Restaurants have always been a people business. The core of our industry is authenticity, and the connection between operators and their guests. That hasn’t changed. What has changed is the environment they operate in.
As I reflect on my takeaways from this year’s National Restaurant Association Show, one theme came through clearly: operators are navigating a more complex landscape than ever before. Traffic remains pressured, costs are elevated, and expectations from guests and employees alike continue to rise. In response, restaurant leaders are not just looking for new technology. They’re looking for ways to simplify their operations, strengthen resilience, and prepare for scale. And they need to do that without disruption.
Modernization without Disruption
For many restaurant leaders, modernization had come with tradeoffs in the past. Innovation often meant risk to day to day operations, to the guest experience, and to the workforce. Modernization today has to be different. It must deliver step‑function improvements in performance, insight, and efficiency, while remaining largely invisible to the people running and experiencing the restaurant. The best technology reduces friction, simplifies decisions, and allows the team to focus on what matters most. That’s what operators are now demanding: platforms that evolve with them, without forcing disruption on the business.
A Shift from Tools to Platforms
Another clear trend is the move away from fragmented solutions toward connected and intelligent platforms. For years, restaurants have layered system upon system to keep up with changing demands. While each tool may have solved a point problem, together they created complexity. Managing the systems meant a lot of manual work, inconsistent data, and operational risk.
Today, operators are asking for something fundamentally different:
- A single, connected foundation
- Real‑time visibility across the business
- The ability to adapt quickly without rebuilding their technology stack
Restaurants that operate at scale, or desire to do so, need to shift from managing systems to relying on platforms that bring the operation together.
AI Moves from Hype to Operational Value
No conversation at NRA was complete without AI – but the discussion has evolved. Restaurants are moving beyond experimentation and focusing on where AI delivers tangible value today. The most impactful applications are not isolated features, they’re embedded into the operation itself.
When done right, AI is creating material advantages to operators:
- Improve forecasting and demand planning
- Optimize labor and inventory decisions
- Reduce manual reporting and exception management
- Enable more consistent execution across locations
- Personalize experiences across every ordering channel
At its core, AI is helping restaurants operate with greater precision and less effort. And importantly, the most effective AI is invisible. Operators don’t want to “use AI”. They want better outcomes, with fewer disruptions, smarter decisions, and more time focused on their teams and guests.
AI‑Native Platforms Are the Next Chapter
Similarly, AI cannot just be another capability to bolt on to existing systems to fully realize the advantages of AI. The next generation of restaurant technology will be AI‑native:
- Architected to learn and improve continuously
- Designed to turn data into real‑time, actionable insight
- Able to adapt as the business evolves—without constant reconfiguration
This represents a fundamental shift from having systems of record to systems of intelligence.
People Still Define the Experience
Even as technology evolves, one thing remains constant: people define the restaurant experience. The most successful operators balance innovation with the fundamentals that have always mattered: authenticity, great teams, and a deep understanding of their guests and communities. Technology’s role is not to replace that. It is to amplify it. When platforms remove friction, automate complexity, and provide clarity, they empower teams to do what they do best: deliver exceptional hospitality.
The Path Forward
Looking ahead, the restaurants that will lead are those that embrace modernization in the right way: grounded in strong fundamentals, but enabled by intelligent, connected platforms. They will:
- Simplify their technology environments
- Build on resilient, scalable foundations
- Use AI to enhance both operations and guest experiences
- Move forward without disrupting what already works
In an industry defined by intensity and precision, the combination of people and intelligent platforms will define the next era. Restaurants will always be a people business. The difference now is that the best operators are pairing that with technology that is finally built to keep up.
Benny Tadele is the President of Restaurants at NCR Voyix.
