Your crew turns over fast, so the crew path is built once and pre-assigned to every new hire’s profile: they show up day one already working through the same onboarding, not learning the job from whoever happens to be on shift. A new crew member’s path runs food-safety basics, allergen handling, cross-contamination, the station, then the point-of-sale (POS) for the counter — well underway before their first shift. One standard, every store, kept current.
From the line to the counter — one standard, every shift.
Every operator and area manager runs into the same four walls:
The crew turns over before they’re fully trained, and the new hire learns the job from whoever happens to be on shift.
Corporate changes a recipe or a procedure, and my stores pick it up at different speeds — some never do.
I need a new hire useful behind the counter on day one, not a week in once someone’s had time to walk them through it.
The health inspector’s at the counter and I have to show every shift, at this location, got their food-safety training.
When someone walks out mid-rush, the training doesn’t go with them — the next hire is assigned the same path and is productive in days, not a week of learning from whoever’s on shift. One standard, every store, every shift.
Learn more →Update the recipe or the procedure once. The course updates and every store across the chain is on the new version within 48 hours — nobody’s still serving last month’s method while the binder shows the old one.
Learn more →Quizzes prove the crew understood the food-safety training, not just clicked through it — and when an inspector asks, you can show who’s trained and who’s certified at that store, in one place, by location.
Learn more →One source becomes 75+ languages, voice and captions reviewed — not subtitles bolted on. Every cashier and cook learns the same food-safety standard in the language they think in, and you can prove they understood.
Learn more →A national quick-service restaurant chain changes its allergen-handling procedure; the VP of Operations updates the source once, and by the next shift the revised course, quiz, and completion record have refreshed across every location, in each crew’s language.
A new cashier is ringing orders on day one — and a line cook is on the current allergen step — because the crew path was already assigned to their profile.
A regional manager shows a health inspector that every shift completed food-safety training, by location.
You answer to standards like these — and they change. When one does, we flag the affected training and prepare the update for you to approve, so no one is ever trained on last year’s rule.
Built, deployed, and kept current — in days, not years.