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t_keyword: Restaurant Marketing Strategies
tags: Marketing strategies, Restaurant marketing, Restaurant marketing strategies
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date_published: 2026-01-29
date_modified: 2026-01-30
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meta_tags:
  t_meta_title: Restaurant Marketing Strategies
  t_meta_description: Restaurant Marketing Strategies help restaurant owners grow using Google, social media, reviews, promotions, and local partnerships to drive traffic.
  t_meta_abstract: Restaurant Marketing Strategies help restaurant owners grow using Google, social media, reviews, promotions, and local partnerships to drive traffic.
  i_meta_image: og_restaurant-marketing-strategies.png
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    v_date_published: 2026-01-29
    v_date_modified: 2026-01-30
  author:
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    t_author: Derrick McMahon
    p_author_url: derrick-mcmahon.html
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    t_author_description: Derrick McMahon is a writer and restaurant technology enthusiast. He holds a Bachelor&amp;amp;amp;#039;s degree in Hospitality Management from UNLV, where he developed a passion for the food service industry.
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    t_title: What's the best marketing strategy for a small restaurant?
    t_description: Start with the basics - accurate Google Business Profile, strong reviews, clear ordering info, and a simple weekly routine (posting 2-3 times, responding to reviews, and doing 5 local partnership touches per week).
  content:
    heading:
      t_title: Restaurant Marketing Strategies
      t_description: Restaurant Marketing Strategies help restaurant owners grow using Google, social media, reviews, promotions, and local partnerships to drive traffic.
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      - t_headline: Overview
        t_text: Restaurant marketing strategies are the repeatable actions you use to consistently bring in the right guests - without guessing week to week. It's not just "posting on Instagram" or running a random discount. A real strategy connects three things - <strong>who you want to attract</strong>, <strong>why they should choose you</strong>, and <strong>how you'll reach them</strong> (online and locally) in a way you can repeat and improve.<br><br>At a simple level, restaurant marketing has four goals -<br><br><strong>1. Get found</strong> (people in your area can easily discover you)<br><strong>2. Get chosen</strong> (your menu, photos, reviews, and messaging make you the obvious pick)<br><strong>3. Get visited or ordered</strong> (you make it easy to take action - walk in, reserve, order online, or cater)<br><strong>4. </strong><strong>Get repeated</strong> (you turn first-time guests into regulars)<br><br>Most restaurant owners lean too hard one way. They either focus only on local tactics (flyers, coupons, word of mouth) and ignore search and listings - or they focus only on social media and forget the basics of foot traffic, partnerships, and community presence. The truth is- <strong>online and local work together.</strong><br><br><strong>- Online</strong> is how people find and judge you fast - Google Search, Google Maps, your website, reviews, social proof, and online ordering.<br><strong>- Local</strong> is how you stay top-of-mind and drive repeat visits- neighborhood partnerships, nearby businesses, events, signage, and in-store offers.<br><br>When your online foundation is strong, local marketing converts better - because people can look you up instantly and feel confident. And when local marketing is active, your online presence grows faster - because more guests search for you, leave reviews, post photos, and recommend you.<br><br>
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      - t_headline: Customer, Offer, and Area
        t_text: Before you spend another dollar or another hour on marketing, you need three basics locked in - <strong>who you're trying to reach, what you're selling (beyond "food"), and how far your real customer radius goes.</strong> This is what keeps your marketing focused and prevents you from doing a little bit of everything with no clear results.<br><br><strong>1) Pick your "best customers"</strong><br> You don't need a fancy persona document. You just need to be honest about who already buys from you - and who you want more of. Most restaurants have 2-3 core groups. Examples -<br><br><strong>Lunch regulars -</strong> nearby workers who care about speed, consistency, and value<br><strong>Family dinner buyers -</strong> convenience, kid-friendly options, predictable favorites<br><strong>Weekend treat guests -</strong> experience, shareable items, vibe, and photos<br><strong>Late-night crowd -</strong> fast pickup, combos, cravings, and clear ordering<br><br>For each group, write down -<br><br><strong>- When</strong> they order (dayparts, days of week)<br><strong>- Why</strong> they choose a place (speed, price, quality, health, experience)<br><strong>- How</strong> they decide (Google Maps, reviews, friends, social media, walking by)<br><br>This matters because your marketing message and channel change depending on the guest. A "busy lunch" strategy is different from a "weekend date night" strategy.<br><br><strong>2) Define your offer</strong><br> Your offer is not your entire menu. It's the reason someone should choose you today instead of the other 10 options nearby.<br><br>Use this simple formula -<br><br><strong>We help [target guest] get [main outcome] by [your unique advantage].</strong><br><br>Examples -<br><br>- "We help busy lunch customers get a fresh meal fast with 10-minute pickup and reliable favorites."<br>- "We help families solve dinner with big portions, simple ordering, and easy pickup."<br>- "We help food lovers try bold flavors with rotating specials and shareable plates."<br><br>If you can't say it simply, your marketing will sound generic - and generic marketing gets ignored.<br><br><strong>3) Set your realistic trade area</strong><br> Your local strategy depends on how far customers will actually travel. In most cases -<br><br><strong>Quick service.</strong> Often 1-3 miles (sometimes less in dense areas)<br><strong>Fast casual / casual.</strong> Often 3-5 miles<br><strong>Destination / special occasion.</strong> Can be wider, but still depends on the market<br><br>Why this matters -<br><br>- It tells you where local partnerships should happen<br>- It tells you what neighborhoods to target with flyers, signage, and community outreach<br>- It helps you optimize Google/Maps visibility where it counts<br><br>A practical way to do this - look at your orders or receipts and identify the most common zip codes/cities. If you don't have that data, start with a conservative radius and expand later based on results.<br><br><strong>4) Choose 1-2 marketing goals</strong><br> Most owner marketing fails because it's trying to do too much. Pick 1-2 goals for the next 30-60 days,<br><br><strong>- More new guests</strong> (discovery + first visit)<br><strong>- More repeat visits</strong> (loyalty + messaging + experience)<br><strong>- More off-peak traffic</strong> (slow-day promos, lunch, late-night)<br><strong>- More online orders</strong> (ordering visibility, packaging, offers)<br><strong>- More catering</strong> (local outreach + simple catering page)<br><br>Then align your tactics to those goals. If your goal is catering, your weekly effort should include local business outreach, not just Instagram posts.<br><br>
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      - t_headline: Build Your Local Marketing Foundation
        t_text: Local marketing is what drives <strong>steady foot traffic</strong> and keeps your restaurant top-of-mind in your neighborhood. But most "local marketing" fails because it's random - one flyer drop, one event, one partnership that doesn't get followed up. This section builds a foundation you can run every week, even when you're busy.<br><br><strong>1) Make sure your restaurant looks "open, active, and worth stopping for"</strong><br> Before you promote anything, make sure your physical presence is doing its job. A surprising amount of local traffic is decided in seconds from the street or parking lot.<br> <strong>Local basics that matter -</strong><br><br><strong>Sign visibility -</strong> Can people read your sign quickly from the road?<br><strong>Hours posted clearly -</strong> On the door, window, and easy to see from outside<br><strong>Lighting and cleanliness -</strong> especially at night (people judge safety + quality fast)<br><strong>Menu visibility - </strong>a simple menu board/poster near the entrance helps undecided guests<br><strong>Sidewalk/entrance cues -</strong> "Order here," "Pickup here," "Open" signage, etc.<br><br>If you rely on walk-ins, your exterior is part of your marketing - treat it that way.<br><br><strong>2) Create an in-store system that turns visits into return visits</strong><br> Local marketing works best when it has a "second step." You don't just want someone to try you onceyou want them to come back next week.<br><br>Simple retention tools you can run in-store -<br><br><strong>Bounce-back offer -</strong> A receipt or card with "Bring this back in 7 days for ___"<br><strong>Bag stuffer -</strong> Small card for takeout bags with a clear next-visit incentive<br><strong>Table tent -</strong> Highlight your best seller, combo, or weekday special<br><strong>Catering reminder -</strong> "Feeding a team? Ask about catering" with a phone number or QR code<br><strong>Loyalty prompt -</strong> A short, direct ask at checkout (don't make it complicated)<br><br>Keep offers simple and margin-safe (examples, free add-on, small appetizer, upgrade, or threshold reward like "$5 off $30+").<br><br><strong>3) Build a repeatable community presence</strong><br> Local visibility doesn't mean sponsoring everything. It means choosing a few community channels that consistently reach your best customers.<br><br>Pick <strong>2-3</strong> from this list and commit to them monthly -<br><br><strong>Schools / youth sports -</strong> Team nights, fundraisers, flyers in backpacks<br><strong>Apartments / HOAs -</strong> Resident deals, welcome packets, lobby flyers<br><strong>Nearby offices -</strong> Lunch catering menus, drop-off samples, standing orders<br><strong>Gyms / salons / retail neighbors -</strong> Cross-promotions and shared coupons<br><strong>Local events -</strong> Farmers markets, street fairs, charity nights (only if you can staff it)<br><br>The key is follow-up. One partnership touch rarely works. A system does -<br><br>Week 1. introduction<br>Week 2. drop off menus or samples<br>Week 3. set a recurring offer or team lunch<br>Week 4. follow up and repeat with the next partner<br><br><strong>4) Use local partnerships the right way</strong><br> Partnerships work when they solve a real problem for the other business.<br><br>Good partnership examples -<br><br><strong>Office lunch deal -</strong> pre-set ordering process + on-time delivery/pickup<br><strong>Gym post-workout special -</strong> healthy option bundle + clear time window<br><strong>Hotel front desk cards -</strong> "Show your key for ___" + easy directions<br><strong>Apartment resident perk -</strong> monthly "resident night" with a simple code<br><br>Make it easy to track -<br><br>- Use a <strong>partnership code</strong> ("GYM10", "APT5") or a specific offer card<br>- Keep the offer consistent for 30-60 days so it has time to catch on<br><br><strong>5) Local "awareness" tactics that actually lead to sales</strong><br> If you're going to do flyers, door hangers, or local boards, do it with a plan -<br><br><strong>Target the right radius -</strong> start close (1-3 miles) before going wider<br><strong>Promote one clear action -</strong> "Order online," "Try the lunch combo," "Catering menu"<br><strong>Make it measurable -</strong> unique code, unique QR link, or a specific offer<br><strong>Repeat the drop -</strong> same area 2-3 times over a month beats one huge drop<br><br>Consistency is what turns local marketing into results.<br><br>
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      - t_headline: Build Your Online Marketing Foundation
        t_text: Online marketing works best when your basics are solid. Most restaurant owners lose sales online for simple reasons - missing info, outdated hours, confusing ordering links, or weak photos. This section is your foundation - <strong>the things that help people find you, trust you, and take action fast.</strong><br><br><strong>1) Your website - keep it simple, fast, and action-first</strong><br> You don't need a fancy site - you need a site that converts. Make sure your website has these essentials <strong>above the fold</strong> (visible without scrolling on mobile) -<br><br><strong>- Hours + location + phone number</strong><br><strong>- Menu</strong> (easy to read on mobile)<br><strong>- Order Online</strong> button (clear and working)<br><strong>- Catering</strong> link (if you offer it)<br><strong>- Directions / parking info</strong> (especially in busy areas)<br><br>If you do nothing else - confirm your ordering button is obvious, your menu is updated, and your hours are correct everywhere.<br><br><strong>2) Google Business Profile</strong><br> For most restaurants, Google Search + Maps drive more intent than any social platform. Treat your Google Business Profile like a daily sales channel.<br><br>Weekly must-dos -<br><br>- Confirm <strong>hours</strong> (including holidays)<br>- Add <strong>new photos</strong> (food, interior, exterior, popular items)<br>- Respond to <strong>reviews</strong> (good and bad)<br>- Keep <strong>categories</strong> accurate (primary + secondary)<br>- Use <strong>Posts</strong> for specials or events (short, clear, with a call to action)<br><br>Also check -<br><br>- Your pin location is correct on Maps<br>- Your phone number and website link work<br>- Your "Order" and "Menu" buttons go to the right place<br><br><strong>3) Listings consistency</strong><br> Your name, address, and phone number (NAP) should match everywhere -<br><br>- Google, Apple Maps, Yelp, TripAdvisor (if relevant)<br>- Facebook/Instagram<br>- Delivery apps (if you use them)<br>- Your website<br><br>Inconsistent info (like "Suite 2" in one place and not another) can hurt visibility and frustrate customers trying to find you.<br><br><strong>4) Online ordering</strong><br> Online orders are won or lost on clarity. Make sure -<br><br>- Your ordering link is <strong>one tap</strong> from Google and your website<br>- Your menu is organized logically (popular items first, clear modifiers)<br>- Item names are clear (avoid inside jokes or vague names)<br>- Photos exist for best sellers (you don't need photos for everything)<br>- Prep times and pickup instructions are accurate and visible<br><br>Bonus - add a "Most Popular" or "Best Sellers category - customers love it.<br><br><strong>5) Social profiles</strong><br> Even if social isn't your main channel, people check it for proof. Tighten -<br><br>- A clear <strong>bio</strong> (what you are + where you are)<br>- Correct <strong>hours</strong> and <strong>location</strong><br>- One clear <strong>link</strong> (order / reservations / catering)<br>- Pinned posts/highlights - <strong>menu, hours, best sellers, ordering</strong><br><br>
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      - t_headline: Social Media Strategy That Drives Orders
        t_text: Social media only becomes "worth it" when it leads to real actions- visits, orders, catering inquiries, and repeat customers. The mistake most restaurant owners make is posting whatever they have time for, whenever they remember. A better approach is to run a simple system that's easy to maintain and clearly tied to sales.<br><br><strong>1) Choose 1-2 platforms you can run consistently</strong><br> You do not need to be everywhere. Pick the platforms where your customers already are and where you can realistically post every week.<br><br>A practical approach -<br><br><strong>Instagram -</strong> great for food photos, stories, specials, and local discovery<br><strong>TikTok -</strong> great for quick behind-the-scenes and craveable items<br><strong>Facebook -</strong> still strong for local communities, events, and older demographics<br><br>If you're not sure, pick <strong>Instagram + Facebook</strong> (easy cross-posting) or <strong>Instagram + TikTok</strong> (strong for food discovery). Consistency beats platform variety.<br><br><strong>2) Your content needs 3 jobs (keep it simple)</strong><br> Every post should do at least one of these -<br><br><strong>- Show what to order</strong> (best sellers, specials, combos, new items)<br><strong>- Prove you're worth it</strong> (reviews, busy moments, fresh prep, portion size)<br><strong>- Tell people what to do next</strong> (order online, visit today, catering, event)<br><br>If a post doesn't help someone decide what to order or how to take action, it's usually just "noise."<br><br><strong>3) Use a repeatable content mix</strong><br> Here's a simple mix that works for most restaurants -<br><br><strong>- 40% Menu + cravings -</strong> best sellers, close-ups, limited-time items<br><strong>- 25% Proof + trust -</strong> reviews, customer reactions, packed dining room, freshness<br><strong>- 20% Convenience -</strong> ordering, pickup process, hours, lunch specials, parking<br><strong>- 15% Community + team -</strong> staff shoutouts, local partnerships, events<br><br>You're not trying to be an influencer. You're trying to be the obvious choice nearby.<br><br>
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      - t_headline: Local Marketing Strategy That Brings Foot Traffic
        t_text: If you want more dine-in and pickup traffic, local marketing should feel like a <strong>weekly routine</strong>, not a one-time campaign. The goal is simple - make sure people within your trade area (your real radius) <strong>hear about you often</strong>, have a <strong>reason to try you</strong>, and get <strong>reminded to come back</strong>.<br><br><strong>1) Win your closest customers first</strong><br> Start close before you go broad. Your fastest growth usually comes from -<br><br>- Nearby neighborhoods within 1-3 miles<br>- Apartment communities<br>- Office clusters and business parks<br>- Schools, gyms, salons, and high-traffic retail centers<br><br>Instead of trying 10 tactics, pick <strong>2-3 channels</strong> that reach these groups and do them consistently.<br><br><strong>2) Build a partnership list</strong><br> Create a simple list of 30-50 nearby places that can send you repeat guests -<br><br>- Offices (small + large)<br>- Apartment leasing offices<br>- Gyms, studios, salons, barbershops<br>- Schools (staff lunches, fundraisers)<br>- Hotels (front desk cards, guest deals)<br>- Retail neighbors (cross-promos)<br><br>Then run a basic weekly outreach -<br><br><strong>- 5 touches per week</strong> (call, visit, email, drop-off)<br><strong>- 1 partnership activation per week</strong> (a deal, a flyer placement, a lunch order)<br><br>Local marketing is a numbers game. The list keeps it structured.<br><br><strong>3) Offer partnerships that are easy to say "yes" to</strong><br> Partnerships work when the other business benefits too. Keep it simple -<br><br><strong>Employee meal deal -</strong> "Show your badge for ___" (weekday only)<br><strong>Resident perk -</strong> "Use code RESIDENT for ___" (monthly)<br><strong>Front desk card -</strong> "Visitor special" with clear directions + hours<br><strong>Fundraiser night -</strong> "We donate ___% between 4-8pm" (one flyer + one code)<br><br>Avoid complicated rules. If it takes more than 10 seconds to explain, it won't spread.<br><br><strong>4) Use catering as a foot-traffic engine</strong><br> Catering doesn't just drive revenue - it introduces you to groups who later become regulars.<br> Simple catering local strategy -<br><br>- Drop off a <strong>one-page catering menu</strong> to 10 nearby offices<br>- Offer a <strong>first-time office lunch bundle</strong> (profit-safe, easy options)<br>- Include a <strong>bounce-back card</strong> in every catering order-<br>- "Bring this in for ___" or "Order online with code ___"<br><br>Every catering tray is a marketing opportunity.<br><br><strong>5) Run local events that match your capacity</strong><br> Events don't have to be big. The best events are easy to staff and repeat.<br> Examples -<br><br>- "Family night" (weekday dinner)<br>- "Lunch combo day" (one day per week)<br>- "Taste test" of a new item (2-hour window)<br>- "Local partner spotlight" (cross-promo with a business)<br><br>Promote events in three places -<br><br>- In-store signage<br>- Google Business Profile post<br>- Social post + stories<br><br>Keep it consistent for 4-6 weeks so people learn it's "a thing."<br><br>
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faq:
  t_faq_title: Frequently Asked Questions
  faq_ask: 
    - t_question: What should restaurants post to get more orders?
      t_answer: Post content that helps customers decide quickly - best sellers, limited-time specials, bundles, behind-the-scenes prep, reviews, and clear "Order now / Visit today" prompts.<br>
    - t_question: How do I market my restaurant online?
      t_answer: Build a strong foundation - mobile-friendly website, optimized Google Business Profile, consistent listings, easy online ordering links, and social content that highlights best sellers, proof, and clear calls to action.<br>
    - t_question: How do I market catering for my restaurant?
      t_answer: Create a simple catering page/menu, then outreach weekly to nearby offices and organizations. Offer an easy "first office lunch" bundle and include bounce-back offers in every catering order.<br>
    - t_question: How do I market my restaurant locally?
      t_answer: Focus on a 1-3 mile radius first. Use partnerships (offices, apartments, gyms), in-store bounce-back offers, community events, and consistent outreach to nearby businesses to drive repeat foot traffic.<br><br>
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