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QR Ordering for Restaurants

QR Ordering for Restaurants: Meaning, Setup & Best Practices | Bill Sarthi

QR Ordering for Restaurants: Meaning, Setup & Best Practices

QR ordering helps customers view a digital menu and place orders faster—reducing staff load, improving speed during rush hours, and making dine-in service more consistent.

QR ordering is a workflow where customers scan a QR code to open a digital menu and place orders, reducing wait time and staff load.
Faster ordering Less staff pressure Better table turnover
Support: support@billsarthi.com • Phone: 9988777409

How does QR ordering work in dine-in?

The goal is simple: customers scan a QR code, view the menu, and place an order quickly—without waiting for staff to bring a menu or take the first order.

QR ordering flow (step-by-step)

1
QR is placed on the table Each table has a QR code card/stand so customers can scan easily.
2
Customer scans and opens menu Digital menu opens on phone. Customer browses items, prices, and notes.
3
Customer places order Customer adds items and confirms the order (flow depends on your setup).
4
Kitchen coordination happens Orders are coordinated in the POS workflow (e.g., KOT + table management).
5
Bill is settled at the end When guests are ready, checkout happens with payment selection and receipt flow.

What problems does QR ordering solve?

QR ordering removes delays from the first step of service: “menu + first order”.

  • Customers waiting for menu or waiter
  • Repeated questions about items and prices
  • Staff overload during peak hours
  • Slow table turnover due to ordering delays
  • Order mistakes caused by rushed communication

If you have dine-in seating, QR ordering often improves speed without increasing staff count.

How to set up QR ordering smoothly

Setup is not just about creating a QR code. The real success comes from menu clarity, table mapping, and a simple customer flow.

1) Keep menu clean

Customers should find items quickly on phone.

  • Clear categories
  • Simple item names
  • Correct prices and add-ons

2) Place QR where it’s visible

If QR isn’t visible, customers won’t use it.

  • Table stand/holder
  • Scan instruction line
  • Keep it clean (no damage)

3) Train staff for support

Some customers still need help.

  • “Scan here to order” script
  • Fallback: staff can take order too
  • Handle elderly/non-tech guests politely

Want a QR ordering setup checklist?

We’ll share a simple checklist for menu structure, QR placement, and staff flow so QR ordering actually gets used.

Best practices to increase QR ordering usage

QR ordering fails when it’s “added” but not “adopted”. These practices help adoption on the floor.

Use a simple 10-second pitch

Staff should encourage usage politely.

  • “Scan to view menu and order quickly.”
  • “You can add items anytime.”
  • “We’ll help if needed.”

Keep the menu updated

Outdated menu kills trust instantly.

  • Update prices quickly
  • Hide unavailable items
  • Clear add-on options

Always provide a fallback

Not all customers prefer QR ordering.

  • Staff can take order normally too
  • Keep service smooth either way
  • Don’t force QR on everyone

FAQs about QR ordering

Quick answers to common QR ordering questions.

What is QR ordering in restaurants? v
QR ordering is a workflow where customers scan a QR code to open a digital menu and place orders, reducing wait time and staff load.
Do customers need an app to order? v
Typically no. Customers scan the QR code and order through their phone browser (setup can vary by restaurant system).
Will QR ordering reduce staff workload? v
It often reduces repeated menu questions and speeds up the first order step, especially during rush hours.
Does QR ordering work for dine-in and cafés? v
Yes—especially for dine-in seating. If your outlet is mostly takeaway, counter billing may already be sufficient.
What are best practices for QR ordering adoption? v
Keep menu clean and updated, place QR visibly, train staff to guide customers, and keep a fallback for guests who prefer normal ordering.