Toast
Toast Innovation & Technology Culture
Frequently Asked Questions
Toast is highly innovation-driven, with teams building restaurant and retail technology that helps operators improve service, manage operations, reduce waste, support guests and grow their businesses.
- Innovation rooted in restaurant and retail needs: Toast’s innovation starts with customer empathy. An engineering manager described building Toast Tables, Toast’s integrated waitlist and reservations solution, from prototype through scaling, and said his team often thinks through products from the perspective of restaurant owners and guests. Toast’s 2025 ESG report also highlights customer-facing innovations like Toast Fundraising, EBT SNAP payment enablement, Food Waste Reduction features and Packaging Preferences.
- Products that create measurable impact: Toast’s innovation is designed to solve practical restaurant problems and advance environmental commitments. In 2025, thousands of restaurants utilizing Toast's Food Waste Reduction features tracked over $120 million in retail value of food waste.Employee-led experimentation: Toast encourages innovation through hackathons, R&D showcases, intern projects and cross-functional product work. A senior director of product management said she loves Toast’s bi-annual company-wide hackathons because they let employees innovate on products, processes and culture. R&D interns also described building real tools, experimenting with AI and presenting work to engineering and product leaders.
- External signals:
- Product Strength: Employees on external review sites highlight Toast’s product strength, market share, meaningful work and impact on restaurants. (Glassdoor)
- Innovation Culture: External reviews describe Toast as a place with challenging work, strong training resources, growth potential and talented coworkers. (Glassdoor; Comparably)
- Workplace Awards: Toast has received Built In 2026 Best Places to Work recognitions and RepVue 2026 Top Rated Sales Orgs at Public Companies. (Built In; RepVue)
Bottom line: Toast’s innovation is strongest where restaurant needs, customer feedback and employee experimentation come together to create practical technology for hospitality businesses.
Toast’s technology is modern, cloud-based and purpose-built for restaurants and food and beverage retailers, with integrated software, payments, hardware, data and customer experience tools.
- Cloud-based hospitality platform: Toast describes itself as a global technology platform built for hospitality and retail businesses. From the busiest local restaurants and shops to large hospitality brands, Toast helps owners and operators manage their businesses more efficiently, drive guest demand and build lasting success. Toast integrates software, agentic AI, payments, financial technology solutions and hardware with a broad partner ecosystem. Powering billions of purchases throughout local commerce, Toast delivers the precision and innovation required for modern restaurant and retail environments.
- Modern hardware and software ecosystem: Toast combines software with restaurant-grade hardware and integrated payment processing. A director of product said Toast moved from buying off-the-shelf devices to building its own hardware to better control price, go-to-market strategy and customer experience. She described Toast Go 2 as built for restaurant realities, including durability, waterproofing and ease of use in fast-paced service environments.
- Data and AI-enabled customer experience: Toast’s Engineering, Product and Design materials describe work across Commerce Platform, Customer Experience Platform and AI interfaces that help customers interact with Toast data, support and education offerings. Toast IQ and kitchen fulfillment data were also highlighted as opportunities to make restaurant insights more accessible to operators.
- External signals:
- Product Reputation: External reviews cite Toast’s strong product, market share and one employee’s view that it may be the best POS product in the industry. (Glassdoor)
- Technical Opportunity: Employees on external reviews highlight interesting problem spaces, talented coworkers, growth potential and meaningful work. (Glassdoor)
- Top-Rated Culture: Toast has a 4.6/5 Overall Culture score, an A+ culture rating and 90% positive employee reviews. (Comparably)
Bottom line: Toast’s technology is modern because it combines cloud software, restaurant-grade hardware, payments, data and AI-enabled tools into an integrated platform built for real restaurant workflows.
Toast appears to adopt new technology quickly when it can create clear customer value, with teams encouraged to experiment, test, learn and scale solutions for restaurants.
- Fast iteration with customer feedback: Toast teams describe moving quickly from prototype to launch while staying close to customers. An engineering manager said the Toast Tables team focused on iterating and deploying quickly, then scaled the product into Toast’s tech stack and integrations. The same team fixed a bug in real time so a restaurant could launch Toast Tables before its grand opening.
- Experimentation through AI and R&D: Toast’s R&D intern blog highlights AI-driven projects, experimentation with fast-moving technology, prototypes and live customer testing. One MBA product management intern described working with a team to “hack together” features and test them live at a customer site within weeks, saying Toast leans into innovation and encourages employees to explore new tools.
- Technology adoption tied to impact: Toast’s adoption of new tools is not just about novelty; it is linked to restaurant outcomes.Toast’s FY2025 Corporate Responsibility and Impact Report highlights ongoing environmental and social initiatives, including significant Toast Fundraising milestones—surpassing $10 million in total funds raised, with nearly $6 million in 2025 alone—and continued Food Waste Reduction features, through which thousands of restaurants tracked over $120 million in retail value of food waste.
- External signals:
- Fast-Moving Work: External reviews describe Toast as a growth company with challenging work, changing rules, strong training resources and a fast-scaling environment. (Glassdoor)
- Product and Market Strength: Employees on external review sites cite Toast’s product strength, market share and meaningful customer impact. (Glassdoor)
- Growth Culture: External reviews point to room to grow, helpful teammates and opportunities to learn through challenging work. (Glassdoor; Comparably)
Bottom line: Toast adopts new technology quickly when it helps hospitality businesses, using customer feedback, prototypes, hackathons, AI exploration and product experiments to move from ideas to usable tools.
Toast’s technology culture is customer-obsessed, collaborative, experimental and practical, with teams focused on building tools that solve real problems for restaurants.
- Customer-first engineering: Toast technology teams stay close to restaurant needs through customer calls, shadowing, product feedback and real-world testing. An engineering manager said Toast teams put themselves in the shoes of business owners and guests to understand what may be confusing or tedious, while a product security leader described shadowing installation visits to identify future security risks and process improvements.
- Cross-functional product culture: Toast product and engineering teams collaborate closely across product management, engineering, design, quality and documentation. A senior product manager said product managers, engineering leads and designers operate like a “three-legged stool,” sharing progress, dependencies, challenges and process improvements. He also said Toast engineers bring a product mindset and help refine strategy by asking “why” and “what.”
- Build, learn and scale: Toast’s technology culture encourages ownership, experimentation and learning by doing. Employees describe hackathons, R&D showcases, AI projects, customer-site testing and internal mobility as ways employees grow while building. The 2025 ESG report also notes Toast’s values include being “hungry to build and learn,” raising the bar and being all in on customer success.
- External signals:
- Technical Environment: External reviews highlight interesting problem spaces, talented coworkers, meaningful work and strong product-market fit. (Glassdoor)
- Team Support: External reviews describe helpful coworkers, collaborative teams and strong peer support. (Comparably; Glassdoor)
- Top-Rated Culture: Toast has a 4.6/5 Overall Culture score, an A+ culture rating, 90% positive employee reviews and a Top 5% Overall Company Culture Score. (Comparably)
Bottom line: Toast’s technology culture blends restaurant empathy with product-minded engineering, fast experimentation and cross-functional collaboration to build practical tools for the hospitality industry.
Toast's Candidate Tradeoffs
If you’re weighing whether Toast is the right fit, these are the core tradeoffs to consider.
- Toast emphasizes customer-driven innovation that delivers meaningful, real-world impact and measurable value, while exploratory initiatives are more selectively prioritized.
Toast Employee Perspectives
Describe the product or feature you worked on.
I was the second engineer on the team that created Toast’s integrated waitlist and reservations solution called Toast Tables.
As one of the first members of the team, I contributed to building the initial prototype. While building, we focused on iterating and deploying quickly. I then led the effort and wrote a large amount of the code to mitigate the prototype into Toast’s traditional tech stack.
I also had the opportunity to expand Toast Tables' integrations, which helps to streamline the reservation creation process for guests. Lately, I’ve partnered with other engineers to work on additional features and scaling initiatives as our product usage has grown.
As the engineering manager, I work with our product manager on roadmap planning and prioritization of features, as well as keeping up to date with all the projects currently in progress.
What was the most exciting or interesting aspect of working on this product?
I enjoyed being able to work closely with our customers.
For example, a customer emailed us saying that they urgently needed help as they were launching the next day. I realized there was a bug, was able to fix the bug in real-time, and enabled that restaurant to launch Toast Tables in time for their grand opening.
How did your engineering team culture support the successful creation of this new product or feature?
Everyone on the team is aligned on delivering the best value to the customer. We all will do what needs to be done, even if it falls outside the typical scope of our roles. Every engineer is able to approach challenges through different lenses, which allows us to figure out the best solution possible for the Toast community.
When we think about the products we’re building, we not only look at them from an engineering standpoint, but we also put ourselves in the shoes of restaurant owners and restaurant patrons to ensure their needs are our focus.
Keeping these perspectives top of mind has been immensely helpful in building the best products possible. While working on this product, we often go through the same motions that a restaurant owner would during implementation. Although this takes a bit more time, the process helps us better understand what may be confusing or tedious for customers.
Looking at our products from all angles allows us to continue to create a better customer experience.

As a product manager, what are the key ingredients for a successful relationship with your engineering team?
The most important key ingredient is trust. Trust allows for strong collaboration, as we appreciate each other’s expertise and perspective. It’s much easier to find resolution and compromises when you trust that the other person has the same goals in mind — even if the approach is different. Trust enables a level of independence from each other, too, because we can assume the other person will complete their responsibilities competently.
Curiosity is also important. The engineers at Toast all exhibit a product mindset and constructively engage with my team’s strategy and roadmap. They aren’t afraid to ask the whys and the whats. Through this questioning, the roadmap gets refined into something that is superior to what we could come up with alone. Similarly, as a non-technical product manager, I always ask our engineers for an “ELI5” — or “explain like I’m five” — if there’s something I don’t understand. I don’t need to learn every technical nuance. But an elementary comprehension of what they’re proposing pays dividends when it comes to prioritizing a roadmap between feature work and technical debt — and gaining empathy if things don’t go exactly as planned.
Describe how your product and engineering teams intersect.
At Toast, the product manager, engineering team lead and product designer form a three-legged stool. One leg can’t make a decision without affecting the other two. The three of us have weekly syncs to talk through progress updates, dependencies and challenges. Additionally, I have weekly one-on-one meetings with my engineering lead to have more focused conversations. I particularly enjoy more candid unplanned conversations where it’s a free-flow of thoughts and ideas. Not every meeting has to be execution-oriented.
Team processes are co-owned by all members of the team. We have a meeting during every sprint to talk through an existing process that can be improved or a new process that we want to adopt. Anyone can raise a particular topic to discuss, and we’ll have an open period for people to raise questions or considerations related to the proposed process ahead of the meeting. During the meeting, we answer each question and then talk through how we can implement process improvements or new processes. No one wants to simply be told how to do their job. A well-functioning team should be able to decide how to move forward together and constantly refine it in the midst of new challenges.
What communication strategies do you use to ensure engineers share your product vision?
As a product manager, I think it’s really easy to get caught up in meetings with external stakeholders and endless documentation to a point where you get isolated from the rest of the team. There’s a real fear in sharing unpolished ideas and documents with engineering. However, if we wait until everything is “complete” prior to sharing with engineering, then to me that’s not collaboration; it’s more similar to throwing requirements over the wall.
I like to communicate things as early as possible, and bring the team along for each iteration of product strategy and vision, inviting them to bring their own perspectives as inputs. I share insights from customer calls in relation to both the pain points they shared and how our work has positively impacted their lives. The pain points help to inspire confidence in the product vision, while the wins help to confirm the product vision and prove that we’re on the right path.

What’s the coolest project you’ve worked on recently?
Toast Go 2 is a handheld product we launched last year. I have heard again and again from our customers how much they love this device and how it has helped them through the Covid-19 pandemic with curbside pickup or outdoor dining. From a design perspective, we strive for a perfect blend of form and function, elegance and durability. We know how hard our customers have to work to serve their guests and we strive to make hardware that’s their reliable best friend and hope to put a smile on their face when they are using it.
When you are designing a product like this, there are many ways you can go. One of the secrets that makes this product so successful is being deeply rooted in understanding our customers’ needs and what’s important for them. We also stretched ourselves in pushing the boundaries of engineering and technology innovation. Knowing how crazy restaurants can get with soda, beer and soy sauce flying around, we spend a lot of time and energy trying to waterproof the readers. This just speaks to how we want the device to be there to boost the confidence of the server and support our customer’s hospitality dream.
What do you envision for the future of your industry and how is your work helping to shape that future and bring it to life?
This is my sixth year at Toast and we have come a long way on our hardware design. We went from buying five to 10 devices from Amazon at a time to commercial-grade devices from Elo, then stepping into the territory of building our own devices so we could have more control over the price, go-to-market and final customer experience.
One area where I think we have a perfect opportunity to lead the industry forward is how to provide the most delightful post-live experience for our customers. Right now, we have beautiful, durable, reliable, easy-to-install hardware that our customers love, and I see the light in their eyes when they open the box. While we are celebrating our scale and maturity, we are also thinking, “So, what’s next?”

Toast Employee Reviews
What People Are Saying About Toast
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Product Innovation: Toast continues to expand a unified platform beyond POS into marketing, ordering, delivery, team management, lending, and drive‑thru, while publicly shipping frequent, granular updates. The 2026 Toast Drive‑Thru launch and ongoing feature velocity signal applied, operator‑visible innovation across new operational frontiers.
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Emerging Technology Adoption: AI is treated as a first‑class pillar via Toast IQ, which evolved into a conversational assistant that surfaces recommendations and automates workflows, including concrete uses in marketing and beverage optimization. AI also appears in tools like auto‑generated campaigns and invoice scanning pilots, emphasizing practical, in‑product adoption rather than hype.
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Customer-Centered Innovation: Launches emphasize outcomes that matter daily—revenue lift, throughput, labor efficiency, and guest frequency—reducing vendor sprawl through a single stack. Public release notes and operator‑facing AI features reflect a pragmatic, “useful now” posture.





