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Maker
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I’ve spent nearly two decades in hospitality and service operations, and one thing kept bothering me.
The standards were rarely the problem.
Hotels, restaurants, spas, clinics—almost every business had SOPs, checklists, and audit forms. They knew what “good” looked like.
But somewhere between headquarters and the frontline, standards slowly drifted. Paper forms disappeared into filing cabinets. PDFs were exported and never opened again. Audits became something people completed because they had to, not because they believed they mattered.
That made me wonder:
What if the problem wasn’t people? What if it was the experience of inspection itself?
Instead of asking, “How can we build a better checklist?” I started asking, “How can we make inspections feel so simple that people actually want to do them every day?”
That question changed everything.
The project evolved from digitising paper forms into rethinking the entire ritual—offline-first, beautiful enough that operators don’t dread opening it, fast enough to finish before the first customer arrives, and designed so the report becomes something worth sharing instead of hiding in a folder.
Eventually I realised something else.
We’re not building audit software.
We’re building a way for businesses to keep the promises they make to every guest, customer, and patient.
I’m curious—if you’ve ever managed multiple locations or frontline teams, where do you think standards usually break down?
Is it the people, the process, or the tools?
Report
How does Morn actually decide when something needs an inspection versus when it's fine to skip — is it on a schedule or does it flag things in real time?
Report
The morning checklist feels simple to set up and actually shows what happened on the floor. Nice that it pings instead of leaving things to memory.
Report
Honestly been curious about this since quality checks usually fall off by lunchtime. Love that the prompts feel short and actually doable rather than another bloated checklist.
How does Morn actually decide when something needs an inspection versus when it's fine to skip — is it on a schedule or does it flag things in real time?
The morning checklist feels simple to set up and actually shows what happened on the floor. Nice that it pings instead of leaving things to memory.
Honestly been curious about this since quality checks usually fall off by lunchtime. Love that the prompts feel short and actually doable rather than another bloated checklist.