One thing the restaurant industry has in abundance right now is data, and as more of the front and back of house get digitized, the amount of data will only grow. But unless you happen to be Starbucks, with deep pockets and lots of resources, making sense of all that data is, in Brightloom CEO Adam Brotman’s words, “a herculean feat” that most restaurants simply can’t afford right now.
Brightloom’s data-science-as-a-service platform aims to help restaurants including small- to medium-sized ones, make more sense of their data and get better insights from it via the company’s customer growth platform. With it, restaurants can organize their data to answer questions about who their customers are, how many customers they even have, what they’re buying, and how frequently they’re doing it, among others.
Brotman will be talking more about the importance of restaurant data at The Spoon’s upcoming Restaurant Tech Summit on August 17. As a teaser, we recently got some high-level thoughts from him around why data is important to the future of the restaurant and how businesses can better leverage it. Full Q&A is below. And if you haven’t already, grab a ticket to the virtual show here.
This Q&A has been lightly edited for clarity.
The Spoon: What problem does Brightloom solve for restaurants/the restaurant industry?
Adam Brotman: Brightloom provides restaurants of all sizes with the ability to develop an effective growth marketing strategy using the customer data they already have. At its essence, it is an intelligent marketing platform built around customer transaction data and powered by measurement and predictive modeling.
The Brightloom Customer Growth Platform (CGP) makes the secret sauce previously available only to giants like Amazon and Starbucks — data science and continuous optimization — available as a simple and affordable service to the huge segment of the market for whom the “build-your-own” option just isn’t a reality, especially now. With the CGP, restaurants can deliver personalized, relevant, and rewarding experiences to their customers that drive higher customer engagement and measurable business results.
We start with a brand’s existing data, we run it through our proprietary ML models and then the CGP provides insights and analytics around the brand’s digital customer base and digital business. Next, the CGP delivers smart segmentation that allows a brand to easily run a series of personalized marketing campaigns on their own channels.
What is the biggest change in terms of the restaurant industry’s approach towards technology as a result of the pandemic?
Last year, COVID-19 forced retailers and restaurants to digitize their operations seemingly overnight, and in turn, brands digitized a majority of their customer relationships. In fact, The Boston Consulting Group found that one-third of restaurants’ digital customers ordered online for the first time during the pandemic. With vaccine distribution well underway, signs of economic relief, and regional restrictions loosening, it’s paramount for restaurants to leverage technology in order to maintain these new digital relationships and drive sustainable revenue.
In the years leading up to the pandemic, brands have competed on customer experience. Now, the battlefront is moving squarely towards digital and omnichannel experiences. Restaurants have an opportunity to convert their new digital customer relationships into a highly effective customer growth strategy.
What will happen to restaurants that don’t use this time to learn how to better leverage their data?
In short, they are going to be left behind. Restaurants are still reeling from last year’s disruptions, and we saw the pandemic force 100,000 restaurant closures in six months. The good news is there’s tremendous upside and potential for those who are able to adapt and take advantage of newly digitized customer relationships. The QSR, fast-casual, and casual restaurant segments have seen an uptick in purchase frequency for digital customers compared to non-digital customers. Relatedly, recent research found that more than 90% of customers who are fully vaccinated plan to continue to order online at least as often as they do now. Restaurants are sitting on a gold mine of first-party, transactional customer data. The key now is for them to harness it in a way that drives customer retention and sustainable revenue.
What is the biggest challenge for restaurants right now when it comes to digitization?
One of the largest challenges we see restaurants struggle with is how to best collate customer data and in turn take action on it. The reason it’s so difficult is because it requires brands to perform a couple of herculean tasks in sequence.
First, they must access and organize their customer data to create customer segments. That alone isn’t difficult, but when you look at it from another dimension — e.g., what product offer should I send this customer — it becomes exponentially more complicated. Virtually no business could afford the human-hours required to do it manually. Instead, brands must use an algorithm and predictive modeling to understand product offers by customer segments instantly across multiple dimensions. Building this algorithm takes data engineers, data scientists, and digital product experts, and most brands don’t have the teams or resources to build it in-house.
What are you most excited about when it comes to the impact of restaurant technology?
For too long digital leaders have been misled with the notion of a golden customer record. The attitude that more data is better is false. Marketers spend more time collecting and cleaning data than acting on it.
We’ve now reached a pivotal tipping point that will redefine the future of digital experiences and how brands engage with their customers. The digitization of restaurants and the explosion of data and analytics around what customers want has opened seemingly endless possible avenues for digital marketers to explore, ideate, and create. From intuitive payment to streamlined ordering to tailored loyalty programs, I’m excited to see how restaurants will continue to elevate the dining experience for their customers.
What do you think the restaurant industry will look like in five years?
I predict we’ll see a couple of notable shifts.
First, digital is here to stay and will only increase. Customers crave frictionless experiences. The accelerated shift to digital menus and mobile ordering and payment during the pandemic illuminated a new standard of customer convenience. If I can order ahead and arrange for curbside delivery with a few clicks on my phone, why would I ever return to waiting in line to order and pick up my food?
Second, we’ll see a rebalanced focus on customer retention relative to customer acquisition. It’s commonplace that loyal customers are almost always more profitable. Instead of over indexing on customer acquisition, restaurants will recalibrate their focus on driving sustainable revenue with existing customers based on historical transaction data.
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