Automat Mayfair
Automat helps you listen to your customers, learn their needs, recommend the right products and deliver personalized ecommerce experiences that are actually personal.
Jan 31, 2021 An Appealing Formula. As with so many other societal trends, it was in turn-of-the-century New York that automats really took off. The first New York Horn & Hardart location opened in 1912, and soon the chain had hit on an appealing formula: customers exchanged dollar bills for handfuls of nickels (from female cashiers behind glass booths, wearing rubber tips on their fingers), then fed their. Automat is the best ecommerce personalization and recommendation platform. Grow your business with conversational AI, product recommendations and website personalization. May 04, 2013 Alan Yau and his backers have just agreed to pay over £9 million for nothing more substantial than a set of keys to what was the ill-fated Automat restaurant on Dover Street, London. So far, Alan Yau is known for having maximized the vital ratio between rent and sales more successfully than any other restaurateur. We are very pleased to offer a fantastic 1993 Rover Mini Mayfair Automatic finished in very classy metallic Quicksilver with a contrasting grey cloth trim and enhanced with a set of Rover Minilite wheels. Mayfair's finest establishments. List Your Bussiness; Advertising Opportunities; Login.
Launch conversational AI shopping experiences that listen, adapt and guide your customers to the products they need. Show your customers you care through engaging and personalized ecommerce experiences.
Map your product feed to the purchase behavior specific to your category with Automat’s AI merchandising and save thousands of hours of manual exporting, tagging, labelling and inventory management.
Recommend the products your customers love and guide them to the products they need with personalized recommendations and automated product bundling for ecommerce. Stop relying on guesswork and launch shopping experiences your customers trust.
Personalize your entire website experience based on your customer’s needs. Show them you’re listening with personalization they can actually see and feel every time they visit.
Personalized shopping experiences convert visitors at twice the rate of standard sites.
Personalized shopping experiences increase AOV by 10% compared to standard sites.
Sites using personalized shopping experiences get an average customer satisfaction score of 90%
Automat builds, launches and manages better customer experiences for you.
Low resource, high return customer experiences
Launch ecommerce personalization and recommendation that drives results, without internal development.
Dedicated success team
Automat’s dedicated success team manages ongoing strategy, optimization and reporting – saving you time and resources.
Millions of conversations with one line of code
Launch amazing customer experiences with one line of code. Automat integrates easily across your site.
Easy integration with the rest of your ecommerce tech stack
Show Your Customers You’re Listening
Listen to your customers, learn their needs and recommend the right products with Personalized Shopping Experiences.
Book a demoThis article was also published in the Financial Times.
Automat Mayfair Ct
Alan Yau and his backers have just agreed to pay over £9 million for nothing more substantial than a set of keys to what was the ill-fated Automat restaurant on Dover Street, London.
So far, Alan Yau is known for having maximized the vital ratio between rent and sales more successfully than any other restaurateur. Twenty years ago he backed his hunch that we were about to fall in love with slurping bowls of noodles by opening the first wagamama in a basement close to the British Museum. Queues ensued.
He had the same success with Hakkasan, serving more expensive Chinese food but again from a once-neglected basement. He sold Hakkasan, yauatcha and Sake No Hana, a Japanese restaurant, most profitably to the Qatar Investment Fund but he still runs several branches of Busaba Eathai; the Italian Princi in Soho which serves 2,000 customers on a busy day; the recently opened Naamyaa café in Islington; and St Betty in his home town Hong Kong.
An extensive, £7 million redesign is planned before a new restaurant, Park Chinois, eventually opens its doors in Dover Street. Along with the keys to this come several commercial advantages. It is extensive by central London standards, comprising 12,000 sq ft over two floors across a whole block from Dover Street to Berkeley Street with the vital kitchen and ventilation in place. It comes with an alcohol licence in Westminster, a council currently reluctant to grant more licences. And, most importantly, it comes with a Mayfair address.
Mayfair is currently Mecca for those from all over the world who are keen to open in London as it attracts a constant flow of well-heeled customers. Hedge-fund managers, their lawyers and those in the fashion business who fill the breakfast tables at Cecconi's and lunch at Scott's; those requiring retail therapy who meet for lunch at Nobu, Berkeley Street; and those in the art world who seek the somewhat quieter tables of Bellamy's.
As a result Mayfair has attracted several restaurateurs who paid premiums that seemed expensive only a few years ago but now look like very sound investments. The two most conspicuous are Arkady Novikov's gamble on the large corner site on Berkeley Street where Novikov serves Asian and Italian on two floors but where a day's turnover can exceed £120,000 thanks to the nightclub in the basement. Arjun Waney has followed a similar format with the Arts Club on Dover Street in addition to his long-established, very French, La Petite Maison and, more recently, the Peruvian-inspired Coya.
Yet investment capital does not necessarily generate a good restaurant and I have experienced noticeable unevenness in the quality of the more recent Mayfair openings. The food and service were both undistinguished when I tried Banca, the strangely named Italian restaurant on North Audley Street, while our dinner at Alyn Williams' restaurant in the Westbury hotel was both ponderous and pretentious.
We returned to this hotel on learning that Eric Chavot (pictured right), who had made a name for himself at the Capital Hotel, Knightsbridge when ambitious French cooking was in vogue, had returned to open Brasserie Chavot there. But apart from enjoying the restaurant's exquisite and original tiled floor (pictured above left) and the charming and knowledgeable female sommelier, our dinner was disappointing.
It began unprofessionally with our waitress relaying that day's specials but forgetting to mention their prices, and ended equally so with a significant discrepancy between the desserts offered initially on the main menu and those then listed on the dessert card. Details such as this matter, as does the fact that the board on which the chicken liver parfait is served is too wide to fit comfortably on a table for two.
More significantly, this is brasserie food 'lite'. Choosing the freshest and most seasonal ingredients is one duty of any chef. But equally important, in my opinion, is maximizing their flavours, particularly when they are accompanied by Mayfair prices.
That extra 'oomph' is supplied in and around Mayfair by two distinct groups of chefs, all of whose restaurants benefit from the security of long leases.
There is, most conspicuously, the Anglo-French brigade: Michel Roux Jr at Le Gavroche, particularly for his weekday set lunch; fellow marathon runner Phil Howard at The Square for its wine list and, unusually, for opening on Sunday evenings; Anthony Demetre with his clearly written, appetizing menu at the recently redesigned Wild Honey; and Jason Atherton with the lively Pollen Street Social and Little Social on either side of Pollen Street.
The second group is comprised of those Japanese restaurants that opened in Mayfair three decades ago to satisfy the demands of the Japanese bankers then moving to London and the proximity of the Japanese embassy on Piccadilly. My favourites include Kiku in Half Moon Street, Miyama on Clarges Street, and the great-value Sakana-Tei on Maddox Street.
My most recent dinner in Mayfair merged the old and the new. Excellent sushi, grilled eel and soft shell crab at Sakura on Conduit Street where the worn, brown leather chairs and banquettes reflect the many customers it has served over the past 25 years was followed by dessert at the bar of Pollen Street Social. The calm of the former was in sharp contrast to the frenetic atmosphere of the latter where most of the customers were half my age. It is Mayfair's ability to generate this demand that currently makes it so very attractive, and clearly valuable, to restaurateurs.