Share
x
Share
x
Ricerca aperta

Quality coffee starts with maintenance

Thousands of coffee machines, one margin to protect
07/05/2026
Food & Consumer Goods
Sectors
Sales
Categories

In the coffee industry, quality in the cup is the result of consistent pressure, precise temperature and perfect timing.

A machine operating outside its parameters produces a coffee that no longer reflects what the roaster originally designed, selected and guaranteed. The same principle applies to managing a fleet of coffee machines on loan: every variable left uncontrolled is a quality promise that never reaches the customer.

Every machine installed in a bar, restaurant or office is an investment spread across the territory. Hundreds – sometimes thousands – of assets distributed across different regions, each with its own history: installation date, contract type, usage frequency and service interventions received. An operational asset base that generates value only if it remains active, functional and monitored.

In the field, however, processes tell a more complex story:

  • machine data is fragmented across Excel sheets, emails and phone calls that accumulate without ever becoming structured information
  • service history often lives only in the memory of the most experienced technicians: valuable knowledge, but fragile, difficult to scale and impossible to transfer properly
  • actual consumption is compared against contractual agreements only when something goes wrong, never through a systematic and preventive approach

In this scenario, every late-managed breakdown is a customer considering alternatives. Every untracked intervention is a hidden cost silently eroding margins without ever clearly appearing in end-of-month reports.

When complexity is not governed, it becomes friction – and over time, friction eats away at margins.

The loan-for-use model is one of the most powerful customer loyalty tools a coffee roaster can leverage: it strengthens long-term relationships, secures the point of consumption and creates a virtuous dependency on service quality.

But it only works when service levels hold up. And maintaining them at scale requires structure.

From data to action: what changes in machine fleet management with digital control

Managing a machine fleet distributed across the territory is much like coordinating a network of micro-roasteries: each one has its own specificities, rhythm and needs.
Without a central control room, every point becomes an island, where information does not circulate, decisions are delayed, and the cost of inefficiency inevitably affects the service delivered to the end customer.

With .one Field, every asset gains a readable, consultable history: installation date, interventions carried out, historical costs, spare parts used, and actual consumption compared with contractual agreements.
Information stops being the exclusive knowledge of those who experienced it in the field and becomes structured, accessible and comparable data for anyone who needs it – from the technician on the road to the sales manager at headquarters.

  • Technicians go out with a mobile app that guides them through each intervention, complete service reports directly on site with photos and notes, and update spare parts in real time.
  • Head office has immediate visibility over what is happening in every corner of the territory.
  • Visit routes are planned based on real priorities, reducing machine downtime and travel costs.

Fewer emergency callouts, fewer information gaps, fewer surprises in billing.

TCO, the total cost of ownership of each individual machine, stops being an accounting abstraction and becomes a concrete operational indicator.

Knowing that a machine installed three years ago has required five interventions in six months, with spare parts costs exceeding its residual value, makes it possible to take timely decisions: replace it, renegotiate the contract, or simply understand that the customer needs a machine with different characteristics.

That is the difference between chasing problems and anticipating them.

Service as a commercial lever

In coffee, quality is experienced in the cup, but loyalty is built through the reliability of the service that makes that quality possible every day.

A bar that knows it can count on fast interventions, a machine that is always in good condition, and a partner who knows the history of every piece of equipment, will rarely change supplier.

When it works well, service becomes an invisible but essential part of the commercial offer. And turning it from a cost centre into a commercial lever requires every intervention to generate data, and every data point to generate a decision.

The difference between an operation that scales and one that gets stuck is often measured in millimetres: an intervention carried out the day before a breakdown becomes urgent, a spare part ordered in advance, a data point read in time.

It is the small efficiencies accumulated every day that make long-term growth sustainable.

Margin is protected in the operational details – and those details remain visible only to those with the tools to see them.

Discover more about our digital solutions for coffee.

ATONEWS
People at the centre
When coffee crosses borders: the export challenge for multi-country roasters
Food & Consumer Goods · E-commerce·Sales·Tech
Alice Cavedoni
When coffee crosses borders: the export challenge for multi-country roasters
12/02/2026
Learn more
Coffee roasters: supplying the HoReCa sector
Food & Consumer Goods · Sales
Giovanni Bonamigo
Coffee roasters: supplying the HoReCa sector
15/11/2024
Learn more
Digital applications for coffee market
Food & Consumer Goods · Sales
Giovanni Bonamigo
The world hidden in a coffee cup
16/07/2024
Learn more
Van sales or direct sales in the coffee market?
Food & Consumer Goods · Sales
Giovanni Bonamigo
Van sales or direct sales in the coffee market?
15/02/2024
Learn more
The 10 key questions for a smart sales application
Food & Consumer Goods · Sales
Giovanni Bonamigo
The 10 key questions for a smart sales application
11/12/2023
Learn more
CASE STUDY
Here are some of our experiences
Read
caffè-vergnano-case-study-aton-img

Caffè Vergnano

Food & Consumer Goods
Today Caffè Vergnano is present in 19 regions with more than 4,500 Ho.Re.Ca. customers and worldwide with more than 70 locations in 19 countries. Such an extensive sales network…
Discover more
Read
Procaffè - Aton

Procaffè

Food & Consumer Goods Omnichannel Sales
Procaffè, historical coffee roasting company born among the Belluno Dolomites and best-known by its brands Bristot, Testa Rossa, Breda and Deorsola, has decided to undergo – together with Aton – a growth course aimed…
Discover more
Read
segafredo-zanetti-piattaforma-software-vendite-aton-img

Segafredo

Industrials Omnichannel Sales
Segafredo Zanetti & Aton together towards 4.0 sales solutions The quality of a product like coffee, which we drink every day at a bar or at home, is the…
Discover more
Read
hausbrandt-banner-img

Hausbrandt

Food & Consumer Goods Vendite Omnichannel
Today, the aroma and fragrance of Hausbrandt coffee are recognised in over 70 countries worldwide. The Zanetti family’s passion goes even further, extending into the world of beer with…
Discover more