Little Raps - Restaurant Strategy Insights and Ideas

Are You Really First-Party? Why Restaurant Brands Need to Own Their Digital Ordering Experience

6 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Are You Really First-Party? Why Restaurant Brands Need to Own Their Digital Ordering Experience

Descripción

Everyone talks about first-party ordering, but what does “first-party” actually mean? If your guest completes their order on a platform you don’t own, is it really your digital experience—or are you renting it? In this episode, we explore why more multi-unit restaurant brands are moving toward fully integrated web and mobile experiences instead of relying on third-party ordering platforms. We discuss how ownership affects guest data, loyalty, marketing, technology, operations, and long-term growth—and why brands making this shift often see double-digit improvements in conversion rates, average order value, and digital sales. If you’re a restaurant marketing leader, CIO, CTO, digital executive, or operations leader, this episode will help you think differently about digital ownership and what it means for your business. Topics include: * First-party ordering vs. third-party ordering * Restaurant digital transformation * Unified web and mobile experiences * Restaurant loyalty and guest data * Digital ordering strategy * Restaurant technology and integrations * Conversion rate optimization for restaurant brands

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54 episodios

episode Are You Really First-Party? Why Restaurant Brands Need to Own Their Digital Ordering Experience artwork

Are You Really First-Party? Why Restaurant Brands Need to Own Their Digital Ordering Experience

Everyone talks about first-party ordering, but what does “first-party” actually mean? If your guest completes their order on a platform you don’t own, is it really your digital experience—or are you renting it? In this episode, we explore why more multi-unit restaurant brands are moving toward fully integrated web and mobile experiences instead of relying on third-party ordering platforms. We discuss how ownership affects guest data, loyalty, marketing, technology, operations, and long-term growth—and why brands making this shift often see double-digit improvements in conversion rates, average order value, and digital sales. If you’re a restaurant marketing leader, CIO, CTO, digital executive, or operations leader, this episode will help you think differently about digital ownership and what it means for your business. Topics include: * First-party ordering vs. third-party ordering * Restaurant digital transformation * Unified web and mobile experiences * Restaurant loyalty and guest data * Digital ordering strategy * Restaurant technology and integrations * Conversion rate optimization for restaurant brands

Ayer6 min
episode Lucy Logan (Everybite): Why the Future of Restaurant Technology Starts With the Menu artwork

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What if the most overlooked technology platform in your restaurant isn’t your POS, loyalty platform, or mobile app—but your menu? Joseph Szala sits down with Lucy Logan, Co-Founder and President of Everybite, to discuss how structured menu data is changing restaurant marketing, operations, personalization, AI, and guest experience. The conversation explores why food allergies are only part of the story. As restaurants invest in digital ordering and artificial intelligence, menus are evolving from static documents into dynamic sources of customer insight. From ingredient-level data to personalization, modifier analytics, and digital hospitality, this episode examines why better menu data creates better business decisions. If you’re leading marketing, technology, operations, culinary, or digital strategy for a multi-unit restaurant brand, this episode will change how you think about the menu.

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episode f You Lead a Restaurant, You’re Already a UX Designer artwork

f You Lead a Restaurant, You’re Already a UX Designer

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episode California’s New Privacy & Allergen Laws: What Every Restaurant Brand Needs to Know artwork

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Two California regulations are creating new challenges for restaurant brands. One focuses on website privacy and digital tracking. The other requires allergen disclosures for chain restaurants beginning July 1, 2026. Neither sounds like a growth initiative. Both have the potential to impact restaurant operations, marketing technology, guest trust, and legal risk. In this episode, Joseph Szala explores: • Why CIPA lawsuits are increasing • How website tracking technologies create unexpected exposure • Why restaurant brands outside California should still pay attention • What the Allergen Disclosure for Dining Experiences Act requires • The operational work needed to maintain accurate allergen data • How structured menu information improves visibility in AI-powered search • Why compliance can become a competitive advantage The brands that manage information well will be better positioned for evolving privacy regulations, AI search experiences, and rising guest expectations. Listen in to understand what restaurant leaders should be doing now and why this work ultimately serves guests better.

15 de jun de 202610 min
episode Why Integrated Restaurant Websites Will Win Google's AI Future artwork

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Google's latest AI announcements signal a significant shift in how consumers discover restaurants online. In this episode of Little Raps, Joseph Szala examines what Google's move toward answer-driven search means for restaurant brands and why traditional marketing websites may become less effective over time. The discussion explores the growing importance of integrated digital experiences, commerce, loyalty, first-party customer relationships, structured data, and authority-building as search continues evolving. Restaurant marketers, operators, and technology leaders will walk away with practical insights on how to prepare for a future where Google increasingly provides answers instead of simply directing users to websites.

8 de jun de 202610 min