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QikServe has raised $11.1M across 13 funding rounds.
Key people at QikServe.
QikServe has raised $11.1M in total across 13 funding rounds.
QikServe offers a digital commerce platform tailored for hospitality, enabling comprehensive guest self-service. It integrates mobile ordering, secure payment processing, and kiosk functionalities with robust content management systems. Supporting various channels like web and mobile apps, the platform streamlines operations and enhances customer experience across diverse hospitality venues, providing a unified solution for digital customer engagement.
Daniel Rodgers and Ronnie Forbes co-founded QikServe in 2011, anticipating a significant digital shift in hospitality customer engagement. They recognized a growing consumer demand for convenient self-service options, believing digital interactions would become paramount to the industry. This core insight fueled the development of an enterprise platform specifically designed to efficiently manage these evolving transactional experiences.
QikServe serves a diverse clientele across the hospitality sector, providing essential tools that enhance operational efficiency and guest experience. Its vision focuses on empowering businesses with flexible, scalable digital ordering and payment solutions. The company continually adapts its platform to lead self-service innovation, aiming for seamless, contactless transactions and personalized customer journeys within the industry.
Key people at QikServe.
QikServe has raised $11.1M across 13 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $670K Series U in September 2020.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 1, 2020 | $670K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Mar 1, 2020 | $480K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Dec 1, 2019 | $600K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Oct 1, 2019 | $350K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| May 1, 2019 | $2M Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Apr 1, 2018 | $510K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Jan 1, 2017 | $3M Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Jul 1, 2016 | $470K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Jan 1, 2016 | $640K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Mar 1, 2015 | $410K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Dec 1, 2014 | $780K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Aug 1, 2014 | $870K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
| Jul 1, 2014 | $290K Series U | — | PAR Equity | Announced |
QikServe has raised $11.1M in total across 13 funding rounds.
QikServe's investors include Par Equity.
# QikServe: Enterprise Self-Service Platform for Hospitality
QikServe is an enterprise software platform that enables hospitality businesses to offer digital self-service ordering and payment solutions across multiple channels—from mobile apps and tablets to kiosks and QR codes.[1][2] Founded in 2011, the company serves restaurants, cafes, bars, and hotels by allowing guests to order and pay directly from their devices, reducing wait times and increasing operational efficiency.[1][4]
The platform addresses a fundamental gap in the hospitality sector's digital maturity. While banking and retail have embraced self-service technology, restaurants and hospitality operators historically lagged behind.[4] QikServe's solution helps hospitality operators increase average check size, reduce labor costs, and improve customer satisfaction by adapting to consumers' growing reliance on mobile devices.[4] The company has demonstrated strong growth momentum: QikServe Payments tripled merchant onboarding within a 12-month period and grew processing volumes by 856% in its first year of market launch.[2]
QikServe was founded in 2011 by Daniel Rodgers and Ronnie Forbes, born from a personal frustration.[4] Rodgers experienced the problem firsthand during a family lunch in London—facing long lines at both the register and for seating, he recognized an opportunity to solve the hospitality industry's self-service gap.[4] This insight crystallized into a mission: develop software that would give restaurants and hospitality operators the tools to compete with more digitally advanced sectors.
The company is headquartered in Edinburgh, Scotland, with a U.S. base in Atlanta, Georgia.[1][4] Over time, QikServe expanded from basic ordering solutions to a comprehensive platform encompassing payments, reservations, and guest experience management across multiple departments including food and beverage, operations, and customer service.[3]
QikServe operates at the intersection of two powerful trends: the digitalization of hospitality and the normalization of contactless, mobile-first customer interactions. The hospitality sector, traditionally slower to adopt technology than financial services or retail, is rapidly modernizing in response to consumer expectations shaped by mobile banking and e-commerce.[4]
The company's timing is particularly relevant in a post-pandemic environment where contactless ordering and payment became operational necessities rather than novelties. QikServe's expansion into hotel room service and broader guest experience management signals how self-service technology is moving beyond quick-service restaurants into full-service hospitality.[5] By providing infrastructure that hospitality operators can deploy quickly and globally, QikServe influences how the industry standardizes digital guest interactions.
QikServe has evolved from solving a single pain point—long restaurant lines—into a comprehensive platform addressing the hospitality industry's broader digital transformation. The 856% growth in processing volumes within the first year of QikServe Payments suggests the company has found product-market fit in a sector hungry for scalable solutions.
Looking ahead, QikServe's trajectory will likely be shaped by continued expansion into underserved hospitality segments (hotels, bars, cafes) and deepening its payments capabilities to compete with broader fintech platforms. The company's ability to maintain rapid onboarding and support for local payment methods globally will be critical as hospitality operators increasingly seek unified platforms that work across multiple geographies. As the hospitality sector continues its digital maturation, QikServe's role as an enabler of that transformation positions it as a key infrastructure player in how guests interact with hospitality businesses worldwide.