Chick-fil-A Wants You To Spend $2 Not To Go To Chick-fil-A
The choices that humans make aren't always the wisest.
All too often, they're based on some mixture of self-regard, self-indulgence, and sheer laziness.
You'd think, though, that if you really love a service, you'll remain loyal to it.
I'm not so sure about that. Because here is the regular leader in truly human fast-food customer service deciding that it needs robotic help.
We're speaking, with much reverence, of Chick-fil-A. This occasionally sanctimonious chicken chain is regularly at the summit of the American Customer Satisfaction Index.
Its customer service humans are said to be exemplars of fine behavior. Yet here is the chain announcing that it's experimenting with robotic delivery. Specifically, the Kiwibot 4.0.
The chain told Restaurant Business that Santa Monica -- already a paradise of indolence -- is now being blessed with Chick-fil-A Kiwibot robots that bring your chicken sandwich to you.
Because why would you want to stand in line for, say, 10 minutes at a Chick-fil-A when a robot can bring you your order in, oh, thirty minutes?
Is that really such an excellent trade-off?
Well, you don't have to move, which is good. But then if you did move and walk a few minutes to the Chick-fil-A you'd burn up a few calories in anticipation of onloading thousands more calories with your Chick-fil-A meal.
Perhaps, though, that's a false analogy. Delivery has become vital for many during COVID-19. And, apparently, the real idea is to reduce the carbon footprint of something that would be a delivery anyway.
Even more excitingly, as Kiwibot COO Diego Varela Prada told Restaurant Business: "What we promise is to at least halve the time it takes for all orders a mile or closer, and more than half the cost."
So the robot can find its way more quickly than your average human?
It also has other skills that humans have, but don't use often enough. The ability to wink, for example. (Yes, I'm truly serious.)
I still worry.
Chick-fil-A has always had humanity as part of its essence. Its drive-thru is, according to research, the slowest. Yet its offering is the very best for accuracy, customer service, and taste. So who needs robots?
Oh, but everyone's being seduced by them these days. Domino's is launching its own robotic delivery boxes in Houston. Soon, indeed, there'll be far less room on sidewalks, as delivery robots constantly scoot through and around human legs in order to leap into human arms and satisfy human mouths and stomachs.
And, in Chick-fil-A's case, the delivery costs -- on average -- a mere $1.99. Yes, pay two bucks not to go to your favorite home of customer service.
Then again, it's not as if these things necessarily save on labor. Chick-fil-A's Kiwibots are still monitored by humans. They're apparently not very good at essentials, such as crossing the road. The robots, that is.
But they can learn. While humans, it seems, can only learn how to get lazier and lazier.
Reassessing AI Investments: What The Correction In US Megacap Tech Stocks Signals
The recent correction in US megacap tech stocks, including giants like Nvidia, Tesla, Meta, and Alphabet, has sent rippl... Read more
AI Hype Meets Reality: Assessing The Impact Of Stock Declines On Future Tech Investments
Recent declines in the stock prices of major tech companies such as Nvidia, Tesla, Meta, and Alphabet have highlighted a... Read more
Technology Sector Fuels U.S. Economic Growth In Q2
The technology sector played a pivotal role in accelerating America's economic growth in the second quarter of 2024.The ... Read more
Tech Start-Ups Advised To Guard Against Foreign Investment Risks
The US National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) has advised American tech start-ups to be wary of foreign... Read more
Global IT Outage Threatens To Cost Insurers Billions
Largest disruption since 2017’s NotPetya malware attack highlights vulnerabilities.A recent global IT outage has cause... Read more
Global IT Outage Disrupts Airlines, Financial Services, And Media Groups
On Friday morning, a major IT outage caused widespread disruption across various sectors, including airlines, financial ... Read more