Stop trying to replace your servers
Restaurant operators have been automating customer service processes for years. Implementing kiosks, self-checkout, and mobile ordering has helped margins and cut labor costs. But now there’s a problem. Friendliness scores dropped 12 points in just one year. Thirty-three percent of customers actively avoid restaurants that feel too automated. And AI is about to flood the market.
Here’s the choice operators face: double down on customer-facing automation and watch friendliness scores keep falling or use AI differently. It’s time to stop automating what customers value and instead start automating what they don’t see.
Smart operators recognize that having AI take orders is not the win. The win is using AI to orchestrate back-of-house operations. That includes tasks like:
- Making sure your kitchen doesn’t run out of the appetizer everyone wants on Friday night.
- Triggering loyalty promos when inventory starts piling up.
- Adjusting labor schedules in real time when online orders spike.
That’s AI as a conductor, coordinating information across your tech stack so your staff can focus on what drives loyalty, making guests feel seen.
THE NEXT AI REVOLUTION
There IS a consumer-facing AI revolution coming. Just not the one operators expect. It’s not in the dining room. It’s on phones, in cars, and through smart speakers.
Half of consumers already use AI-powered search for buying decisions. Soon they’ll place orders directly through ChatGPT or voice assistants or their car dashboard.
Before long, customers will say, “Hey Siri, order our usual from [Restaurant]” while they are driving. Soon they will be able to order a pizza from the ad they see while watching a game. This isn’t science fiction. The infrastructure is already in everyone’s pockets and living rooms.
So now you’ve got a new front door. Great. Except most operators can’t even walk through it. Why? Because their tech stack is a mess:
- POS doesn’t talk to inventory.
- The loyalty platform won’t integrate with voice ordering.
- Menu data is scattered.
Operators deploying chatbots to replace hostesses? They’re building on sand. The ones investing in integrated platforms that let AI coordinate inventory, labor, loyalty, and ordering? They’re building the foundation. When voice ordering becomes default, operators can capture more market share.
3 AUTOMATION STRATEGIES
Successful automation requires going back to the basics.
1. Audit your tech stack. Look for integration gaps. If your systems can’t share data, you’re not ready.
2. Stop automating guest interactions. Kill pilot programs. Instead, shift the budget to technology that supports operational intelligence, such as predictive inventory, dynamic scheduling, loyalty engines that learn.
3. Clean up your menu data. Make it structured with consistent item names, modifiers, and rules that machines can understand. Make it API-ready, so other systems can reliably query what’s available and order it correctly. When voice ordering goes mainstream in 2026, restaurants that can’t be found by AI agents will be invisible. Simple as that.
Here’s what it comes down to. AI isn’t replacing your people. It’s making them better. And it’s making sure you show up when someone says “order pizza” to their car. Miss that, and you’re invisible.
Savneet Singh is the president and CEO of PAR Technology Corp.