Running a restaurant means juggling a hundred things at once. But if you're not hearing from your customers regularly, you're missing the most important signal of all.
Here are five ways to collect feedback that actually work — without slowing down service or annoying your guests.
1. QR codes on every table
This is the simplest and most effective method. Print a QR code, put it on a table tent or stick it to the menu, and let customers scan when they're ready.
Customers can give feedback while the experience is fresh — not three days later when they're writing a Yelp review. No app download required. They scan, they type, they're done.
Place the QR code near where customers naturally wait: by the check, near the entrance, or at the bar.
2. Post-visit text or email
If you collect phone numbers or emails through reservations or loyalty programs, send a short follow-up within an hour of their visit.
The experience is still fresh, and a personal touch shows you care. Keep it to one question: "How was your visit today?"
One message is thoughtful. Three is spam.
3. Train staff to ask the right way
"How was everything?" is the most useless question in hospitality. Train your team to ask specific, open-ended questions instead:
- "Was there anything we could have done differently tonight?"
- "How was the timing between courses?"
- "Did you try our new seasonal menu?"
Specific questions get specific answers. "Everything was fine" tells you nothing. "The appetizers came out too fast" tells you exactly what to fix.
4. Comment cards (with a twist)
Comment cards aren't dead — they just need an upgrade. Instead of a generic "rate your experience" card, try a single focused question that changes weekly, a space for the customer's name so you can follow up, and a QR code that links to a digital form for customers who prefer typing.
A focused question gets better responses than a blank box that says "comments."
5. Watch the nonverbal feedback
Not all feedback comes in words. Train your team to notice:
- Plates coming back full — food issue
- Customers looking around for their server — service gap
- Tables leaving faster than usual — something's off
- Customers taking photos — something's going right
The best restaurants don't just listen, they observe. What customers say and what they do together give you the full picture.
The bottom line
The best feedback system is the one your customers will actually use. For most restaurants, that means making it as easy as scanning a QR code — no app, no account, no friction.
Whatever method you choose, act on what you hear. Feedback without action is just noise.