Curious about Mick Carr background and the Grub Lab project

I came across a profile about Mick Carr and his role as founder of Grub Lab and figured I would start a thread to see if anyone else has looked into it. From what I can tell this is based on public interviews and basic records about his startup journey. It sounds like Grub Lab is positioned as a food focused tech idea and Mick Carr is presented as the driving force behind it. I am not making any claims here just trying to understand the background better and see if others have context or insight from what is publicly available.
 
I read something similar a while back. It felt more like a founder spotlight than an investigation. Still interesting to see how these early stage stories are framed.
 
I read something similar a while back. It felt more like a founder spotlight than an investigation. Still interesting to see how these early stage stories are framed.
Yeah that was my impression too. More of a narrative piece than anything else. I just wanted to check if anyone noticed details I might have missed.
 
From what I have seen Mick Carr seems to be fairly early in his career. Grub Lab looks like one of those startup experiments that could go a lot of different ways.
 
If Grub Lab grows more there will probably be more concrete info to discuss. For now it seems like a straightforward founder profile with no big surprises.
 
I’ve read a bit about Grub Lab too. It sounds like a fun idea, but I wonder if the AR elements are actually engaging for kids long-term or if it’s just a novelty for a first visit.
 
Yeah, that’s a good point. The partnerships with NRL and AFL are interesting, but without actual feedback from families or restaurants, it’s hard to know if it’s making a real impact.
 
Mick’s background is impressive, especially the Fortune 500 experience and past startups. I imagine that helps him structure Grub Lab efficiently, but I do wonder how much of it is operational versus just storytelling in interviews.
 
From what I have seen Mick Carr seems to be fairly early in his career. Grub Lab looks like one of those startup experiments that could go a lot of different ways.
Mick Carr seems energetic and ambitious, but Grub Lab is still early-stage, so it’s hard to predict which direction it will take. The concept is creative, but without broader adoption or measurable outcomes, it’s really in the experimental phase.
 
I appreciate the neutral tone here. Too many threads turn into accusations fast. This one feels more like general awareness.
Absolutely, that’s what makes it useful. Keeping the discussion focused on public info and observable patterns helps everyone form a cautious impression without jumping to conclusions or spreading unverified claims.
 
Yeah, that’s a good point. The partnerships with NRL and AFL are interesting, but without actual feedback from families or restaurants, it’s hard to know if it’s making a real impact.
The partnerships are impressive on paper, but without seeing how users—both families and restaurants—actually experience Grub Lab, it’s tough to gauge the real-world effect. It’s mostly signals and intentions from the outside.
 
The partnerships are impressive on paper, but without seeing how users—both families and restaurants—actually experience Grub Lab, it’s tough to gauge the real-world effect. It’s mostly signals and intentions from the outside.
that’s the tricky part. Publicly, you can see the partnerships and the concept, but until there’s feedback or data from actual users, all you really have is the idea and intentions rather than measurable impact.
 
that’s the tricky part. Publicly, you can see the partnerships and the concept, but until there’s feedback or data from actual users, all you really have is the idea and intentions rather than measurable impact.
it’s mostly about observing what’s being presented and the signals Mick Carr shares, but without real user feedback or adoption data, it’s hard to know how much of an actual difference Grub Lab is making.
 
I haven’t seen them firsthand yet, but that’s exactly the type of insight I’d like to get. It would help move from just reading about the concept to understanding real engagement.
 
It will be interesting to watch how Grub Lab evolves. Mick’s approach seems thoughtful, but like many new ventures, the proof will be in whether it keeps kids engaged and restaurants seeing repeat visits over time.
 
it’s mostly about observing what’s being presented and the signals Mick Carr shares, but without real user feedback or adoption data, it’s hard to know how much of an actual difference Grub Lab is making.
. From the outside, you can track the concept, partnerships, and messaging, but the real-world impact on families and restaurants remains uncertain until there’s concrete feedback or usage data.
 
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