Rise of the (fast food) robots: How labor shortages are accelerating automation
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When you think of innovative industries, fast food might not be the first type of business that springs to mind. But as an investor, your options for innovative companies aren’t limited to new frontiers like electric vehicles, online gambling, or space stocks.

Innovation is also a growth driver in the seemingly humdrum business of fast food. In many ways, innovations have shaped fast food as we know it today. A quick glimpse at the early years of the world’s largest fast food restaurant demonstrates how new ideas can translate to big upside for shareholders.

Innovation is a fast food ‘supersizer’

The original McDonald’s restaurant was opened in 1940 in San Bernardino, California. Using their own operational innovation, the application of production line manufacturing to fast food (dubbed the ‘Speedee Service System’), the McDonald brothers had a local hit.

Harry Sonneborn doesn’t get much pop culture recognition in the McDonald’s story, but the financial innovations he executed still shape the company today. Any time you hear an assertion that McDonald’s is in the real estate business and not in the hamburger business, think Sonneborn.

The company is so well known that many readers have probably already thought of other innovations: menu items like the Big Mac or Filet-O-Fish, the introduction of the Happy Meal, and of course the creation of Ronald McDonald.

Fast food in the age of COVID

More recently, COVID-19 forced restaurants to pivot. Ghost kitchens popped up to crank out delivery and takeout orders. But with global vaccination rates steadily rising and the Delta wave subsiding, more customers want to sit down and eat. That means reopening dining areas and hiring more staff–no easy task given today’s global labor shortages.

A year after COVID-19 was declared a pandemic, the US restaurant industry found itself short of 1.2 million employees compared to the prior year. There is no singular reason. Stimulus checks and unemployment benefits likely kept some workers at home. Others must have spent that time retraining for a different job.

Whatever the case, the tight employment market has remained persistent. In the U.S., the labor force participation rate is at its lowest point since the 1970s. McDonald’s made headlines earlier this year for offering $50 to job applicants just for showing up for an interview.

Hiring is one challenge. Retaining is another. Several companies have experienced organized employee walkouts over the past year as workers lobby for better working conditions. A photo of a Burger King sign went viral in July, as employees and a general manager quit in unison. The sign outside the restaurant read “WE ALL QUIT” and “SORRY FOR THE INCONVENIENCE”.