Want A Simple To Follow System To Improve Your Catering Sales?
February 24, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Catering, Catering Tools, Restaurant Marketing
In a previous post I talked about a simple system to build your Restaurant Sales. My restaurants and catering companies are rigorous when it comes to following an exacting system that we created to maximize our sales.
Today I want to share with you our Everyday Catering Sales Building System and I encourage you to S&D it (Swipe and Deploy it). This too is not pretty and may even come across as hieroglyphics for some of you. Others that have heard me speak will appreciate the cut to the chase approach.
- Take Orders Well
- Deliver Flawlessly (driver check outs are critical)
- Street Market After Delivery (this is critical)
- Driver Completes Daily Duties Upon Return
- Call Back Every Client/Order (ask the right questions)
- Have A System of Ongoing Marketing and Communication (also critical)
Stay on top of, Stay in front of and know your clients!
Read The Whole Article>> For my members I have spelled out the whole system in an easy to follow format I normally don’t restrict much but the complete article is for “Inner Circle Members and above”
Members login to view this content.(Not a member? Join today!)
[Content protected for Inner Circle members only][Content protected for Top Tier Coaching members only][Content protected for Super Performers members only]
Communicate Promotions and Specials “What’s New”, speak from the heart – This is what we cover in our Restaurant Marketing Planner
Repeat it all again – just like shampoo
Our Goal Is Every new Customer is in Our Club so they become Guests/Clients for Life
Our Club does the majority of the heavy lifting
Automation – Removing the Human Element has been the key to consistent sales growth
Click here to obtain details on our loyalty program
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Introduction to the process of Guest-Centered Marketing
February 24, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Low Cost No Cost Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Marketing
Introduction to the process of Guest-Centered Marketing
For those of you in the catering business you will find I refer to those guests as clients. In any regard a customer implies a one time transaction where guest or client implies a long term relationship. This is a very big point and being Guest or Client centered is very important. We want a sale to gain a guest (or client) which we keep for life. Most businesses are on their head, they look at a customer for a sale. A slight difference in how you look at things really can change everything.
I’m constantly amazed at how many clients and people in my audiences think that marketing is an event. They’re looking for the one thing that they can do that will produce instant, profitable business.
It doesn’t happen that way. The reason is that people don’t work like that.
People don’t just wake up in the morning and decide to find you and buy from you. They generally don’t buy because they see a single, stunning ad or get a single, persuasive letter. No, when they show up at your door or website, it’s the result of a process.
They have to know you. People won’t buy from you unless they’ve heard of you and know something about you.
They have to like you. People must be comfortable enough with you and the way you do business to take a very big step: buying from you for the first time.
They have to trust you. If you have a choice, you won’t keep doing business with a company you don’t trust. Neither will those first-time customers that you want to become lifetime customers.
For years, I’ve read everything I can get my hands on about marketing. I’ve gone to seminars and conferences. I’ve talked with colleagues, worked with clients, and absorbed the thinking of people like Brian Tracy, Dan Kennedy, Michael Masterson, Michael Gerber, Jim Collins, and many more.
Guest-Centered Marketing starts with people and their needs and wants. Guest-Centered Marketing is the process of developing mutually beneficial relationship with customers that extends over time.
I divide the process into three stages because your relationship with the customer is different for each one. In the beginning, you don’t really have a relationship. Then the customer takes the leap of faith to buy from you for the first time. They are now a guest. From then on, every contact with “Your Guest” puts a stick on that pile of your relationship, or takes one away.
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10 strategies that are working in the tough restaurant economy
February 23, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Low Cost No Cost Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Marketing, restaurant cost control
Waiter, Bring Me a Fresh Idea
10 strategies that are working in the tough restaurant economy
By Jason Daley | Entrepreneur Magazine – March 2010
I saw this and wanted to share with everyone ~ Jonathan
___________________________________________
It was about 20 years ago that the casual dining boom got started in the United States. It was a golden, batter-dipped age: We were lured in by the novelty of mozzarella sticks and artichoke dip, marveled at the cluttered walls and uniform flair and gulped down two-liter mango margaritas like every night was Friday.
But the bloom is off the bloomin’ onion when it comes to casual dining. The recession has customers trading down to fast food and the growing “fast-casual” segment of takeout specialists (think Chipotle, Noodles or Panera). Over the last couple decades, while drive-thru burger joints have kept their prices flat, the typical bill at casual dining chains has multiplied three or four times. And the quality of the food has remained pretty much the same while fast food has become better and more diverse. Add to that grumbles about predictable, high-fat menus and stale décor and it’s understandable why in 2009 the category was down 5 percent to 8 percent with a 3 percent to 5 percent drop forecast for 2010.
But some chains are figuring out ways to keep customers coming through their doors. Red Lobster, for one, has designed a quick-turnaround lunch service designed to draw the time-strapped crowd, and its new wood-fired entrees are appealing to the health-conscious. Ruby Tuesday redesigned its menu, retrained staff, modernized its décor–and brought in almost 2 percent more customers in late 2009 than in late 2008.
There are plenty of steps to take in a down market, and it’s important to remember that even individual franchisees are not powerless. We spoke with some of the leading thinkers in the casual dining field to find out what you can do to put a little flair back into your business.
- Think locally
Casual dining chains are some of the most aggressive national advertisers out there. (Remember the “I want my baby back” jingle?) The problem is, plenty of franchisees think that’s enough, especially after a splashy grand opening with big media buys. “Local franchisees are advised to put 1 to 5 percent of their money into local advertising by their franchisors, but they think the national TV commercials are enough to drive customers,” says James Sinclair of OnSite Consulting, a Los Angeles firm that helps rescue flailing restaurants. “We often suggest local marketing like sponsoring soccer teams, participating in fundraisers, things like that. There’s no better advertising than getting buzz in the community.” Casual dining mom-and-pops haven’t been hurt as much by the recession, mainly because people feel a strong connection to the businesses. Becoming a local leader and integral part of the community, versus a faceless chain, can go a long way to developing customer loyalty. - Speed up lunch
Lunch is when the fast-food joints and casual restaurants go head to head–and where casual dining loses out. “Business users want to get in and out quickly, and most don’t have a full hour for lunch,” says Darren Tristano, executive vice president of Technomic, a Chicago-based food-industry consulting and research firm. Shaving 10 to 15 minutes off a visit can mean the difference between drawing a lunch crowd or sitting idle for the afternoon. Cracker Barrel and Chili’s have invested in system-wide redesigns of their kitchens and service procedures to help cut big chunks off their service time, but franchisees can help keep things moving by investing in more lunchtime staff, making sure servers are trained and efficient and streamlining the lunch menu to keep the kitchen on track. Tristano also suggests keeping prices competitive. Having lunch entrees in the $5-to-$8 range makes it less likely that budget customers will shift to the burger shack if times get tougher. - Push the bottle
Booze is always a high-margin item for casual restaurants, but more importantly it’s a gateway to gaining customers for dinner. According to Technomic’s research, only 14 percent of customers find occasion to drink in the afternoon, which is why national chains have started placing a new emphasis on earlier happy hours. Ruby Tuesday recently revamped its bar lineup, retrained its bartenders and introduced $5 signature premium drinks. T.G.I. Friday’s offered free appetizers at the bar last year in an attempt to draw people in during the dead afternoon hours. Starting drink specials at 2 or 3 p.m. is a great way to attract shift workers, business people scheduling casual meetings or retirees looking for afternoon deals. “You have to remember,” says Jeff Davis, president of Sandelman & Associates, a food-service research firm in Irving, Texas, “when times are tough alcohol is the one thing people don’t cut back on.” - Push the plate
Besides offering an extended happy hour on booze, create a happy hour on menu items, suggests Tristano, who points out that Steak ‘n Shake’s afternoon half-price milkshake promotion can easily lead to an order of burger and fries, and Braxton Seafood Grill’s happy hour, when it sells lobsters at cost, often gets orders for a few beers and all the fixings. One innovative strategy to woo the late-afternoon crowd is offering items at ascending prices–$3 appetizers at 3 p.m., $4 at 4 p.m. and so on. “The only way to maximize opportunities is to trade up,” Davis says. “The main goal when you get someone through the door is to trade up.” - Focus on the quality
“If you’re at a Mexican restaurant, people are going to notice if you’re scraping broken tortilla chips from the bottom of the barrel and not filling their glasses to the top,” Tristano says. Many chains also make the mistake of charging for soft drink refills or reducing the number of servers to save money. This sends a clear message to the customer that you’re struggling. If it is necessary to reduce costs, he suggests making cuts across the board instead of pulling savings in the areas of servers and food costs. Instead of switching from a good cheddar to a block of “cheese product,” try to renegotiate prices with vendors. “Be careful to negotiate pricing and to take cost savings out of other areas,” he says, “not from areas where customers will feel it most.” - Don’t chase Subway
One of the big temptations in casual dining is to simply slash prices until hordes of $5 deal-seekers start filling the tables. But Sinclair says that’s exactly the wrong tactic. “All that does is draw in deal hunters, and when the promotion is over, they won’t return,” he says. “You can’t focus on the short term. You have to be focused on what is going to make the customer return. If you’re going to discount, rebuild the menu so the price of the dish doesn’t lose you money.” The same thing goes for cutting portions. For the most part, consumers see smaller portions as a loss of value–and the savings to the restaurant are small. In the end, Sinclair says, “you’re not saving money per dish, you’re losing customer satisfaction.” Some portion-cutting campaigns have been successful: T.G.I. Friday’s Right Portion, Right Price campaign hit a sweet spot and The Cheesecake Factory scored when it brought its lunch portions down to human scale. But the strategy was about “right-sizing” ridiculous portions. “Some places serve way too much,” Davis says. “Why pay $15 for a salad that I can only eat a third of?” - Give them something special
It might seem obvious: People go to a specific restaurant to get food they can’t get anywhere else. But that idea has become murky in casual dining, where fried appetizers and flatiron steaks have all melded into culinary clichés. Tristano says there are two ways to give your menu an edge: Offer items that are a healthful alternative for those looking to adopt a “better-for-you lifestyle” or dishes that most diners can’t cook at home. “Quality Mexican entrees are difficult for people to make at home, or Asian appetizers like pot stickers. For crème brûlée you need to have that little flamethrower,” he says. “People are drawn to items that require culinary expertise or ingredients that are difficult to purchase.” - Reward loyalty
The best way to earn loyalty–and repeat visits–is to provide quality food and service. But Americans are suckers for deals, and loyalty programs are one of the things that keep diners coming back to their favorite booth. Sinclair suggests implementing programs that don’t necessarily hand out freebies but still provide something meaningful to diners. Rewards can include priority seating, discounts or rebates on gift cards or–one of Sinclair’s favorites–the chance to sign up and win prize money. “The idea,” he says, “is to get customers involved in the brand and get them to feel a natural partnership with you.” - Get it out the door
Fast-casual establishments are striking a chord with Americans–the food is better than a drive-thru burger joint, but it doesn’t require an hour of time and a 20-percent tip. Full-service casual restaurants, however, can easily mimic fast casual. System-wide, Denny’s and IHOP are experimenting with fast-casual annexes attached to their restaurants, and Buffalo Wild Wings, which has dedicated takeout ordering stations, is successfully bridging the fast- and full-service divide. Tristano says providing alternatives to sit-down dining–whether call-ahead, drive-thrus or catering–is a great way to create new revenue streams. “The more you drive off-premises growth, the greater opportunity you’ll have to weather the economic storm,” he says. “You have to understand what the customer wants and adapt to this environment and this economy.” - Take time to train
In the constant rush of the restaurant business, sometimes it’s hard to stop and take a good hard look at the big picture. “We don’t always have time to train employees or go through a full menu evaluation,” Davis says. “Maybe, with the recession, we have that time now.” Don’t be scared off by the extra investment involved in training–when restaurants are fighting tooth and nail to earn repeat customers, exceptional service is a huge factor in their deciding where to go, and good training often leads to less staff turnover. “It will cost money,” he says, “but in the longer term, people who continue to invest in their businesses will succeed. Excellence always wins, top to bottom.”
Jason Daley is a freelance writer based in Madison, Wis.
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Social Media Marketing for Restaurants Webinar
This is a “Don’t Miss” event. This Thursday, February 25th at 4pm
How To Successfully Use Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, And Other Online Social Media For Practical, Profitable Purposes
You can listen in and and ask your most burning questions about Social
Media Marketing for your restaurant or catering company. We will
holding a live Q&A session at the end, so don’t miss out!
Here are some details on Cynthia and the information we are going to cover:
Guest Expert~Cynthia Richards
Cynthia recently presented at the Restaurant & Catering Super Conference and was a smash hit, I could not resist the opportunity to share her insight with all of you!
Cynthia is one of those few who really know – from actual
experience -how to make all this free media pay. It is mandatory that you discover how to effectively leverage this new form of word-of-mouth marketing..
Cynthia is going to show you exactly how to take advantage of all the low cost and even NO-cost ways of reaching out to new customers, more frequently communicating with present customers, and getting prospects and customers involved in dialogue and interaction rather than just static, “push” selling by you.
If you are serious about succeeding, about high income, about longevity in the restaurant industry,
this expert interview with Cynthia is NOT A LUXURY; IT IS NECESSITY!
*********************************
Call Details:
Thursday, February 25th 4pm EST
********************************
Only 50 Spots Available – They will be gone quick!
Don’t Procrastinate- Sign up now!
Talk to you then!
Jonathan Munsell
Founder & Creator
Restaurant Success System
Restaurant Success Monthly
Restaurant Marketing Planner
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Want A Simple To Follow System To Improve Your Restaurant Sales?
February 16, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Featured, Low Cost No Cost Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Success Secrets, Systems & Operations
Want A Simple To Follow System To Improve Your Restaurant Sales?
Every Year I right Goals and Objectives with my team and managers. Recently we were looking at our successes (Up 41% Year To Date). One big thing jumped out at us. It was the fact that we were religiously following an exacting system that we created to maximize our sales.
I want to share with you our Restaurant Sales Building System and I encourage you to S&D it (Swipe and Deploy it). It is not pretty and may even come across as hieroglyphics for some of you. Others that have heard me speak will appreciate the cut to the chase approach. I am going to talk through the entire system in detail on my next Super Performers Call open to my members. But for those of you that want to have a peek I encourage you to take a look..
Our Philosophy is “A Sale To Get A Guest for Life” not a customer to get a sale
Person walks into “My Restaurant” for the first time
We WOW them, communicate to them what we are about
We serve them a product and experience far superior to that of any and ALL competitors
We get them to enrolled in our club
The club keeps them engaged
- Welcome Card – Free Fries & Drink
- Weekly Emails
- Standard Overview Email 1st &15th
- Specific Emails in between
Communicate Promotions and Specials “What’s New”, speak from the heart – This is what we cover in our Restaurant Marketing Planner
- Birthday mailer
- ½ Birthday mailer
- Anniversary mailer
- Reward Certificates
Quarterly Manual Mailers to our list “Small Post Cards”
Quarterly Lost Customer Campaign
What we do to get them in the door for that first time
- Signage outside
- Street Signage on Weekends
- New Mover Mailers (also covered by our automated loyalty program)
- Cold Mailers (also covered by our automated loyalty program)
- Monthly Newsletters (also covered by our automated loyalty program)
- Quarterly Money Mailer, newspaper or Advo
- JV Deals (Apartment, Businesses, etc)
- Hotel Advertising
Our Goal Is Every new Customer is in Our Club so they become Guests for Life
Our Club does the majority of the heavy lifting
Automation – Removing the Human Element has been the key to consistent sales growth Click here to obtain details on our loyalty program
We must spend the business hours working to constantly and consistently improve our sales
~Engage Guests, Apartment Complexes, Local JV opportunities, Churches
That’s it in a nut shell. Restaurant Success System has all the components mentioned above and much much more. We can get you up to speed very quickly and demystify what it means to have a true system that basically takes care of your restaurant marketing and gives you huge returns.
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Video Blog: Dramatically Increase Your Sales & Profits Over The Next 12 Months
February 16, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Featured, Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Success Secrets
Video Blog
This video is part of a series of videos where I, Jonathan Munsell, answer questions and offer hard hitting comments that you can use to improve your restaurant immediately!
If you are seeing this you probably don’t need to go to RestaurantGoldMine.com to get hooked up with me. If you are not already a member of Restaurant Success System or Restaurant Success Monthly a good place to start is by grabbing some FREE information by clicking HOME and then click on the Free Kit Image to the right.
Dramatically Increase Your Sales & Profits Over The Next 12 Months with something as simple as a 10% increase in key areas.
Hey it’s Jonathan Munsell with Restaurant Success Systems.
Let’s talk about dramatically increasing your sales and profit over the course of the next 12 months and something as simple as a 10% increase can do that.
A lot of people might be sitting there looking at their numbers and realizing, “Oh my gosh, I need to do double what I’m doing today to live the way that I want to live.” And I’m here to tell you that it may be the case looking at numbers but that may not be the way to get there.
A simple 10% increase for you can be huge. I’ve talked about getting your guests to come more, getting your guests to spend more when they come, and then even going out and getting more guests. So let’s talk about that a little bit.
So you have these guests that are coming; to get them to come more or even 10% more. So if somebody’s coming maybe a couple times a year, to get them to come once a month or so. Or if somebody’s coming in and they come in every ten days, get them to come in every nine. So you’re just trying to get the same people that are coming in to come in more.
The way you do that is by promotions and effectively marketing to them. Once they come in, you want to know who they are and you want to market to them. So focus on just getting your existing guests to come in 10% more; in other words, you get them to spend more. And one of the things that I find a lot of times with restaurants owners is pricing and they’re always hesitant to raise prices.
I’ll tell you there’s a couple ways that you can raise your check average or easily raise the amount that you’re getting from people when they do come in. And one of the simple things is to up-sell or suggestive sell and if I had to ask you what you could do today to go and increase your sales, the only thing that you could do immediately; if I walked out of here and I held a gun to your head and I said, “You need to increase your sales today,” the only thing that you could really do is go and sell more to the people that are coming into your business.
You could go and drag people in off the street and all but it’s not an effective, long-term solution. You could put a marketing plan together but that’s still in the future. The thing you could do is, once those people come in, you can effectively suggestive sell and up-sell them. You can add on items, you can get them to buy dessert, you can get them to get a larger beverage.
Those things will increase your sales and very quickly you could increase your customer base by 10%. So that’s effective advertising. Even doing the same things that you’re doing that are similar with some minor tweaks can make your advertising a lot more effective. So it’s not difficult to get the 10% increase and think about what that does for you over the course of a longer period of time. If you’re able to do that and you’re able to get your check average up and you’re able to get the people to come in more and you’re able to get some new guests to come in; it happens very quickly and the 10% adds on to the 10% and that adds on to the other 10%. All of a sudden you have more new guests coming in more often and spending more when they’re there.
The economics work out really well and at the end of the year, you end up with a huge increase compared to the 10%; you end up with a 50 or 100% increase over what you had. So start small, work on the simple things that you can control, and go for small increases right now and you’ll see that your economics will change pretty quickly.
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7 Things You Must Know About Your Marketing Prospect
February 15, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Featured, Low Cost No Cost Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Marketing Tools
I often talk about knowing your guest and about
capturing information, specifically name, address, email , birth date, anniversary. I wanted to shift gears a little bit and help you understand why that information is so important and also show you how it plays into your future marketing.
The reason we want the information from our guests is two fold: 1. We want to market to them so we can get them to come back time and time again. 2. We want to understand the demographics of our existing guests and clients so we know exactly what to look for when we seek out more people to market to. “Our future guests look a lot like our current best guest”
So I put together a list of 7 things you absolutely MUST know about your future prospects.
1. Age- Everything you say and write, including slang, allusions, word difficulty, and topics should be adjusted to meet age appropriateness.
2. Gender- Despite the dual roles men and women tend to fill, most individuals can be segmented (and sold to) based on gender-specific interests or needs.
3. Location- Values and culture tend to vary based on demographics. Having a clear understanding of regional difference will improve your targeted messages.
4. Education Level- Similar to age appropriateness, education levels should determine how you address your prospects and what benefits they will find in your product or service.
5. Income- The needs and wants from one social class to another should be a guide to the types of products and services you should be selling them.
6. Marital Status- The values, needs, and desires of married persons greatly differ from those that are single. Marketing family messages to single persons (and vice versa) can lose the deal for you.
7. What Keeps Them Up At Night- This is the most important one. You’ve got to know your prospect’s fears, worries, concerns, excitements, hopes and dreams. When you know the conversation inside your prospect’s head, you can enter it, speak to it, and build a relationship that leads to a customer.
Once you have this information in focus you can really craft a message that speaks to your prospect. We will focus on that in our next Business Builder Tip.
I would love to hear your thoughts on the topics I present and their link to True Restaurant Success. Please do not hesitate to share - Leave a Comment
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What The Press Has To Say About Jonathan and His Restaurants
February 15, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Low Cost No Cost Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Marketing
Independent Weekly
September 2009
For a hybrid of fresh-made fast food, visit Jumpin’ Jonny’s Steaks & Subs, across Highway 70 from Brier Creek. Jonathan “Jonny” Munsell, surely the quickest-thinking sub-shop owner in town, dreams up specials no one could imagine: Bring in your Sunday bulletin and have 10 percent donated back to your church. Write a jingle—win a sandwich every day for a month. Jonny’s leaving town—spy on his employees like a “secret shopper” for a free large fry and lemonade.
The Jumpin’ Jonny’s method for self-ordering beats even Char-Grill’s. Strips of cardstock are color-coded by food; choose red for burger, then X-out any toppings you don’t like, or add extras at no charge: hot cherry peppers, mild cherry peppers, grilled mushrooms, raw onions, etc. Fresh-cut fries? Check the boxes to have them loaded with cheese, bacon, ranch or blue cheese dressing.
It’s worth a visit to comprehend the infinite combinations and to see if your company gets discounts: LabCorp, IBM, Glaxo and Qualcomm are a few that do. Incidentally, Jumpin Jonny’s is extremely kid-friendly, with a promotion for them, too: Kids eat free every Tuesday (one per adult, please).
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Video Blog: How To Increase Your Restaurant & Catering Sales
February 10, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Low Cost No Cost Restaurant Marketing, Restaurant Marketing
Video Blog
This video is part of a series of videos where I, Jonathan Munsell, answer questions and offer hard hitting comments that you can use to improve your restaurant immediately!
If you are seeing this you probably don’t need to go to RestaurantGoldMine.com to get hooked up with me. If you are not already a member of Restaurant Success System or Restaurant Success Monthly a good place to start is by grabbing some FREE information by clicking HOME and then click on the Free Kit Image to the right.
How To Increase Your Restaurant & Catering Sales
Hey it’s Jonathan Munsell with Restaurant Success Systems. I wanted to talk today about growing sales.
A question I get all the time is, “How do I increase my sales?” And really there’s only three ways to increase your sales. As much as people think that there’s a million things you can do, there’s only three ways:
1) You can go get more guests. You can go get more people to come into the door which a lot of people focus on. Actually people spend the most time focusing on getting new guests more than they focus on other things; at least people that are not the members of Restaurant Success Systems.
The other two focus on your guests.
2) Get the guests that are already coming in to come in more. So find ways for them to come in more. Do promotions, do whatever you have to, but just give them a reason to come back to the restaurant.
3) Lastly, when they do come back in, get them to spend more.
So you’re getting people to come in more, you’re getting them to spend more, and you’re going to see a nice, little bump from that. Then go after those new guests. Focus on your existing guests first and you’ll find that you can quickly gain some traction in increasing your sales and profits.
So remember, get the guests that you have to come in more, get the guests that you have coming in more to spend more, and then lastly, go out and find more guests and plug them into the same process.
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GOOGLES Free Tools Every Restaurant Needs to Use
February 10, 2010 by Jonathan Munsell
Filed under Low Cost No Cost Restaurant Marketing, Operations Tools, Restaurant Marketing, Systems & Operations
Here are some of the free google resources I mentioned in a recent Restaurant Marketing Planner Call:
Unlock your local business listing on Google. It’s free. Click Here
-
Manage your local listing
Edit the content of your Google listing, add it for the first time, and delete old locations. Make sure your information is correct, and see it on your Place Page. -
Engage potential customers
More people search locally on Google than anywhere else. Show them coupons, add videos and photos, and even post real-time updates. -
See the results
Log in anytime to see how many times people have viewed your listing, what actions they took, and where they came from in your local area.
Here is how you can be listed Page 1 in Google New! Create a public profile page
Set up Google Alerts so anytime your restaurant or catering company is mentioned in a web posting you know about it and you can manage your online presence. http://www.google.com/alerts
Googles Favorite Place Program – Google recently sent to one of my restaurants the attached information and a sticker that goes on the front door. The sticker, see attached, goes on your front door and people that visit your restaurant can scan the black bar code type thing and it immediately loads there phone with all your business information as listed on google.
Other FREE Resources I recommend from Google:
YouTube -
Yes Google owns YouTube. I recommend having your own channel and recording a few quick videos about your restaurant. Examples: A video tour, showing your place on a busy day (I say on a busy day, because no one wants to go to a restaurant unless others like to go there)
Another good video strategy is to have quick videos about covering your frequently asked questions. example: What type of food do you serve? What is the best time to come? What is your specialty? etc.
Google Docs – a great place to share documents and spreadsheets online that you share with your team. It has features that allow you to work on a document and save with changes online so others can access it from anywhere with an internet connection.
Create and share your work online
Google Calendar - Organize your schedule and share events with friends
With Google’s free online calendar, it’s easy to keep track of life’s important events all in one place.
1. Share your schedule
Let your co-workers, family, and friends see your calendar, and view schedules that others have shared with you. When you know when everyone is free or busy, scheduling is a snap.
2. Get your calendar on the go
With two-way syncing to your mobile phone’s built-in calendar or a mobile version of Google Calendar that’s made for the small screen, you can access your calendar while you’re away from your desk.
3. Never forget another event again
Customizable reminders help you stay on schedule. You can choose to be notified by email or get a text message sent right to your mobile phone.
4. Send invitations and track RSVPs
Invite other people to events on your calendar. Guests can RSVP to your events by email or via Google Calendar.
5. Sync with your desktop applications
Access your calendar however and whenever you want by syncing events with Microsoft Outlook, Apple iCal and Mozilla Sunbird.
6. Work offline
Know where you’re supposed to be even when you don’t have internet access. With offline access, you can view a read-only version of your calendar no matter where you are.
My last little tidbit – Have a document with all your restaurant information in it so you can easily load it into online directories and tag it (use Keywords) to get your information easily found by search engines.
How do you use Google services? Add questions & suggestions
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