For decades, workplace dining has often been approached through standardized frameworks, uniform menus, fixed service models, and broad assumptions about what employees want from their food experience. Yet organizational environments are rarely uniform. Workforces differ in culture, pace, health priorities, and even regional identity. According to Robert Shelby, founder of Corporate Dining Concepts, treating workplace dining as a one-size-fits-all service overlooks the complexity of modern corporate environments.
“Every workplace has its own rhythm, its own culture, and its own expectations around food,” Shelby explains. “If you walk into ten different corporate locations at lunchtime, you should expect to see ten completely different dining experiences.”
Corporate Dining Concepts was founded in 1999 to focus specifically on foodservice within the at-work environment, supporting corporate headquarters, regional offices, and manufacturing facilities through tailored dining programs. The company concentrated its efforts on workplace settings, developing operational models designed around employee populations, facility sizes, and employer objectives.
That flexibility, he says, begins with listening. “We start by understanding what the client actually needs, not what we assume they need,” Shelby says. “From large campuses serving thousands of employees to smaller offices requiring limited services, scalability has always been important to us.” Some locations operate full cafeteria programs, while others may focus on micro-markets, vending, office coffee, or corporate catering, depending entirely on operational need.
Customization also extends beyond operational scale into culinary identity. Shelby recalls opening new dining programs in the American Southwest, where regional food culture played a defining role in menu development. Initial assumptions about menu direction shifted after local teams explained the distinctions between neighboring culinary traditions.
“They helped us understand that regional food is not interchangeable,” he says. “So we built menus that reflected local tastes, ingredients, and expectations. That level of cultural awareness matters when you are serving people every day.”
Wellness programming represents another layer of personalization. Shelby explains that workplace health initiatives often carry different meanings depending on organizational goals and employee preferences. “If you ask ten clients what wellness means, you will get ten different answers,” he says. “For some, it’s calorie control. For others, it’s plant-based meals, low-carb options, or performance nutrition. Our role is to design programs that align with their definition, not ours.”
In practice, Shelby explains that wellness programming can take different forms depending on what an organization hopes to support within its workforce. That may include nutrition-guided menus, ingredient sourcing considerations, or portion planning frameworks tailored to employee priorities. From his perspective, the goal is not to impose a single definition of healthy eating, but to align dining programs with each client’s interpretation of wellness rather than offering standardized healthy options.
Operational agility has also shaped the company’s evolution, particularly in response to workplace shifts in recent years. Shelby explains how dining services were gradually reintroduced in phases as employee populations returned to physical worksites, with staffing levels, menus, and service formats expanding alongside occupancy levels. He notes that this phased model allowed programs to scale in step with client needs while maintaining continuity in service. “It required flexibility,” he says. “We built programs that could scale up as workforces returned, ensuring clients could reopen dining services responsibly and efficiently.”
Shelby places equal importance on technology and communication tools, which have further supported that adaptability. “Digital ordering platforms, contactless pickup systems, and data reporting mechanisms allow organizations to track participation trends and adjust offerings accordingly,” Shelby says. He notes that sharing purchasing insights with clients helps employers better understand employee engagement and dining preferences.
Shelby also emphasizes the importance of leadership accessibility within client relationships, noting that engagement should extend beyond operational teams. “I have always believed clients should have access to leadership,” he says. “It’s important that they know we are present, engaged, and accountable for the programs we build together.”
That accessibility, Shelby explains, also shapes how client relationships are managed over time. “Some organizations prefer structured operational reviews and regular performance check-ins, while others take a more hands-off approach,” he notes. In his view, adapting to those preferences is part of delivering a responsive service model, reflecting the company’s broader philosophy of flexibility in how partnerships are supported.
According to Shelby, marketing and on-site engagement represent another strategic layer of workplace dining. Because employees interact with dining spaces daily, he emphasizes the importance of consistent internal promotion, from digital menu boards to featured meal campaigns designed to sustain participation. He notes that visible, well-timed messaging helps keep the dining experience dynamic within the workplace environment. “You have to keep the experience fresh,” he says. “Presentation, communication, and creativity all influence how employees engage with workplace dining.”
Today, Corporate Dining Concepts operates across the United States, supporting organizations through programs designed to reflect workforce identity rather than replace it. While growth remains part of the company’s long-term trajectory, Shelby maintains that its defining characteristic will remain unchanged.
“Our role is not just to serve meals,” Shelby says. “It’s to understand the people behind the workplace and build dining programs that reflect who they are, how they work, and what matters to them every day.”






