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digital ordering

April 29, 2020

Starbucks Leans on Digital Orders and Modified Formats to Reopen 90% of Stores by June

Starbucks plans to reopen 90 percent of its U.S. stores by early June, the company said this week on its Q1 2020 earnings call. As expected, stores won’t immediately reopen nationwide and with the same sit-down cafe format in which they operated before the pandemic. Instead, the Seattle-based coffee giant will open gradually, with modified service that emphasizes pickup, delivery, and drive-thru. 

The company hinted at these plans a little less than two weeks ago, when company CEO Kevin Johnson sent a letter to employees explaining the chain’s recovery plan. As I wrote at the time, Starubucks is an international chain that is already navigating this recovery process in China, so it has some experience other U.S.-based chains may not. It is also ahead of the curve — a major leader, actually — in both off-premises formats and digital business. 

On this week’s call, Johnson spotlighted both of those things. He noted that “continued recovery in China strengthens our belief that these impacts [from COVID-19] are temporary” and that Starbucks expects to emerge with an even stronger business. “We are well positioned to leverage our digital assets and new operating formats like contactless pickup and curbside to expand service to customers,” he said.   

Only 30 stores will reopen their cafes, Starbucks COO Rosalind Brewer said during the call, and there will be no seating in those locations. “We will amplify delivery, we will have the Mobile Order & Pay channels open and then the addition of a new concept, the Entryway Handoff,” she said. Starbucks will monitor what happens in these stores before making the move to reopen other locations. 

For Starubucks, this slow reopening is less detrimental than it might be for a chain with a less robust off-premises strategy. Johnson noted on the call that 80 percent of customer occasions in U.S. stores were to-go before the pandemic even hit. “And so by augmenting the in-store experience with mobile ordering and contactless pickup, we can service significant volume of customers without having the cafe seating area actually opened,” he said. 

As states slowly begin to reopen their economies, bigger chains with similar store formats to Starbucks and existing digital strategies in place will likely operate with their own versions of this modified, to-go-centric format. Chipotle, which was already testing off-premises store formats pre-pandemic, has reported strong digital sales for the quarter. With more earnings calls set to happen over the next few days, we’ll get more intel into what other chains, such as McDonald’s, have in the works.

Smaller restaurants that can’t afford expensive mobile-order systems or accommodate drive-thru lanes can still look to some tech to help with the transition towards this new normal. While most independent businesses are more concerned with keeping the lights on right now, contactless customer service and digital payments will be two areas more restaurants will look to expand to in the coming months. 

April 8, 2020

McDonald’s Slows Development on Its Tech-Forward Store Remodels

In an effort to reduce capital expenditures by $1 billion, McDonald’s is slowing the development of its Experience of the Future store remodels across the U.S., according to a press statement the company sent out today. 

The move comes in the wake of the mega-chain, not to mention the entire restaurant industry, having to adjust both operations and expectations to serve customers during a global health crisis. Restaurant sales are down 80 percent, and many establishments are having to quickly pivot to delivery and takeout models in order to stay in business. 

Unlike smaller restaurants with shallower pockets, McDonald’s isn’t a newcomer to the off-premises world or the technology that powers it. Up to now, the company was running a $4 billion digital business driven largely by delivery orders. Acquisitions in 2019 of Dynamic Yield (AI tech) and Apprente (voice tech) further enhanced the chain’s to-go-friendly business model, and Experience of the Future stores are meant to encompass all these elements under one roof. They also feature self-service kiosks, curbside pickup areas, improved drive-thru lanes, and many other things meant to make the customer experience at McDonald’s as speedy and efficient as possible.

Then came COVID-19. In addition to closing dining rooms across the U.S., McDonald’s has also halted operations entirely at many stores, including 50 in the U.S., and every single one in the United Kingdom. Those shutdowns also include drive-thru and delivery.

“We entered 2020 in a strong position, but of course the world has since changed,” CEO Chris Kempczinski told Nation’s Restaurant News. “While our January and February global comparable sales were strong, changes in consumer behavior and the various restrictions in place by governments around the world have led to a significant decline in sales.” 

To that end, McDonald’s says it plans to build fewer Experience of the Future stores, whether new locations or remodels of old ones, worldwide.  

Whether this is a sign of things to come from other similar chains depends. One of the major factors of Mickey D’s remodels is how costly they are — over $700,000 per store, in some cases. Not every chain’s digital business reinvention requires an architectural overhaul as well, especially if a brand is more interested in improving things like delivery and loyalty programs. That said, we may see fewer Chipotlanes and Starbucks Express Stores rolling out for the rest of 2020 — and possibly beyond.

March 5, 2020

Taco Bell to Give Its Stores a ‘Tech-Forward’ Facelift, Launches Veggie Mode for Kiosks

Like many quick-service and fast-casual chains these days, Taco Bell is responding to the demand for digital and off-premises orders in part by revamping its physical locations. Case in point: Today, the chain unveiled plans to build out new stores under its Cantina concept as well as convert some traditional Taco Bell locations into Cantinas. 

The Cantina is Taco Bell’s somewhat more upscale concept the chain has opened around urban areas over the last few years. To be clear: the Cantina format is still quick-service, just a higher-end version that often features alcohol and includes new technologies like self-order kiosks and digital menu boards.

The company said today it will open its “most technology-forward Taco Bell”  in fall of 2020 in NYC’s Times Square. The press release is vague on details, however, stating only that “the upcoming New York Cantina will utilize new digital features that not only allows for a smooth ordering experience but showcases digital moments throughout the restaurant like never before.”

I’m intrigued as to whether “technology-forward” means the new Times Square store will simply have more of the brand’s existing restaurant tech or if Taco Bell has something up its sleeve it hasn’t yet revealed to the general public. After all, in-store kiosks, mobile order capabilities, pickup shelves, and digital boards are fast becoming the standard not just in Taco Bell locations but across most major QSRs.

Whatever it means, Taco Bell is clearly trying to go after a new audience with the store format that in some ways feels like the Sweetgreen of traditional fast food.

Taco Bell will also convert three of its traditional restaurants into Cantinas to test the concept in more suburban areas. After a period of evaluation, Taco Bell will expand the Cantina concept to other traditional locations.  

Taco Bell has in the meantime also announced a new feature for its self-order kiosks called Veggie Mode. According to an email sent to The Spoon, the function is essentially a way for users to filter menu options so they don’t see any meat-based meals among their selections. Users simply slide a button on the kiosk’s touchscreen to activate Veggie Mode. 

The new features is part of Taco Bell’s ongoing push to appeal to vegetarians or those simply wanting to cut down on the amount of meat they consume. The Veggie Mode feature will be available starting March 12 at Taco Bell kiosks across the U.S., and presumably included in the ones that launch with the new and revamped stores the chain has planned for 2020.

December 19, 2019

Chipotle Unveils a New Restaurant Design to Support Delivery, Digital Ordering

Chipotle today announced it is testing a design prototype for its stores aimed at further growing the chain’s billion-dollar digital business.

According to a Chipotle press release, the new digital-centric store design will be trialed in the following different Chipotle store formats: an urban storefront, a standalone restaurant with a Chipotlane, and an endcap restaurant with a Chipotlane. So far, the chain has stores in Chicago, IL, Cincinnati, OH, and Phoenix, AZ set to test the new design. It will also retrofit two existing stores in California.

“By better suiting our restaurants to accommodate the digital business, we’re able to finalize orders more effectively and provide a better overall experience for our guests,” Curt Garner, Chief Technology Officer, said in a statement.

The new store model will integrate longtime pieces of existing layouts, such as an open views of make-lines in the kitchen, with more recent changes the chain has made to accommodate the uptick in digital and delivery orders. That includes dedicated pickup shelves for digital orders, second make-lines meant to fulfill meals for delivery, and more Chipotlanes. 

In case you hadn’t guessed, Chipotlanes are a big part of that strategy. Unlike traditional drive-thru operations, those of Chipotle are designed specifically for digital orders. You cannot simply drive up to a menu board and order on the spot from a Chipotlane. Instead, customers order ahead via mobile and only use the window to pick up their food. Third-party delivery drivers can use this feature as well, saving themselves the trouble of having to walk into the store and locate their order. 

On Chipotle’s Q3 earnings call this past October, CEO Brian Niccol said the chain expects a total of 60 Chipotlanes by the end of 2019, though some of these new openings may shift into Q1 of 2020. Additionally, of the 150 to 165 new restaurants Chipotle plans to open in 2020, about half will include a Chipotlane. 

Whether by drive-thru, pickup shelves, or some other method, restaurant chains giving their stores makeovers for the digital-ordering era is a major strategy right now. Just yesterday, we wrote that Shake Shack is opening a new NYC location that will emphasize digital ordering and delivery. Starbucks, Krispy Kreme, and a boatload of others have already made similar moves.

As to how widespread Chipotle’s new design prototype will expand, the chain said in the press release it will asses the performance of each of the four new locations before deciding when and where to roll the concepts out nationally. 

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