Restaurant CIO: Would You Like Wi-Fi with That?
The Krystal Co. (the nations second-oldest fast-food restaurant chain, founded in 1932) is clearly hoping that a lot of customers will be intrigued and will munch on a burger and fries while gulping from its unlimited refill 802.11 fountain.
But for CIO David Reid, the challenge lay in getting the wireless system installed and supported for as little moneyand with as little operational disruptionas possible.
Click here to read about how Carnival Cruise Lines is wooing business travellers with Wi-Fi access.
The idea of offering a wireless option came when Krystal officials noticed that University of Tennessee campuseswhich some Krystal restaurants are nearhad gone fully wireless.
"We thought, If we could draw some faculty and students over there by being wireless as well," the chain could do some extra business, Reid said. And the installations would be "plug-and-play and simple and repeatable."
As luck would have it, the chain had already decided to upgrade restaurants network connections to a variety of DSL and cable modem broadband hookups to accelerate credit card, inventory and transaction data communications.
"Because we were having a technician visiting the restaurants anyway," Reid said, the wireless setups were relatively easy, "and so cost-effective, the way weve implemented them."
Krystal is privately held and has about 7,500 employees and about $400 million in annual revenue, Reid said.
To keep things low in cost and easier to manage, Reids department proposed making the service free. Although that certainly made the marketing component of the wireless access more attractiveafter all, the goal of the program is to sell more hamburgersthe driving force for the recommendation was IT logistics.
Read the full story on CIOInsight.com: Restaurant CIO: Would You Like Wi-Fi with That?
Check out eWEEK.coms for the latest news, views and analysis on technologys impact on retail.
