The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

McDonald’s tests voice recognitio­n

Company buys startup Apprente to speed up drive-thru lines.

- By Leslie Patton

McDonald’s Corp. is making a bet it can automate the task of taking drive-thru orders.

The world’s biggest restaurant company is buying startup Apprente Inc., a developer of voice-recognitio­n technology for use in the restaurant industry, to help speed up lines. The idea is to eventually have a machine, instead of a person, on the other side of the intercom to relay orders to kitchen staff. In Chicago-area restaurant­s where the system is already being tested, employees still oversee drive-thru order-taking and can step in when needed.

The acquisitio­n is McDonald’s third tech deal in the past six months and fits into the company’s push to lean more heavily on machines and artificial intelligen­ce to boost sales. McDonald’s is also using Apprente’s headquarte­rs in Mountain View, California — also home to Google owner Alphabet Inc. — to start a tech lab, with plans to add employees there.

“We believe we’re at the right stage now to build out our capacity and have a greater presence in Silicon Valley,” McDonald’s Chief Executive Officer Steve Easterbroo­k said.

McDonald’s sees Apprente,

which has fewer than 20 employees, helping it move cars through the drive-thru lane more quickly and take orders more accurately than employees. The company is also investing to add ordering apps and kiosks in its restaurant­s and digital menu displays.

In the U.S., fast-food companies are looking for an edge amid intense competitio­n. While many chains have turned in robust sales results this summer, a lot of that growth has been rooted in high prices and new locations, rather than traffic gains. Though McDonald’s last quarter posted a 6.5% gain in same-store sales — its best result in seven years — guest counts in the U.S. remained down.

Founded in 2017, Apprente says its technology can accurately interpret conversati­onal language — such as a customer ordering a hamburger with no onions and extra sauce. McDonald’s already is testing the technology in two locations in the drive-thru lane, which makes up about 70% of the company’s business. It plans to roll Apprente’s technology out nationwide, Easterbroo­k said. He predicted it will have a “positive impact on more than half of our customers.”

Earlier this year, McDonald’s spent $300 million on Dynamic Yield Ltd., which helps retailers improve performanc­e by collecting personal data from customers to fine-tune sales pitches and promotions. McDonald’s uses Dynamic Yield’s tools to suggest food and drinks to diners based on factors such as time of day, weather and traffic. In April, it bought a small stake in Plexure Group Ltd., which develops mobile apps.

Shares of McDonald’s fell as much as 2.8% to $211.24 in New York last Tuesday. They had gained 22% this year through Monday’s close, outpacing gains in the S&P 500 Index.

McDonald’s, which declined to disclose terms of the deal, may expand the use of Apprente’s technology to markets beyond the U.S. The company wants to make sure it can work with different accents, such as in Australia and the U.K., and work in languages besides English, Easterbroo­k said. The company also sees the technology being used at kiosks and in mobile apps.

“We’d like to get a second language developed very quickly,” he said. “We see it as being a global solution.”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R DILTS / BLOOMBERG ?? McDonald’s is testing voice recognitio­n in two locations’ drive-thru lane, which makes up about 70% of its business.
CHRISTOPHE­R DILTS / BLOOMBERG McDonald’s is testing voice recognitio­n in two locations’ drive-thru lane, which makes up about 70% of its business.

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