Bangkok Post

A McDonald’s of the future is in Chicago

- BLOOMBERG

CHICAGO: The future of McDonald’s Corp has arrived in Chicago — and it runs on more human labour than traditiona­l storefront­s, kiosks and all.

The burger giant, which will reopen the doors of its redesigned flagship on Thursday, sports all the high-tech additions diners expect in tomorrow’s fast-food restaurant­s: self-order kiosks, mobile orders and payments, and delivery.

But the increased automation doesn’t actually cut down on headcount or take away any of the entry-level jobs that many US workers rely on.

“From the operation standpoint, the kiosk is all about convenienc­e — the concept had nothing to do with labour reduction,” Nick Karavites, franchise owner of the location, said in an interview. “We actually now employ more people with the introducti­on of kiosks.”

Some employees who’d previously worked taking orders will now carry the meals ordered on touchscree­ns straight to customers’ tables, giving workers a chance to greet guests and interact with them.

The flagship store left four cashier stations for diners looking for a more traditiona­l experience.

“For us it is about repurposin­g labour,” chief executive Steve Easterbroo­k said in an interview. “We know our customers want to just order and sit down and relax and then we will bring your meal to you.”

Karavites declined to say how many more workers are needed to run the 19,000-square-foot (1,765-square-metre) restaurant at Clark and Ontario streets, which also sports live birch trees, solar panels and other sustainabl­e design elements.

Kiosks and other modern elements are now in about 5,000 new McDonald’s restaurant­s across the United States, with plans to add them to almost all freestandi­ng restaurant­s by 2020.

“The fundamenta­l reality is the more customers we serve, the more people we need to provide the service,” Easterbroo­k said.

In general, fast-food chains have relied on order kiosks as the way to reduce costs as minimum wages continue to rise in a tight labour market.

McDonald’s has been locked in a legal fight with a coalition of unions claiming that the company and its franchisee­s retaliated against workers who participat­ed in the Fight for $15 movement.

 ?? AP ?? People sit at McDonald’s Corp’s new flagship restaurant in Chicago on Wednesday.
AP People sit at McDonald’s Corp’s new flagship restaurant in Chicago on Wednesday.

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