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Top Four Restaurant Marketing Tips
Successful restaurant marketing is a mix of art and science. As an
industry, the restaurant business showcases a wide diversity of
experience and inexperience. Some proprietors grow up in the family
business and understand their restaurant as a work of the heart.
Others come into the restaurant business out of a love or passion
for fine food or wine.
Most importantly, what this diversity demonstrates is that there is
no single perfect strategy for effectively marketing your
restaurant. Instead, it takes careful deliberation and constant
refinement.
This is by no means an exhaustive list; instead, I would like to
highlight the top four areas that our restaurant marketing program
focuses on in order to grow your business:
New Clients
Returning Clients
Check Size
Staff
Let’s look at each of these to understand how to approach your
restaurant marketing strategy:
New or first-time clients are guests who have never visited your
restaurant before. These guests are by far the most expensive
clients you will acquire, as you have to cut through the advertising
clutter to gain some element of interest or desire in order to get
them to visit you. Nevertheless, new customers are the foundation
for a successful restaurant, and any marketing strategy must include
at least a small emphasis on generating new visits.
How to get new clients?
In order to generate new clients, it’s important to combine
strategic promotions with compelling advertisements and appealing
restaurant. First off, and perhaps most obvious, is to ensure that
people walking past your restaurant see a clean, bright, inviting
location. But how to get people who aren’t walking by to stop in?
Forget about big, brash, expensive advertising in television or
radio. When you get right down to it, great restaurant marketing is
all about the offer!
I am a strong proponent of advertising in local papers; usually
local papers have a loyal readership and are fairly inexpensive to
advertise in. As a small restaurant owner, this is exactly what
you’re looking for.
So what should your offer be? Something free. It doesn’t have to be
expensive, but offering a free appetizer, dessert, or beverage goes
a very long way to getting people interested in visiting your
restaurant for the first time. Once they are there, and have enjoyed
your menu, the atmosphere and the outstanding service, you’re on you
way to creating customers for life.
Also, keep in mind that it doesn’t matter how good your offer is,
you’re going to need to repeat it several times before your see any
real traction. Throughout your advertising, it’s important to track
all of your results: monitor which days people come in, which day of
the week is the best for putting out an advertisement, and track
which offers generate the greatest response. Over six months, you
will have a great deal of experience that will help you advertise
your restaurant effectively for years to come.
The second area to focus on is returning customers. There is no
sure-fire way of guaranteeing a satisfied customer will return, but
there are several things you can do to increase the likelihood they
will come back.
The most powerful thing you can do is make sure the experience is
memorable. A memorable dining experience is something guests will
share with family and friends, ensuring a constant stream of new and
returning clients.
So, how do you create that "memorable" dining experience? Three
things will help: provide outstanding customer service, provide a
well-rounded and unique menu, and ensure your restaurant is clean
and appealing. Make it a no-brainer for customers to come back by
offering loyalty rewards, or even more simply, by personally
thanking them and inviting them come back as they leave.
As mentioned, it is much easier to get an existing customer to
return than to get entirely new customers. There are two reasons for
this: they have already demonstrated a propensity to purchase your
type of food, and you have their attention when they are sitting in
your restaurant. Existing customers are your most valuable resource
and should be treated with the highest regard.
So, now that your getting customers in the door, what next? The next
step is to increase average check size. A good way to look at check
size is to average it out by person at a table. Once you know how
much your average per-person check size is, it can be a relatively
easy process to increase your restaurant’s sales by targeting very
specific increases to how much each individual sells. For example, a
very powerful technique is "up-selling" or offering menu suggestions
or add-ons. If a guest orders a burger, ask if they would like
guacamole; if they simply want water to drink, ask if they’d like
bottled or spring water. Small, incremental sales such as these can
add 10 to 15 percent to a bill, which will have a noticeable impact
on your bottom line.
Finally, one area that ties all the others together is staff. Your
staff is the face of your restaurant; they can be the reason a first
visit is memorable, the reason why customers come back time after
time, and the way to increase overall restaurant sales. So the
lesson is, take the time to select great staff who will be
passionate about your business. And make them partners to your
success: train them effectively, listen to their suggestions, and
monitor their sales results on a regular basis.
All things considered, there is a great deal of variability in what
is successful restaurant marketing. Typical restaurant marketing
budgets should consist of 5% to 7% of your sales, and should be
directed at the most cost-effective mediums. And if there’s one
thing I will emphasize over and over it is this: test, test, test.
No advertising campaign is perfect from the start, so monitor
results as you get your message out.
Finally, don’t get caught following the crowd. Just because you see
big national chains spending large amounts of money advertising
doesn’t mean you should. Mass media advertising often provides a
dismal return. Instead, focus on community-level advertising,
increasing the frequency of visits, and increasing average check
size. Remember these core elements and over a period of time you
will inevitably see your overall sales results increase.
There is no single perfect strategy for effectively marketing your
restaurant. Instead, it takes careful deliberation and constant
refinement.
Michael Lee-Smith has been
creating effective restaurant marketing programs for over a decade.
Learn more about how you can succeed at restaurant marketing at our
website
http://www.myrestaurantcoach.com.
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