McDonald’s bets on automated drive-thru ordering
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, Calif., — 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.
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 per cent 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.”
Shares of McDonald’s fell as much as 2.8 per cent to $211.24 in New York Tuesday. They had gained 22 per cent 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 the technology to markets beyond the U.S. The company wants to make sure it can work with different accents and languages.