Pickup should feel faster than delivery, but too many restaurants turn it into a chaotic mini-rush.
Separate promise time from kitchen fantasy
Many pickup problems start with bad promised times. Operators pick an optimistic prep number instead of a realistic range that accounts for current volume, labor, and packaging. The result is a customer who arrives exactly when you told them to and still waits eight minutes at the counter.
Promised time should be a service-level commitment, not a best-case scenario. The direct channel gives you more control over this because you can shape the workflow and messaging instead of inheriting a generic estimate.
Build a real pickup station
Restaurants that win pickup create a physical system for it: labelled shelves, bags grouped by time, a visible check process, and a single team member responsible during peak windows. Pickup cannot be “wherever there is room.” It needs a lane of its own.
When pickup lives inside a reliable station, staff make fewer handoff mistakes and customers stop crowding the host stand or calling the store the moment they park.
- Label bags with customer name and promised time.
- Use one pickup shelf, not several hidden surfaces.
- Send the ready message only when the order is actually handoff-ready.
Communication is part of throughput
A clear pickup-ready SMS or status page is not a nice extra. It is operational throughput. Every unnecessary phone call, doorway check-in, or “is my order ready?” conversation consumes attention during the rush.
Restaurants that simplify communication often discover that the line feels shorter even before prep times improve, because uncertainty is what makes waiting feel slow.
What to do next
- Promise conservative times and beat them.
- Give pickup its own physical workflow.
- Treat status communication as operational infrastructure.