Peter Petroulas on how Greek upbringing inspired his $275 million booking system

·

“If you think different, then you can actually bring around real change, and totally revolutionise something,” Peter Petroulas tells The Greek Herald.

Peter is the Founder and Owner of WizButler, an innovative booking system which recently won a $275 million US patent valuation.

He is the first person in the world to solve a booking system issue that once troubled the restaurant industry for decades.

And you’re probably thinking how? WizButler manages restaurant space instead of a fixed number of restaurant tables. The algorithm reallocates tables and every booking in real time to optimise space and bookings on the dining floor.

Believe it or not, this million-dollar idea stems from something so wholesome and simple.

Born in Aeropolis, Mani, Greece, Peter came to Australia at five years old in 1965 with his family. Peter explains it was moments with his Greek migrant father as a young boy and helping him with renovations that was essentially the “key” to his discovery.

“When dad was doing some renovations, he used to get me involved, get me on the other end of the stick, or the measuring tape, or whatever he was doing. From this, I grew up understanding about measurements,” he says. 

“So then, you know, my understanding of space, and the use of space in the restaurant, and then tables and chairs around to optimise that space is sort of the key to the patent.”

Peter Petroulas family. From left to right, John, Mum (Julia), Peter, Dad (Panagiotis), Colin and Spiro.

Living the Greek legacy:

Peter makes it clear that the booking system idea didn’t come into fruition seamlessly, or by luck. There were challenges but he persevered – something we agreed reflects the Greek legacy, alongside the “think different” mentality.

“It was not as if I woke up one day and the idea of making a better restaurant booking and management system that others could not solve came to me,” Peter says.

“My parents instilled into me that if there’s a problem, you solve it, you don’t walk away from it, you can’t give up. You certainly don’t give up.”

His hard work in past jobs as a corporate planning manager, director of finance and technology at East West airlines and Air Niugini airline, and a business degree gave him a strong foundational understanding of systems and coding.

Peter Petroulas.

But he says that pitching his booking system idea, which he knew was groundbreaking, to a mathematician was not met with optimism.

“He turned around and said ‘what you’re trying to do won’t work’,” Peter explains.

After letting the mathematician try his own way, he asked to trial what he had proposed in their first meeting.

“So then he did it. And then you know, it started to work…” he says.

The system Peter created is logical and thoroughly thought out. People before him would simply try and improve the old booking system, but Peter approached things differently by stripping everything back and looking at the issue from a whole different perspective.

“Don’t follow in other people’s footsteps. You know it’s true, like Steve Jobs said, ‘Don’t think better, think different’,” Peter says.

As for the patent valuation, Peter explains that “it is simply a milestone in the journey of wanting to help other restaurants and do right by the customers.”

He aims to grow the business and for it to become global and “reach the potential that I know it can achieve.”

Peter’s innovative discovery is rooted in the experiences of being a child of Greek migrants who left Greece in awe of Australia – “the country of opportunity and education.” It is testament to their sacrifice and to the Greek mindset to never give up, and of course to think differently.

For Peter, his greatest desire is to pay tribute to his Greek heritage and bring this never-before-done technology to Greece.

“That would be a full circle moment and the icing on the cake… to expand the business to Greece and become part of the community in Greece,” he concludes.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

GOCNSW youth lead heartfelt farewell to Greek Consul General in Sydney

The Greek Orthodox Community of NSW hosted a special farewell reception for the Consul General of Greece in Sydney, Yannis Mallikourtis.

From Athens with purpose: Reflections on the Global Summit of Hellenic Lawyers 2025

As the Global Summit of Hellenic Lawyers 2025 drew to a close, it did so against the majestic backdrop of Athens.

Honouring Cyprus’ martyrs: Melbourne remembers the sacrifice of July 9, 1821

A hierarchical memorial service was held on Sunday, July 13, at the Holy Church of the Presentation of the Theotokos in North Balwyn.

Melbourne’s Greek community pays emotional tribute to the ‘Pontian Eagle’ Peter Jasonides

On a cold Friday night, a full hall at Alphington Grammar’s Lyceum brought warmth to those gathered to honour the life of Peter Jasonides.

Faith leaders condemn Israeli attacks on West Bank’s last Christian town

Greek Orthodox clergy in Taybeh, the only entirely Christian town in the West Bank, have condemned a wave of settler violence.

You May Also Like

Oakleigh Grammar student Noah Peoples wins prestigious Swannie Award

Oakleigh Grammar student Noah Peoples was presented with a prestigious Swannie Award at the Debating Awards night on October 7.

COVID-19 death toll rises to 430 after 6 lives lost in Greece

The official death toll has increased to 430 after six people tragically lost their lives with the virus in the past 24-hour period.

Pan-Lesvian and Mytilenean Associations unite to address growing migrant crisis

The Pan Lesvian Federation of Australia and NZ and the Mytilenean Brotherhood of Sydney and NSW has called for the commencement of action at Meeting at Mytilenean House on Saturday 14 March 2020 from 4pm.