Built for convenience, the drive thru has always had speed at its crux, but rising pressures pushed drive-thru speed of service up this year.
Customers spent an average of 255 seconds from speaker to order window in 2019, about 20 seconds longer than in 2018. And with menus becoming more complex and lanes possibly getting more crowded with not only drive-thru customers but also those picking up mobile orders, it's going to be difficult for brands to shave off seconds moving forward.
Dunkin' clocked in with the fastest speed of service, which perhaps can be expected in light of its simpler breakfast, coffee, and treats menu. Still, even with a straightforward menu, the chain has looked for creative digital solutions to prevent the seconds from climbing too high.
"At several of our Dunkin' NextGen locations, we feature an On-the-Go drive-thru lane, which allows guests who order ahead through the Dunkin' mobile app to bypass the regular drive-thru lane to pick up their orders and get on their way even faster than before," says Scott Murphy, COO for Dunkin' U.S.
Chick-fil-A is also looking for tech that can quicken its drive-thru process. Team members are posted outdoors with iPads at several locations, using the tablets to take customers' orders and payment at once. The practice achieves two key points of an order in one fell swoop and allows employees to move freely from car to car. Chick-fil-A's speed of service is still the slowest, due to its constantly crowded lanes that aren't showing any signs of dying down in the near future. The brand is on the lookout for additional digital ways to streamline. "We are embracing technology to both provide a better experience for guests and to help take tasks off restaurant team members so they can devote more time to hospitality for our customers," says Khalilah Cooper, director of service and hospitality for Chick-fil-A.
For other brands, technology plays a role in improving speed-of-service performance, but that technology rests in the kitchen rather than in the drive-thru lane itself.
Arby's COO John Kelly says the brand's internal target speed of service is 200 seconds. He adds that ever-developing menus featuring higher-quality, more imaginative sandwiches create a need for a more efficient production line that can quickly assemble orders in time for a customer's arrival at the pick-up window. To speed things up, Arby's is focused on firming up an assembly-line model in each individual store.
"We know we've got very complex menu items, and our guests are demanding those, so we have to make sure that the engine that we build in our kitchen is able to execute them in a very efficient way," Kelly says.
Source: QSR Magazine