📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Restaurant Chain Slammed For Viral Photo of Policy Claiming Employees Must Earn Five-Star Reviews or Be Terminated The chain has since spoken out since the viral photo made its rounds over the weekend.

By Emily Rella

entrepreneur daily

Chances are you've probably been at a restaurant or in a store and had employees mention to you that they would be appreciative if you could leave a review for their services on any given review site.

And while it might be slightly off-putting, it makes sense — better reviews equals a higher chance more customers will come in which generates more money for the business.

But one chain of restaurants in New Jersey is taking heat for allegedly forcing employees to earn a minimum number of five-star Google reviews in order to keep their employment after photos of the policy typed out made its way around social media.

Triple T Hospitality Group, which owns Tio Taco and Tequila Bar and with Tommy's Tavern and Tap, is under fire after an absurd policy posted at Tio's location in Edison, New Jersey was leaked which told employees that they would face termination if they didn't receive a certain amount of five-star reviews.

"Every service employee for FOH is required to get a minimum of 5 Google reviews per month to remain employed at the Edison location starting February 2022. The review must include your first name and five stars in order to count," the typed out notice said. "We will have monthly Google review contests each month to promote health[y] competition. You must have a minimum of 15 reviews to qualify for the prizes. 1st place winner gets first pick out of five potential prizes and 2nd place gets to choose from the left-over prizes."

Prizes included two free meals (for $22 or less), an extra day off, gift cards and merch items.

The photo, which was originally posted to Reddit has received over 1,600 comments.

"My bet is they know nobody's going to get those reviews, so they can use that to threaten and fire at will," one commenter said.

"The owner or area boss most likely threatened the General Manager's job over the place's lackluster reviews, so they responded in typical restaurant manager fashion: sticking an aggressive memo to a wall and threatening consequence," another suggested. "People aren't quitting restaurants because the pandemic was bad. They were fed up in 2019. The pandemic was just the last straw."

Two Taco and Tequila bar currently has three locations in New Jersey (Marlboro and Clifton alongside the Edison location where the sign was posted) while Tommy's Tavern + Tap has six Jersey locations (Freehold, Sea Bright, Clifton Bridgewater, Princeton and Morris Plains) as well as one restaurant in in Staten Island.

Chief Marketing Officer of Triple T, Andrea Bonfiglio, told My Central Jersey that the notice in the Edison location was posted unwarranted by a general manager and that the policy had not been approved by corporate.

"We did not institute this policy," Bonfiglio said to the outlet. "It's an insane policy … We reward people who go above and beyond, but we would never be like, 'You better get these.'"

Triple T Hospitality Group is owned by Bonfiglio's father, Tommy Bonfiglio and it is estimated that the restaurant group employees around 1,100 employees.

Thousands of horrible and negative reviews were reportedly plastered across the Google reviews landing pages for different locations of the restaurant chains but have since been scrubbed.

"In the restaurant business, we're not firing anyone, we're still trying to hire people," Triple T owner Tommy Bonfiglio told NJ Advance Media. "It would be an impossible policy. I'd have to fire the whole crew."

Both the general and assistant manager who admitted that they posted the policy were fired following the incident.

Emily Rella

Entrepreneur Staff

Senior News Writer

Emily Rella is a Senior News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was an editor at Verizon Media. Her coverage spans features, business, lifestyle, tech, entertainment, and lifestyle. She is a 2015 graduate of Boston College and a Ridgefield, CT native. Find her on Twitter at @EmilyKRella.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

These $1 Bills Could Be Worth $150,000 — Here's How to Check If One Is in Your Wallet Right Now

There are an estimated six million of these erroneous bills in circulation.

Leadership

6 Guiding Principles Behind Every Successful Company — And Why You Should Follow Them to Excel

Certain common characteristics that I identified after analyzing the top companies currently active in the market can aid in achieving success. And all of them are applicable to every business.

Side Hustle

When This Entrepreneur Couldn't Decide What to Name His Business, He Started a $2,000-a-Month Side Hustle to Help — Now It Earns Over $10 Million a Year

Darpan Munjal, founder and CEO of AI-powered startup ecosystem Atom, offered $50 to anyone who could help with the creativity block.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Gen Z Is Increasingly Turning to Trade Schools as a Fast Track to Entrepreneurship and an AI-Proof Career

Trade school enrollments increased last year as undergrad degree completion dropped.

Starting a Business

Here's What 86% of Hourly Workers Say Would Actually Make Them Happier at Their Jobs. (Hint: It Isn't More Money.)

John Waldmann, the CEO and co-founder of the small business team management app Homebase, discusses the launch of his business and the findings from his company's small business fulfillment survey.