The Welland Tribune

McDonald’s tech updates impact workers

- LESLIE PATTON

For Dudley Dickerson, the mobile-app orders were the last straw.

McDonald’s has been updating with new technology, delivery, a revamped menu and curbside pickup. But the “Experience of the Future” has employees handling more tasks — in many cases, they say, without pay raises or adequate staffing. So Dickerson, 23, handed over his spatula for the last time.

“They added a lot of complicate­d things,” Dickerson said in an interview. “It makes it harder for the workers.”

Many fast-food employees hop from job to job. But with unemployme­nt so low, turnover is becoming a problem. Workers are walking rather than dealing with new technologi­es and menu options. The result: Customers will wait longer. Drive-thru times at McDonald’s slowed to 239 seconds last year — more than 30 seconds slower than in 2016, according to QSR magazine. It’s also pokier than Burger King, Wendy’s and Taco Bell.

Turnover at U.S. fast-food restaurant­s jumped to 150 per cent — meaning a store employing 20 workers would go through 30 in one year. That figure is the highest since industry tracker People Report began collecting data in 1995.

“Quick-service restaurant­s are having a little more trouble with job openings and finding workers,” said Michael Harms, executive director of operations at People Report. “It’s the pace of work, the pace of technology and the lower wage rate.”

McDonald’s and its franchisee­s haven’t seen an increase in crew turnover over the last year, nor is there a correlatio­n between the new initiative­s and turnover, spokespers­on Terri Hickey said in an emailed statement.

“Together with our owneropera­tors, we are investing in all necessary training to ensure successful implementa­tion of any changes in our restaurant­s,” she wrote. “Just as Experience of the Future modernizes the restaurant experience for our customers, there is also a focus on improving the work experience for restaurant employees.”

McDonald’s chief executive officer Steve Easterbroo­k has been pushing initiative­s that have helped turn around comparable sales, which rose 3.6 per cent last year in the U.S.

Last year, McDonald’s said, it employed 235,000 people, including corporate and restaurant workers. Each of those people generated $97,000 in revenue, compared to about $65,000 the year before. While this could be a sign of increased efficiency, it could also be seen as stretching thin an inadequate number of employees.

In Broward County, Fla., Westley Williams said he’s moving from McDonald’s to burger joint Checkers because of mobile-app orders, new items and six new self-order kiosks.

“It’s more stressful now,” said Williams, 42. “When we mess up a little bit because we’re getting used to something new, we get yelled at.”

On a recent Wednesday afternoon, about 10 McDonald’s workers hustled behind the counter of a store in Chicago’s Loop. They called out order numbers for those waiting for lunch — some had ordered via an in-store kiosk, some from the mobile app and some the old-fashioned way, at the register. An order of a Bacon McDouble, small fries and an apple juice took about 2 1/2 minutes, faster than the average drive-through time, but the drink was missing and the employee seemed confused when asked for it.

“The biggest risk when you have a lot of employee turnover is the customer experience,” said Brian Yarbrough, an analyst for Edward Jones. “If that starts to wane, then this turns into a bigger problem.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO ?? An employee packs an order for a customer at a McDonald's restaurant in Phoenix, Ariz.
BLOOMBERG FILE PHOTO An employee packs an order for a customer at a McDonald's restaurant in Phoenix, Ariz.

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