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A Decade Of Restaurant Technologies
The life of a restaurant operator has evolved rapidly over the last decade. As we begin in 2020, it’s important to stop and take a moment to acknowledge how far we’ve come. Many things that are regular pieces of our lives today were beginning, and others still haven’t made their way to the mainstream. In 2009, customer-driven reputation sites like Yelp, gave operators a chance to respond to reviews publically, leveraging the start of a two-way conversation that is still happening today between restaurants and patrons. By 2011 Back of House Management platforms like Oracle started migrating to the cloud, storing the data used to calculate important information on purchases, sales, and an inventory that streamlined kitchen operations. In 2012, Facebook surpassed other sites with the largest quantity of reviews, and Apple Maps began partnering with Yelp to show reviews to consumers. In 2013, the first customer-facing Point of Sale systems began permeating the restaurant industry and our vendor, Square, released their Square Register in 2017 that revolutionized the iPad-based point-of-sale systems of its kind. Making Smart Technology Choices Today’s restaurant leaders are faced with endless choices as they’re tempted with the best innovations to drive their business forward. With more data available at every operator’s fingertips, the choice between remaining faithful to menu items or chasing trends is a regular conversation. Speaking of data that leads to a choice on which customer segment is most important to attract? While you’re at it, go ahead and mine the data on what their preferences are for the size of entrée, price, and method of ordering. Operators are now choosing between which online platforms can better educate employees, and match shrinking attention spans. Investments always bring choices but now include digital ordering platform upgrades that promise our operators to access to new customer demographics, more efficient scheduling, perpetual inventory, Bluetooth temperature tracking, and alerts for everything under the sun. Partnerships are even full of choices, as operators are now choosing vendors based on blockchain practices, and their ability to trace products to the source for safety protocol. Looking Ahead To The Future At every turn, we should prioritize our choice to remain informed, which our industry has fared well in for a long time. The first manager to embrace a spreadsheet to produce a schedule or calculate weekly inventory pars set us on this path. Today’s equivalent of that spreadsheet is utilizing software to not only create a schedule but understand the labor capacity of our people. For those of us using digital prep lists, the next logical step is creating tables of data that can tell us average performance times and productivity by the employee. More data empowers operators with more choices. We’ve seen innovations like this keep the manufacturing industry alive for quite some time, why not benefit from it in ours? Availability and productivity by employee data will allow fully-automated scheduling, optimized based on sales and product mix. In the near future, Artificial Intelligence will bring automated production schedules, employee schedules, and product ordering, into a new realm. Operators will laugh as they tell new up-and-comers about how we used to have to count everything in the walk-in cooler for hours.Today’s restaurant leaders are faced with endless choices as they’re tempted with the best innovations to drive their business forward. With more data available at every operator’s fingertips, the choic