Celebrating 40 years of farm fresh, Farmer Boys® is a farm-to-table fast casual restaurant chain serving award-winning burgers and all-day breakfast, stacked sandwiches, hand-chopped salads, and signature hand-breaded zucchini sticks and colossal onion rings. At Farmer Boys, Farm Food Ain’t Fast Food®. Farmer Boys is annually recognized with ‘Best Of’ food awards, voted by consumers who value generous portions of farm fresh food at a fair price. Farmer Boys is also continuously recognized by notable industry publications, including being named one of Fast Casual's Top 100 Movers & Shakers in 2021. Farmer Boys currently operates restaurants in California, Nevada, and Arizona.
SaaS Adoption
SaaS Adoption indicates the level of adoption by this company of software as a service services.
Cloud Adoption
Cloud Adoption indicates the level of adoption by this company of cloud services.
IT Footprint
IT Footprint gives a relative indication of how much IT services this company consumes.
IT Spend
IT Spend shows roughly how much this client spends on IT per year in USD.
Enlyft tracks the use of over 15,000 technologies and has proprietary data on over 18 million companies worldwide.
Farmer Boys uses 5 different technologies from 20 different vendors. They have above average use of several technologies including OpenX, GO1 and Perl.
Farmer Boys uses products from 27 different product categories. They are particularly heavy users of products in Business Intelligence, Web Hosting Services, and Web Analytics.
Enlyft tracks the use of over 15,000 technologies and has proprietary data on over 18 million companies worldwide.
Technology | Category | Vendor | Usage |
---|---|---|---|
OpenX | Ad Servers | OpenX | |
GO1 | Enterprise Learning Management | GO1 | |
Perl | Programming Languages | Perl | |
Zendesk | Customer Service Management | Zendesk, Inc. | |
The Trade Desk | Advertising Campaign Management | The Trade Desk |
What other companies use OpenX?
Who are the biggest users of Enterprise Learning Management?
What countries, industries, and company sizes are most likely to use Perl?