Service day
Reservations, menus, counter or table service, payment, and close review.
Industry guide
A cafe, supermarket, clothing store, beauty studio, hotel, and service office do not start from the same daily work. Use this page to see the capabilities that fit each operating model.
Choose the business rhythm closest to yours.
Reservations, menus, counter or table service, payment, and close review.
Barcode speed, shelf depth, replenishment, product availability, and reports.
Products, variants, seasonal stock, customers, campaigns, and online catalog.
Operating fit
The platform stays connected, but the first workflow changes by business type: service rhythm, checkout speed, product depth, appointments, reporting, or device setup.
Service-day rhythm for reservations, menus, counter/table selling, gift cards, inventory, and close review.
Service focus
Start by planning reservations, menu choices, and staff rhythm before service.
Product-first retail workflow for checkout, stock, customers, campaigns, and online presentation.
Retail floor focus
Start by selling from the floor while product and customer context stay visible.
High-throughput checkout and stock-depth workflow for barcode lanes, replenishment, invoices, reports, and accounting context.
Checkout and stock focus
Keep fast checkout connected to product depth and barcode flow.
Catalog-rich retail for collections, sizes, colors, seasonal stock, customers, campaigns, and online presentation.
Catalog focus
Represent products through collections, sizes, colors, and variants.
Appointment-led service workflow for bookings, customers, payments, gift cards, products, and follow-up.
Appointment focus
Plan appointments and customer context before the visit.
Service package and customer-care workflow for bookings, profiles, gift cards, marketing, and payments.
Client care focus
Coordinate appointments, packages, and customer history.
Fresh-product workflow for fast selling, product availability, purchase timing, inventory, and daily close.
Operating focus
Start by planning product availability for fresh goods and counter rush.
Booking and guest-service workflow for reservations, customer profiles, invoices, payments, and reporting.
Guest service focus
Connect reservations and guest context before arrival.
Professional-service workflow for customers, contracts, digital invoices, accounting, reports, payments, and scheduling.
Service workflow focus
Keep customer, service, document, and invoice context connected.
Decision guide
Pick the operating rhythm first, then open the capabilities that support that rhythm.
Restaurants, cafes, bakeries, hairdressers, wellness teams, and accommodations usually need reservations or counter service, product choices, payment, customer context, and close review to stay connected.
Supermarkets, retail stores, and bakeries need POS, catalog, inventory, purchase planning, barcode or counter speed, and reports to stay close to product availability.
Clothing stores and online-facing retailers need products, categories, brands, collections, variants, seasonal stock, customers, campaigns, and online presentation to move together.
Offices and professional services often start from customers, documents, digital invoices, payments, accounting context, reports, and scheduling.
Business workflow
Each business type starts from a different daily rhythm. Use the closest fit to see which capabilities matter first.
Service-day rhythm for reservations, menus, counter/table selling, gift cards, inventory, and close review.
Product-first retail workflow for checkout, stock, customers, campaigns, and online presentation.
High-throughput checkout and stock-depth workflow for barcode lanes, replenishment, invoices, reports, and accounting context.
Catalog-rich retail for collections, sizes, colors, seasonal stock, customers, campaigns, and online presentation.
Appointment-led service workflow for bookings, customers, payments, gift cards, products, and follow-up.
Service package and customer-care workflow for bookings, profiles, gift cards, marketing, and payments.
Fresh-product workflow for fast selling, product availability, purchase timing, inventory, and daily close.
Booking and guest-service workflow for reservations, customer profiles, invoices, payments, and reporting.
Professional-service workflow for customers, contracts, digital invoices, accounting, reports, payments, and scheduling.
Related industry posts are selected by the matching planning category.
Next step
Use the industry view to decide which workflows matter first, then compare pricing or book a focused review.
Different starting points
Service, retail, appointment, and checkout-heavy businesses begin with different workflows.
Capability next steps
Follow the related capability pages to see how each workflow connects.
Occasional notes on choosing the right mix of POS, catalog, stock, payments, online commerce, and reporting for different business models.