SA国际传媒

Business

Robotic Coffee Competition Brews As Cafe X Expands To SFO

When Austin-based opened up its robotic coffee bar in San Francisco’s International Airport (SFO), I sensed some brewing tension.

Subscribe to the SA国际传媒 Daily

After all, there is already a venture-backed robotic coffee shop actually based in San Francisco: Cafe X. The company raised $12 million Series A about a year ago, and has three locations currently across the Financial District – but until now it wasn鈥檛 in the airport.

That is about to change according to Cafe X founder and CEO Henry Hu when the company expands to SFO in November.

Is there enough room for two robot coffee shops in the Bay? More importantly, is there a need? I caught up with both companies to learn about trends within food automation, interesting go-to-market strategies, and the idea of experiential java.

Austin-based Briggo Brings The Brew

Briggo, which started by serving fully autonomous coffee in 2011 at University of Texas, has raised $19 million to date, and is currently raising a Series B, per CEO and co-founder . For the upcoming round, Briggo has already secured one investor: , an early and growth stage venture capital firm based in Austin.

The company opened up a 鈥溾 in SFO in August to serve 24 hour coffee. This is the company鈥檚 .

While its roots are in Austin, Briggo鈥檚 SFO location serves and , two San Francisco brands.

鈥淸Airports] are a great place for international exposure,鈥 Nater said on the phone to SA国际传媒 News. He added that the company, to increase focus on the airport market, has recently signed large contracts to expand into multiple states across the largest airports in the country.

Briggo鈥檚 Nater said its competitive advantage is the fact that its been on the market longer than most autonomous coffee robots.

鈥淲e flat out have longer experience and more engagement with customers in the Bay than Cafe X,鈥 Nater said. 鈥淭heir purchasing experience is pretty much a mirror of what we were doing already.鈥

He added: 鈥淎nd they’ve got a wonderful 60 degree access robot that entertains the customer. But yeah, we’re probably a little bit more industrial food driven, and not so much entertainment driven.鈥

I caught up with Cafe X to learn if 鈥渆ntertaining the customer鈥 has been an effective strategy.

San Fran鈥檚 Cafe X Brings The Fun

This fall Cafe X will be offering an 鈥渆xperiential鈥 coffee shop to airport goers. Since raising its Series A, Cafe X has created three locations, and with that, taken lessons from each Hu said.

Fundamentally, a barista robot might seem focused on speed but now Cafe X is devoting more energy (and resources) to create ambiance.

For the upcoming location, Cafe X wants to be less robot, more old school coffee. Think menu board and backdrops.

鈥淚t’s not just going to be like a lonely robotic coffee bar sitting there against the wall,鈥 Hu said on the phone.

At first the company outsourced a ton of its hardware engineering talent. Now, with 38 people working at the company, Cafe X has moved those processes in-house and it has helped efficiency, said Hu.

鈥淚nstead of using people to do repetitive tasks, like pushing buttons, we think labor should be used to do more productive and more impactful things like educating customers on our ingredients and expanding the menu and doing customer service,鈥 he said.

A Cuppa Innovation

We are, rightfully, not in the business of making predictions about the success of startups. However, after talking to Briggo and Cafe X, I do believe there鈥檚 room for differential innovation within this space. As innovation within coffee enters our lives, it will be interesting to see where automation collides with other parts of our palate.

Illustration Credit:

 

Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the SA国际传媒 Daily.

67.1K Followers

CTA

Discover and act on private market opportunities with predictive company intelligence.

Copy link