The system, nicknamed “Archy,” processes orders in both English and Spanish and reportedly handles roughly 90% of transactions without human intervention. Franchisee reports suggest the software can recognize repeat customers and offer their standard orders, though McDonald’s has kept technical specifications under wraps. Beyond taking orders, ArchIQ serves as a diagnostic tool, alerting managers to kitchen bottlenecks or hardware failures like malfunctioning freezers.
McDonald’s Taps Google Tech for New AI Drive-Thru Pilot
After a high-profile failure with IBM’s automated ordering, McDonald’s is testing a new Google-backed system dubbed ArchIQ. Currently live at five undisclosed U.S. locations, the platform aims to automate drive-thru interactions and provide real-time operational oversight for restaurant managers, signaling a renewed push into retail artificial intelligence.

This rollout follows the 2024 termination of a partnership with IBM, which saw widespread negative publicity after customers reported bizarre errors, including one instance where an automated system mistakenly added $250 worth of chicken nuggets to a single order. While McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski frames this shift as a necessary evolution for productivity under the “McDonald’s > NEXT” growth plan, the industry remains divided. With drive-thru traffic struggling, competitors like Wendy’s and Taco Bell are also racing to automate, even as some customers continue to voice a preference for human service over algorithmic efficiency.




Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!