FastBite
FastBite is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at FastBite.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who founded FastBite?
FastBite was founded by Avlok Kohli (Founder / CEO).
FastBite is a company.
Key people at FastBite.
FastBite was founded by Avlok Kohli (Founder / CEO).
FastBite was founded by Avlok Kohli (Founder / CEO).
Key people at FastBite.
FastBite, also known as The Fast Bite or The Fast Bite Co., is a digital service provider specializing in web and mobile development, online ordering platforms, and digital marketing tailored for restaurants.[2][3][4][5] It builds customizable, commission-free websites and iOS/Android mobile apps that enable restaurants to manage online orders, own customer data, and run promotions like loyalty programs and email blasts, serving pizzerias, fast-casual spots, fine dining, and various ethnic cuisines.[2][3] This solves the problem of high-commission third-party platforms by giving restaurants control over their takeout business, boosting direct orders and customer retention through easy-to-use tools and dedicated support.[2][4]
An earlier iteration of FastBite, founded around 2015 in San Francisco, focused on ultra-fast, low-cost meal delivery (~$10 meals in 10 minutes) by partnering with restaurants for quick-prep menus, but was acquired by Square (via Caviar) shortly after launch, integrating into their food delivery ecosystem.[1]
The prominent FastBite entity emerged as The Fast Bite Co., a SaaS platform developed specifically for restaurants to reclaim control over online ordering amid rising competition from aggregator apps.[2][3] While exact founding details are sparse in available records, it gained visibility by 2017, offering comprehensive digital tools including custom websites and apps with built-in ordering, order management via email/fax/tablet/desktop, and marketing support like push notifications and in-store collateral.[2]
Separately, a 2015 San Francisco startup named Fastbite—co-founded by Avlok Kohli—pioneered partnering with local restaurants (e.g., eight partners for cuisines like Indian and Italian) to create rotating, data-driven fast meals for Caviar delivery, leveraging existing restaurant relationships for quick volume prep; this version achieved early traction before its acquisition by Square, marking a pivotal shift from independent operator to integrated service.[1]
(Note: Two entities share the name; current FastBite emphasizes SaaS tools over direct delivery.[1][2])
FastBite rides the wave of restaurant digitization, accelerated by post-2015 food delivery booms (e.g., Uber Eats, DoorDash) and the pandemic's takeout surge, enabling independents to counter aggregator dominance through owned channels.[2][3] Timing aligns with mobile commerce growth, where custom apps reduce reliance on high-fee platforms (often 15-30% commissions), favoring direct customer relationships amid rising labor and data privacy concerns.[2] It influences the ecosystem by empowering small-to-medium restaurants—key to local economies—with scalable tech, fostering resilience against consolidations like Square's 2015 Caviar/Fastbite moves that expanded into fast-casual delivery.[1][4]
FastBite is poised to expand as AI-driven personalization and contactless ordering evolve, potentially integrating advanced analytics for predictive menus or AR previews to deepen restaurant-customer bonds.[2][3] Trends like zero-commission models and Web3 loyalty (e.g., NFT rewards) could amplify its edge, while mergers in foodtech may spur acquisitions. Its influence may grow by democratizing tech for underserved eateries, evolving from niche SaaS to ecosystem enablers—much like its 2015 precursor accelerated Square's delivery play—ultimately reshaping how restaurants own their digital front door.[1][2]