Most restaurant operators don't have a complete picture of their technology stack. They know which systems they use day-to-day, but they often don't know what they're actually paying for everything, whether those systems are integrated correctly, what they're missing, or what they're overpaying for. A restaurant tech audit is a structured way to get that picture.
What a restaurant tech audit covers
A thorough audit reviews every piece of technology touching your operation. That typically includes:
- POS system. Is it configured correctly? Are you on the right plan? Is the contract fair? Are there features you're paying for but not using?
- Online ordering and delivery integrations. Are orders injecting into the POS correctly? Is the menu in sync? What are your actual margins per platform?
- Network infrastructure. What router and access points are you running? Is there network segmentation? Do you have failover? Are there security vulnerabilities?
- Vendor contracts and costs. What are you actually paying across all technology vendors? Are you getting value? Are you locked into unfavorable terms?
- Staff workflow. How are staff actually using the technology? Where are the friction points that cost time during service?
What you get from an audit
The output of a good audit isn't a list of things to buy. It's a prioritized action plan based on what will actually make a difference for your specific operation. Some of those actions are changes to existing systems — configuration fixes, plan adjustments, integration repairs. Some are vendor decisions — renegotiating a contract, eliminating a redundant tool, replacing a system that isn't working. Some are additions — a failover connection, a direct ordering channel, a loyalty program.
The typical outcome: Most audits surface 2–3 meaningful changes that pay for the audit cost many times over — either in recovered margin, reduced costs, or eliminated downtime.
When does a tech audit make sense?
- You're experiencing recurring tech problems and don't know the root cause
- You're opening a second location and want to make sure your tech stack is right before you scale it
- Your technology costs have grown and you're not sure what you're getting for it
- You're considering a POS change and want an objective view of your options
- You're launching delivery for the first time and want to set it up correctly
- You just signed a lease and are setting up technology from scratch
What a tech audit is not
A tech audit is not a sales pitch for new systems. The goal is to understand your current state honestly and give you the information to make good decisions — not to create a shopping list. Some operators come in expecting to need a major overhaul and leave with a short list of small fixes. Others have systems that genuinely aren't working and need to be replaced. The audit tells you which situation you're actually in.
How Fork & Firewall approaches audits
Every audit starts with a free conversation to understand what's actually bothering you — what's breaking, what's costing more than it should, what's just always been a nuisance. From there, a structured assessment covers the areas above and produces a written prioritized plan. No vendor ties, no referral fees, no interest in recommending something expensive when something simple will work.
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