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CommentaryRestaurants

Wendy’s U.S. President: the CEO burger battles exposed a truth every brand leader needs to hear

By
Pete Suerken
Pete Suerken
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By
Pete Suerken
Pete Suerken
Down Arrow Button Icon
May 28, 2026, 8:30 AM ET
Pete Suerken is President, U.S., The Wendy’s Company.
suerken
Pete Suerken, President. U.S., The Wendy's Company.courtesy of Wendy's

Every May, National Hamburger Day does what the best food holidays do: it gives people a reason to celebrate something they already love. At Wendy’s, we honor this sentiment year-round because it’s at the heart of our brand. We’re passionate every day about providing fresh, high-quality, great-tasting food at a great value.

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But this year, the hamburger has been the focus of business stories and a social media phenomenon.

The past several months have brought something you don’t often see in the quick service restaurant industry: genuine public scrutiny of how leaders show up for the food that defines their brands. Executives throwing shade, consumers weighing in on social and a cultural moment that turned a popular menu item into a referendum on brand integrity. When a hamburger becomes a headline, it’s worth pausing to ask what that reveals. Not about the burger itself, but about the brands behind it. Here’s the question underneath all the noise: when your star menu item is under the microscope, what are you actually standing on?

Most companies will tell you their quality standards are non-negotiable. They mean it, too, right up until holding that standard seems impossible. That’s the difference between a brand standard and a brand aspiration. A standard is what you hold even when holding it costs you something. An aspiration is what you aim for when conditions are favorable. The brands that win — the ones that become genuinely iconic — are the ones that never confuse the two under pressure.

What Dave Thomas built

When Dave Thomas founded Wendy’s in 1969, he made a foundational decision that has shaped everything that followed: to never cut corners by using fresh, never frozen North American beef. This was not a tagline or marketing positioning. It was a deliberate commitment rooted in a straightforward belief that quality should never be compromised, fresh beef tastes better, and guests deserve fresh beef on every hamburger no matter the size or cost. Building a business around that belief required constructing an entirely different kind of supply chain from the ground up, one that has never been simple or low-cost to operate.

Fresh beef requires a strict just-in-time delivery system that leaves no margin for delay. It demands increased delivery frequency to every restaurant because fresh food has a shelf life that frozen alternatives simply do not. And it depends on highly localized sourcing and tightly controlled shipping. Thousands of times every week, we transport fresh beef from American processing plants to Wendy’s restaurants in a matter of days. Preserving that food quality and safety means closely monitoring temperatures in the refrigerated trucks and working with the most technologically advanced transportation companies in the industry. Frozen alternatives require none of that discipline. They are more forgiving, more flexible and less operationally demanding. Wendy’s has understood that tradeoff for 57 years, and we continue to choose the harder path anyway.

I have seen that complexity up close. Before taking on my current role, I spent more than two decades working across food, beverage and restaurant operations, including several years running Wendy’s purchasing co-op. I am also a farm kid, which means the food supply chain has never been an abstraction to me. I understand what it takes to bring food from the farm to the table, and I’m grateful for the hard-working farmers who make our brand promise possible. That shapes how I think about what we owe our customers every time they order one of our hamburgers. What we owe them is an uncompromising standard for fresh, never frozen beef, across the entire menu, not just premium sandwiches.

Consumer behavior has a way of confirming what effective operators already understand. We know that a significant portion of Wendy’s customers choose us specifically for the quality upgrade. It shows that a decision made in 1969, rooted in putting the customer first, is still influencing loyalty today. The supply chain Dave Thomas built is a competitive asset that compounds over time and can’t be replicated quickly by a competitor who chose differently. When the CEO “burger battles” put the entire QSR category under the spotlight this year, brands with authentic claims owned the conversation.

Every successful business has their own ‘fresh, never frozen‘

The business lesson here extends far beyond hamburgers. Every brand that has become a cultural fixture has a version of fresh, never frozen. It is the standard that defines you. In a world where the pressure to cut corners is real and unrelenting, your standard only matters if it is what you protect when everyone around you is looking for shortcuts.

The things that make you different are the things people remember. On a day when the nation is celebrating the hamburger, Wendy’s is serving up fresh, never frozen beef, just like we did on day one. Fifty-seven years in, we are still not interested in being just another burger place.

For every leader responsible for an iconic brand, the question is simple: when there is pressure to compromise, what standard will you battle to protect, no matter what?

Fresh beef available in the contiguous U.S., Alaska and Canada.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

About the Author
By Pete Suerken
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