http://www.businessweek.com/print/magazine/content/11_20/b4228064581642.htm

Taco Bell and the Golden Age of Drive-Thru
Operational innovations at restaurants like Taco Bell rival those 
at any factory in the world. A view from the drive-thru window at 
how they do it

By Karl Taro Greenfeld

It must always be, "Hi, how are you today?" Never, "Hi, how are 
you?" "Hi, how's it going?" or "Welcome to Taco Bell." Never, 
"What will it be today?" or, even worse, "What do you want?" Every 
Taco Bell Service Champion memorizes the order script before his 
first shift. The folks who work the drive-thru windows at the Taco 
Bell here in Tustin, Calif., about 35 miles south of Los Angeles, 
and everywhere else, are called Service Champions. Those who work 
the food production line are called Food Champions.

You think you know it—"Hi, how are you today?" It seems easy 
enough. And you follow that with, "You can order when you're 
ready," never "Can I take your order?" The latter puts pressure on 
the driver, who might be a distracted teenager busy texting her 
BFF or a soccer mom with a half-dozen kids in the van. "They don't 
need the additional pressure of a disembodied voice demanding to 
know their order," explains Mike Harkins. Harkins, 49, is 
vice-president of One System Operations for Taco Bell (YUM), which 
means he spends all day, every day, thinking about the kitchen and 
the drive-thru.

He has been prepping me for my debut at the window. Getting ready, 
I wash my hands, scrubbing for the mandated 20 seconds; slide on 
rubber gloves; and don the three-channel headset that connects me 
to the ordering station out in the lot, as well as to my fellow 
Champions. I take my place at the window. I hear the ding 
indicating a customer has pulled into the loop around the 
restaurant, and I immediately ask, "Hi, how's it going?"

It gets worse from there. As a Service Champion, my job is to say 
my lines, input the order into the proprietary point of sale (POS) 
system, prepare and make drinks like Limeade Sparklers and 
Frutista Freezes, collect bills or credit cards, and make change. 
I input Beefy Crunch Burritos, Volcano Burritos, Chalupas, and 
Gorditas. My biggest worry is that someone will order a Crunchwrap 
Supreme, a fast-food marvel made up of two kinds of tortillas, 
beef, cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, and sauces, all scooped, folded, 
and assembled into a hand-held, multiple-food-group package, which 
then gets grilled for 27 seconds. An order for a Crunchwrap 
Supreme, the most complex item on the menu, sometimes requires the 
Service Champion to take up position on the food production line 
to complete it in anything like the 164 seconds that Taco Bell 
averages for each customer, from driving up to the ordering 
station to pulling away from the pick-up window.

Drive-thru is the operational heart of the fast-food industry, as 
central to a brand like Taco Bell as the kitchen itself, maybe 
more so. According to the National Restaurant Assn., the fast-food 
industry will do $168 billion in sales for 2011, and about 70 
percent of that will come in through drive-thru windows. The 
technology deployed at order stations and pick-up windows has 
evolved to meet that demand. Every step is measured, every 
movement calculated, every word scripted. Taco Bell, with more 
than 5,600 locations in the U.S., currently operates some of the 
fastest and most accurate drive-thru windows in the industry, at 
least according to QSR magazine's last survey, in 2009, though for 
years they lagged. The system is the result of a 15-year-plus 
focus on the window as the core of the business. Taco Bell's pride 
in moving from the bottom of the pack to near the top is also part 
of the reason it allowed a journalist, unsupervised by public 
relations staff, to work the line.

Above me on the wall, a flat-screen display shows the average time 
of the last five cars at either the order station or the pick-up 
window, depending on which is slowest. If the number is red, as it 
is now, that means one, or both, of the waits is exceeding 50 
seconds, the target during peak periods. It now shows 53 seconds, 
on its way to 60, 70 ... and then I stop looking. The high-pitched 
ding that announces each new customer becomes steady, unrelenting, 
and dispiriting—85 cars will roll through over the peak lunch 
rush. And I keep blowing the order script.

I fall behind so quickly and completely that restaurant manager 
Amanda Mihal, a veteran of 12 years in the QSR business (Quick 
Serve Restaurant, the acronym for an industry that makes acronyms 
for everything), has to step in. "You'll get it," Amanda says as 
she fixes an order that I have managed to screw up. "Eventually."

Go into the kitchen of a Taco Bell today, and you'll find a strong 
counterargument to any notion that the U.S. has lost its 
manufacturing edge. Every Taco Bell, McDonald's (MCD), Wendy's 
(WEN), and Burger King is a little factory, with a manager who 
oversees three dozen workers, devises schedules and shifts, keeps 
track of inventory and the supply chain, supervises an assembly 
line churning out a quality-controlled, high-volume product, and 
takes in revenue of $1 million to $3 million a year, all with 
customers who show up at the front end of the factory at all hours 
of the day to buy the product. Taco Bell Chief Executive Officer 
Greg Creed, a veteran of the detergents and personal products 
division of Unilever (UL), puts it this way: "I think at Unilever, 
we had five factories. Well, at Taco Bell today I've got 6,000 
factories, many of them running 24 hours a day."

It's as if the great advances of human civilization, in everything 
from animal husbandry to mathematics to architecture to 
manufacturing to information technology, have all crescendoed with 
the Crunchwrap Supreme, delivered via the pick-up window.

"The most advanced operational thinking in the world is going on 
in the back of a QSR," says Mike Watson, a former senior 
vice-president for operations at Wendy's and currently executive 
director of operations engineering at WD Partners, a consulting 
firm that works with QSR brands. "If you have it laid out where it 
doesn't flow right, that means less order flow, less product, 
lower sales."

The big brands spend hundreds of millions and devote as much time 
to finding ways to shave seconds in the kitchen and drive-thru as 
they do coming up with new menu items. "The majority of the 
business now happens around the back of the building," says Blair 
Chancey, editor of QSR magazine. "So much money and R&D go into 
perfecting the production system because there is so much money to 
be had."

The development of new menu items has become subservient to the 
need to get food to drivers as quickly as possible. At Taco Bell, 
for example, a 2006 decision to add a new grill to the 
line—forcing thousands of franchisees to upgrade their kitchens, 
retrain staff, and modify the food preparation process—was far 
more momentous than decisions about switching the marketing 
campaign from, say, "Make a run for the Border" to "Think Outside 
the Bun."

The food was designed for mass production almost from the start. 
Glen Bell, Taco Bell's founder, began experimenting in 1950 with 
what he called a tay-co, trying to devise a crispy tortilla shell 
that wouldn't shatter when stuffed with ground beef, lettuce, and 
cheese. He had watched customers in Mexican restaurants eating 
their soft tay-cos with their fingers, folding the end with one 
finger to keep sauce from dripping. Bell felt a hard shell would 
lend itself to the assembly-line style of food preparation 
pioneered by McDonald's. He invented a wire basket with six slots 
for corn tortillas that could be dunked in boiling oil and then 
removed. To facilitate the assembly process, he designed a rack 
that allowed workers to slide the shells past the trays of beef, 
lettuce, and cheese, the tacos taking shape the same way a car 
does as it rolls through the factory. Both those implements exist 
in every Taco Bell today. The assembly line would increasingly 
determine the texture, shape, and taste of the food as big brands 
made menu decisions based as much on what was operationally 
possible as on what tasted good.

Bell opened and closed several fast-food operations before 
launching Taco Bell in 1962. Spurred by the success of those 
hard-shell tacos, he would franchise and eventually take Taco Bell 
public in 1969, before resigning from the board in 1975. Taco Bell 
was acquired by PepsiCo (PEP) in 1978, then spun off with Pizza 
Hut and KFC to form Tricon Global Restaurants in 1997, which 
became Yum! Brands (YUM) in 2002. None of that would have been 
possible without coming up with a faster, easier way to deep-fry 
tortilla shells.

Mike Harkins started working at 7-Elevens when he was 15 and spent 
11 years at Southland Corp., putting himself through Grossmont 
College, where he earned a degree in accounting. Taco Bell 
recruited him in 1996 to be a market manager overseeing the San 
Diego area. (Even his oldest son worked as a drive-thru Service 
Champion for a year and half.) Harkins managed restaurants as 
well—it has become almost a requirement that Taco Bell senior 
management put in some time running an actual restaurant—and as he 
shows me around the Tustin Taco Bell, it's obvious he knows where 
everything is without bothering to look. "I've spent my whole life 
living in 7-Elevens and Taco Bells and I've thought a lot about 
what makes these kinds of operations go," he says, pulling on 
rubber gloves and pointing to the food production line. "You have 
to have consistency. You walk into any Taco Bell, and you see, 
roughly, this."

Every Taco Bell has two food production lines, one dedicated to 
the drive-thru and the other to servicing the walk-up counter. 
Working those lines is no easier than wearing the headset. The 
back of the restaurant has been engineered so that the Steamers, 
Stuffers, and Expeditors, the names given to the Food Champions 
who work the pans, take as few footsteps as possible during a 
shift. There are three prep areas: the hot holding area, the cold 
holding area, and the wrapping expediting area. The Stuffer in the 
hot holding area stuffs the meat into the tortillas, ladling beef 
with Taco Bell's proprietary tool, the BPT, or beef portioning 
tool. The steps for scooping the beef have been broken down into 
another acronym, SST, for stir, scoop, and tap. Flour tortillas 
must be cooked on one side for 15 seconds and the other for five.

When I take my place on the line and start to prepare burritos, 
tacos, and chalupas—they won't let me near a Crunchwrap Supreme—it 
is immediately clear that this has been engineered to make the 
process as simple as possible. The real challenge is the wrapping. 
Taco Bell once had 13 different wrappers for its products. That 
has been cut to six by labeling the corners of each wrapper 
differently. The paper, designed to slide off a stack in single 
sheets, has to be angled with the name of the item being made at 
the upper corner. The tortilla is placed in the middle of the 
paper and the item assembled from there until you fold the whole 
thing up in the wrapping expediting area next to the grill. "We 
had so many wrappers before, half a dozen stickers; it was all 
costing us seconds," says Harkins. In repeated attempts, I never 
get the proper item name into the proper place. And my burritos 
just do not hold together.

With me on the line are Carmen Franco, 60, and Ricardo Alvarez, 
36. The best Food Champions can prepare about 100 burritos, tacos, 
chalupas, and gorditas in less than half an hour, and they have 
the 78-item menu memorized. Franco and Alvarez are a precise and 
frighteningly fast team. Ten orders at a time are displayed on a 
screen above the line, five drive-thrus and five walk-ins. Franco 
is a blur of motion as she slips out wrapping paper and tortillas, 
stirs, scoops, and taps, then slides the items down the line while 
looking up at the screen. The top Food Champions have an ability 
to scan through the next five orders and identify those that 
require more preparation steps, such as Grilled Stuffed Burritos 
and Crunchwrap Supremes, and set those up before returning to 
simpler tacos and burritos. When Alvarez is bogged down, Franco 
slips around him and slides Crunchwrap Supremes into their boxes. 
For this adroit time management and manual dexterity, Taco Bell 
starts its workers at $8.50 an hour, $1.25 more than minimum wage.

Chief Operating Officer Rob Savage's office at Taco Bell's 
headquarters, or, as they call it, the Restaurant Support Center, 
in Irvine, Calif., looks out over Interstate 405 toward the 
coastal mountains along the Pacific. Savage and Harkins are 
explaining how Glen Bell never envisioned a drive-thru when he 
created his first Mission-style Taco Bells. As the brand grew to 
more than 6,000 locations by the 1990s, the company found itself 
struggling to deliver on both speed and accuracy, coming in close 
to the bottom of QSR magazine surveys. "We were getting slammed," 
says Savage. "We realized we didn't have good systems. We didn't 
have good processes, training."

In the early 1990s each Taco Bell location was coming up with its 
own responses to a drive-thru business already delivering more 
than 50 percent of the brand's revenue. There was no order script. 
Service Champions were constantly running back into the kitchen to 
grab missing items. "We were getting the speed part, but 
sacrificing accuracy," says Harkins. The response, of course, was 
to create an acronym, TRED, which, after much discussion among the 
operations team seated in Savage's office, is determined to stand 
for Target, Rush Readiness, Equipment Functionality, and 
Deployment. What it meant was that operations throughout the brand 
were standardized, bottlenecks were identified, and staffing was 
optimized to deploy enough bodies to handle the peak traffic 
periods. One of their discoveries was that at some locations, 70 
percent of the business was coming through the drive-thru, and 80 
percent of that was coming in about 90 minutes of peak time around 
lunch. That meant that 56 percent of the total business was being 
conducted at one window in one and a half hours.

Through the mid and late '90s, Taco Bell designed and implemented 
the kitchen and drive-thru operation it still uses today. It 
eventually got its speed and accuracy to where it consistently 
beat the 3-minute, 30-second target per order, even during peak. 
Taco Bell does this while serving a wider range of menu items, and 
more complicated food, than the hamburger chains.

The program was so successful that in 2009 the brand was the first 
to finish in the top five in QSR magazine's Drive-Thru Performance 
Study in both speed and accuracy, averaging 164 seconds per 
vehicle with an accuracy rate of 93.1 percent. Wendy's was fastest 
with an astonishing 134 seconds per vehicle, but it didn't crack 
the top five in accuracy. Citing a need to protect "key secrets" 
central to its business, Wendy's declined to provide access to its 
restaurants.

There is no secret formula for Wendy's success, says former 
Vice-President Watson, other than "a consistent operating system 
and training, and measures to reinforce positive behaviors." 
Pretty similar, in other words, to Taco Bell's TRED system, though 
likely with a different acronym.

Visit any kitchen in the QSR industry, and you will see certain 
similarities. The food production line will be in a T-pattern, 
with the dine-in counter and the pick-up window at each end of the 
top of the "T." There have been headsets since the 1970s, and a 
strict division of labor has been in place since the 1960s, albeit 
with tweaks and modifications that have made it possible for a 
McDonald's employee to assemble a Big Mac in 15 seconds. Screens 
throughout the kitchen displaying orders and order times have made 
the kitchen faster.

Drive-thru accuracy has improved immensely. Much of the credit for 
that goes to the verification board, first used by McDonald's in 
the '90s, which let customers see their orders rather than just 
hear them read back. This eliminated the large percentage of order 
mistakes that were actually customer errors and not the result of 
a drive-thru worker putting the wrong thing into the POS or a food 
worker preparing the wrong item. "That meant I knew if you 
understood me and I understood you," says Dennis Lombardi of WD 
Partners. "That was huge for customer satisfaction."

The operations are now so fast and so efficient that there may not 
be many more seconds to be wrung out of the current system. A 
human being can only order so fast, drive so fast, and hand over 
his currency or credit card so fast. "They have gotten to a place 
where it is probably as fast and accurate as it is going to be," 
says Blair Chauncey, of QSR magazine, adding that this is one of 
the reasons her magazine stopped doing the Performance Study after 
2009. "We got to the point where they were separated by a few 
seconds and everyone's accuracy was above 90 percent. Everyone has 
gotten so good."

We are all of us, right now, living in the golden age of 
drive-thru. That doesn't mean the industry doesn't want to go 
faster. The two most highly touted innovations of the past 
decade—side-by-side ordering, where two order stations funnel to 
one pickup lane; and call centers, which take orders from a remote 
location—have both been tested with varying degrees of success. 
While McDonald's rolled out the first side-by-side ordering in 
2005, the concept has been limited by the cost and complexity of 
retrofitting existing locations with multiple lanes. "The 
perception is that you are faster," says John Miologos, a former 
corporate vice-president for architecture and design at McDonald's 
and currently a consultant with WD Partners. "It speaks to 
fairness, so you won't get stuck in a line behind a soccer mom 
ordering 14 meals for the team." Still, to make the concept 
significantly faster, Miologos believes you also have to add a 
second window, one for the transaction and another to pick up the 
food. "I could see this gaining traction, but the economics of 
this have to be dealt with," says Miologos.

The call center was yesterday's big idea in the QSR space. It was 
tempting for companies to imagine the customer pulling up to the 
speaker box and placing her order with someone in a country where 
the minimum wage is lower than it is in the U.S. Wendy's tried the 
idea in Lexington, Ky., with the help of Exit41, an Andover 
(Mass.) technology consulting firm that specializes in the QSR 
industry. WD Partners' Watson, who was a Wendy's senior 
vice-president at the time of the testing, says the economics work 
well when you are able to pool five or six stores. "But you are 
still depending on kitchen production," he says, "so even if it 
looks faster, if you don't ramp up kitchen production you don't 
improve sales."

This year, Pollo Tropical and Taco Cabana, fast casual restaurants 
with 275 locations, will be testing a platform that allows 
customers to order via the web. If this works, Chief Marketing 
Officer Jason Abelkop believes the brands can explore expanding 
into more crowded retail spaces, i.e., those without surrounding 
parking lots, which would change the business completely. "Look, 
the drive-thru exists in and of itself not because people 
intrinsically love the drive-thru experience, but because they 
love the convenience of it," says Abelkop. "In some ways, this 
exceeds that."

At the drive-thru window in Tustin, I would have shaken off the 
headset many orders ago had it not been for manager Mihal's 
support, but I'm hanging in there. After a while, I do begin to 
detect a pleasing, steady rhythm to the system, the transaction, 
the delivery of the food. Each is a discrete, predictable, 
scripted interaction. When the order is input correctly, the 
customer drives up to the window, the money is paid, the Frutista 
Freeze or Atomic Bacon Bombers (a test item specific to this Taco 
Bell) handed over, and you send people on their way with a smile 
and a "Thank you for coming to Taco Bell," you feel a moment of 
accomplishment. And so does Harkins, for it has all gone exactly 
as he has planned.

Then a ding in my headset.

"Um, hello?"

Idiot, I think to myself, I've blown the script again.

Greenfeld is a Bloomberg Businessweek contributor.
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