Omicron is driving a wave of restaurant cancellations, but it’s not as stark as it was in 2020

Indoor dining establishments across the world are getting battered by the ongoing omicron wave of the pandemic, but new data from SevenRooms—which makes software for restaurant reservations—indicates that the damage is not nearly as dramatic as it was when COVID-19 first struck. As omicron became the dominant strain in North America, restaurant reservation trends definitely reflected fresh hesitance among would-be diners, with cancellation rates jumping 16.6% in December and January, according to data shared by SevenRooms with Fast Company. Globally, the rate of cancellations rose 17.5%. But both of those figures were small in comparison to March and April of 2020, when cancellation rates spiked 72.5% in North America and 44.3% globally. Back then, restaurants and other venues were facing a lot more uncertainty, including local lockdown orders and other harsher restrictions that governments have been reluctant to repeat. In New York City, for instance, restaurants, bars, and even Broadway theaters have been allowed to remain open during the omicron wave, although many have closed temporarily due to outbreaks among staff or as a result of people calling in sick. Even before the highly contagious variant first reared its ugly head, retail businesses were up against staff shortages and reduced foot traffic. The good news is, the omicron wave may already be peaking in some cities that were hit early by it. Data tracking from the New York Times shows what could be a plateau in New York’s daily caseloads, although hospitals there are still overloaded and the situation on the ground remains dire. Let’s just hope those graphs we’re all obsessed with start trending downward soon.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90713270/omicron-is-driving-a-wave-of-restaurant-cancellations-but-its-not-as-stark-as-it-was-in-2020?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 3y | Jan 14, 2022, 5:22:28 PM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Here are crypto’s biggest heists after Bybit’s $1.5 billion hack

Cryptocurrency exchange Bybit said last week hackers had stolen digital tokens worth around $1.5 billion, in what researchers called the biggest crypto heist of all time.

Bybit CEO Ben Z

Feb 24, 2025, 10:30:07 PM | Fast company - tech
‘We are never going to stop existing’: Hunter Schafer called out Trump’s passport policy on TikTok

“I had a bit of a harsh reality check today, and felt like it’s important to share with whoever is listening,” model and actress Hunter Schafer said in an eight-minute

Feb 24, 2025, 8:20:06 PM | Fast company - tech
Anthropic’s new Claude AI model can decide between speed and deep thinking

Anthropic released on Monday its Claude 3.7 Sonnet model, which it says returns results faster and can show the user the “chain of thought” it follows to reach an answer. This latest model also po

Feb 24, 2025, 8:20:05 PM | Fast company - tech
Ai2’s Ali Farhadi advocates for open-source AI models. Here’s why

A year before Elon Musk helped start OpenAI in San Francisco, philanthropist and Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen already had established his own nonprofit

Feb 24, 2025, 5:50:07 PM | Fast company - tech
How agentic AI will shape the future of business

In 2024, Amazon introduced its AI-powered HR ass

Feb 24, 2025, 5:50:06 PM | Fast company - tech
How ‘lore’ became the internet’s favorite way to overshare

Lore isn’t just for games like The Elder Scrolls or films like The Lord of the Rings—online, it has evolved into something entirely new.

The Old English word made the s

Feb 24, 2025, 1:20:04 PM | Fast company - tech