MELBOURNE, Australia, Feb. 3, 2023 /PRNewswire/ Specialist hospitality IT platform Redcat is continuing to expand globally after officially launching in the United Kingdom. Trading under the name 'Redcat Hospitality Technology', the Australian-owned company is rolling its tech platform out to Quick Service Restaurants (QSRs) in England. Redcat is a stalwart in the Australian QSR space, providing its technology to a customer base that includes Nando's, Boost Juice, Grill'd, Betty's Burgers, Gami Chicken, Chatime and the Australian Open. "Our expansion into the UK is a significant milestone for us and we are thrilled to be officially providing our platform in the region," said Redcat CEO, Jeff Lamb. "The UK presents significant opportunity for us and is a key element of our long-term growth strategy. "Redcat's vision is to be the global leader in innovative hospitality technology solutions. This launch is an important step in achieving that g
Tattle, the innovator in the customer experience improvement (CXI) category, is going international. The brand is now integrated with Redcat, Australia’s prominent hospitality IT platform. This partnership empowers mutually partnered restaurants to effortlessly uncover key operational improvements, resulting in tangible ways to elevate the off-premise guest experience, giving team members the data they need to increase positive guest sentiment, ultimately driving sales and transactions.
Tattle provides guests with a survey after they order from the Redcat platform. This provides restaurant operating teams with guest feedback from Redcat’s online ordering and QR code ordering experiences, so they can in turn, make high-impact operational improvements.
The iconic Sydney Opera House, Sydney, Australia
Google’s threatened shutdown of its search engine in Australia over a proposed content licensing law would ripple across industries, saddling partners like Apple with a sudden revenue gap and retailers as varied as affordable Kmart to upmarket David Jones with a supply of potentially useless gadgets.
The Alphabet-owned company last month said it would likely pull its core search function from Australia if the government pushes ahead with a plan to require it and Facebook to pay media companies an indeterminate fee for news snippets shown on their services.
Google and Facebook are fighting the first-of-its-kind “News Media Bargaining Code” as other countries consider similar efforts to aid publishers that have lost ad sales to the tech companies. In a sign of the Australian effort’s potential to shake up the industry, Microsoft whose Bing search engine stands to benefit from any Google retreat on Thursday called for the U
Australia shrugs off Google threat to cut search engine Government plans to introduce law to force the search engine and Facebook to pay media companies an indeterminate fee for news snippets 12 February 2021 - 09:34 Byron Kaye and Paresh Dave Picture: 123RF/PANITHAN FAKSEEMUANG
Sydney Google’s threatened shutdown of its search engine in Australia over a proposed content licensing law would ripple across industries, saddling partners such as Apple with a sudden revenue gap and retailers as varied as affordable Kmart to upmarket David Jones with a supply of potentially useless gadgets.
The Alphabet-owned company in January said it would likely pull its core search function from Australia if the government pushes ahead with a plan to require it and Facebook to pay media companies an indeterminate fee for news snippets shown on their services.