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Tech Tracker: Digital shelving, drink printing and ‘grown up’ robots

This special edition of Tech Tracker looks at how operators are adopting new tech tools

Nancy Luna, Senior editor, Nation's Restaurant News

May 22, 2019

5 Min Read
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This is part of NRN’s special coverage of the 2019 NRA Show, being held in Chicago, May 18-21. Visit NRN.com for the latest coverage from the show, plus follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

Order and pay systems powered by artificial intelligence, personalized push notifications and enhanced self-serve gizmos and gadgets dominated the technology sections of the 100th annual National Restaurant Association show in Chicago.

The massive trade show featured more than 230 technology and entertainment companies offering a wide variety of services for restaurants looking for frictionless interactions with customers.

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And, unlike the past, this year restaurants are less cautious about adopting technology.

“Operators are hungry for new tech,” said Allison Page, chief product officer and co-founder of reservation and guest management platform SevenRooms.

Page was a panelist during a Monday panel session discussing the “The Future of Restaurants.”

She joined representatives from Domino’s Pizza and Miso Robotics to talk about technology trends. Most agreed that automation, frictionless technologies and personalized digital marketing are dominating the industry.

During the show, we spotted several of these tech services. Some are in beta test. Others are enhancements to existing technology. Here’s a look at what’s coming.

Digital pick-up shelves

Restaurant-turned-tech company Eatsa showcased its new, digitally enhanced meal pickup shelving stations at the show.

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The Spotlight Pickup System uses the same technology as Eatsa’s Cubby system but ditches the “locked” doors. Each shelf contains “spots” equipped with sensors that light up to indicate when a person’s order is ready for pick up.

Instead of labeling a bag with a person’s name, the shelf will digitally display a customer’s name. Last week, Eatsa announced its latest Spotlight customer: Rōti Modern Mediterranean, a Chicago-based fast-casual Mediterranean restaurant with 40 locations.

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Roti is the third restaurant brand to adopt Spotlight. Other restaurants using Spotlight include Mac’D, a build-your-own macaroni and cheese concept in San Francisco and Evergreens, a salad, wrap and bowl concept in Seattle.

Rōti CEO Carl Segal said Eatsa’s technology “will help us deliver a more convenient experience with shorter wait times and more seamless customization, enabling us to scale an engaging and differentiated customer experience.”

Cafes geared for Millennials

Cafes and bars are turning to Ripples to jazz up their java and beer game for Instagram-loving Millennials.

The Israeli-based company’s Ripple Maker uses 3D and ink jet printing to spruce up lattes and foamy beers with personal messages and images.

“We’re growing like crazy,” CEO and co-founder Yossi Meshulam.

The Ripples booth, swarmed by attendees, was cranking out dozens of lattes with various images and pop-culture messages such as “May the Coffee be With You.”

One machine can produce a custom image on a beverage, including a cocktail, in 10 seconds.

Restaurants that use Ripples include The Mark Restaurant by Jean Georges, BomboBar in Chicago, Bodega in Chicago, Cafe Lola in Las Vegas, Bruno's Taco Bar in Las Vegas and Johnny Rockets.

Meshulam said most cafes and bars add the Ripples device to enhance beverage sales by offering customized “printed” drinks for an upcharge.  However, he said one Los Angeles based café, Carrera Café, opened with a business model built around the Ripple Maker. The cafe’s Instagram page has nearly 45,000 followers, many of whom check on the brand’s creative coffee-infused messages.

“The entire store is catering to the personalized experience,” Meshulam said.

Beer wall taps growing by leaps and bounds

Chicago-based PourMyBeer is expanding its next-generation automated tap systems by leaps and bounds.

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The self-pour system is now in more than 210 locations around the world. U.S.-based sports bars and breweries are seeing the advantages of PourMyBeer’s automated tap system, which allows customers to act as their own bartender.

Customers are given an RFID card that is secured by their credit card. The RFID card allows the customer to sample various beers without committing to a whole pint. Each beer is priced per ounce. When a customer pours from a tap, a digital display shows the customer how much they’ve spent.

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The self-pouring taps can be found in select Buffalo Wild Wings and Dickey’s Barbecue Pit restaurants, as well as 10 Blast & Brew restaurants in California. Southern California-based fast-casual chain Pieology Pizzeria, which competes with Blaze Pizza and MOD Pizza, is also piloting the self-serve tap system.

Penny grows up

Bear Robotics returned to the show with a new version of Penny, a robotic “food runner” who made her debut last year at the NRA event.

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This year, Penny has “grown up” adding new abilities such as being able to deliver a tray full of drinks, something she couldn’t do last year. Now equipped with a three-tier swappable tray system, Penny can deliver beverages and food at the same time.   Servers can also use Penny to help bus tables.

The self-driving robot is engineered to easily navigate a busy dining room, and has improved battery power. The older version of Penny is currently being used at Amici's Pizza in Northern California.

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The company is showcasing the latest version at the show – and of course, taking pre-orders.

Stay tuned: Later this week, Tech Tracker will look at a swarm of new startups spotted at the show that could be game changers for independent and chain restaurants.

Contact Nancy Luna at [email protected]

Follow her on Twitter: @FastFoodMaven

About the Author

Nancy Luna

Senior editor, Nation's Restaurant News

Nancy Luna is a senior editor at Nation's Restaurant News and a contributing editor at Supermarket News. She covers the industry's largest and most talked about fast-food brands including McDonald's, Starbucks, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, KFC and Subway. She is an award-winning journalist with more than 25 years reporting experience. As a veteran business reporter based in Southern California, Nancy has covered some of the country's most beloved food and retail brands including In-N-Out, Taco Bell, Trader Joe's, Aldi, Whole Foods Market, Target and Costco. Luna is a graduate of Cal State Fullerton. When she's not digging for news on her beat, you can find Nancy regaling her fans about her latest dining adventures on her Fast Food Maven social media channels. Contact [email protected]  or follow her on Twitter at https://twitter.com/fastfoodmaven

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