The 21 Digital Disruptors Shaping Restaurants in 2022

Rom Krupp

Founder and CEO, OneDine

The year was 2018. Rom Krupp cleared the table and got dystopian for a moment. What if the restaurant industry never existed? Could a tech company approach food as an all-new sector? Krupp not only thought it was feasible, but fundamental to where consumers were taking restaurants. An industry built on guts was beginning to understand the value of data, as Krupp’s 2012-founded Marketing Vitals was proving out. But the next great disruption was unfurling within the structure of restaurants themselves. “The industry that we’re going to build will serve people food the way food is being served today,” says Krupp.

This was the starting point for OneDine, a company that’s web capabilities out into a lot of areas. At its center, though, it’s a platform that supercharges existing POS systems to enable contactless ordering and payment, to optimize labor, eliminate fraudulent chargebacks, and create a “triple-win for servers, managers, and guests alike,” the company says.

What Krupp, who has been in the business for 26 years, is recognized as having a lack of agility among POS devices.

As he explains it, “a ground-up rewrite of looking at the restaurant industry as a brand-new industry. Not one trying to adopt all of the things that have been adopted for the last 40 years.”

Krupp doesn’t believe restaurants need a brick-and-mortar tech stack anymore. Consider a project OneDine recently tackled. It completed a baseball stadium setup—23 concession stands, eight kiosks, 12 handhelds for VIP suites, 7,000 QR codes, and 180 pickup cubbies. But the key was OneDine did so without installing a single piece of software in the building. Everything runs from secure browsers.

“Cloud-based POS are not really cloud-based POS, they’re cloud-based databases,” says Krupp, “which means the POS is running locally but the database is running in the cloud; but there’s software running in the building. That means you have to upgrade it, version control it. We don’t. Even the software is running as a web service. So there’s nothing really deploying to the field. And that’s a brand-new way to look in the industry, which is you don’t need actual software to run the physical locations.”

OneDine early on created handheld tablets that interfaced with a merchant’s existing tech stack. It was a solution focused on labor and creating a contactless and efficient ordering and payment process for servers and diners. It established PCI and EMV compliance and eliminated fraudulent chargebacks.

However, this was just an opening shot. OneDine expanded to incorporate additional contactless payment technology, mobile menu browsing, and curbside order and payment options to help restaurants generate off-premises revenue. AI surveys, guest preference tracking, and offer management eventually made their way into OneDine’s 360-degree solution as well. It then expanded to accommodate multi-merchant venues (like malls), hotels, airports, retail establishments, and event venues, such as the stadium case.

In Krupp’s two-plus decades working with restaurants—he spent 16 years with Custom Business Solutions before Marketing Vitals—he’s seen the space evolve from POS’ infancy in 1996 to now. And what’s happened since, he says, is commerce has become increasingly decentralized. That began in the early 2000s as online ordering arrived. Krupp himself was involved in launching the integrated system for Jason’s Deli from the internet into the POS in 2000.

Restaurants quickly had different channels for online ordering and different ones for digital menus. It was an OK concept when that slice of business represented a “few percentage points here and there,” says Krupp. But in 2018, the world had morphed to 30–50 percent of sales for countless brands sector-wide.

So given how many transactions are now decentralized, the amount of effort it was taking operators to manage commerce ballooned into a massive, and often messy, undertaking.

“Because everything was still anchored in the POS systems,” says Krupp, “and the POS system was built to run the brick-and-mortar; they were never built to run kind of an Amazon concept. An ecommerce concept. Commerce is not only happening on multiple channels for you as a brand that you can control—commerce was also happening on channels you couldn’t control.”

Krupp is referencing streams like third-party marketplaces and Google ordering.

Again, going back to the idea of ​​OneDine, Krupp says he didn’t look at the industry’s evolution only through the lens of labor. There were a bevy of solutions working to help restaurants maintain new channels and improve flow.

Krupp says efficiencies in throttling and quoting times, and just managing kitchens in general, flashed on the horizon. “When you have multiple commerce channels, POS, on-premises, off-premises, third-party, not only do you have six or seven vendors to do commerce, but how do they know to quote the delivery driver the right timing and not effect negatively the people who showed up in the building and

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One of the World’s Most Influential Restaurants Has Closed

The pandemic restaurant casualties just keep coming. This time, unfortunately, it’s a true leader in sustainability.

Copenhangen’s Amass has closed its doors as of Tuesday, the chef-owner Matt Orlando announced on Instagram. In a post on the restaurant’s website, the closure is accompanied by a note stating that Amass was taken under bankruptcy proceedings.

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“Amass is not a physical space, but a mindset that transcends these walls,” Orlando wrote on Instagram. “It’s an ethos that is in the grasp of anyone who is willing to go through the motions to understand what it means for us as individuals to exist.”

That statement continues Orlando’s longtime project at Amass, which he ran with an eye—and a palate—toward sustainability in all its forms. He took that mission to heart, rather than simply using it as a vanity project to score points with both the culinary and environmental worlds. Case in point: He worked with outside analysts to assess Amass’s carbon footprint, and then made changes to the menu and the restaurant’s practices based on the numbers.

Most notably, Orlando ran a test kitchen devoted to finding new—and delicious—ways of reusing food waste. Many people have worked toward making food ways more sustainable, but often to the detriment of the actual taste of the end product. “If you’re a person operating in this sphere of upcycling and being responsible and you make something that is not delicious, you’re actually working against me,” Orlando told Robb Report last year. Instead, he’s found ways to turn old loaves of bread into ice cream, or coffee grounds into miso. In other words, Orlando’s the real deal when it comes to sustainable cuisine.

Acclaimed Chef Matt Orlando runs Amass in Copenhagen

Matt Orlando in Amass’s garden

Chefs throughout the industry know that, and they mourn the closing of his groundbreaking restaurant. In the comments on Orlando’s Instagram post, notable names from across the globe mentioned his influence and that of Amass, as did everyday diners who had the chance to eat at the restaurant. The team at Noma wrote, “Copenhagen is losing arguably the most influential restaurant of the last decade,” while the chef and fermenter David Zilber said, “Matt, you were an inspiration to me before I ever set foot in Copenhagen, and will continue to be forever after!”

With the bankruptcy proceedings, potential buyers may be able to continue to operate the restaurant, potentially including the lease agreement and employees. But as Orlando noted, Amass is more than the physical space, meaning it could—and will—come back in some form in the future.

“I am not sure what form this mindset will take moving forward,” he wrote. “But rest assured, it is far from being over.”

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California has 6 of the best German restaurants: Yelp

Yelp released a list of the top 30 German restaurants across the country, and six spots in California made the list.

Yelp released a list of the top 30 German restaurants across the country, and six spots in California made the list.

Screen grab from German Guys’ Facebook

For those who are craving bratwurst, hot pretzels, sauerkraut or schnitzel, six restaurants in California are among the top spots for German food in the country, according to Yelp.

Yelp released its “top 30 German eateries worth traveling to this winter,” and restaurants and delis across the state made the Nov. 30 list, including in Big Bear Lake, Palm Desert, Calimesa, Orange, Stockton and Campbell.

To find the top German restaurants in the US, Yelp identified businesses in the German category and ranked them based on the total volume and ratings of reviews.

The Old German Deli —Big Bear Lake

A small resort city in Southern California is home to one of the top German spots in the United States.

The Old German Deli serves sandwiches, soups, bratwurst and other sausages.

“After eating here, I now understand why there are so many 5-star reviews. The sausages are SO tasty and served on perfectly-toasted buns along with some delightful sides,” one Yelp reviewer wrote.

Sides include sauerkraut, potato salad, potato soup, or split pea soup (only if it’s winter.)

Big Bear Lake is about 100 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.

Alps Village —Palm Desert

In Coachella Valley, the Alps Village is another top contender on Yelp’s list.

The family-owned restaurant offers spaetzle, pretzels, schnitzel and other popular German dishes. Yelp reviewers raved about Mama Milkas stuffed cabbage rolls, the cevapcici and the chicken paprikash.

“Great food, festive vibe, fantastic service, ice cold beer and friendly staff. It’s no wonder this place has a line out the door,” another reviewer wrote.

The restaurant is about 20 miles southeast of Palm Springs.

George’s Market Calimesa

George’s Market, a German deli in Calimesa, was also recognized.

The grocery and deli spot is popular on Yelp for its German hot plate, pastrami sandwich and Black Forest ham.

“The pastrami is melt in your mouth tender. We go there as often as we can,” said one reviewer.

The deli also has a patio where dogs are allowed on a leash, one reviewer said.

“Decor is cute, nostalgic, and quaint. There’s inside and outside seating and you can tell that it’s a hit with the locals, seeing as it looks like everyone knows each other and with how packed the parking lot was,” another reviewer wrote.

Calimesa is about 20 miles southeast of San Bernardino.

Matter Sausage & Deli Orange

Customers can order sandwiches at Mattern Sausage & Deli in Orange, but the deli also serves a vast selection of cold-cut meats, sausages and cheeses.

Yelp reviewers recommend ordering the salami to go or getting it in a sandwich.

“Got a pound of German salami, a poor boy sandwich, a smoked brat with Gouda and a roast beef sandwich. Brought it home and the family loved every bite,” one reviewer said.

Orange is about 30 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles.

German Guys — Stockton

In Stockton, a couple from Germany opened German Guys with the goal of serving original German recipes.

Their restaurant also made it among Yelp’s top German restaurants in the country.

And Yelp reviewers seem to agree.

“We love finding those little out of the way, family-owned places that leave you with a full tummy and a warm heart. German Guys ticked all those boxes for us,” one reviewer wrote.

Other reviewers also noted the restaurant being a bit out of the way, but worth the drive.

“You drive and drive, and then just when you’re sure you’re lost and doomed to live in your car … it’s on the left. TOTALLY WORTH IT! I’d drive twice as far for this food,” another reviewer wrote.

Dishes on the dinner menu include a wide list of schnitzel, including lemon schnitzel and the gipsy schnitzel with a creamy tomato, onion and sweet bell pepper sauce.

Stockton is about 50 miles south of Sacramento.

Naschmarkt — Campbell

A Bay Area restaurant in Campbell also made Yelp’s top German spots in the country. But Naschmarkt’s main cuisine is Austrian.

“Naschmarkt has been a new Modern European staple in downtown Campbell for numerous years, and it is one of the best if not better spots on Campbell Ave,” one reviewer wrote.

Like other restaurants on Yelp’s list, Naschmarkt also offers German staples, including pretzels, spaghetti and sausage.

Yelp reviewers recommend the Hungarian beef goulash, the apple strudel and the double cooked pork belly.

“The Beef goulash was tender, full of earthy, bright paprika and perfectly balanced with cream and a side of spaetzle,” one reviewer said.

Naschmarkt has another location in Palo Alto.

Campbell is about 8 miles southwest of San Jose.

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