American dining has changed: Nearly 75 percent of all restaurant traffic now comes from people who never sit down. Consumers are more often choosing takeout, drive-thru, and meal delivery, according to a report by the National Restaurant Association.

To survive this shift, restaurant brands need to make better decisions faster. It’s true in quick service and fine dining. As inflation and other forces push consumers to rethink their habits, restaurants are scrambling to maintain market share and meet revenue projections. To stay relevant, they need to keep pace with what local customers want.

The strategy that helps many leading brands pivot—and frequently course correct—is to let location guide them. It means using geographic analysis – maps and data – to understand what’s happening at the local level.

The tools are AI-powered, data-rich maps built on geographic information system (GIS) technology.

On a GIS map, detailed community portraits emerge. These portraits show which consumers live near an existing or potential restaurant site, how much they earn, and even how they spend their money. AI accelerates the analysis, allowing decision-makers to work faster and smarter.

Today, for food businesses, location is now as critical as price and speed. The right location data can change a menu, adjust store hours, or shape a delivery program.

MANY BRANDS HAVE GROWN REVENUE while overhauling how they operate.

Fast food chains that use GIS analysis before expanding hit their profit targets even in crowded markets. Before opening new locations, they use mapping and modeling to forecast sales and to avoid harming their existing stores.

A popular chicken restaurant chain with more than 1,800 locations relies on GIS technology to improve collaboration and visibility over operations by securely sharing business data. This includes new store locations, sales figures, and customer surveys. Analysts add data on income. age, and what nearby consumers value and care about.

Other brands are launching new concepts, such as fast-fine dining—think online food courts and upscale fast food. This type of move requires even more precise market intelligence. Mapping helps brands find the communities most likely to try a new concept.

Restaurants are one proof point. The same geographic intelligence drives decisions across many commercial industries. Retailers use it to right-size store networks and reduce overlap. Healthcare systems use it to locate urgent care facilities where patient demand is unmet. Financial services firms use it to find branches where small business density indicates untapped lending opportunity. In each case, the question is the same: where are my best customers, and am I positioned to reach them?

GEOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS HELPS BUSINESS TEAMS hit sales and growth targets by showing what’s working, and where. That edge is hard for competitors to match. The companies become equipped to:

  • Pull business data into a single location platform so operations run leaner. Shared access to the same maps and data improves how teams report, collaborate, and perform.
  • See any market or site clearly, on a map. Data-rich maps make it easy to see where opportunity exists.
  • Test scenarios before committing, surface hidden risks, and make a stronger case to investors. GIS does this through predictive modeling, mapping clusters and hot spots, and calculating drive times.

EVERY NEIGHBORHOOD IS DIFFERENT. Incomes, age, spending habits, and store space all vary block by block. That diversity creates real risk for retailers that don’t study their markets. It doesn’t matter whether you’re placing a restaurant, a clinic, a branch, or a distribution hub.

In times of rapid change, the best brands lean harder on maps and data to spot what’s shifting.

Businesses that use AI and maps to guide decisions attract and connect with the customers they’re uniquely suited to serve. Every business has a geography. The ones that understand theirs win.

Learn more about how mapping technology can help advance more intelligent location-driven business decisions.

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