Quick answer
Plan printable QR menu placement for happy-hour tables, bar rails, host stand, or lounge seating, avoid setting-specific scan mistakes, and review analytics after launch.
QR menu print guide for QR menu table tent card for happy hour at a hotel dining
Owner wants a QR menu print guide for a hotel dining using a QR menu table tent card in happy hour. A printable QR menu should fit the physical setting, not just place a code on paper. For hotel dining operation teams, the useful outcome is a stable QR destination that remains printed while menu items, prices, photos, hours, and availability change behind it. Built from FlipMenu support for hosted menus, multilingual menu paths, QR codes, and menu analytics.
Placement and guest action
Use a sturdy folded card with a matte face so the code stays upright and readable through repeated service. The design goal is to make happy hour scanning obvious for a hotel dining while preserving one live menu destination. The placement context is happy-hour tables, bar rails, host stand, or lounge seating, and the guest action is to scan during the offer window to confirm food, drinks, timing, and availability. Place the asset where guests decide whether to order another round or ask about time-sensitive specials. The print asset should support the guest's decision path instead of becoming background decoration.
How to prepare the QR menu table tent card
Publish the live QR menu first
Create the menu destination before printing so the QR menu table tent card points guests to a current hotel dining menu.
Match the material to the setting
Use a sturdy folded card with a matte face so the code stays upright and readable through repeated service. Do not hide the QR code on a back panel that only one seat can see.
Place the print asset where the decision happens
Place the asset where guests decide whether to order another round or ask about time-sensitive specials.
Size and test the QR code
Keep the QR code large enough for a seated guest to scan without leaning across plates, glassware, or condiments. Scan before the offer window starts and after it ends to confirm the live menu does not confuse timing.
Review scans after service
Compare happy-hour scans with views of drink, snack, and specials sections during the offer window.
QR menu table tent card happy hour review checklist
QR menu table tent card print, QR, placement, scan, review, and analytics plan
| Area | Print detail | QR setup | Placement review | Guest scan outcome | Analytics signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Print asset | QR menu table tent card | folded table tent card | Review material condition | Guest scans the QR menu | Track print placement scans |
| Setting | happy hour | happy-hour tables, bar rails, host stand, or lounge seating | Review the exact placement | scan during the offer window to confirm food, drinks, timing, and availability | Compare scans by setting |
| QR size | Scannable code | Keep the QR code large enough for a seated guest to scan without leaning across plates, glassware, or condiments. | Check distance and quiet space | Guest opens live menu | Watch scan success signals |
| Material | Printed surface | Use a sturdy folded card with a matte face so the code stays upright and readable through repeated service. | Review glare, damage, and movement | Guest scans without staff help | Compare scans before and after material changes |
| Placement | happy-hour tables, bar rails, host stand, or lounge seating | Place the asset where guests decide whether to order another round or ask about time-sensitive specials. | Review visibility from the guest path | scan during the offer window to confirm food, drinks, timing, and availability | Compare scans by placement |
| Scan copy | Menu promise | Use table-level copy such as Scan the live menu, then add one short promise about current items or specials. For happy hour, the call to action should make time-sensitive specials clear before staff repeat the same availability answer. | Review wording | Guest knows what opens | Watch menu views after scan |
| Mistake to avoid | Print review | Do not hide the QR code on a back panel that only one seat can see. | Review before service | Guest does not need staff correction | Watch dropoff after scan |
| Testing | Pre-service review | Scan before the offer window starts and after it ends to confirm the live menu does not confuse timing. | Review phone scan path | Guest reaches the right menu | Watch dropoff after scan |
| Replacement | Material refresh | Update live specials and hours behind the same QR code rather than printing new cards for every offer change. | Review stale materials | Guest still sees current menu | Track changes after refresh |
| Analytics | Post-launch review | Compare happy-hour scans with views of drink, snack, and specials sections during the offer window. | Review scans and menu views | Guest engagement improves | Use analytics to adjust placement |
Material, size, copy, and mistakes
Use a sturdy folded card with a matte face so the code stays upright and readable through repeated service. Keep the QR code large enough for a seated guest to scan without leaning across plates, glassware, or condiments. Use a sturdy folded card with a matte face so the code stays upright and readable through repeated service. Test contrast in the actual happy-hour tables, bar rails, host stand, or lounge seating before service so glare, shadows, or motion do not hide the code. Do not hide the QR code on a back panel that only one seat can see. Use table-level copy such as Scan the live menu, then add one short promise about current items or specials. For happy hour, the call to action should make time-sensitive specials clear before staff repeat the same availability answer. In happy hour, the print asset has to survive the real service environment and still make the scan action feel obvious. A strong page pairs the visible QR code with a live menu destination, so staff can update items without changing printed materials every time the hotel dining menu changes.
Print the entry point, keep the menu live
The QR menu table tent card should point to a live QR menu, not a fixed file that becomes outdated. Keep the printed code stable, then update menu items, prices, photos, hours, and availability behind the same destination.
Useful FlipMenu features for QR menu print placement
Testing, replacement, and analytics
Scan before the offer window starts and after it ends to confirm the live menu does not confuse timing. Update live specials and hours behind the same QR code rather than printing new cards for every offer change. Compare happy-hour scans with views of drink, snack, and specials sections during the offer window. This guide covers QR menu print placement and review workflow; it does not provide print-vendor services or compliance certification. This page focuses on physical QR menu placement for a specific restaurant setting, not general QR menu setup, ordering, delivery, or scan prompt copy alone. For this hotel dining, the use case is to help hotel guests find dining hours, room-service details, outlet menus, and current availability from printed QR placements.