Tech startup to put surveillance in fast-food kitchens to improve accuracy
A tech startup is wooing fast-food restaurants with surveillance systems that it claims will make sure workers fill orders accurately.
Pittsburgh, Pa.-based Agot AI, which has installed its overhead cameras in a number of undisclosed chain restaurants, issues real-time correction alerts to line workers, according to its website.
The startup didnât specifically say whether, for example, its systems can verify that a kitchen worker did, in fact, hold the mayo as requested.
Nevertheless, the company said its cameras can ensure âitems are ingredient accurate and bagged correctly,â according to Agotâs website. The cameras likewise âmonitor kitchen and drive-thru events to improve speed of service,â the company said.
Agot AI just secured $10 million in seed funding from heavy hitters including The Kitchen Fund, which is an investor in quick service salad chain darling, Sweetgreen; and Continental Grain, which invested in Panera Bread and KeurigDrPepper, according to CNBC.
Founded in 2019, Agot had previously secured $50,000, according to Pitchbook. Now, it says business is booming because of the pandemic, which has driven explosive demand for drive-thru windows. McDonaldâs says it generated 70 percent of its sales via its drive-thrus last year.
âWe see that across the [quick-service restaurant] industry order accuracy is becoming an increasingly large problem as a result of the shift to drive-thru,â chief executive Evan DeSantola told CNBC. âWhat was once a smaller pain point, when the accuracy rates havenât gotten much better, is now a much larger pain point.â
Agot AI has installed overhead cameras in a number of fast food kitchens.Gado via Getty ImagesDemand for technology that reduces restaurantsâ reliance on labor, including food ordering kiosks, has also soared during the pandemic. Agot AI said its technology works similarly to that in self-driving vehicles, but didnât elaborate.
In 2019, McDonaldâs acquired two AI companies. Dynamic Yieldâs software recommends orders based on the weather and how busy the kitchen is, while the startup Apprente uses automation to take drive-thru orders.
Agot declined to identify the chains using its camera technology, according to the CNBC report, but said the funding would help it to beef up its staffing so it can work with more restaurants.
McDonaldâs has invested in a number of tech companies that improve the speed of its food orders.Alamy Stock PhotoAgot did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Source: NYPOST
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