Quick answer
Use this menu import guide to turn a website menu page into a reviewed QR menu for event menus. It covers accepted input, preparation, extraction risk, cleanup focus, field mapping, category strategy, pricing review, allergen review, translation review, quality check, publishing, QR distribution, and analytics.
Import path for event menus
Website Menu Page to QR Menu Import Guide for Catering and Event is for catering and event teams that already have a menu source and want a cleaner live QR menu without rebuilding every item manually. The source format is Website Menu Page. The accepted input is: Copy the visible menu text from the restaurant website, or save the page content into a supported text workflow.
This guide is different from the interactive tool pages. The tool pages help with upload or parsing. This page is the workflow around that step: preparation before import, cleanup after extraction, review before publishing, and QR distribution after the menu is approved. The preparation step is: Copy the current public menu, not hidden HTML, staff notes, or old promotional blocks.
The main extraction risk is: Website pages can mix menus with gallery captions, event copy, old specials, and location-specific sections. That risk matters for event menus because owners often need serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing to be correct before guests scan the QR code. The cleanup focus is: Separate real menu sections from marketing copy, confirm current items, and remove old events. The field mapping is: Map website headings to menu categories, item blocks to menu items, and useful descriptions to item descriptions.
Use this workflow as a practical owner checklist. FlipMenu supports PDF upload, image upload, CSV or TSV upload, and pasted text as starting points. For sources such as design exports, profile menus, website menus, or paper menus, prepare the source as a supported file or text first, then review the imported menu before publishing.
Website Menu Page import review table
| Source area | Import step | Cleanup note | Review point | QR menu outcome | Analytics signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source file | Copy the visible menu text from the restaurant website, or save the page content into a supported text workflow. | Copy the current public menu, not hidden HTML, staff notes, or old promotional blocks. | Confirm the source is current before import | Start the QR menu from the cleanest available input | After launch, compare scans, menu views, and item views to see whether serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing are clear enough for guests. |
| Section structure | Import section headings as menu categories | Website pages can mix menus with gallery captions, event copy, old specials, and location-specific sections. | Review merged or missing headings | Guests see clear categories on mobile | Watch category and item views after launch |
| Item names | Import each visible dish or drink as an item | Separate real menu sections from marketing copy, confirm current items, and remove old events. | Compare names against the current menu | Guests can scan accurate item cards | Look for repeated detail views on unclear items |
| Descriptions | Keep useful guest-facing copy only | Map website headings to menu categories, item blocks to menu items, and useful descriptions to item descriptions. | Remove staff-only or design-only notes | The QR menu stays readable | Review engagement before adding longer copy |
| Prices | Extract prices into item price fields | Separate real menu sections from marketing copy, confirm current items, and remove old events. | Check serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing where prices, portions, or add-ons can be misread during import. | Guests see current prices without a reprint | Watch price-sensitive item views |
| Dietary notes | Move dietary and allergen notes into reviewed public copy | Have the owner review allergens, dietary notes, and cross-contact language before publishing event menus. | Owner checks ingredients and cross-contact wording | Guests see cautious menu notes | Track views on dietary-heavy items |
| Translation | Review names and descriptions before adding languages | Review imported names and descriptions before translating event menus, especially local dish names and option labels. | Check local vocabulary and product truth | Tourists get clearer menu context | Monitor language-specific page engagement |
| QR launch | Publish only after section order, item names, prices, descriptions, photos, and availability have been reviewed. | Use the QR code after the catering and event menu has been reviewed; keep printed materials pointing to the live menu URL. | Open the imported menu on mobile and compare it with the original website menu page before sharing the QR code. | The same QR code can stay printed while the menu changes | After launch, compare scans, menu views, and item views to see whether serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing are clear enough for guests. |
Cleanup and review before publishing
The category strategy is: Keep event menus categories aligned with how guests scan the live QR menu, not with old print layout constraints. Old menus often reflect print constraints. A QR menu should reflect how guests actually scan on a phone: clear sections, short item cards, visible prices, useful photos, and notes that help the guest decide without asking staff for every detail.
Pricing review matters because import can misread columns, currency symbols, handwritten updates, or package ranges. Check serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing where prices, portions, or add-ons can be misread during import. Allergen review also needs care. Have the owner review allergens, dietary notes, and cross-contact language before publishing event menus. Use cautious wording and have the restaurant confirm ingredient and cross-contact notes.
Translation review should happen after the English or source-language menu is cleaned up. Review imported names and descriptions before translating event menus, especially local dish names and option labels. If the source menu is messy, translating it only spreads the mess into more languages. Clean the item names, categories, and descriptions first, then add translations where they help guests.
The quality check is: Open the imported menu on mobile and compare it with the original website menu page before sharing the QR code. The publish step is: Publish only after section order, item names, prices, descriptions, photos, and availability have been reviewed. Once the menu is live, the QR distribution step is: Use the QR code after the catering and event menu has been reviewed; keep printed materials pointing to the live menu URL. The analytics signal to watch is: After launch, compare scans, menu views, and item views to see whether serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing are clear enough for guests.
Website Menu Page import checklist
Convert website menu page to a QR menu
Prepare the source
Copy the current public menu, not hidden HTML, staff notes, or old promotional blocks.
Import through a supported path
Copy the visible menu text from the restaurant website, or save the page content into a supported text workflow.
Clean up structure and fields
Separate real menu sections from marketing copy, confirm current items, and remove old events. Map website headings to menu categories, item blocks to menu items, and useful descriptions to item descriptions.
Review sensitive details
Check serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing where prices, portions, or add-ons can be misread during import. Have the owner review allergens, dietary notes, and cross-contact language before publishing event menus. Review imported names and descriptions before translating event menus, especially local dish names and option labels.
Publish and monitor
Publish only after section order, item names, prices, descriptions, photos, and availability have been reviewed. After launch, compare scans, menu views, and item views to see whether serving counts, package contents, dietary notes, and approval timing are clear enough for guests.
Review before guests scan
Import saves setup time, but website menu page extraction can still need human review. Website pages can mix menus with gallery captions, event copy, old specials, and location-specific sections. Have the restaurant approve prices, allergens, descriptions, and availability before printing or sharing the QR code.
Import, publish, and improve the menu
Related import paths
Import during signup
Use the closest supported path for this source before reviewing and publishing the menu.
Free QR menu
Create a live menu link and QR code after the imported menu is reviewed.
Catering Event menu examples
Compare imported structure against practical menu examples for this restaurant context.