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Attention Restaurant Owners - How to Create
a Menu for Success
This is addressed to the one million
plus restaurant owners in the US. You are in business to make a
profit. Sure, you also want to pass on your great recipes, watch
happy people eating and create a legacy for your children. But, when
all is said and done, you are in business to make money. Doing so is
another issue.
It begins with a plan, including the type of food, location, and
marketplace. Who will eat there and how much will they pay? How will
you attract them? What are your long-term goals? How about a
short-term goal of creating the restaurant and surviving the first
year?
There are so many elements in the process, yet it’s fairly easy to
list them, not necessarily in order:
• The basic business plan
• Arranging the financing
• Securing the property
• Seeking out a contractor
• Creating the cuisine
• Looking for employees
• Obtaining insurance, accounting and legal resources
• Planning the marketing approach
• Setting a timetable
• Designing a menu
The last one is not the least, in order of importance. It might even
be the first. Without a menu, you have no restaurant. Why? Because
it sets the tone for the whole operation.
It lists all the items you have for sale. It shows the public your
pricing structure. It gives other information such as payment types,
catering, banquet facilities, delivery or takeout, and other details
about your business. If it doesn’t, it should. It’s a
mini-advertisement or billboard, that eventually ends up in the
hands of every single customer, therefore it’s terribly important.
So, how much time did you spend on it’s content and design? Probably
not nearly enough, but now you have some food for thought (pardoning
the pun).
Now, a few words about my background. I worked as a sales consultant
for the Yellow Pages for 25 years and encouraged all my restaurant
accounts to place their menus in the directory. The problem was the
need for a full page to accommodate the menu. That proved to be
rather expensive and therefore, not an option, for many family-run
restaurants.
Today, there are several online versions of the directory that allow
this feature. Luckily , there are some more specialized sites only
list restaurant menus, but they also retype them for some reason. I
prefer an online copy of the actual menu, which helps display the
flavor of the restaurant. I think most people prefer to see the real
menu for that reason. One such site even asks for restaurants to
post them on their site for free. Menuelephant.com is my choice for
placing your free menu. It will gain you maximum exposure with a
zero cost investment. You have no excuse not to go there and try it.
Where else can you get free advertising and a purple pachyderm as a
business partner?
Jeffrey Hauser was a sales
consultant for the Bell System Yellow Pages for nearly 25 years. He
graduated from Pratt Institute with a BFA in Advertising and has a
Master's Degree in teaching. He had his own advertising agency in
Scottsdale, Arizona and ran a consulting and design firm, ABC
Advertising. He authored a book about his directory years, "Inside
the Yellow Pages" which can be seen at his website,
http://www.poweradbook.com and he is currently the
Marketing Director for
http://www.thenurseschoice.com a Health Information site
and
http://www.menuelephant.com which posts restaurant menus
on the "site you'll never forget."
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