Vancouver Sun

App could help you get that double-double on the double

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

The parent company TORONTO of Tim Hortons and Burger King plans to launch an app Canadawide this spring that would allow customers to order and pay in advance on their smartphone without lining up to pay a cashier.

The move by Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal follows a similar one by Starbucks and is the latest push toward more automation in the food service industry.

In the fall of 2015, RBI acquired Brewster App and tasked the startup’s dozen staff to develop the app.

“The first feature we’re going to be introducin­g is ... the ability for a customer to have Tim Hortons (and Burger King) in their pocket,” said Steve Greenwood, RBI’s head of digital.

Since late December, the app has undergone testing in 25 Tim Hortons cafes in Ontario and 25 Burger King restaurant­s in Miami.

The expansion would see the app rolled out to the roughly 4,000 Tim Hortons and Burger King locations across Canada.

In October 2015, Starbucks Canada launched a similar app at 300 stores in the Toronto area. The service is now available at various locations in the country, excluding Quebec and New Brunswick, according to the company’s website. The technology is not yet available for users of its French-language app.

Automated customer service is part of a general trend as people become increasing­ly accustomed to going online to access services, such as making reservatio­ns or pre-selecting movie theatre seats, said David Hardisty, an assistant professor at the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

The push toward greater automation could result in cashiers being laid off or put into different roles, but Hardisty said he doesn’t expect such jobs to be eliminated outright. “Mostly everybody just uses ATMs and automated stuff all the time, but they still have tellers there,” he said. “Stuff comes up that’s just really hard for a completely automated system to handle.”

In 2015, self-service kiosks started showing up at McDonald’s restaurant­s in Canada. Many grocery stores and other retailers also offer self-serve checkouts.

For RBI, the app could pave the way for other developmen­ts, like self-service kiosks, Greenwood said.

The company already operates self-service kiosks in Burger King restaurant­s in several internatio­nal markets and they’re being tested in the U.S., Shannon Hall, an RBI spokeswoma­n, said in an email.

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