Burger King has introduced an AI assistant for staff at US restaurants.
The system connects to employee headsets and analyzes drive-thru conversations.
The company calls the voice chatbot “Patty.”
It can detect polite expressions such as “welcome,” “please,” and “thank you.”
Managers will use the data to review overall service patterns.
Burger King says the tool will not score individual workers.
It describes the platform as coaching and operational support.
Managers should gain real-time insights and recognize strong team performance.
The AI also updates digital menus when items sell out.
It guides staff during food preparation and confirms recipe steps.
The system can flag cleaning tasks, including restroom maintenance.
The assistant listens to drive-thru orders to improve accuracy.
It aims to help teams handle complex workflows during busy hours.
The company is testing the headset in 500 locations.
All US restaurants should receive the platform by the end of 2026.
The announcement triggered criticism on social media.
Some users called the technology excessive workplace monitoring.
The rollout follows McDonald’s decision to remove its AI drive-thru ordering system last year.
