Beating Rush-Hour Queues: Cashier Workflow Strategies
Long queues aren't always a staffing problem — they're often a workflow problem. Here are approaches that can help.
The Problem Usually Isn't Headcount
You can have two cashiers but if the workflow is chaotic — fighting over the printer, confused about whose order is whose — things stay slow. What usually needs fixing isn't the people, it's the process.
Separate Order Types from the Start
Dine-in needs a table number. Take-away needs a customer name. If your cashier has to think about which flow they're in mid-queue, that's time wasted on every transaction. A picker at the start makes it clear from second one.
Held Orders for Unfinished Transactions
Customer still deciding? Don't block the line. Create a draft, hold it, move to the next customer. The draft can be resumed anytime — even from a different device if you're running multi-cashier.
Batch Kitchen Sends
Send orders to the kitchen as a batch, not one by one. Each batch gets a letter (A, B, C) so the kitchen knows the sequence. This also reduces ticket count — one per batch instead of per item.
Separate Shifts for Multi-Cashier
Each cashier opens their own shift with their own cash balance. At shift end, reconciliation is per cashier. This eliminates the "whose money is short?" confusion that comes with sharing a drawer.