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| Multi-Level Reporting | |  |
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| Reports for all Levels: Restaurant, Area, Region, Concept, Franchisee, Franchisor, and Enterprise |
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- On-demand, current data available anytime from anywhere
- Informational views dependent on Job Responsibilities
- Optimized for Groups with Owned and Franchised Sites
- Watch Inventory Variance Report Video
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Decision Logic's Multi-level Reporting capabilities are included in the Sales & Financial module. The capabilities are part of an integrated enterprise management solution for multi-unit restaurant operators, offering Payroll Management, Declining Budget P&L, and Inventory & Supply Chain. Decision Logic's Sales & Financial module provides a comprehensive set of reports that are customized according to what the operator feels is important. More...
We produce many of our reports based on check-level detail from the POS system. This approach allows Decision Logic to provide a level of customization not found in Above Store Reporting solutions that merely poll summary totals from the POS system.
But, POS information is just one source of data for the comprehensive array of reports available within Decision Logic. Through our restaurant back office, Decision Logic controls the entire process of ordering and receiving product within our Supply Chain & Variance module, which allows source data for product, inventory, and cost of goods to be available on demand, in real-time. Decision Logic's unique approach to inventory control is highlighted by the clarity and detail available in our Supply Chain & Variance reporting capabilities.
Beyond POS and the Supply Chain, Decision Logic has the ability to receive data from any other source that can make the data available. Amongst other solutions Decision Logic is currently receiving information from are: Kitchen Display Systems (KDS), Timekeeping solutions, Customer Satisfaction Indexes (CSI), Back Office Accounting, Workforce Management solutions, Payroll providers, and Corporate Accounting solutions. The true power of Decision Logic reporting comes into play when one considers that data from all the disparate sources can be displayed together, in the manner that the operator wishes to view the information. A good example of the power available can be seen in the stack ranking reports where restaurants can be ranked from high-to-low or from low-to-high using whatever metric the operator chooses. At the click of a mouse, the report will restack restaurants based on sales, labor, CSI scores, or other data columns, allowing the operator to determine what metrics are relational and relevant to their enterprise.
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