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From Tables to Rooms – What Restaurant Operators Can Learn from Hotel PMS Thinking

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Nory, the AI-native restaurant management startup, has raised $37 million in Series B funding to accelerate the rollout of its platform, which helps hospitality businesses cut costs, streamline operations, and improve profitability.

Restaurant owners have spent years refining the customer journey through booking tools, POS platforms, kitchen display systems, loyalty apps and payment technology.

Yet many hospitality businesses are now looking beyond the dining room for inspiration, and a practical PMS system guide for hotels can be surprisingly useful for understanding how accommodation-led businesses connect reservations, payments, guest profiles, and daily operations into a clearer commercial picture.

That matters because restaurants are no longer judged only on food and service. Guests expect accuracy, speed, personalisation and consistency across every touchpoint. The same customer who books a boutique hotel online also expects a restaurant to remember dietary preferences, process payments smoothly and handle last-minute changes without confusion.

Why Restaurant Operators Should Care About PMS Thinking

A Property Management System, or PMS, is traditionally associated with hotels. It helps manage room bookings, guest records, housekeeping, billing and availability. At first glance, that may seem far removed from a restaurant POS system. But the underlying business logic is very familiar.

Both restaurants and hotels depend on:

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  • Accurate availability
  • Fast service delivery
  • Clean customer data
  • Efficient staff workflows
  • Clear reporting
  • Reliable payment handling

For restaurant owners, the lesson is not that they need to run hotel software. It is that the best hospitality systems are built around the full guest journey rather than isolated transactions.

A modern PMS system in a hotel environment gives managers a joined-up view of guests, bookings, charges, and service requirements. Restaurants can apply the same principle by connecting table reservations, POS data, stock usage, marketing preferences and customer history.

The Shift from Transactional Systems to Guest-Centred Operations

Many restaurants still think of software in separate boxes. The POS handles sales. The booking platform manages reservations. The stock system monitors ingredients. The loyalty tool sends offers. Each product may work well on its own, but the business can still feel fragmented.

Hotels faced this problem years ago. A guest might book online, request an early check-in, order room service, visit the bar and pay at reception. Without connected systems, the experience becomes clumsy for both staff and guests.

Restaurants face similar challenges when:

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  • A regular guest books online but is not recognised by the front-of-house staff
  • A POS system records spend but does not inform marketing
  • A kitchen runs out of an item that is still available on digital menus
  • A private dining enquiry is managed outside normal reporting
  • A loyalty reward is missed because customer data is incomplete

The value of PMS-style thinking is that it encourages operators to view software as an operational ecosystem rather than a collection of tools.

Lessons from Hotels That Restaurants Can Apply

1. Treat customer data as an operational asset

Hotels depend on guest profiles. Preferences, previous stays, spending patterns and special requests all influence service quality. Restaurants can benefit from the same mindset.

A guest who regularly orders vegetarian dishes, prefers a quiet table, or books for business lunches is giving the business useful information. When handled responsibly, this data can improve service without feeling intrusive.

The goal is not to over-personalise. It is to help staff make better decisions.

2. Make availability visible and accurate

Hotel teams live and die by availability. Rooms cannot be sold twice, and poor availability management damages revenue. Restaurants deal with the same issue through table capacity, kitchen load, staff coverage and event space.

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The discipline used in PMS systems for small hotels can be useful here. Smaller hotels often need lean, practical systems that prevent overbooking without creating unnecessary administration. Restaurants, especially independents and small groups, need similar clarity around covers, sittings and peak-time capacity.

3. Connect payments to the customer journey

In hotels, charges may come from the room, restaurant, spa, minibar or event space. A good PMS keeps billing coherent. Restaurants can learn from that approach, particularly those offering deposits, delivery, catering, events, memberships or gift cards.

Payment should not be treated as the final step only. It is part of the experience. A slow bill split, a missing deposit, or an unclear service charge can weaken an otherwise excellent meal.

Why This Matters for B2B Restaurant Software Buyers

Restaurant software buyers are becoming more commercially mature. They are not simply asking, “Does this POS take payments?” They are asking whether technology can reduce labour pressure, improve margins and support better decision-making.

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For B2B restaurant software clients, the bigger questions are:

  • Does the system reduce duplication of work?
  • Can managers see useful reporting without exporting spreadsheets?
  • Does it integrate with booking and payment platforms?
  • Can staff learn it quickly?
  • Does it improve the guest experience?
  • Will it scale as the business grows?

These are the same questions that hotel operators ask when assessing PMS for small hotels. The scale may differ, but the buying logic is similar: the software must make the business easier to run.

Small Hospitality Businesses Need Practical, Not Overbuilt, Systems

There is a temptation in hospitality technology to add features because they sound impressive. In reality, many operators need fewer features that work better together.

PMS systems for small hotels are often judged on usability, affordability and operational clarity. The same should apply to restaurant technology. A small restaurant group does not need enterprise complexity if the team cannot use it confidently during service.

The most valuable software usually supports everyday work:

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  • Taking bookings accurately
  • Managing walk-ins fairly
  • Processing orders quickly
  • Updating menus easily
  • Tracking stock sensibly
  • Reporting sales clearly
  • Supporting repeat customers
  • Reducing manual admin

Technology should remove friction. It should not become another operational burden.

The POS Is Still Central, But It Should Not Stand Alone

For restaurants, the POS remains the heart of daily operations. It captures revenue, drives kitchen communication, supports payments and provides sales reporting. But the POS becomes far more powerful when it sits within a connected hospitality stack.

A standalone POS can tell you what sold yesterday. A connected system can help explain why it sold, who bought it, whether the margin was strong and what action should follow.

That is where PMS thinking becomes useful. Hotels have long understood that operational data is only valuable when it supports decisions. Restaurants can use that same approach to improve rota planning, menu engineering, customer retention and event sales.

What Restaurant Owners Should Look For Next

Restaurant operators do not need to copy hotels directly. A restaurant is not a bedroom inventory business, and the service rhythm is different. But the best hospitality technology shares common qualities.

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Owners should look for systems that are:

  • Simple enough for staff to use under pressure
  • Flexible enough to support different revenue streams
  • Clear enough to inform management decisions
  • Open enough to integrate with other tools
  • Secure enough to protect customer and payment data
  • Scalable enough to grow with the business

The strongest technology choices are rarely the flashiest. They are the ones that fit the operation, improve consistency and help the team serve guests better.

Final Thoughts: Hospitality Software Is Moving Towards One Guest View

The future of restaurant technology is not about replacing people with systems. It is about giving people better information at the right moment.

Hotels, especially those using modern PMS platforms, have already shown the value of joined-up guest management. Restaurants can take the same strategic lesson and apply it to tables, orders, payments, loyalty and events.

For restaurant owners, POS buyers and B2B software clients, the opportunity is clear: stop thinking only in terms of transactions and start thinking in terms of relationships. A better-connected system does not just make reporting cleaner. It helps create smoother service, smarter decisions and more resilient hospitality businesses.

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Healthcare Stocks Can Benefit From AI, Too. But That Isn’t the Reason to Buy Them.

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Healthcare Stocks Can Benefit From AI, Too. But That Isn’t the Reason to Buy Them.

Healthcare Stocks Can Benefit From AI, Too. But That Isn’t the Reason to Buy Them.

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What Will SpaceX’s IPO Mean for Your Index Funds?

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What Will SpaceX’s IPO Mean for Your Index Funds?

What Will SpaceX’s IPO Mean for Your Index Funds?

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Target recalls popular baby wipes after FDA finds potentially harmful bacteria

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Target recalls popular baby wipes after FDA finds potentially harmful bacteria

Target is recalling several Up & Up baby wipes products sold nationwide after testing identified potentially dangerous bacteria that could cause serious infections, particularly in infants and young children.

According to a recall notice posted Friday by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Target is voluntarily recalling certain lots of Up & Up Fragrance Free Baby Wipes and Up & Up Fresh Cucumber Scented Baby Wipes following customer complaints about product discoloration.

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FDA testing identified the presence of Burkholderia cepacia complex and Burkholderia gladioli in samples of the affected wipes.

Health officials warned that products contaminated with the bacteria could lead to serious and potentially life-threatening infections. The wipes are primarily used on newborns, infants and young children, a group considered particularly vulnerable because of their developing immune systems.

TARGET TO CUT PRICES ON 3,000 ITEMS AS INFLATION REMAINS ABOVE FED TARGET

Target fragrance free baby wipes

Up & Up Fragrance Free Baby Wipes sold at Target stores nationwide are included in a voluntary recall announced June 2026. (FDA / Unknown)

The FDA said healthy individuals who use the contaminated wipes on skin with minor cuts or abrasions may develop localized infections. However, infections in immunocompromised individuals, newborns and infants could spread into the bloodstream and potentially cause sepsis or pneumonia.

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The recalled wipes were manufactured by supplier Sapro Temizlik Urunleri and sold at Target stores nationwide as well as through Target.com.

Target and the manufacturer have received a number of consumer complaints and adverse event reports alleging product discoloration and symptoms including skin irritation, eye irritation and infections that may be linked to use of the wipes. The reports remain under investigation.

A representative for Target did not immediately respond to FOX Business’ request for comment.

TARGET SET TO OPEN ITS 2,000TH STORE, PLANS TO OPEN HUNDREDS MORE IN NEXT DECADE

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Cucumber scented baby wipes from Target

A three-pack of Up & Up Fresh Cucumber Scented Baby Wipes is shown. Target is recalling certain baby wipes products after FDA testing identified potentially harmful bacteria in product samples. (FDA / Unknown)

The recall affects multiple sizes of Up & Up Fragrance Free Baby Wipes, including 20-count, 72-count, 216-count, 800-count and 1,200-count packages, as well as Up & Up Fresh Cucumber Scented Baby Wipes sold in 72-count, 216-count and 800-count packages.

Consumers are being urged to stop using the recalled wipes immediately and return them to any Target store for a full refund.

Target said customers seeking additional information can contact Target Guest Relations at 1-800-440-0680.

The recall is being conducted with the knowledge of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and Target said it is continuing to investigate the matter in coordination with the manufacturer.

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TGT TARGET CORP. 122.57 -1.28 -1.03%

According to the FDA, the affected Up & Up Fragrance Free Baby Wipes were manufactured between Nov. 7, 2025, and May 5, 2026, and carry expiration dates ranging from May 10, 2028, through Nov. 5, 2028.

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The recalled Up & Up Fresh Cucumber Scented Baby Wipes were manufactured between Dec. 29 and Dec. 30, 2025, and carry expiration dates ranging from June 29, 2028, through June 30, 2028.

A complete list of affected UPCs, manufacturing codes and package sizes is available in the FDA recall notice.

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Senseonics Holdings, Inc. (SENS) Shareholder/Analyst Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Tim Goodnow
President, CEO & Director

Thanks for joining us. And as we update you folks on the Senseonics story, it’s a pretty exciting time for us. As many of you know, for those that were able to join us a year ago, we had a partnership with the PHC Corporation for the commercial activities. We’ve transitioned that since we last spoke. And it’s a pretty exciting time for us as we’ve been able to leverage that experience and that capability significantly with our strategic investment into the commercial organization. And frankly, we’re very excited with the commercial results that we’re now getting.

So obviously, the control of our destiny is very, very important, because it gives us the ability to pivot and move quick, make adjustments, expand those areas that make the most sense and frankly, leverage the internal capability. But we’ve been able to do that because, although we did the transition, we’ve essentially brought the entire Ascensia commercial organization over under Brian’s leadership, and that really has made a seamless process that we’ve been very excited to be able to execute against.

We also made the decision as part of that transition in the last year that the primary issue for growth with Eversense in a highly competitive market, but a very attractive market really had to

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STK: Still Has Room To Run But Isn’t As Attractive (NYSE:STK)

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A10 Networks Q1 Preview: Not A 'Buy' Before Earnings, Not Ideal For Any Option Play (ATEN)

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Financial analyst by day and a seasoned investor by passion, I’ve been involved in the world of investing for over 15 years and honed my skills in analyzing lucrative opportunities within the market.I specialize in uncovering high quality dividend stocks and other assets that offer potential for long term-growth that pack a serious punch for bill-paying potential. I use myself as an example that with a solid base of classic dividend growth stocks, sprinkling in some Business Development Companies, REITs, and Closed End Funds can be a highly efficient way to boost your investment income while still capturing a total return that follows traditional index funds. I created a hybrid system between growth and income and manage to still capture a total return that is on par with the S&P.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of STK either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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My Bullish Call On Bank Of America Aligns With Its Seeking Alpha Quant Rating (NYSE:BAC)

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My Bullish Call On Bank Of America Aligns With Its Seeking Alpha Quant Rating (NYSE:BAC)

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As an individual investor nearing retirement I am trying to build my financial assets in order to have a fulfilling retirement. I am interested in trading both long and short; or at least using inverse ETFs, to take advantage of market declines. Having long term and short term trading strategies, proper execution of my trading plan, and absolute investing results are my goals. I see my articles as a way to keep me focused on developing winning trades. I also expect to learn much from the feedback that is provided in the comments section.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, but may initiate a beneficial Long position through a purchase of the stock, or the purchase of call options or similar derivatives in BAC over the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Kraft Heinz: There Are Better Options On The Table

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Kraft Heinz: There Are Better Options On The Table

Kraft Heinz: There Are Better Options On The Table

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Rolls-Royce: The Strong Forward Trajectory (OTCMKTS:RYCEY)

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Rolls-Royce: The Strong Forward Trajectory (OTCMKTS:RYCEY)

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Luke Pomichter is a defense and national security professional with over a decade of experience spanning intelligence operations, cyber threat intelligence, and security engineering across the defense industrial base. He holds a PhD examining investment decision behavior through a behavioral finance and is a Stanford LEAD Candidate. His research interests sit at the intersection of national security and capital markets — areas where domain expertise is rare among financial professionals and informational edge is highest. He writes on aerospace, defense, and emerging technology equities as a natural extension of his professional background and ongoing graduate work. He is pursuing the CAIA designation and holds the CISSP and multiple GIAC certifications. The author publishes independently. Views expressed are his own and do not represent any employer or affiliated institution.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of RYCEY either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Nebius Is Priced For Flawless Delivery

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Soccer-Iraq World Cup striker Hussein questioned for hours at Chicago airport, source says

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Soccer-Iraq World Cup striker Hussein questioned for hours at Chicago airport, source says


Soccer-Iraq World Cup striker Hussein questioned for hours at Chicago airport, source says

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