Pricing gaps
Menu quality validation
MenuList checks for missing prices, empty categories, incomplete details, weak item content, and public-readiness gaps so the owner can fix issues before publishing.
Validation journey
This is a P0 dedicated page because accuracy is central to MenuList: the public version should be easier to keep correct.
Menu check
MenuList can flag missing prices, empty categories, weak content, image gaps, and public-readiness problems before publishing.
Missing or inconsistent prices are easier to notice before the menu goes live.
Items and categories with weak information can be surfaced for review.
Photo or visual gaps can be treated as setup actions, not ignored.
Customer trust
Wrong prices, missing items, incomplete details, and stale-looking menus make customers doubt the business.
Owners can see what would weaken customer confidence.
Validation supports accuracy without changing public truth by itself.
The owner gets a clearer reason to fix before going public.
Guided correction
Each signal should connect to an owner-readable action: add price, fill detail, add image, review item, or approve source.
Signals point to what needs attention instead of dumping warnings.
Corrections can improve the menu state after owner review.
MenuList supports correction, but the owner remains in control.
Public readiness
Freshness, offering type, sections, search, clear actions, and visible details help customers trust that the menu is real and current.
The public menu can show signs that it is current and usable.
Validation happens before customers depend on the menu.
The final public state follows the owner-approved source.
What this combines
Pricing integrity, menu validation, and public trust indicators belong together because customers only trust the current source when the details look complete.
One owner-approved price should be the price customers see across QR, public menu, print files, screens, and staff view.
Customers should see enough evidence that the menu is current, usable, and connected to the business without exposing internal scores.
Accuracy guardrail
The page stays inside MenuList’s trust boundary: surface issues, guide fixes, and keep owner approval final.
Signals point out issues, but the owner controls what changes.
Potential issues can be reviewed before customers rely on the menu.
Better pricing, details, and freshness help the menu feel real and current.
Quality checks strengthen the source instead of creating another dashboard to maintain.
Publish with confidence
Start with your current menu, fix what needs attention, and publish the owner-approved version customers can rely on.