What We’ve Learned From Working With Global Foodservice Brands

What does it take to manage food operations at a global scale? From recipe standardization to compliance and cost control, we share insights from years of working with international foodservice leaders and how the right digital tools make success repeatable.



AI's collaborative role in professional kitchens

Global brands face growing pressure to stay agile, standardize operations, and respond to shifting consumer demands, all while maintaining profitability and compliance.

At EGS Enggist & Grandjean Software (EGS), we’ve had the opportunity to work with some of the world’s leading hotel chains, restaurant groups, and institutional foodservice operators. Through these partnerships, we’ve gained a deep understanding of the shared pain points across markets and the digital solutions that drive meaningful change.

Here are some of the key lessons we’ve learned along the way:

1. Global Consistency Is a Constant Struggle

Many foodservice brands operate in multiple countries, which means they juggle different suppliers, units of measure, languages, and regulatory standards. Ensuring menu consistency across locations, while allowing for local flexibility, is a balancing act.

What Works
A centralized recipe management system that allows for version control, localization, and real-time updates across teams worldwide.

2. Allergen & Nutrition Compliance Is a Growing Priority

Consumer expectations and regulations around allergens, nutrition labeling, and sustainability are increasing. Brands can’t afford errors in allergen communication or nutritional claims.

What Works
Automated allergen tagging, integrated nutritional databases, and tools that simplify compliance across global markets.

3. Cost Visibility Drives Smarter Decisions

With food inflation and supply chain volatility, operators need to analyze recipe costs in real time. But many still rely on outdated tools like spreadsheets, which limit their visibility and response time.

What Works
Live costing features connected to supplier data, allowing for dynamic recipe adjustments and better forecasting.

4. Standardization Doesn’t Mean Sacrificing Creativity

Corporate chefs and R&D teams often fear that digital systems will stifle creativity. But with the right platform, recipe development becomes faster, more collaborative, and easier to scale.

What Works
A flexible system that supports idea sharing, testing, and collaboration while ensuring standardization and brand integrity.

5. Digital Transformation Is Cultural, Not Just Technical

The biggest barrier to digital success isn’t always the technology, it’s the people using it. Training, onboarding, and change management are just as critical as feature sets.

What Works
Ongoing support, user-friendly interfaces, and implementation strategies that involve culinary and operations teams from day one.

Final Thoughts

Global foodservice brands have no shortage of complexity. But they also have a tremendous opportunity: to leverage technology not just to survive, but to thrive, scaling smarter, staying compliant, and delivering consistent value across every location.

We’re proud to support foodservice brands in this journey, and we continue to evolve alongside them - learning, adapting, and delivering solutions that make a real impact.

Want to see how we support global food operations? Reach out to us and let’s talk.