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Four ways hospitality tech can improve the customer journey in garden centre cafés and restaurants

This is Alison Vasey, Zonal's Group Products Director

Written by Alison Vasey

13th July 2022

According to the Garden Centre Association’s Barometer of Trade report, catering sales in garden centres were up a staggering 3,679% in March 2022 compared to the same month in 2021, and have been up throughout 2022 so far[1], which neatly demonstrates just how important this arm of the business has become. Now playing a key role in driving revenue and footfall, café and restaurant F&B managers in garden centres must deliver on evolving customer expectations in order to continue to drive growth in 2022.

Delivering exceptional customer service in garden centre cafés and restaurants can be easily achieved by implementing the right tech – and technology specifically designed to meet the challenges of a hospitality environment can be employed to give garden centre restaurants the edge.

Here are four ways this tech can help improve the customer journey in your garden centre restaurant or cafe:

  1. Booking systems can reduce queue times

Although Brits are known to love a queue, we don’t like to be kept waiting unnecessarily. In fact, according to research we conducted together with KAM Media, a main bugbear for consumers when spending time in a restaurant is being forced to queue for a table, with 55% of consumers citing this as a top frustration.

Implementing a simple and easy-to-use booking system is one solution to alleviating this pain point. Having systems in place that allow customers to either reserve a table, or be added to a waiting list whilst they shop and be alerted when their table is available, is a great way to manage customer expectations and alleviate a major pain point for customers.

Further research also showed that 64% of consumers have reserved a table or space to eat or drink out since hospitality venues reopened in April 2021. With more customers wanting to have the assurance that their table is booked and ready for them, garden centres that provide customers with this facility will get happier customers as a result.

  1. Mobile devices can speed up service

Not only do customers not like to be kept waiting, but we know from our research that customers are looking for slick, quick, convenient service. In fact, we know that more than a quarter of consumers (29%) now expect to receive updates about things like the status and timing of their orders, and another 46% would welcome them.

The challenge then, is to deliver a convenient service that doesn’t compromise on the overall quality of face-to-face service and going mobile is one solution to this dilemma. If you offer table service in your restaurants or cafes, or are considering offering it, an easy way to increase speed of service, is for staff to use handheld ordering devices, as this reduces the reliance on fixed terminals and eliminates the need for staff to rekey orders into the POS, both saving your team a significant amount of time as well as reducing any potential mistakes. This will free up staff to focus on delivering great customer service.

Digital order and payment solutions, which enable customers to order and pay directly from their mobile phone, are another easy-to-implement piece of tech that offers customers a quick and easy way to order food and drink or pay for the bill. Post-pandemic, customers have become accustomed to the presence of such services in their everyday lives. Our GO Tech report findings, in partnership with CGA, found that 79% of consumers were happy with the ease and speed of payment when paying digitally. The warm reception from consumers given to order and payment apps is reflective of how valued they have become, making them a valuable addition to any garden centre restaurant or café.

  1. Digital loyalty schemes can drive repeat footfall

Our latest report conducted in partnership with CGA found that 80% of customers seek some form of personalisation from restaurants. What’s more, a third of people expect tailored discounts and details as a matter of course. But what does this mean for garden centres?

We know that people want to be treated on a personal level when spending time in other hospitality venues, so there’s every reason to believe they will have the same expectations in a garden centre café or restaurant. Meeting these expectations and providing customers with the personal touches they expect will make them feel valued and hopefully keep them coming back again and again. Having your EPoS system linked to a digital loyalty scheme is a fantastic way to achieve this. The customer data businesses acquire from their EPoS can inform F&B managers on vital sales information about their customers which can be used to create bespoke offers, deals and promotions as well as targeted marketing campaigns.

  1. Digital stock management can remove customer disappointment

Specialist hospitality technology can help keep track of stock levels down to every single ingredient – in real time. This is important in terms of reducing wastage and keeping costs down, but it also removes a customer frustration before it has even occurred.

We know that another major bugbear for customers in hospitality is ordering things on a menu that are sold out already and therefore unavailable to them. With an inventory and ordering system such as Zonal’s, menus can be updated as items are ordered by customers and staff can be informed of shortages ahead of customers ordering them, side-stepping a potential customer upset.

Garden Centre Association, April 2022

If you would like to reduce queues, increase speed of service and grow profits in your garden centre restaurant or cafe, get in touch with us today and one of our experts will be in touch to discuss your requirements!

This is Alison Vasey, Zonal's Group Products Director

By Alison Vasey

Group Product Director at Zonal

Alison is Zonal’s product visionary and defines our technology roadmap and strategy. Passionate about the future of technology and how it can help operators enhance the customer experience, while driving operational efficiencies.

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    8 ways pub technology can really help cut costs and boost the bottom line

    It seems everything is going up.

    News cycles are dominated by hikes in fuel and food prices, utilities, import charges and the general cost of living. Add in a staffing crisis and the pressures of running a hospitality business, and things are arguably more challenging than ever before. The natural temptation is to cut costs and raise prices. And while both of these options have their place, so too does investing in technology that can reduce your costs overall.

    Here are eight ways technology can really help your numbers.

    1. Keeping a closer eye on stock control

    With many ingredients and items facing double-digit price increases, it is vital to know precisely what you are spending. An effective stock management tool will allow you to monitor exactly what is going out of the business and help you adjust accordingly by either changing recipes or searching for new suppliers.

    1. What about waste?

    Another major issue is losing cash through wastage. Of course, waste of some kind is inevitable, but by using a stocktaking solution that allows you to look at what is either not being ordered, what’s being wasted in the kitchen and what is coming back on the plate, you can monitor portion sizes and reduce over-ordering of ingredients. Keeping on top of waste not only helps the bottom line but also to achieve sustainability ambitions.

    1. Mistakes will be made…

    You may have the best staff around, but human error will always be a factor in any busy hospitality business. This can be tracked using reporting functionality within your EPoS. Not only can you see what is and isn’t selling, it can also pinpoint where errors are being made on the till or with payment devices and highlight them to reduce the problem.

    1. Cash free payments

    More and more businesses are going cash-free, and it’s easy to see why. Contactless payment devices are not only more efficient, but they also remove any risks associated with cash. The less cash you have in the business, the less there is that can go missing.

    1. Make them an offer they can’t refuse

    Tech allows you to create, schedule and tweak promotions linked to what is working in the business and what stock you have available. This saves time and also potentially money in terms of hours worked. You can consider producing bounce-back offers on receipts and by collating data you can also create offers for customers on key occasions such as birthdays.

    1. Order and pay

    It was on its way before, but the pandemic certainly changed the way customers feel about ordering and paying with technology. For many it became a preferred option, meaning they can order drinks or food without running the risk of losing their chosen spot or facing a queue at the bar. With recruitment and the cost of staffing an ongoing issue, this reduces the strain on your staff, and allows the staff you do have to achieve more, by getting customers to perform some of that role themselves.

    1. Money up front

    Not only are customers happy to order themselves they are also becoming increasingly more comfortable with the concept of deposits. In research last year, 51% told us they would be happy to pay a deposit when booking a table in a restaurant or pub. . Taking deposits will reduce the dreaded no –shows, which have so many negative consequences including lost revenue and wasted stock, but also means more cash flowing into the business.

    1. Turning tables into profits

    A digital table management tool, such as the one in Zonal’s suite of solutions, is more than just a way of knowing how many customers are coming to dine with you. You can also set the system so it knows the volumes you can cope with during given trading periods, taking the strain off your team. Having the ability to control those numbers and access to the data at your fingertips means you can reduce money spent on staff and give available tables to walk-ins. Again, having such an effective system could reduce labour hours and help your profits.

    Zonal has a wide range of technology solutions designed to make life easier and businesses more profitable. Find out more about our range designed specifically with pub tenants and licensees in mind, here!

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    How to reduce queues, increase speed of service and grow profits in your garden centre restaurant

    Long gone are the days where garden centres were simply a place for consumers to pick up a petunia or two. As the popularity of Santa’s Grottos at Christmas demonstrate, a trip to a garden centre is now a full experience and, as a result, food and drink has become more important than ever.

    Restaurant and café operations have become an increasingly vital revenue stream for the sector. However, with new opportunities, come new challenges, and with the recent eye-watering increases in overheads, the pressure is on to find ways to drive increased spend and improve the customer experience.

    In order to achieve this, technology that’s geared up to handle the unique demands of an F&B operation is key. As hospitality tech experts with proven experience in the garden centre sector, we’ve put together our three top tips on how garden centres can leverage hospitality tech in their restaurants and cafes to reduce queues, increase speed of service and grow profits.

    1. Quicker queues and less waiting!

    While trading in garden cafés and restaurants remains steady through most of the day, there are nevertheless key trading times, as there are in any hospitality venue. It’s therefore important to have the right technology in place to help staff manage high footfall and reduce the amount of time customers are required to queue to be seated or served. For example, technology that enables customers to be added to a wait list and be alerted via a text when their table is available. This speeds up service, enables customers to shop while they wait for their table rather than simply leaving to find an alternative, and allows staff to serve more people – improving the overall customer experience.

    While pre-booking a table may not have been something that has played a huge role in garden centre restaurants and cafés to-date, we know that three quarters (76%) of consumers say they have pre-booked to eat or drink out since the end of Britain’s first lockdown in summer 2020. Having the assurance that their table is booked and ready waiting for them has become a customer priority. With this in mind, implementing booking technology that allows customers to reserve a table, helps to improve the customer experience, as well as reducing queues and wait times during peak times – such as when the Santa’s Grotto is running or over the summer holidays.

    1. Go mobile to speed up service

    It’s important for F&B managers to take into consideration the main points of friction that can occur during the customer journey. We know, something which is echoed in our GO Technology report from this year, that convenience and speed of service is important to customers. More than a quarter (29%) now expect to receive updates about things like the status and timing of their orders, and another 46% would welcome them.

    The key to speeding up operations whilst maintaining high-quality customer service is by leveraging technology to process customer orders quicker. Handheld ordering devices for staff is a solution, which is cost effective and can also speed-up orders and wait times. Providing staff with handheld devices reduces the reliance on fixed terminals and can also help to reduce mistakes when inputting orders. This also frees up staff to focus on delivering great customer service.

    1. Grow profits

    There is also back-of-house tech, such as stock and ordering technology that takes the guesswork out of stock control by providing real-time availability. If implemented into garden centre cafés and restaurants, managers will be able to more easily ensure they are maximising the profitability of each product they stock. Meanwhile, inventory and ordering systems developed specifically for the hospitality sector, would give garden centre café and restaurant managers tighter control over their purchasing. Such systems eliminate the risk of over-ordering, minimise wastage and avoid a situation where cash is tied up in stock.  Consolidating and joining these systems will also highlight where inefficiencies lie, improve reporting at all levels and increase profitability as a result.

    If you would like to reduce queues, increase speed of service and grow profits in your garden centre restaurant or cafe, get in touch with us today and one of our experts will be in touch to discuss your requirements!

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    Not enough hours in the day? 5 ways pub tech can save you time

    The tech every licensee needs to streamline operations and free-up time

    Merely the word “technology” can be enough to strike fear into the hearts of some pub operators. It can feel like a distant land where the rewards are high but the path to get there is full of potential pitfalls; far too complicated, time-consuming or just prohibitively expensive. When you think about it though, nearly all hospitality operators have been travelling this path with success for years already.

    You don’t see many black and white TVs in pubs anymore, do you? And old fashioned cash registers are now few and far between. The fact is that technological advances have already had a huge bearing on the way the industry operates and will continue to do so.

    Moreover, the right technology – from the right supplier that understands the sector and the needs of pubs big and small, will save you not just money but also a significant amount of time, something we know is seriously in short supply at the moment due to the staffing crisis – particularly for independent operators with small to medium-sized pubs.

    With all that in mind, here are five ways that technology can free up your valuable time by streamlining operations:

    1. EPOS is boss

    It starts behind the bar with a time-saving, data-collecting, report-producing till system but also extends out to the floor and the garden. Having an integrated EPoS system means that staff can take orders on handheld devices. The orders are then sent instantly to the kitchen, eliminating the opportunity for errors along the way. Fewer errors equals time saved.

    Cash free payments at the table are also a time-saver and are only going to increase, in fact 57% of teenagers surveyed by us can’t see cash being used at all in 10 years’ time  so investing in tech such as handheld readers, or app-based payments will certainly pay off.

    1. Data day use

    You may have a genius in your ranks who can recall everyone’s name, birthday, favourite drink and where they like to sit on a Sunday at 2pm. But not everyone is in possession of such sorcery. And what happens if that genius leaves? You can, however, have access to that information through a digital booking system, that can harvest valuable consumer data, enabling you to efficiently provide tailored and personalised offers and deals to your customers. Connecting a loyalty scheme, will build on this even further, offering tailored rewards based on habits and preferences. And we know they want it, with our recent research with CGA showing that 80% of consumers are interested in some form of personalisation when visiting pubs, bars and restaurants.

    Having such an automated system not only relieves a little pressure on the old grey matter but also saves you paper and the time it takes to note everything down and refer to it.

    1. Turning tables

    The pandemic normalised pre-booking tables for food and even drinks in pubs, and an online way of doing this makes life so much easier for both you and your customers. Having a booking system that automatically updates as soon as someone books, allows you and your team to focus on other areas of the business. A system that also sends out automated reminders to your customers will not only save the team needing to call every customer to reconfirm bookings, but will also cut down dreaded no-shows – something which costs the industry a whopping £17.6bn a year, according to our research – which can prove devastating for smaller businesses.

    1. Pre-payment

    Taking a deposit ahead of a visit is something of a thorny subject in the pub trade. However, research we conducted last year as part of our #ShowUpForHospitality campaign suggests customers are mellowing on the subject – 51% are happy to pay a deposit. You can do this through a seat and redeem system, meaning that a pre-paid deposit can be assigned at the point of seating the guest. This has obvious financial benefits and, again, reduces the chances of a no show. But in this instance money also equals time, because you are reducing the manual steps in the process and have customer and payment details before they even step foot in the pub.

    1. Show me the money

    Smart systems not only make it easier to take money but they also keep a close eye on your cash flow. At the click of a button you will be able to see where money is being spent, how much you are spending on stock and wages, what’s being wasted and where you can make savings. That’s got to be quicker than looking through your ring-binders and receipts? And the admin time-saving doesn’t stop there. You can also use smart system to plan your rotas, identify trends that may need attention and much more. Having this all in one place without needing to jump around from place to place means fewer clicks and manifold benefits to you and your business. That could free you and staff up to spend more time on the floor or get round to those jobs that always seem to be on the bottom of the list.

    Zonal has a wide range of technology solutions designed to make life easier and businesses more profitable. Find out more about our range designed specifically with pub tenants and licensees in mind, here!

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    Talking tech: hospitality tech terminology explained

    Want to know your AI from your EPOS? We understand that hospitality technology can be intimidating and some of the terminology is, frankly, baffling, so we’ve created this jargon-busting glossary of terms to help licensees make sense of it all.

    Artificial intelligence (AI)

    In pubs, this happens when arguments and theories become more spurious the longer the night goes on. In tech, it means intelligence demonstrated by machines rather than humans or animals. Advanced Google searches or Alexa answering your questions are both common examples.

    Augmented Reality (AR)

    It’s reality but not as we know it. Augmented reality is an interactive experience of the real world enhanced by computer generated information. Still not clear? Remember when loads of people were using their smartphones to find Pokémon? That was augmented reality. It can be used in pubs to provide customers with venue information that can be accessed with their phones, such as details generated on menus or pump-clips about food and drink.

    Backend

    Tech circles will affectionately refer to this as ‘under the hood’. This is the bit of the computer which allows it to operate and is not typically accessed by the user, it includes data and operating systems.

    Click & Collect

    Prior to the pandemic, the practise of buying online and collecting at a venue was more generally associated with retail and the weekly shop. Smart pub operators pivoted during enforced closure periods to sell meals and drinks online that customers would collect at the venue. For many, it has provided a valuable and continued revenue stream.

    Connected Technology

    This one is as simple as it sounds. Connected technologies are devices that connect to each other and the internet, making business more efficient. This could be a tablet connecting to your EPOS system to monitor payments and bookings or the way a smart phone links to a watch.

    Customer Database

    A means of storing all the metrics about your customers and how they interact with your business. Using a variety of channels like reservations, loyalty and WiFi to build and maintain your database allows you to glean insights about your customers and thus personalise their experience of your brand. If the data shows the majority are veggies, maybe hold off on that steak night! This data is often stored in a CRM system.

    Customer Relationship Management (CRM) System

    Ensuring customers are happy and want to come back for more is essential for any pub. CRM systems are designed to help you do this by managing the touchpoints you have with customers so you can communicate effectively. They do this by using the data from your customer database.

    Customer Experience (CX)

    Also known as the customer journey. This is the entire experience a customer has with you, from finding you online, making a reservation, entering the building, ordering, eating and drinking – all the way through to writing a positive review and sharing that experience with others.

    Contactless Payment

    Contactless was something we all got used to over the course of the pandemic. Payment wise, customers now expect to be able to pay using contactless in pubs so they can avoid entering their PIN number or trying to find some loose cash. Contactless includes both physical cards and mobile payment devices using Apple or Google Pay.

    Digital technology

    A catch-all term for basically everything involving computerised technology. It also covers data captured in binary digits. We’re talking smartphones, social media, laptops, desktops, digital photos, EPoS (we’ll get to that) and much, much more.

    EPoS

    Newcomers to the trade may well wonder what this acronym means. It’s short for Electronic Point of Sale (as opposed to PoS, which covers the likes of posters, beer mats and table talkers). However, EPoS is so much more than just a fancy till system these days. A modern EPoS includes all the tools a business needs to help you run your business better, faster and with as little effort as possible. Find out more about our customisable EPoS solutions for independent pubs here.

    Handheld Ordering

    Taking the EPoS system to the table with a connected handheld device has many advantages. It dramatically speeds things up, reduces the potential for any errors from either memory, notebooks or inputting into the till and can give a superior guest experience! (Think: a table ordering drinks before their meals, and having those drinks arrive before they complete the ordering process!)

    Integrated Payment System

    The important bit – receiving your hard-earned money! This technology ensures servers always charge the correct amount and sends that money directly to your bank. Simple. As this technology progresses, you’ll find it built into EPoS, Pay-at-Table devices. handhelds, kiosks, apps, websites… and likely wherever the next frontier takes us…

    Integrated Technology

    A suite of technological solutions that link and work seamlessly together to help the smooth running of the business. Zonal works with a number of partners to offer various solutions to help pubs and the wider hospitality industry.

    Inventory Management System

    This is a digital system that controls your Stock and Order process – from supply chain and recipes and menus to stock counts and reports. Such systems help operators keep a close eye on things and spot where savings can be made and margins improved.

    Online Booking

    A software system to allow customers to make reservations online, before they visit you in person.

    Order & Pay

    The ability to browse the menu on your phone, make your choice and pay, all while at the table or in a seat. Another area of tech that became more familiar from necessity due to the pandemic, but is now a customer expectation.

    Platform

    Not just the stage from where your resident quizmaster asks the questions or your karaoke singers star, but also technologies that provide systems or services. Google, Amazon, Twitter, Facebook and (of course!) Zonal are all platforms.

    Property Management System (PMS)

    A software system for hotels and venues with rooms. It can encompass facilitation and management of a range of requirements such as: bookings (availability, rates and channels); check-in / out; finance and invoicing; room maintenance; customer details; staff rotas and wages; marketing and point of sale.

    PoS Terminal

    The tangible device that houses your EPoS software, be that behind the bar, at a host point, in the ticket office, at reception and even at the table (see handheld ordering). Check out what Zonal has on offer here.

    Purchase to Pay

    This is the term that describes the end-to-end journey of placing orders with your suppliers. It can enable teams to see what’s in stock, what’s on order, when orders are due for delivery and invoices that need to be paid. A Purchase to Pay system can reduce over-ordering and significantly improve margins by sourcing goods from the best supplier at the cheapest price..

    Mixed Reality

    The next step on from augmented reality, where the real world and virtual reality are combined together to create new experiences. Think, sitting in a pub and enjoying a pint with friends – except they are in another pub…

    Real-time Booking

    Technology that allows customers to make online reservations with you at any time of day or night and receive immediate confirmation. Connected technology can take this to the next level by giving an ‘in-session’ view of availability for those last minute booking types!

    SEO

    Not the boss of the company, but probably even more important. Your SEO is ‘search engine optimisation’ and getting it right improves your visibility and presence online.

    Server

    A pivotal role in all hospitality businesses around the world! Not dissimilarly, in tech a server takes orders and delivers the right thing, to the right place, at the right time! It stores applications, files, web services, email and customer databases.

    Stock & Order

    Running low on stock? Got a big event coming up? Stock and Order describes the process of tracking what lines you have in stock, on order and what you will need to replenish.

    Table Management System

    Paper diaries are great. Online Bookings are even better. And Table Management makes Online Bookings the best! A good Table Management system will automatically assign your bookings to the most suitable table, allow hosts to plan and refine the session allocations and make greeting and seating a thing of beauty. Using connected technology can even give a hosts live course status’, automatically assign loyalty numbers and even ping pre-orders directly to the kitchen! Check out how we can help with this.

    Tech Stack

    All the bits and bobs together… The combination of technologies used to help run a range of processes within a business. This is sometimes delivered by a single platform (like Google or Microsoft – you may hear a business described as a ‘Microsoft House’ which means their tech stack is mostly provided by them), or by a multitude of providers. Choosing the right ‘stack’ is essential for a business and will be determined mostly by the technology experience levels it holds, and how well this tech works together.

    User Experience (UX)

    A term that has as much relevance in hospitality as it does to technology. User experience, often shortened to ‘UX’ is used when talking about how easy, effective and enjoyable a device or service is for the person using it. Something tech and hospitality providers strive tirelessly to get spot on.

    Voice Recognition

    Many of us are now familiar with asking Alexa, Siri or Google for answers to tricky homework questions or weather forecasts. We would anticipate a proliferation of this kind of technology within hospitality both for customers and staff.

    Virtual Reality (VR)

    Another piece of the reality puzzle, where users are immersed in an entirely simulated environment. Examples are already appearing in hospitality via gaming experiences and is likely to grow in the on-trade. This could be used in training programmes or even allow customers to enjoy a version of your venue from anywhere in the world.

    Web Ordering

    Not just for those Halloween decorations. It’s another catch-all term that covers ordering via any web-based platform. It includes how your menus can be made available on third-party apps and website.

    Wireless

    As simple as it sounds, the ability to communicate over distances without the need for any wires or cables. There are many technologies that can provide this, most notably: Wi-Fi; Bluetooth and 4/5G. Different situations and locations will suit a certain wireless type, so it’s always a good decision to get some expert advice.

    Zonal has a wide range of technology solutions designed to make life easier and businesses more profitable. Find out more about our range designed specifically with pub tenants and licensees in mind, here!

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    Download guide
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    The TBC Pub Company scales up with Zonal

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    Read case study
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    Rockfish Logo

    Rockfish sees Zonal's EPoS as catch of the day

    Introducing Rockfish

    Group of 9 seafood restaurants, based along the coasts of Devon and Dorset

    Aim to get the freshest fish as quickly as possible to their restaurants

    Founded and ran by best friends Mitch Tonks and Mat Prowse

    Won ‘Best Independent Restaurant’ twice at the National Fish & Chip Awards

    “Zonal has played its part in our growth and our success of the business, because it has really helped us deliver. It’s been a really solid platform to work with”
    Mat Prowse, Operations Director & Co-founder, Rockfish

    The business challenge

    Click to watch rockfish case study video

    The solution

    Having worked together for a number of years, Zonal’s solution has helped Rockfish create an overall picture of how the business is built, and will continue to help shape the business moving forward.

    Supporting Rockfish with a wide range of technology, such as our EPoS, Zonal provides a robust and reliable suite of solutions to help the team at Rockfish manage every aspect of their business – both front of house and operationally. In particular, Rockfish have benefitted from data capture and reporting functionality, providing them with detailed oversight of a number of areas within the business, such as stock levels and sales reports, enabling them to fine tune their business.

    For Rockfish, technology that simply works in the background and doesn’t interfere with their overall guest experience is incredibly important, as it allows their staff to provide excellent customer service and ensures their guests have a great experience in-venue.

    The addition of an Order and Pay app helped Rockfish adapt to the challenges faced during the pandemic, but has also added a valuable new ordering channel, responding to the needs of the digital diner.

    “The app, which has been really useful in recent times through people paying and reordering orders very simply. I feel smaller independents can really use this technology as well.”
    Mat Prowse, Operations Director & Co-founder, Rockfish

    Results

    Supports business growth
    Enables Rockfish to respond to changing consumer trends
    Robust reporting and insights functionality
    Helps provide a seamless customer service
    Supports customer data collection
    This is a clock icon
    Speeds up efficiency
    “Technology for any business in this day and age is a really important factor to consider. In restaurants especially, it’s all about the guest experience.”
    Mat Prowse, Operations Director & Co-founder, Rockfish

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    3 reasons why you should embrace in-venue order and payment apps

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    Room for Growth: How Accommodation Is Driving New Revenue at Upham Inns

    Guest blog by PayPal

    The in-venue stage of the customer journey  your customers’ experience from arrival to ordering and paying for their food – has irreversibly changed over the past 18 months, with digital solutions being placed centre stage. Most notable of these has been order and pay at table solutions, from apps to web ordering, which have now become second nature to many. 

    Whilst they may not be the preference of all, stats from Zonal and CGA’s GO Technology research programme show that in-venue order and pay apps are here to stay. Customers increasingly expect them, and they can also improve your operational efficiency too.

    Restaurants and pubs are hoping for a busy autumn and winter of in-venue diners and drinkers. As Covid restrictions ease, customers may be eager to spend their lockdown savings on eating, drinking and socialising.

    According to research by Lumina Intelligence, the UK market for eating out will grow by 33.4% in 2021 and will have exceeded pre-pandemic levels by the end of 2022.

    But, this isn’t a return to “the before times”. It’s clear that customers’ service expectations have changed, especially with regard to ordering and paying.

    Some of us with a career in full-service hospitality may find it hard to imagine why customers could wish to sit in a restaurant and order on their phones. Why not interact with a human professional? As Zonal’s research shows, there are good reasons why people prefer their screens.

    What’s more, embracing the preference can work to your advantage in more ways than simply giving customers what they want (always a good thing to do).

    Let’s take a look.

    3 reasons to offer in-venue order and payment apps.

    While Covid-19 certainly accelerated uptake of the in-venue app or web-ordering experience, it’s a trend that’s been growing for several years and will continue to grow as customers pour back to your venue.

    If you thought offering an app was just a stop-gap solution, think again.

    1. Customers increasingly expect and value the app or web experience.

    In Zonal’s research, two out of five people said that contactless ordering and payment was more important to them than 12 months ago.

    Why? Half say it’s because of convenience and nearly half (47%) say it’s about ease of payment.

    That’s not surprising when respondents also say that their top three frustrations when ordering in pubs, bars or restaurants are:

    • struggling to get servers’ attention (cited by 30%)
    • Items not being available (22%)
    • Being rushed to place an order (18%).

    With a mobile app or web-ordering solution, customers can choose from an up-to-date menu at their convenience.

    2. In-venue apps reduce unprofitable dwell-time.

    Time spent waiting for a server – either to place an order, or to ask for the bill and pay – is frustrating for customers and could be unprofitable for your operation.

    What’s more, last impressions count. The final minutes of any experience have a disproportionate effect on our overall memory, so billing and payment are important steps to get right.

    The Zonal report shows that customers’ two top priorities at the end of a visit are:

    • Being able to pay immediately, and
    • Having a wide choice of payment options.

    Their top frustrations at this stage, alongside the automatic addition of a service charge (cited by 18%), include:

    • An incorrect bill (14%)
    • Struggling to get a server’s attention (14%)
    • Having to wait to get their bill (11%).

    Again, it is clear how an order and payment solution can help – enabling the customer to receive and settle an accurate bill (no room for human error) as soon as they’re ready to go.

    And, as the world is increasingly cashless and contactless, a mobile-based solution opens the way to offer a wide range of payment options including cards, the PayPal wallet, Apple Pay and Google Pay.

    Offering digital payment solutions can also make it simpler for guests to divide and settle bills between themselves.

    3. Free your valuable staff to focus on other tasks.

    What about the human touch? What about professional service? Providing an in-venue order and payment solution is not about removing the human element. It’s about making the most of your valuable staff.

    Unsurprisingly, more than half of customers (51%) prefer to be welcomed in person and a third say that friendly and helpful service is the most important aspect of placing orders.

    But, in an environment where the hospitality sector faces recruitment challenges and staff shortages, it makes sense to place your people where they can be of greatest value and to support them with the information that digital solutions can provide.

    Remember to add PayPal

    Offering customers an excellent, on-mobile, in-venue ordering and payment solution can help bring clear benefits to your customers and your operations.

    As you design or enhance your app, remember to include PayPal as a payment option. Zonal’s research shows that consumers rank a wide choice of payment options as being one of the most important aspects of settling bills and PayPal, with over 400 million customers worldwide, is widely trusted as a payment method both online and in person.

    With PayPal, customers can pay how they please – by credit or debit card, using their PayPal account, or with increasingly popular alternative payment methods.

    What’s more, PayPal makes it simple for guests to transfer money to each other to simplify bill-splitting and sharing using their account.

    In fact, across the entertainment & leisure and food sectors, PayPal users are more likely to have a favourable online experience than non-PayPal users.

    Customer satisfaction is also strong with PayPal. Net Promoter Scores (NPS) in the entertainment & leisure sector are four points higher when paying with PayPal.

    PayPal’s advanced fraud protection technology also helps to protect venues by minimising fraudulent payments.

    To read more about how PayPal could support your hospitality operations, visit enterprise.

     

    About PayPal

    PayPal has remained at the forefront of the digital payment revolution for more than 20 years. PayPal allows any business or individual with an email address to securely, conveniently and cost-effectively send and receive payments online. Our network builds on the existing financial infrastructure of bank accounts and credit cards to create a global, real-time payment solution. By leveraging technology to make financial services and commerce more convenient, affordable, and secure, the PayPal platform is empowering more than 400 million consumers and merchants in more than 200 markets to join and thrive in the global economy.

    For more information, visit our website.

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    Is Dine at Home Here to Stay?

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    Room for Growth: How Accommodation Is Driving New Revenue at Upham Inns

    Zonal’s Glenn Tait looks at whether people will retain an appetite for dining at home once the hospitality sector reopens fully.

    Pre-pandemic customers choosing to dine at home would have been considered bad for the industry. With necessity being the mother of invention, however, agile and innovative operators were quick to pivot, meaning meal kits, delivery and click and collect quickly gained consumer attention during the pandemic.

    But is dine at home here to stay? And if so, is that good or bad news for operators?

    The findings of our recent Plan to Plate report in partnership with KAM Media earlier this year showed that more than a quarter of respondents spent more or the same amount on restaurant/pub meal kits during the pandemic. Separate research from KAM found 9-in-10 consumers want the hospitality brands that they’ve had in their homes during lockdowns to continue offering these ‘at home’ solutions even when restrictions lift. And if they don’t already, about two thirds want their favourite restaurants to start selling ‘cook at home’ meal boxes nationwide.

    Appetite for takeaways continues unabated with people remaining hooked on having meals and groceries delivered to their home.

    This highlights how consumer behaviour has changed during the course of the pandemic and the lasting effect it will have in the immediate and long term. Our research emphasises that ‘a more relaxed environment’ was the benefit people liked most about staying in – something that, on the face of it, is not great news for hospitality operators.

    Strengthened loyalty

    However, that need not be the case. Looking at the bigger picture, offering food and drink for at-home consumption not only creates a new revenue stream through delivery and click and collect channels, but also deepens relationships with customers and brands, providing further opportunities to capture data, drive loyalty and convert at-home diners to in-venue visits.

    Offering delivery and click & collect options allows operators to capture customer data and build a direct relationship with guests, something often missing with third-party delivery companies. Delivery and click & collect bridges that gap between visits and can encourage and incentivise customers to stay engaged with your brand and continue to spend money on at-home experiences.

    This continuous engagement at every stage of the customer journey gives operators a deeper understanding of guests’ habits and preferences, which ultimately means more personalised marketing and promotions to attract them back again and again.

    Technology can also streamline operations to ensure these new channels do not impact existing standards in-venue and result in greater efficiencies. No need for orders to be taken from one system and input into another, for example, saving staff time and reducing room for error; and controlling the flow and number of orders from multiple channels, in one central place, will help prevent the kitchen from becoming overwhelmed. With menu items being unavailable to order a major bugbear for customers both in-venue and at home, integrated tech helps by using real-time stock levels to update online or in-app menus. With 30% of people saying short wait time is a priority for them when ordering delivery, integrating ordering, EPoS and kitchen management systems can ensure the quickest possible delivery times.

    Encourage in-venue visits

    Attracting customers back to venues will require greater focus post-pandemic: poor weather, travel time and problems booking are all barriers to visiting. But there is a balance to be had here – using technology and social media to promote food and drink deals and advertise events will become even more important, especially for smaller operators.

    This is also where operators can take advantage of the at-home opportunities available to them: a home-delivered tasting menu of new dishes or drinks only available if customers visit might be one way of making the at-home channel work for you. Consumers are increasingly less likely to visit a venue on a whim, as our recent research has highlighted 1 in 3  look up photos of the venue and food prior to visit and are far more likely to book ahead with more than half (51%) saying they are now likely to reserve, so that they know there’s a table available for them.

    With this in mind, imagine a home-delivered tasting selection so good that customers just have to make a booking – through a QR code or online or via an app, – to sample the full menu.  This example highlights how effective use of technology can offer an enhanced experience, driving consumer engagement and bookings, as well as responding to rapidly changing consumer behaviours.

    Enjoyable experiences

    Technology can create an even more enjoyable hospitality experience for those keen to get back out and socialise; it can help smaller operators reach the in-home enthusiasts who’ll mix the new-found enjoyment with visits to venues, and can help convince those perhaps more cautious in nature to venture out with targeted food and drink offers.

    And always be fast and flexible, because the majority of people (61%) will use at least one tool to choose a venue whether that be through social, review sites or your own website, so you must be ready and able to influence their choice.

    Get in touch with Zonal today to discover how our connected technology solutions are helping hospitality businesses of all shapes and sizes to understand and enhance their customer journeys, make significant service improvements and exploit new revenue streams.

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    Order & Pay - A smart digital solution for the contactless COVID era

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    People Make The Experience: How Your Staff Drive Customer Loyalty

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    It Should Feel Like Magic, Not Marketing: Personalisation, Loyalty & Data in Hospitality

    Zonal’s CTO Jon Woodforth and Product Delivery Manager Matt Brooks look at how the pandemic has put digital solutions at centre stage in the consumer journey, and how consumers have reacted to this change when eating and drinking out. Most notable is order and pay at table solutions – from apps to web ordering, which, prior to COVID were still emerging technologies. In this video we’ll demonstrate the benefits of the Zonal solution and take a look into what’s next for Order and Pay technology.

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