Not totally surprising to me that AI economics are challenged in the QSR sector. The current processes aren't massively inefficient and pay rates are low. Seems like the more fertile ground will be in higher-order, more complex work processes (e.g. coding, content creation, customer support, etc.) where pay rates and productivity potential is far higher.
Also, on a minor note, your analysis of Domino's predictive AI savings potential may be
too low. If you relied on public data on Domino's inventory carrying cost, I suspect the vast majority of Domino's inventory costs are on their franchisee's ledger.
Not totally surprising to me that AI economics are challenged in the QSR sector. The current processes aren't massively inefficient and pay rates are low. Seems like the more fertile ground will be in higher-order, more complex work processes (e.g. coding, content creation, customer support, etc.) where pay rates and productivity potential is far higher.
Also, on a minor note, your analysis of Domino's predictive AI savings potential may be
too low. If you relied on public data on Domino's inventory carrying cost, I suspect the vast majority of Domino's inventory costs are on their franchisee's ledger.
Great point about Dominos!