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Chipotle employees are rising through the ranks and making 6 figures after Guild suggested a simple switch that transformed the workforce

Amanda Gerut
By
Amanda Gerut
Amanda Gerut
News Editor, West Coast
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Amanda Gerut
By
Amanda Gerut
Amanda Gerut
News Editor, West Coast
Down Arrow Button Icon
May 21, 2025, 10:08 PM ET
Ilene Eskenazi, Chief Human Resource Officer, Chipotle Bijal Shah, Chief Executive Officer, Guild
Ilene Eskenazi, Chief Human Resources Officer, Chipotle (left) and Bijal Shah, Chief Executive Officer, Guild (right)Kristy Walker/Fortune

As is customary in the restaurant industry, Chipotle was facing steep turnover and a 50% retention rate. CEO Scott Boatwright’s strategy called for the taco-bowl chain to hire 10,000 workers to staff more than 300 new restaurants in 2025—with thousands more needed in the coming years. And ultimately, the senior team wanted a more stable, well-trained workforce that could embrace the company’s culture and advance up the ranks.

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“We often have high turnover, so we were solving for two things,” said Ilene Eskenazi, chief human resources officer at Chipotle, speaking at Fortune’s Workplace Innovation Summit in California this week. “In the restaurants that have higher turnover, where we’re constantly having to train and retrain new employees, performance is not as high as teams that have longer tenure. And in addition, we have been on a really high-growth trajectory.”

To help address the talent aspect, Chipotle turned to Guild, an education technology and upskilling firm. 

At the time, Chipotle already offered employees a tuition reimbursement benefit, said Shah, who also spoke at Fortune’s summit. However—and this was key—traditional reimbursement programs are often out of reach for frontline workers, the very cohort companies hope to target with such offerings. 

“Tuition reimbursement requires the employee to take out-of-pocket dollars, use them to go get educated, and then get reimbursed after the fact,” explained Shah. “And that works really well when you have more than $300 in your bank account, available and accessible to you.”

So the Guild team talked with Chipotle about a program that would appeal to employees who can’t afford those upfront, out-of-pocket costs, but want to get educated and skilled up in areas that can help propel their careers forward. 

Now, Chipotle has a program that allows for both reimbursement and assistance, said Shah. The programs “provide access to specific opportunities and then broader opportunities,” she said.

In 2024, Chipotle promoted 23,000 employees, with 85% of restaurant management roles taken by internal candidates. Some five out of 11 regional vice presidents are former frontline workers who moved up through the ranks to the senior operations level. At the field leader level, a role accountable for an average of eight restaurant sites in a single region, 84% are internal promotions and that group now oversees business segments that average $24 million in sales per year.  

Eskenazi said hearing individual stories from employees who have moved up after getting involved in the program is one of her favorite parts about the impact of the initiative.

“We have all these amazing stories where you talk to people, and they immigrated to this country 10 years ago and started as a crew member, and now they’re taking a six-figure job in leadership, and they just put one of their children through college or they bought a home,” she said.

Eskenazi said the tuition-assistance program initially focused on business and technology, both areas that align with the fast-casual chain’s strategic plan. Over time, Eskenazi said, she heard feedback that people were interested in the program, but they wanted more flexibility to explore new areas. Now, it includes some 100 different degrees people go after. Chipotle has also charted and structured advancement opportunities for employees so they can visualize their career path and see precisely how further education can result in upward mobility. 

“When we look at the business now, and we talk to our teams, there’s a lot of belief in the program, and there’s a lot of belief in the opportunity for career progression in the company,” she said.

Shah added that the “virality” of the program—one coworker embarking on a journey and then telling another coworker about it—helps to drive greater adoption. 

“People start to see their coworkers, see mobility opportunities, and see change happening in their life,” she said. “There’s just a confidence. There’s something about getting educated that builds your confidence.” 

Plus, it identifies ambitious employees who are motivated to move up.

“Seeing who enrolls in it is a really good indicator of who’s motivated, who’s excited, who’s inspired, who wants to invest in themselves,” Shah said. “You probably all have latent talent inside your organization that is just waiting for their potential to be unlocked.”

Join us at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit May 19–20, 2026, in Atlanta. The next era of workplace innovation is here—and the old playbook is being rewritten. At this exclusive, high-energy event, the world’s most innovative leaders will convene to explore how AI, humanity, and strategy converge to redefine, again, the future of work. Register now.
About the Author
Amanda Gerut
By Amanda GerutNews Editor, West Coast

Amanda Gerut is the west coast editor at Fortune, overseeing publicly traded businesses, executive compensation, Securities and Exchange Commission regulations, and investigations.

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