The problem
Mac Daddy AZ, a restaurant in Tempe, had three problems at once, and each one made the others worse:
- The website wasn't doing them any favors. It didn't match the food, and it didn't help anyone order or find them.
- The POS kept crashing, which is the kind of problem that costs you money during the dinner rush, every time.
- There was no digital signage for the dining-room TVs, so the menus on screen were static or missing.
Three vendors could have handled three pieces. Instead the pieces would never quite talk to each other.
What we're building
One team, one rebuild, everything connected:
- A new custom website that looks like the restaurant actually feels.
- Digital menus for the in-store TVs, designed and deployed so the screens update without a fight.
- A repaired and integrated POS that stops dropping orders and connects to the rest of the stack.
- Online ordering and booking wired straight into the site and the POS, so an order online is an order in the kitchen.
Why it's one install, not four
The reason this works is that the same two people build all of it. There's no handoff between a "website agency," a "POS guy," and a "menu vendor," which is exactly where restaurant tech usually breaks. Mac Daddy AZ launches June 2026. Once it's been live for 90 days, we'll publish the before-and-after numbers here, honestly.