Technology

Restaurant intelligence company Brizo raises $9M

Brizo’s FoodMetrics platform includes data on more than 1 million restaurants in North America. Restaurants and suppliers can use it for market research and sales.
Brizo founders
Brizo Chief Revenue Officer Trevor Shimizu and CEO Ian Delisle. / Photo courtesy of Brizo

Brizo, a provider of foodservice data for restaurants and tech suppliers, has raised $9 million ($12 million CAD) to help it grow.

Quebec City-based Brizo’s main product is FoodMetrics, a dashboard that provides “near real-time” foodservice data for use in market research, marketing and sales. 

FoodMetrics covers more than 1 million restaurants, c-stores, virtual brands and other foodservice businesses in the U.S. and Canada and includes information about their menus, locations, tech vendors and more.

Brizo was founded in 2020 by tech entrepreneurs Ian Delisle, Trevor Shimizu, Gaetan Corneau and Jean-Sébastien Vachon. Though both restaurants and suppliers use its data, it seems geared toward helping tech suppliers find new customers amid rising demand for tech.

Online catering company EzCater, for instance, uses Brizo to research inbound restaurant leads and make sure they are good partners, according to a case study on Brizo’s website.

DoorDash, Toast and Resy are also customers.

“Brizo makes it fast and easy to understand the data and insights that are now part of day-to-day operations, and to operationalize those insights to remove friction for sales teams, widen margins and serve customers better,” Shimizu said in a statement.

The Series A funding round was led by Framework Venture Partners and BDC Capital's Industrial Innovation Venture Fund.

Brizo said it would help the company speed up its growth and enter new markets.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Food

Inside Chili's quest to craft a value-priced burger that could take on McDonald's

Behind the Menu: How the casual-dining chain smashes expectations with a winning combination of familiarity and price with its new Big Smasher burger.

Financing

Here's the big problem with all these $5 meal deals

The Bottom Line: With McDonald’s planning a $5 value meal of its own, more brands are already jumping onto the bandwagon. But not everybody will pay $5.

Financing

What did the Starbucks CEO expect?

The Bottom Line: Howard Schultz needed just one bad quarter to make public his displeasure with the coffee shop chain. But the stage was set for that two years ago.

Trending

More from our partners