The new decade is upon us, which means it’s time to ditch things that no longer serve you. For many enterprise operators that may mean your current POS system.
February 4, 2020
BY: Cristal Ghitman | February 04, 2020
The new decade is upon us, which means it’s time to ditch things that no longer serve you. For many enterprise operators that may mean your current POS system.
In a recent study conducted by Qu, 40% of respondents from enterprise brands said they’re looking to switch POS systems in 2020, with another 33% saying they’re open to switching within the next 12-18 months.
Crafting an RFP for an enterprise POS upgrade is complicated, but don’t worry. We’ve compiled the best practices for you below and the 5 most important POS requirements you need to include in your RFP—to ensure a scalable solution well into the future.
To forge a data-driven future that includes a more manageable and scalable tech stack for your enterprise restaurant, here are top requirements your RFP (and technology strategy) must cover:
One of the most common questions we see is “Do you have an open API?”
This sounds like a great question, but it’s no longer good enough to simply have an Open API.
Today's API's need to be robust and simplify integrations to all partners, while lowering the cost and time required for future initiatives. Understanding that “not all APIs are created equal” is a cornerstone to asking more detailed questions about the API philosophy and approach the tech vendor embraces.
To fully understand the vendor’s API approach and true “openness” you’ll need to dig deeper to understand if the POS system has:
The Restaurant Technology Network has adopted some key principles of an open API structure for our industry, these should be considered a guide. Following this guide will help make sure your POS system provider’s API’s will create the seamless ecosystem and integrations that truly open API’s should deliver on.
Guests have changed the way they order food, and they have changed it for good. Most operators today have at least three, if not more, order channels and menus to manage, from web ordering to kiosk to third party delivery.
Unfortunately, legacy POS systems haven’t kept pace with the changing preferences of guests, which resulted in operators managing multiple menus, multiple items, and multiple data sets.
This exhaustive, often manual, process exists because your POS system lacks context.
As in contextual, dynamic items that feed from one central core. Dynamic items allow you to program one item across multiple order channels, day parts, promotions, pricing, imagery, and an almost unlimited array of contexts.
Your modern POS system has to have modern menu management structure, and we often see this important aspect overlooked in RFPs.
Additional questions you should be asking on your RFP to get past your menu management mayhem include:
Data Data Data. You want your Data, and you want it NOW.
Restaurants are awash in data, but it’s fragmented and messy and nearly impossible to streamline for insights and action.
Even more so, like API’s, not all data is equal to all areas of your operation. Everyone in your organization needs different types of data to do their jobs, and the sources for that information comes from a variety of places.
Below are the major types of data you need to capture to help you make informed decisions across your organization.
Most POS platforms provide for and integrate with multiple data sources, but the flows are one-directional or incomplete.
Multiple databases and menus mean multiple reports to reconcile. Customer data that lives across different platforms (loyalty, POS, online ordering) can’t be matched together for a holistic view of the guest.
Payment data and reporting is fragmented and takes weeks to reconcile at months end. The data disaster goes on.
When evaluating POS for an RFP it is CRITICAL that you ask:
No one LOVES spending money on technology, but everyone relies on it to operate their restaurants, facilitate orders, and most of all, accept payment! Typical legacy POS pricing models have created some serious PTSD on tech spending with high upfront costs AND expensive maintenance, upgrades, and support. SaaS products have swung the pendulum so far in the other direction with high monthly costs or relying on processing tie ins to make up for the revenue they lose by “giving away” their software.
More often than not, pricing is the elephant in the room and no one wants to ask about it upfront on an RFP before you get through validating if the system will be right for you.
Since every brand has different objectives, you also have different buying models. The pricing models your provider offers should align with your overall budget, vision, and resources for support. Depending on what your objective is, consider some of the following questions:
If going through the process of developing an RFP seems like a hard workout, then implementing a new POS is like running a marathon. Uphill and barefoot, in the snow.
You don’t want to do that more than once, and pretty much everyone in your organization, from CEO to store managers, can agree that change is a grueling process.
When evaluating POS, the decisions you make should be for the long term, but we often see that the questions asked are a little short-sighted. While providing a comprehensive list of features and functionalities you need now is important, it’s even more important to ask what the design philosophy and vision is for your provider. You don’t know what you don’t know, and our industry changes almost daily, so FUTURE-PROOFING your investment is critical.
Some things to consider asking:
Designing an RFP that’s aligned with your brand strategy, asking the right questions, and being diligent about knowing your POS provider’s vision can help make the arduous process of changing your technology easier.
The points above are important, but don’t forget to bring in all the right stakeholders to assess your brand, operational, financial, and labor needs to have a balanced view of your buying decision. It’s a new decade and a great time to evaluate a new POS, and with technology moving at light speed, making a future-friendly choice will ensure you’re poised for success in 2020, and beyond!
Qu is the restaurant technology company evolving POS, responsibly, for a more sustainable future. With the industry’s first unified commerce platform, Qu’s fully integrated products go beyond fragmented ordering and tech experiences to create healthier connections for restaurant operating teams and their many stakeholders.