Few days carry as much pressure for restaurants as Mother’s Day. Tickets start rolling in quickly, but what matters more is what’s behind each order, because people are celebrating, and even small issues can leave a lasting impression. Orders on Mother’s Day behave differently from a typical rush because many are tied to group decisions, even when individuals are placing their own orders. If that experience feels unclear or takes too long, they’ll leave instead of spending time figuring it out. No one wants to be tied to a bad experience on a day like that, which makes ordering in the first place extremely important. If the menu slows things down, customers will simply move on. Group Ordering Changes How Menus Should Work Most menus still assume one person ordering for one meal, but Mother’s Day orders often fall into two buckets at the same time. Some customers plan ahead and place larger, bundled orders for pickup, like family meals or holiday packages, while others order closer to mealtime by building a cart on the fly for a group at home. Both show up through online ordering, and both put pressure on the same operation. A common mistake is treating Mother’s Day like a single-day event. In reality, a meaningful portion of demand forms earlier in the weeks and month leading up to the special day. A customer trying to feed six or eight people doesn’t want to scroll through dozens of individual items and build a cart from scratch.…