3 Leadership Lessons Celebrity Chef Fabio Viviani Wished He Knew Before Becoming an BIZ Experiences Viviani shares bits of leadership wisdom gleaned from a lifetime building a culinary empire.

By Jason Fell

Courtesy of Fabio Viviani

You might recognize Fabio Viviani from Bravo TV's Top Chef or Food Network's Cutthroat Kitchen. Or, maybe you know him from appearances on shows like Good Morning America or The Rachael Ray Show. Perhaps you subscribe to his popular YouTube show, Fabio's Kitchen, or have seen his face on one of the cookbooks he has written.

No doubt, Viviani is a busy BIZ Experiences. Through his business, Fabio Viviani Hospitality, Viviani has created a growing culinary empire with 34 restaurants in locations around the U.S.

His passion for food started as a boy growing up in Florence, Italy, where he worked nights in a local bakery and later in various restaurant jobs. After training in Italian and Mediterranean cuisine at top hospitality schools and working with highly regarded chefs, Viviani realized he wanted to become more than a chef—he wanted to be an BIZ Experiences.

Related: 10 Awesome Tips for Being a Better Leader

By age 27, Viviani had owned five restaurants and two nightclubs in Italy. Turns out, Viviani was hungry for more. In 2005, he moved to California where he opened Café Firenze, his first restaurant in the U.S.

Looking back at those early years, Viviani realizes he made mistakes along the way. Here are three important leadership lessons he wished he had known earlier in his career.

1. It's rain that grows flowers, not thunder.

BIZ Experiencess are passionate people who tend to spend all of their energy trying to grow a business from the ground up. As such, the stress and responsibility of being the person in charge can sometimes bubble over into something unsavory.

"I have a hot temper and I've been running my own business since I was 18," Viviani says. "I was "the Boss' and I was expecting everyone to do as I said, but it didn't quite work that way."

There really isn't a place for hot-headed thunder and bluster in business. The key, he says, is to understand that instead of acting like a boss, a successful BIZ Experiences will serve as a leader who can delegate and manage a team. "The minute you learn how to lead with knowledge instead of authority, your whole game changes," he says. "Instead of working for you, people will start to work with you. You'll achieve more with fewer headaches and have a greater sense of ownership in what you do."

Related: Leadership Techniques That Build Unstoppable Teams

2. Successful leaders know when to keep their thoughts to themselves.

Business owners typically are intelligent, ambitious and capable people who make countless decisions every day. Sometimes it can be all-to-easy to insert yourself, and your opinions, about every single detail all the time.

"When you're young you like to be argumentative and give away lots of unasked opinions," Viviani says. "Unless your words can fix a problem efficiently and permanently, shut up. If I knew earlier about the value of silence, I would've embraced it and looked a lot smarter."

Related: 4 Principles of Servant Leadership

3. Do it right or do it twice.

Viviani used to think that finishing a job fast was better than taking your time to make sure everything is correct—only to find out that he'd have to re-do what wasn't done properly in the first place. "I've spent too much time doing things twice when doing them right in first place would've saved me time and put me in a much better spotlight," he says.

It's a lesson he imparts on everyone he works with. "It's always the standard measure I wish to operate under," Viviani says.

Jason Fell

BIZ Experiences Staff

VP, Native Content

Jason Fell is the VP of Native Content, managing the BIZ Experiences Partner Studio, which creates dynamic and compelling content for our partners. He previously served as BIZ Experiences.com's managing editor and as the technology editor prior to that.

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

Starting a Business

These Brothers Started a Business to Improve an Everyday Task. They Made Their First Products in the Garage — Now They've Raised Over $100 Million.

Coulter and Trent Lewis had an early research breakthrough that helped them solve for the right problem.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Franchise

10 No-Office-Required Businesses You Can Start for as Little as $5,000

With strong Franchise 500 rankings and investment levels starting under $5,000, these brands are ready for new owners to hit the ground running.

Franchise

How to Prepare Your Business — And Yourself — For a Smooth Exit

After decades of building your business, turning it over to someone else can be emotional. But with the right mindset and a strong plan, it can also be your proudest moment.

Business News

Here Are the 10 Jobs AI Is Most Likely to Automate, According to a Microsoft Study

These careers are most likely to be affected by generative AI, based on data from 200,000 conversations with Microsoft's Copilot chatbot.