Description
If the Waffle House is closed, run. How a 24-hour diner became the government's best tool for measuring disaster. When a hurricane hits the US coast, FEMA officials don't just look at weather radar; they look at Waffle House. If the local Waffle House is open and serving a full menu, things are fine (Green). If they are serving a limited menu, there is no power (Yellow). If the Waffle House is closed, it's a catastrophe (Red). This is not a joke; it is the official "Waffle House Index" used by the US government."The Waffle Index" explores the incredible logistics and resilience of the restaurant chain that prides itself on never closing. It details their "jump teams" of managers who rush into disaster zones and their pre-printed "no power" menus.But the book goes deeper, using Waffle House as a lens to understand modern supply chain resilience, risk management, and the economics of disaster. It contrasts the agile, decentralized response of the private sector with the often slow bureaucracy of government relief. It is a lesson on how to stay open when the world is falling apart.



