, those who genuinely believe Domino’s is a highly
profitable business. However, when the store is not profitable franchisees are held to blame
for bad business management. The stress of making ends meet took its toll on many
franchisees who realised the business they had bought into was not viable, due to the
company policies, especially on labour costs and a perception that the head office was only
concerned about the welfare of people at the corporate level. Whilst Domino’s profit is
doubling the cost of pizzas is getting cheaper due to high competition in the fast-food sector.
However, this cheap cost of pizza is borne by the franchisees who are struggling to make a
decent profit due to them not being able to pass on the increasing high costs of running the
stores.
Understanding the CEO
Influenced by a business-minded father, Meij said he quickly developed an entrepreneurial
streak nurturing both his creative and analytical sides with a mix of arts and economics
education at university. This shaped his leadership style which is focused on helping staff
grow inside the business. Meij, who started his career as a pizza delivery driver in 1987, is a
calculated risk taker, regularly changing Domino’s business model to stay ahead of the
market. “I have been in the business for 25 years and we are in our third major change of
our business model,’’ he says. The latest revolution is the way the company has embraced
online retailing and social media.Page 2 of 3
Meij believes the only way a business can deal with challenges is to work out ways of turning
a negative into a positive. For example, legislation on employee conditions has forced up
Domino’s labour costs 100% over the next four or five years. “But that means people are
getting better paid, which means the company is holding on to its employees for longer”, he
says. The result: delivery times have reduced from 32 to minutes to 24. Also, there are fewer
mistakes in store and staff members are more engaged.
Meij uses encouragement and training programs to engage and motivate staff. “We
incentivise people through a range of systems to become better pizza makers, better dough
makers, to become more skilled delivery drivers. There are training classes and we time you
and you go through tests and you get different badges on your shirt and so on.” Domino’s
staff respond to his nurturing leadership with loyalty. As a reward every year Meij takes his
top team to Silicon Valley in the USA to view new technologies that could be introduced into
the Domino’s business.
Meij emphasises the big picture and getting managers to focus on the long term. “In some
cases, you have to be a benign dictator, because it’s in the better interests of the group. It’s
a combination of being directive on top of co-operation and bargaining and trading with
interested parties in the group, from boards to franchise owners, to managers to leadership
team members to business partners outside the business. You just have to go and sell your
new strategy.”
Meij says his managers are champions of change. But running the team, he says, means
discussion, compromise and occasionally, admitting when you were wrong. “It’s important to
allow discussion. When you’re dictating new policies, you still have to have enough allies.
You can’t be the lone soldier”.
Worker unhappiness
The reality of life inside the Domino’s Pizza chain is not what is portrayed to the general
public. Many workers are unhappy due to widespread underpayment of wages, the
deliberate underpayment of penalties using a delivery scam and the illegal sale of
sponsorships of workers. Not always paying staff their full entitlements was found to be
standard practice across many stores. Hard-working staff made few tips and often suffered
abuse and danger while delivering food to strangers. He said affected workers were
reluctant to speak out for fear of retribution.
It took Domino’s store manager Josef Yap three years to get the courage to inform head
office that his boss Del Santo, who was also one of its biggest most powerful franchisees
and a member of Domino’s influential Franchisee Advisory Committee, was exploiting
workers. Del Santo ran 10 stores on the outskirts of Sydney. Yap was concerned when Del
Santo had told him to keep labour costs below 27 per cent of sales by any means possible. It
meant that in a week of bad sales, Yap was told to manipulate the store's payroll system
and lower the number of staff hours worked, and reduce their pay accordingly, including his
own. Every week Yap would send Del Santo’s payroll reports listing employees working less
than their actual hours.
Del Santo maintains he has fostered a "loving" relationship with his staff. "I am not a dictator;
I just want my staff to be happy. They are not scared of me ... they are very hardworking. I
love them and they love me”, he said. Del Santo admitted the payroll figures didn't always
match the hours recorded on internal "sales reports", but blamed his employees for the
discrepancies, claiming they often clocked in early or clocked out late. He said sometimes
store managers deliver pizzas and this accounted for the pay-slip differences.Page 3 of 3
But not all of Del Santo’s staff agreed. Yap remembers working long hours without a break in
suffocating heat, with no air conditioning working close to a 200-degree oven. "I had to bring
in a fan because it was so hot.” "I was so stressed all the time," he says. Yap said he worked
between 50 hours and 60 hours a week but that his pay slips often showed he worked 35
hours as anything above 38 hours would attract penalties. This had the effect of denying him
overtime payments for extra hours he worked. "I was told the money would be made up
when we get a good day, but that didn't happen. I was very nervous and afraid working in
the stores. If the sales weren't good I would be shouted at," he says. "Once I was told I
'would be put in the oven' he was so mad," he said.
Workers, owed hundreds of thousands of dollars from Domino’s Pizza, are still waiting to be
repaid almost two years after underpayment of staff was discovered. Domino’s said many
instances of underpayment were just "simple misunderstandings" but it had concerns that
some franchisees were “doing the wrong thing” which was detrimental to the Domino’s
brand.
Franchisees
After claims of unlawful conduct by franchisees was made to head office, Domino’s audited
its stores and terminated four franchisees for wage fraud. The audit uncovered "a strong
likelihood of unlawful and fraudulent behaviour, driven by greed", including manipulation of
worker shift hours by the franchisee, breach of payroll conditions and practices, not paying
overtime, not paying the correct hourly rate, as Yap had claimed, and workers breaching
their visa conditions. Domino’s said it has "zero tolerance" for worker exploitation and will
take action against anyone caught deliberately underpaying workers.
Why were some franchisees acting like this? As competition intensified with other rival food
chains, a number of franchisees describe the head office system as "dictatorial" with its
ongoing demands to make record profits. Franchisees reported being very stressed losing
hundreds of thousands of dollars. They weren't making money unless they were cutting
costs or being subsidised by head office. Franchisees were being asked to pay more and
more ongoing fees, sell $5 pizzas and make them in increasingly record times - all of which
put pressure on staff and franchisees.
Franchisees looked for different ways to cut costs such as scrimping on core ingredients like
flour and reusing raw ingredients that fell off unbaked pizzas. “You can only make 42 bases
out of a bag of flour but we were making upwards of 50 - they were getting around 10
more pizzas out of each bag then they were supposed to," one franchisee reported.
Another franchisee says running a Domino’s store almost cost her health, relationships and
financial wellbeing. All employees were required to make the food, including managers and
drivers. She worked at the store six days a week, clocking off at 3am some nights. "A lot of
people I've known have had mental breakdowns because there is so much you have to do,
and so many restraints ...," she said. Another franchisee admitted underpayment was
common among Domino’s franchisees. "I had my own arrangement with the staff. Some
were students and I was paying their fees ... Sometimes I'd help with their rent." he said.
Yap reported Del Santo to head office shortly after he quit his job in April 2016. The long
hours, poor pay, and heat exhaustion finally got to him. He never heard back from Domino’s
and never received back pay.