List of Adyen POS Customers
Amsterdam, 1011,
Netherlands
Since 2010, our global team of researchers has been studying Adyen POS customers around the world, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions and perhaps the rise and fall of certain vendors and their products on a quarterly basis.
Each quarter our research team identifies companies that have purchased Adyen POS for Point Of Sale from public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources, including the customer size, industry, location, implementation status, partner involvement, LOB Key Stakeholders and related IT decision-makers contact details.
Companies using Adyen POS for Point Of Sale include: Hungry Jack's, a Australia based Leisure and Hospitality organisation with 25000 employees and revenues of $1.90 billion, Domino’s Pizza, a Australia based Retail organisation with 26000 employees and revenues of $1.59 billion, Lush, a United Kingdom based Consumer Packaged Goods organisation with 4500 employees and revenues of $1.12 billion, Tape a l’Oeil, a France based Retail organisation with 900 employees and revenues of $275.0 million and many others.
Contact us if you need a completed and verified list of companies using Adyen POS, including the breakdown by industry (21 Verticals), Geography (Region, Country, State, City), Company Size (Revenue, Employees, Asset) and related IT Decision Makers, Key Stakeholders, business and technology executives responsible for the software purchases.
The Adyen POS customer wins are being incorporated in our Enterprise Applications Buyer Insight and Technographics Customer Database which has over 100 data fields that detail company usage of software systems and their digital transformation initiatives. Apps Run The World wants to become your No. 1 technographic data source!
Apply Filters For Customers
| Logo | Customer | Industry | Empl. | Revenue | Country | Vendor | Application | Category | When | SI | Insight | Insight Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Domino’s Pizza | Retail | 26000 | $1.6B | Australia | Adyen | Adyen POS | Point Of Sale | 2020 | n/a | In 2020, Domino's Pizza deployed Adyen POS across its Australia and New Zealand operations to support point of sale payment capture and accounts receivable workflows. Adyen POS, Apps Category , served as the primary application for processing store sales transactions and initiating refunds within the merchant payment layer. The implementation focused on accounts receivable capabilities, including weekly sales validation, extraction of sales data for reconciliation, preparation and posting of estore journals for on charging, aged debtor monitoring, and processing customer refunds. Adyen POS was configured to support payment capture and refund initiation while AR staff reconciled reported store sales against the data pulled through from the system and generated exception reports for senior management. Operational integrations described in implementation activities included refund processing through PayPal, Adyen and the bank, reconciliation of Uber settlement receipts against each store's Uber sales, and extraction of information from the internal reporting system to prepare journals. The deployment supported centralized weekly direct debit runs for all stores in Australia and New Zealand and allocation of external platform receipts to individual store accounts for accounting purposes. Governance and process changes emphasized weekly control cycles and role based ownership within the accounts receivable function, including monitoring the accounts receivable inbox, issuing debtor statements, managing aged debtors, and posting journals to the general ledger. Adyen POS therefore became embedded in Domino's Pizza Enterprises Ltd accounts receivable and reconciliation workflows, with operational coverage centered on the AR team in Brisbane and supporting the broader Australia and New Zealand store network. | |
|
|
Hungry Jack's | Leisure and Hospitality | 25000 | $1.9B | Australia | Adyen | Adyen POS | Point Of Sale | 2020 | n/a | In 2020, Hungry Jack's implemented Adyen POS in the Point of Sale category to modernize its point-of-sale terminal fleet and to unify in-store and ecommerce payment channels. The initiative targeted improved terminal reliability and a unified commerce posture that supported online ordering, delivery, and drive-through operations while dining rooms were closed during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Adyen POS deployment concentrated on standardizing the payment terminal fleet and consolidating omnichannel payment processing, using Adyen POS to deliver consistent authorization and settlement workflows across physical and digital channels. Implementation activities included configuring terminal behavior for peak service times and drive-through lanes, and aligning payment acceptance logic for in-store and ecommerce checkout flows. Integration work tied Adyen POS to Hungry Jack's online and delivery channels to present a single payment platform across storefront, ecommerce, delivery, and drive-through. Operational coverage was focused on Hungry Jack's Australia-based quick-service restaurant operations, with CIO Bruce Nolte cited as prioritizing payment reliability and preferred payment options across channels. Reported outcomes from the project included cost savings, improved revenue capture, and enhanced customer experience by delivering faster, more reliable payments and enabling continued online, delivery, and drive-through commerce during pandemic-related dining room closures. The Adyen POS implementation centralized payment operations and established a unified commerce foundation for cross-channel payment consistency. | |
|
|
Lush | Consumer Packaged Goods | 4500 | $1.1B | United Kingdom | Adyen | Adyen POS | Point Of Sale | 2019 | n/a | In 2019, Lush deployed Adyen POS as its Point of Sale system and began a staged rollout across 110 Lush stores in Germany, the United Kingdom and Japan, with the POS software distribution continuing through 2019. The program also included a pilot of bespoke POS hardware that debuted in November 2019 and is being tested in two U.K. stores, while Lush operates over 950 shops with more than 3,800 cash registers globally and maintains an average of four registers per store. Typical single POS hardware costs cited in the market range between $2,500 and $6,400, and Lush noted ongoing subscription, processing and maintenance costs factor into total ownership. Lush reports it has processed over $221 million in sales across 12.5 million transactions using its own POS software. Adyen POS at Lush was implemented as an open source software platform, the codebase of Adyen POS is hosted on GitHub, and core functional capabilities implemented include email receipts, buy online and pick up in store workflows, order online and pay in-store flows, and live shop-level sales reporting. The implementation provides consolidated visibility of sales per shop and live sales information, and it generates up-to-date stock management reports for manufacturing and supply chain functions. Lush framed the system as a singular platform that extends between e-commerce and retail to address synchronization between online launches and in-store exclusives. Architecturally the initiative emphasizes in-house control of the POS software stack and durable, serviceable hardware design to facilitate replaceable parts and longer lifecycle management. The solution is positioned to unify checkout workflows across channels, reduce friction during high volume product launches, and allow faster feature rollout by centralizing the POS application layer under Lush control. Lush has explicitly limited customer data use to processing and invoicing of purchases to strengthen data protection, and the open source approach is intended to enable external contributions without full-time internal engineering investment. Governance and operational intent were expressed around centralizing update cadence and release control to keep pace with frequent product launches, and Lush signaled a supplier selection filter that includes ethical manufacturing and use of renewable energy to power transaction flows. The company emphasized using the platform to reduce long-term costs associated with POS implementation and management while improving the customer experience through increased personalization and faster checkout throughput. Lush did not provide a definitive quantified cost savings figure, noting overall costs are not clean cut, and the roadmap indicates additional features and functionality will be introduced over time. | |
|
|
|
Retail | 900 | $275M | France | Adyen | Adyen POS | Point Of Sale | 2016 | n/a |
|
|
Buyer Intent: Companies Evaluating Adyen POS
- Flagship Pioneering, a United States based Life Sciences organization with 1500 Employees
Discover Software Buyers actively Evaluating Enterprise Applications
| Logo | Company | Industry | Employees | Revenue | Country | Evaluated | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No data found | ||||||||