Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Bob Evans Restaurants

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Type
  
Public

Key people
  
Saed Mohseni, CEO

Industry
  
Restaurant

Founder
  
Bob Evans

Bob Evans Restaurants httpslh6googleusercontentcomltiju31nDlAAAA

Traded as
  
NASDAQ: BOBE S&P 600 Component

Products
  
Bob Evans Restaurants Bob Evans Sausage Owens Country Sausage Mimi's Cafe

Revenue
  
$1.669 billion (FY 2012)

Stock price
  
BOBE (NASDAQ) US$ 56.82 +0.12 (+0.21%)3 Mar, 4:00 PM GMT-5 - Disclaimer

Headquarters
  
New Albany, Ohio, United States

CEO
  
Saed Mohseni (1 Jan 2016–)

Founded
  
1946, Rio Grande, Ohio, United States

Profiles

Bob Evans Restaurants is an American national chain of restaurants operated by Bob Evans Farms, Inc., a food service, processing, and retail company based in New Albany, Ohio. The company is named after its founder, Bob Evans (1918–2007). Its food processing and retail enterprise products are manufactured and sold under the Bob Evans and Owens Country Sausage brand names.

Contents

Overview

The Bob Evans chain has over 600 locations in 24 states, primarily in the Mid-Atlantic, Midwestern, and upper Southern states. All locations are corporately owned, not franchised.

The restaurants offer a theme of country living, and a close connection to farms. Breakfast is served at the restaurants all day long.

The company also offers pork products to the retail grocery market, as well as other prepared food products to the grocery and food service segments. Baked goods, snacks, greeting cards, and small gift items are also sold at some Bob Evans restaurants.

History

In 1946, the Bob Evans Restaurant chain started from a single truck stop diner near the Bob Evans Farm in Rio Grande, Ohio.

The restaurant chain started up after Bob Evans began processing and packaging his own sausage for his diner. Truck drivers and other patrons began telling him that his sausage was superior. He did not have the capacity to fill large orders. As a result, he contracted with his cousin Tim Evans of Evans Packing Co. to package Bob Evans Sausage products. Bob made his way across the Southern Ohio Hills seeking some of the best cuts of meat. He was very well known in the town of Gallipolis, Ohio, where at the local Meat Market & Grocery Store he and Earl Nance created sausage recipes. Evans tried to sell his sausage to area restaurants, but they turned him down, saying that customers wouldn't pay more for quality. Evans felt differently and opened his own restaurant on his farm in Rio Grande in 1962.

Another relative, Dan Evans, served as CEO until his retirement in 2000.

The company acquired Texas-based Owens Country Sausage in 1987. The company branded its otherwise identical restaurants in Texas as Owens Restaurants due to trademark issues. By January 2006, all Owens restaurants were closed.

The company operated a Mexican-themed restaurant called Cantina del Rio in the mid-1990s, a move which Bob Evans called "a disaster" in 2003.

The Evans family controlled daily operations of the company until 2000 when Dan Evans retired as CEO. After Dan's retirement, Stewart K. Owens (a former officer of the Owens Country Sausage company and later president of BOBE) assumed control of Bob Evans Farms Inc. as CEO. In 2001, he became Chairman of the Board. Company profits faltered under Owens' tenure. In August 2005, after corporate profits had dropped in eight of the previous nine quarters, Owens announced his resignation. After operating for several months under interim CEO Larry Corbin, the company hired Steven Davis, former president of Long John Silver's, as CEO in May 2006.

In July 2004, Bob Evans Farms purchased the California-based Mimi's Cafe restaurant chain (operating under SWH Corporation) for $182 million. Mimi's Cafe had 144 locations throughout the U.S. at the time. They featured casual dining and American food with a French emphasis and decorative elements. Bob Evans Farms sold Mimi's Cafe to the U.S. branch of Groupe Le Duff in 2013.

On August 17, 2009, Bob Evans opened a prototype restaurant in Xenia, Ohio. This restaurant has a more farm-like feel and resembles the Bob Evans farm.

CEO Steven Davis resigned in December 2014.

As of Q4 2015, the chain announced its intention to sell 145 properties to Mesirow Financial Holdings Inc. for a total price of $200 million. The net proceeds are expected to be approximately $165 million and the deal is expected to close in Q2 2016.

Sale to Golden Gate Capital

On 24 January 2017, the Bob Evans Restaurants business unit was sold to the private equity company Golden Gate Capital for US$565 million plus the assumption of up to US$50 million in liabilities. Net proceeds from the sale to Bob Evans Farms are expected to be between $475 million to $485 million.

On the same day, Bob Evans Farms entered into an agreement to acquire the Pineland Farms Potato Co. of Mars Hill, Maine, for US$115 million. Pineland Farms is a value-added potato processor, including a 900-acre (360 ha) potato farm, serving the retail and food service markets; they also operate a cheese processing business.

References

Bob Evans Restaurants Wikipedia