Starter
Essential tools for operations.
- Menu management
- KDS
- QR menu
- Table management
TableMind Marketplace Integrations help restaurants bring orders from external delivery platforms into one connected system. Manage sources, menu availability, and kitchen routing without disconnected tablets.
Wolt, Glovo, Bolt, Uber
Identify channel origins
Automate kitchen queues
Minimize cancellation rates
Clear courier visibility
Compare analytics
Delivery marketplaces can help restaurants reach more customers, but they often create operational friction. Orders arrive in different apps, with different sounds, screens, rules, and reporting.
TableMind Marketplace Integrations are designed to connect those external orders into your internal workflow, so your team can manage them with more control and less switching.
Why operations managers connect external marketplaces into TableMind.
Staff manage multiple delivery tablets, accept orders manually in separate apps, and change item availability by logging into multiple merchant panels.
External marketplace orders enter TableMind directly, carrying clean source labels, routing to KDS/Collection Point, and syncing availability states.
They work together, but handle completely different parts of your operations.
The technical connection layer between TableMind and external marketplace platforms.
Bring marketplace order data into TableMind.
The staff-facing software screen for managing external orders on your counter.
Give staff one place to accept, track, prepare, and hand off orders.
Why delivery app orders must be unified into one operating model.
Every marketplace device adds another alert, screen, and manual task for the team.
Transcribing orders from tablets to another system increases the risk of wrong items, missing modifiers, or delayed preparation.
Restaurants need a way to control unavailable items and menu changes across connected platforms where supported.
Marketplace orders should not remain hidden on a counter tablet while dine-in and direct orders run through the KDS.
The counter team needs to know which external orders are in preparation, ready, waiting, or collected.
Marketplace performance should be compared alongside direct ordering, pickup, takeaway, app, website, and dine-in channels.
Watch how TableMind maps and processes incoming delivery app order data.
Step 1: Receive
An external platform sends a new order into TableMind where integration is supported.
Marketplace support depends on market, provider APIs, approval, platform rules, and TableMind's roadmap.
A complete directory of support actions, routes, and mappings built into the platform.
Receives orders from connected marketplace platforms. Orders enter the restaurant’s internal workflow instead of staying isolated in external apps.
Shows which platform each order came from (Wolt, Glovo, Bolt Food, Uber Eats, Pyszne.pl, or another supported channel) so staff can quickly understand expected handoff processes.
Keeps external marketplace order numbers visible inside TableMind. Courier pickup and customer support depend on platform order numbers.
Receives customer name, contact details, or delivery information where the platform provides it and privacy rules allow it.
Maps marketplace items to TableMind menu items where supported. Correct mapping helps orders route properly to kitchen, reporting, and analytics.
Maps sizes, toppings, extras, options, and special preparation choices. Modifier errors can create wrong orders and guest complaints.
Synchronizes menu items, categories, prices, descriptions, and images where supported. Restaurants should not need to update the same menu repeatedly.
Updates sold-out or unavailable items across connected marketplaces where supported. Guests should not order food the restaurant cannot prepare.
Syncs item prices across connected platforms where supported. Pricing errors can affect margin and customer trust.
Syncs menu images to supported marketplace listings where available. Consistent visuals improve menu presentation across channels.
Allows staff to accept or confirm marketplace orders where supported. Fast acceptance improves marketplace workflow and customer expectations.
Allows staff to reject or flag orders where supported. Restaurants need to handle unavailable items, closing times, or capacity issues.
Tracks cancelled marketplace orders and cancellation reasons where available. Cancellations affect reporting, kitchen preparation, and customer experience.
Updates order statuses between TableMind and marketplace systems where supported. Guests, couriers, and staff need correct status visibility.
Routes marketplace orders to the Kitchen Display System (KDS). Kitchen staff can prepare external orders in the same workflow as direct and dine-in orders.
Sends marketplace orders into the Collection Point screen. Counter staff can manage external orders from one view.
Sends marketplace orders to connected POS systems where supported. Restaurants may need orders reflected in sales, accounting, and reports.
Sends marketplace orders to supported printers where needed. Some kitchens still rely on physical paper tickets for preparation or packing.
Tracks courier pickup or handoff status where platform data allows it. Counter staff need to know what is waiting and what has already been collected.
Lets restaurants manage estimated preparation times where supported. Food quality and courier timing depend on realistic preparation estimates.
Allows restaurants to pause or control marketplace availability where supported. During overload, restaurants may need to slow down incoming external orders.
Maps platform accounts, store IDs, menus, and orders to the correct restaurant location. Multi-location brands need orders routed to the correct branch.
Feeds marketplace activity into analytics dashboards. Owners can compare order volume, revenue, average order value, cancellations, delays, and channel pressure.
Compares marketplace orders with direct ordering, website, app, pickup, takeaway, and dine-in channels.
Flags failed imports, missing item mappings, disconnected integrations, or sync problems. Integration problems need to be visible before they affect service.
Records events such as order received, order accepted, menu synced, status updated, or sync failed to help troubleshoot issues.
Allows restaurants to request new marketplace integrations, keeping integration priorities aligned with real restaurant demand.
See how TableMind solves real-life delivery app issues behind the counter.
Situation: A busy restaurant receives multiple Wolt and Glovo orders during the lunch peak.
Problem: Staff struggle to watch separate tablets, leading to incorrect items and delayed kitchen handoffs.
TableMind Way: TableMind Marketplace Integrations route all orders directly to Collection Point and KDS.
Situation: The restaurant runs out of a popular burger ingredient during dinner service.
Problem: The dish remains available on delivery apps, causing out-of-stock cancellations and customer frustration.
TableMind Way: Staff update menu availability in TableMind, which syncs to supported marketplace platforms.
Situation: A franchise brand runs multiple locations with different marketplace merchant accounts.
Problem: Orders sometimes route to the wrong location, causing food waste and delivery driver confusion.
TableMind Way: TableMind maps provider credentials and store IDs to the correct local kitchen.
Situation: A chef prepares dishes from dine-in QR orders, takeaway pickup, and delivery apps.
Problem: Delivery orders remain on counter tablets, hidden from the main kitchen queue.
TableMind Way: Marketplace orders go directly to KDS alongside direct orders, labeled with their source.
Situation: A restaurant owner wants to assess marketplace performance against higher-margin direct orders.
Problem: Reports are scattered across provider portals and custom spreadsheets.
TableMind Way: All marketplace orders feed the channel reporting dashboard in TableMind.
Situation: A dozen riders arrive at the counter simultaneously looking for parcels.
Problem: Staff waste minutes questioning riders and checking separate tablets to match numbers.
TableMind Way: Ready orders are grouped in Collection Point with source labels and order numbers.
Connecting operations, marketing, finance, and counter staff teams.
Connect external demand with internal operations and analytics.
Reduce tablet clutter, monitor channel performance, and control order flow.
Manage courier handoffs, order status, and preparation timelines clearly.
Receive external orders in the same kitchen workflow as direct and dine-in orders.
Reconcile marketplace order data with POS, payments, and reporting where supported.
Use channel comparison metrics to decide when to promote direct orders or run marketplace campaigns.
Use multi-location mapping and consolidated reporting to manage marketplace activity across branches.
Use integration logs and status indicators to diagnose connectivity or mapping issues.
Bring orders from external delivery platforms into TableMind instead of leaving them on separate screens.
[WOLT] Order #1902 received (3× Pizza)
[TABLEMIND] Normalizing items...
[KDS] Order added to kitchen display
[GLOVO] Order #8294 received (1× Burger)
[TABLEMIND] Normalizing items...
[KDS] Order added to kitchen display
Source labels, order numbers, and platform indicators help staff identify where each order came from.
Marketplace orders can move into KDS, printers, POS, or Collection Point depending on your setup.
Sync items, prices, modifiers, and sold-out status where marketplace integrations support it.
Compare revenue, order volume, average order value, cancellations, and pressure by marketplace.
Integration status, error alerts, and logs help teams detect missing mappings, failed imports, and disconnected providers.
Alert raised for Glovo modifier ID: extra_parmesan_32
Add Marketplace Integrations when external orders become part of your daily operation.
Start with a digital menu.
Select supported platforms.
Prioritized for multiple platforms.
Advanced routing, organization key mapping.
Essential tools for operations.
Growth and online features.
Enterprise automation.
Custom pricing
Answers to architectural, operations, and setup questions about Marketplace connections.
Marketplace Integrations connect external delivery and ordering platforms with TableMind so marketplace orders can enter your restaurant workflow.
The product can be designed for platforms such as Wolt, Glovo, Bolt Food, Uber Eats, Pyszne.pl, Foodora, Takeaway.com, DoorDash, Deliveroo, Just Eat, and local partners, depending on market and integration availability.
No. Availability depends on TableMind’s roadmap, provider access, API permissions, market, and technical feasibility. The website clearly labels integrations as Available, In Progress, Planned, Requested, or Custom.
Yes. Connected marketplace orders can appear in Collection Point so staff can manage them from one screen.
Yes. Marketplace orders can route to KDS where the integration and restaurant workflow support it.
Yes. POS routing can be supported where both the marketplace integration and POS integration allow it.
Menu sync can be supported where the marketplace integration allows item, category, price, modifier, image, and availability updates.
Availability sync can be supported where the marketplace allows it. This helps reduce orders for sold-out items.
Order acceptance can be supported where the marketplace integration allows it.
Platform pause or availability control can be supported where the provider integration allows it.
Yes. Marketplace orders can feed into analytics so owners can compare order volume, revenue, average order value, cancellations, and operational pressure by channel.
Yes. Multi-location mapping can connect marketplace accounts, menus, orders, and reports to the correct branch where supported.
TableMind shows integration status, error alerts, and logs so managers or support teams can detect and investigate issues.
Bring external delivery orders into TableMind, route them to your team, and understand which channels are driving value.