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Veebie

July 9, 2018

Rebranded Kadabra Deploys Kiosk That’s Basically an Amazon Locker for Food

Sometimes it’s just easier to let people come to you.

That seems to be the thinking as Kadabra (previously Veebie) debuts the second generation prototype of its cubby-filled kiosk. Unlike the company’s first prototype which was a mobile kiosk that could be moved around a city to a different a location every day, the Portland, Maine startup’s latest prototype is stationary.

“Based on the test, we determined that it would be too costly to move hundreds of mobile kiosks around a large city on a daily basis,” Kadabra CEO Steve Sperry told me via email.

Makes sense, particularly for a resource-constrained startup.  Creating a fleet of mobile kiosks – with a plan to eventually make them self-driving – is a much bigger (and more capital intensive) idea than simply creating an network of stationary, automated food cubby systems located in different high-volume locations like fast-casual restaurants or office building lobbies.

This second, more achievable concept is exactly what Kadabra is now focused on, and to commemorate the change the company once named Veebie has also changed its name to Kadabra.

“We changed our name because we felt that Veebie, while unique and memorable, didn’t say anything about our company or our concept,” said Sperry. “Kadabra is meant to suggest that the food ‘magically’ appears in the pod, which from the user’s point of view it kind of does.”

But Sperry and his team didn’t just take the wheels off their kiosks and change the company’s name. They also made some pretty radical changes to the product.

“It’s much more sophisticated than our first prototype,” said Sperry. “It’s a fully functional IoT device that can operate without an attendant and is also refrigerated.”

By taking mobility off the table, Perry’s team was able to focus on making a more capable kiosk system that seems almost akin to an Amazon Locker for food. With the new kiosk system, a consumer can order food from local restaurants and have it delivered to the kiosk and then unlock a cubby with their phone. And because the new system is refrigerated, food can be placed into a cubby (called pods) for a much longer period of time.

It seems the Portland, Maine startup has an affinity for cities named Portland, as the company received a $1 million seed funding round in January of this year from Elevate Capital, a VC based in the other Portland (Oregon).  The company also decided to launch its second prototype in Portland West, as the new Kadabra kiosk resides within a Portland, Oregon location owned by fast casual salad chain Garden Bar.

The company’s business model relies on restaurant partners that can deliver food to the kiosk, but longer term they are considering letting restaurant companies without food delivery capabilities use their kiosks as a way to reach customers.

“We are also exploring using our pods to solve the “last mile” problem in office food delivery,” said Sperry.

You can see a hero reel below narrated by company cofounder/head of hardware Yona Belfort to hear a little about the second generation kiosk design backstory:

October 19, 2017

Veebie’s Kiosk Brings Lunch Hour Convenience

When you only have an hour for lunch, you really don’t want to spend most of that in line waiting. Portland, Maine-based Veebie is trying to solve this issue with mobile self-service kiosks that hold pre-ordered food for people to quickly pick up during their break.

Veebie rolled out (pardon the pun) it’s first kiosk in downtown Portland earlier this week. The bright orange containers on wheels have 48 numbered cubbies. Order your food through Veebie on your phone and pick it up from your assigned cubby between 11:30 and 1:30. The menu features items from a different restaurant every day, so today (Thursday), for example, the items available are from B.Good.

Company Co-Founder and CEO Steven Sperry is an entrepreneur-in-residence at Venture Hall, a Maine-based tech accelerator. Sperry told the Press-Herald that while they are starting Portland, Veebie is looking to expand into other markets outside of Maine, and broaden its use of technology, including incorporating self-driving carts.

Looking at the Veebie web site, you can see the company is still very much early stage. Right now, the kiosks do not have an automated locking system (that you could unlock with your phone, say), so there are attendants on duty. It only offers cold food now, nothing hot, and you place an order by visiting veebie.me on a browser on your phone, rather than a dedicated app.

But it’s easy to envision Veebie ramping up quickly and dispensing self-driving carts to convenient locations across cities. Focusing on lunch is a good idea as most people during that hour are interested in efficiency and speed.

The company is not alone, however, in its mission to maximize lunch times. You can use any number of apps to order food online in advance. Earlier this week, Allset raised $5 million to expand its reservation+pre-order and pay service. Office vending machines are getting smarter and holding fresher ingredients. And, of course, robots are coming to take over the world deliver your lunch.

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