Restaurant Marketing Plan: Ideas & Strategies

When you read through this section, have your business plan, budget, and priorities close at hand. Note which restaurant marketing strategies you think will resonate the most based on the research you’ve already done on your target market and concept.

How to Write a Restaurant Marketing Plan

So when it comes to drafting your restaurant marketing plan, there’s good news: you’ve sort of already done it with your business plan.

For your restaurant marketing plan, you’ll just need to pull together relevant pieces from your business plan in a way that will translate into a succinct, actionable restaurant marketing plan. Here’s how to do it.

Step 1: Solidify your brand.

Before you begin brainstorming marketing activities, revisit your brand’s mission statement, vision statement, value propositions, and positioning statement. These should already be in your business plan, but it’s important to revisit them with a restaurant marketing lens. Here’s a reminder of what these components should look like.

Mission statement: A mission statement is the reason your restaurant exists. Mission statements are usually one to three sentences and approximately 50 words. They should:

Vision statement: Your vision statement should answer the question, “What does your restaurant hope to create in the future?” Make it inspirational and motivational. Announce your goals and how you intend to impact your customers and the restaurant industry in the future. Use the future tense.

Value propositions: In one sentence, describe the unique value your restaurant provides to customers. Feel free to break down this sentence further into three or four value propositions that are unique to your restaurant. You will use these statements to describe how your restaurant stands out from your competition.

Positioning statement: In one sentence, describe how you want competitors, customers, and the rest of the marketplace to perceive you.

Step 2: Remind yourself of your target audience.

Your target audience was defined based on the the demographics, psychographics, and behaviors of your customer segments. All restaurant marketing strategies you develop should speak to one or more segment of your target market.

Run through the following questions for each customer segment:

Feel free to add any concept-specific questions that address the behaviors of your customer segments. You’ll want to determine the motivations behind choosing one restaurant over another, so that you can properly speak to your target audiences in ways that will resonate with them.

Step 3: Perform a SWOT analysis on your competitors.

Refer back to the competitor analysis you completed based on How To Do A Restaurant Competitor Analysis. Choose your top three to five local competitors.

For each competitor, perform a SWOT analysis:

Check your competitors’ website for the most current promotions and campaigns. Log coupons or freebies, deals, and daily recurring specials. Note special events like live music, karaoke, games night, etc.

Visit your competitors’ Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and blog. Evaluate their follower numbers and content

Step 4: Define your market differentiators.

Repeat the SWOT process on your own restaurant, and define your market differentiator in a single statement. This statement should describe your advantage over the competition.

Examples of a unique selling point are: lower pricing, unique location, specialty dishes, more engaging service, the atmosphere at your restaurant, or the culture you’re creating.

You get fresh, hot pizza delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less or it’s free.

Step 5: Craft your elevator pitch.

An elevator pitch is how you would describe your restaurant to a stranger in 60 seconds or less. It’s important to keep this in mind as you craft the messaging behind promotions later.

In your elevator pitch, state:

Example: The Burger Bank is a gourmet burger fast casual restaurant. Our burgers fuse traditional Americana with flavors from around the world. Located in the heart of New York’s financial district, Wall Street professionals choose us to satisfy their quick service needs, without sacrificing gourmet taste or breaking the bank.

Step 6: Define and prioritize your restaurant marketing objectives.

Your restaurant marketing priorities at the beginning of your restaurant’s life will change as you develop. In general, however, all restaurant marketing initiatives will serve at least one of these three purposes:

Your brand precedes you. It’s your reputation – and you want to have a good one. Your brand will be reflected in everything you do as a business, including your marketing materials, decor, etc. Promoting your brand is vital to capturing the attention of your target audience and sticking out in their memory when they’re deciding where to eat.

Example initiatives: social media, PR, events, blogs, restaurant partnerships

  1. Customer acquisition

This is your obvious objective: to fill seats, fill bellies, swipe credits cards, and collect cash. These are the marketing campaigns that will get customers in the door.

Example initiatives: promotions, coupons, advertisements

  1. Customer retention

Customer retention campaigns are the marketing efforts you use to secure return business. Customer retention strategies involve capturing customer information and mixing branding and acquisition strategies. Customer retention initiatives make sure you can easily lure customers back in with incentives.

Example initiatives: social media, email marketing, loyalty programs

Step 7: Choose your promotional strategies.

Based on your budget, target audience, and goals, choose a few of these strategies to implement first (see below for detailed descriptions of each):

Digital restaurant marketing strategies

Traditional restaurant marketing strategies

When you’ve chosen your strategies, define the following for each:

Digital Restaurant Marketing Strategies

Now that you know how to write a restaurant marketing plan, it’s time to start filling it in with restaurant marketing ideas and campaigns.

Digital restaurant marketing refers to all marketing initiatives that you perform online. Traditional restaurant marketing refers to all the marketing initiatives that involve hard copy promotional materials. There will be crossover between the two, and there will be times when you’ll execute traditional and digital marketing in isolation of one another. A well-rounded marketing strategy includes elements of both.

Here’s what you need to know about digital restaurant marketing strategies.

Restaurant Marketing: Website & SEO

In When to Start Promoting Your Restaurant, we explained the basics of search engine optimization (SEO) and how to optimize your website for search engines.

To recap, SEO is the practice of optimizing your website for search engine results, particularly Google. Your goal is to rank the highest on search engine page results (SERPs) when people use search terms that are relevant to your restaurant’s concept, type of food, and location.

There are several ways you can develop your website so that it’s optimized for Google’s indexing algorithm. Here are some basic best practices when you’re thinking about SEO.

Content: Don’t plagiarize content because Google will know. Use original copy on your website that keeps people browsing. As you develop the content on your site after you open, post relevant videos, images, and links to reputable websites to improve your SEO ranking.

Keywords: Research keywords that are relevant to your restaurant. Use Google Keyword Planner to get started. Enter your city and the term “restaurant”, click on your product category, and browse the results. Once you’ve researched relevant keywords, use them (naturally) into your web copy.

Title tags: In the backend of your website, you’ll see a field for title tags. Title tags are what appear in Google search results, and they should be between 20 and 60 characters long. Be as straightforward as you can when using title tags. For your restaurant’s homepage, for example, use your restaurant’s name and your location for your title tag.

Meta descriptions:Your meta description is the brief description of text below the title tag displayed in search results. In your meta description, summarize your page in 150 characters or less. Use relevant keywords within your description.

Backlinks to your website: Note that when a “high authority” website links to your website, your SEO ranking improves. So if you can get media coverage, blog coverage, etc. from other websites that Google has already ranked highly, your website’s ranking will also improve.

Now that you know the basics of SEO, here are two common best practices to follow when building your website.

Responsive design: A website is “responsive” when its design adjusts for smartphones, tablets, and desktops. Responsive design allows users to comfortable view and navigate a webpage on any device, without compromising the page’s text or functions. Most website templates and providers now use responsive design tactics. When you’re choosing a template for your website, make sure it supports responsive design.

Your website as a hub: Your digital restaurant marketing efforts should drive traffic to your website, and your website should include links to all your digital promotional assets. Make sure you include the following assets on your website:

Restaurant Marketing: Content

Content marketing uses blog posts, videos, images, and SEO to:

Your main tool for a healthy content marketing strategy will be a blog. If you enjoy writing, have a great story to tell, or your concept is interesting enough to explore in a blog, content marketing may be a crucial part of your overall marketing strategy.

Here’s how to create and maintain a great restaurant blog.

Host your blog on your website: Hosting your blog on your website can increase your SEO ranking because you’re producing more material for search engines to crawl and generate links.

Build a content calendar: An ideal posting cadence is three times per week, but we understand this is a lofty goal for a busy restaurateur. The most important thing is to create a content calendar so you can plan content and stick to a regular schedule that you can manage.

Generate content that is easy to create: Here are some restaurant marketing ideas for content to get you started:

Hack the news: If something in the news relates back to your restaurant, feel free to write about it in your own words. Since the topic is trending, news hacking has the potential to bring more traffic to your site.

Distribute the workload: Ask staff and your business partners to write guest blogs, and feature a variety of subject matter experts.

Use keywords: Produce content that people are search for in the first place. Use Google Keyword Planner to plan content, and use keywords in your blog post’s title, the opening line, and throughout the body of the post.

Proofread your content: Re-read your content (out loud helps). Check for spelling and grammatical errors.

Repurpose content: Make sure you’re featuring your blog content across multiple platforms. For example, if you created a video of your chef explaining how to braise beef, write a blog post about it and post a shorter version on social media.

Cross-promote: Share all blog posts social media pages, in your e-newsletter, etc.

Restaurant Marketing: Social Media

While there are multiple social media platforms you can sign up for, here we’ll focus on the big three: Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

Facebook

Use it for: maintaining customer relationships, announcing new items, promoting events and specials, customer service, marketing incentives, and attracting new customers.

Post a maximum of two times per day to avoid inundating your audience. Here are some ideas for content to post to Facebook:

When you post something to Facebook, you’ve created an organic post. You should know that organic posts by businesses are not served up to followers as much as they were in the past. If you really want to increase reach and engagement on Facebook, you’ll need to pay for Facebook advertising.

Facebook advertising allows you to:

Here are some campaigns you can run on Facebook based on which goals you’re trying to meet.

Brand awareness: Showcase your Facebook ad to as many people as possible. Use an awareness campaign for content that teaches people about your brand or area of expertise. Use this type of campaign for foundational, high-level marketing pieces like a brand video.

Store visits: Focus on acquiring customers to your location. Facebook uses your location to target appropriate users.

Local awareness: Create brand awareness based on your location. If you’re creating high-level content that speaks to your neighborhood, for instance, you may want to use this campaign.

Website conversions: Get traffic to your website and encourage people to take an action. Use this campaign to promote subscriptions to your e-newsletter, event attendance, or promo sign up.

Clicks to website: Drive more traffic to your website through a content piece. Or use this campaign to direct users to a third-party review, for instance.

Event ads: If you’ve created an event through your page, promote the ad to users beyond your network.

Offer claim ads: Customize a call-to-action that sends users to a sign up form on your website where they can claim a discount code.

Form fill ads: Facebook enables you to create a form for users to fill out without making them leave Facebook. The user clicks the ad and is brought to a pop-up. They can then submit the form and redeem their offer, while you get the information they fill out.

Page likes: Get more users to like your page. This is especially useful if you’re regularly posting content to Facebook and want to generate more reach.

Post engagement: Showcase content to broader audiences by expanding the reach of single post. This ad serves the dual purpose of generating more activity (likes and comments) on your posts and exposing your page to new likes.

When you run a Facebook ad, you’ll need to create an “ad set” – a target audience – based on a set of criteria. Use the target audience you’ve identified in your marketing plan as a guide to creating your ad sets.

When creating ad sets, Facebook gives you the following criteria to filter:

You can also exclude certain interest groups and narrow your search by including “must-have” interests.

Instagram

Use it for: showcasing mouth-watering menu items, cross-promoting content, spreading awareness of your brand and culture, promoting contests and engagement.

Instagram is where restaurants shine, with mouth-watering pictures of food. Feel free to post at least once or twice a day to Instagram. Here are some ideas for content to post to Instagram:

Here are some tips to posting high-quality Instagram content.

Post great photos: Use professionally curated images or ones that you’ve taken yourself under great lighting. Download an easy-to-use photo editing app to your phone, such as Snapseed, A Color Story, or VSCO.

Share more than food: Feature content about your customers and partners, share community news about your restaurant, and feature images of local entertainment that will be playing at your restaurant.

Always respond to comments: The more you engage with your audience, the more Instagram’s algorithms will believe your content is relevant. When Instagram perceives your content as relevant, your posts will appear in more feeds.

Engage with customers and partners: Don’t wait for them to comment on your posts. Stay top of mind by commenting on their posts first.

Use Instagram Stories: Instagram allows you to post 15-second videos and photos that are visible to audiences for 24 hours. Feel free to post non-professional, in-the-moment material.

Use unique hashtags: Create a hashtag based on the name of your restaurant, a contest, campaign, or promotion. Use the # sign and add the theme or campaign name. By creating a unique hashtag, you’re creating a conversation thread that tracks any post using that hashtag.

Use niche hashtags: Use hashtags that already exist. They might be geographical, industry related, or event driven. Niche hastags allow you to join in on a conversation so that potential customers can find you when they search the hashtag. Search #WingWednesday on Instagram to see how niche hashtags work.

Use geo-tags: Always geo-tag to your content by tagging the location of your restaurant or the city you’re in. Geo-tagged content has a better chance of being featured because Instagram indexes this information when suggesting promoting relevant content to their users.

Similar to Facebook, you can create ads on Instagram. Instagram advertising allows you to:

Create ads through Facebook: Facebook owns Instagram, therefore the platforms are linked. Create an Instagram ad at the same time as a Facebook ad. Do this to cross-promote a campaign and increase its impact on multiple social media platforms. Before you place the order for your Facebook ad through the Ad Manager, check off Instagram in the “Ad Preview” section.

Create Instagram Story ads: Using Facebook’s ad manager, upload one photo or a 15-second video. Facebook will serve your Instagram Story ad to relevant audiences in between stories. Note that you can only use 9×16 vertical images and video for Story Ads.

Promote a post quickly: Sponsor posts on-the-fly using the Instagram app. Simply click the “Promote” button and select an eligible post that you’ve already published. Then determine your audience, budget, and the ad duration.

Twitter

Use it for: Promotions, moment-to-moment updates, customer relationships, and customer service

Post to Twitter as much as you’d like! But three or more times daily is a common standard.

Note that marketers have been questioning the value of Twitter. With that in mind, we suggest prioritizing other social media platforms over Twitter, especially as you’re starting out and you’re short on time.

Here are some best practices to posting to Twitter:

Restaurant Marketing: Email Marketing

Email marketing is an effective way to:

To get you started, here are a few email platforms you can use to create attracted and effective emails:

Here are some ideas for the types of content you can send via email.

Newsletter: Send a monthly newsletter with new menu items, special menus, and upcoming events. Include successful blog posts, videos, and any contests. Offer incentives to your email list to get return business, whether that’s a coupon or a promo code.

Dedicated email blasts: Send a dedicated, follow-up email to the emails you collected during a contest or event. Do this within a week of receiving their email. Capture their attention – and hopefully their business – while the event or contest is still fresh in their mind.

Here are some best practices for email marketing.

Build up your email database.

Follow your country’s opt-in requirements.

You can send promotional emails, but you must include the ability to opt-out of communications.

Emails must clearly identify your restaurant as the sender. Emails must contain an unsubscribe link and your postal address.

Recipients must opt-in to email communications and give express consent before you can send promotional emails to them. You must maintain a record of consented addresses. Consent is implied when the email contact has purchased a product, service, or made another business deal, contract, or membership with your organization in the last 24 months. Emails must clearly identify your restaurant as the sender. They must contain contain an unsubscribe link, postal address, and your contact information.

Know your ideal email frequency.

Measure your success.

According to MailChimp’s Email Marketing Benchmarks, here are the average numbers for the restaurant industry.

IndustryOpenClickSoft BounceHard BounceUnsub
Restaurant21.17%1.25%0.24%0.22%0.26%

Restaurant Marketing:Text Messaging

SMS/MMS text message marketing sends a text directly to someone’s phone. Text message marketing has a higher open rate than emails, but note that the practice is still new and may feel invasive to some people.

Here are some providers you can look to if you’re considering SMS text message marketing.

Here are some ideas for content you can send via SMS:

Here are some SMS marketing best practices.

Keep it short: Text messages are limited to 160 characters. Keep your text short.

Include a clear call-to-action: Tell customers exactly what you want them to do, whether that’s to redeem an offer code or visit your website.

Identify your restaurant: Recipients are easily put off by a text from an unknown number. Make it clear that the text is coming from your restaurant.

Opt-in messages: Both U.S. and Canadian companies need to obtain permission to send marketing messages. You can do so with an initial text message or a web-based form-fill. It’s also a best practice to set expectations by telling contacts the type of material you intend to send them and the frequency.

Opt-out messages: Notify the recipient of the ways they can opt-out of communications. It’s better to have a contact opt-out before they start receiving messages, rather than send materials that could provoke a negative response toward your brand.

Restaurant Marketing: Review Sites

You may think of review sites as a place to manage customer complaints, gather intelligence, and showcase your menu. But review sites are also incredibly effective advertising platforms. In fact, review sites have optimized their platforms to give restaurants an opportunity to tap into the diners who are looking at reviews.

You’ll want to start by claiming your page on all review sites. Once you claim your business page, you should:

Add photos: Optimize your page by adding professionally curated photos of favorite dishes and your space.

Update information: Update any contact information and ensure your location information is accurate. The majority of people on review sites are looking for contact information.

Manage feedback: Both positive and negative reviews require a response. Think of your response as good customer service, so make sure you’re cordial when responding to negative reviews. And invite guests who have had a positive experience to leave a review – more reviews mean a higher ranking in results. But don’t pay or offer incentives for reviews. You could get suspended from the site if you’re found out.

In addition to responding to reviews and inviting guests to leave one, taking time to remove Yelp spam comments can help protect your restaurant’s online reputation, which plays a critical role in advertising your business. The same should be done on other review sites as well.

Each review site has marketing tools for restaurant owners. Here are some of the most common review site marketing platforms.

Yelp Ads feature your restaurant in Yelp search rankings. Target local audiences and place an ad on competitors’ business pages. You can also:

Foursquare uses consumer behavior, preferences, and location to advertise your business to the correct target audience. Foursquare ads feature your restaurant at the top of their search page. The ad itself is free, but you pay when a user clicks on your ad.

TripAdvisor comes with three tools beyond its free business page:

Zomato has two advertising models. You can use customized banners on Zomato’s website and mobile platform, or you can advertise within the collection of restaurants where you’re already featured.

Zomato also has widgets you can add to your website. These widgets prompt users to rate your restaurant on Zomato or order from your restaurant on Zomato.

OpenTable ads: Like other review sites, OpenTable ads make your listing show up higher in search results, across all mobile and web platforms. OpenTable follows a pay per click model, so you only pay when diners take action on your ad. The cost is $5 per seat cover.

Gifts: You have the option of sell gift cards through OpenTable.

Bonus points: On OpenTable, users can collect points and get rewards when they book a table through the platform. OpenTable enables you to hijack this feature. Offer bonus points during slow times to incentivize diners to choose your restaurant over others.

Private dining: OpenTable’s Private Dining pages are essentially premium pages. They promise to increase your Google SEO and have more space for visuals and lengthy descriptions. OpenTable also actively promotes restaurants with private dining pages in their seasonal emails.

Restaurant Marketing: Loyalty Program

The goal of loyalty programs is to generate repeat business using incentives and gamification.

The benefits of loyalty programs include:

Here are types of loyalty programs to explore for your restaurant.

Punch cards: The concept is simple. When a customer purchases a menu item, they receive a stamp. After they have acquired a specific amount of stamps, they earn a free meal. Apps, however, have made it possible for customers to collect points digitally.

POS loyalty programs: A POS system allocates points to guests based on the amount of money they spend or the items they choose. The system can distribute discounts based on the customer’s activity. Usually the customer is working towards a points goal that results in a free or discounted meal.

Referral programs: Referral programs are a great way to get satisfied customers to engage their networks. When a customer refers a friend to your restaurant, you reward them based on the new business they send you.

Food Delivery and Ordering Apps

A 2016 statista study found that 26% of people order food online at least once a week, and another 24% order food online three times a week.

By having a presence on take-out and delivery sites, you get your brand and your menu in front of a larger audience. Here are some food delivery and ordering apps you should consider being a part of.

Traditional Restaurant Marketing Strategies

While digital marketing efforts have become the cornerstone of most marketing plans, the power of traditional marketing should not be overlooked.

Face-to-face interaction, word of mouth, and endorsements are tried-and-true marketing tactics that still work. Be sure to bolster your digital marketing efforts with traditional marketing as well. This dual strategy makes for well-rounded marketing that leaves no stone unturned.

Restaurant Marketing: Contests

Contests are an effective way to engage your audience and tap into their networks. They offer entrants a reward in exchange for their submission. Entrants are more willing to give up their contact information and share the contest because they want free stuff.

The key to a successful contest is making sure the reward is worth the steps to enter, whether that’s giving their email address or tagging friends.

There are three subcategories of contests:

To run a contest, you’re responsible for putting together rules and guidelines. These should include:

Also be aware of Facebook and Instagram contest rules. You’re responsible for “the lawful operation of that promotion” including:

Both sites have some substantial differences in their guidelines.

In essence, you cannot use any of Facebook’s features to host a contest. That means you can’t say “like/share/tag this post for a chance to win.” You’ll instead need to use a third-party app or link to an external page.

The legalities of Facebook contests can get murky really quickly. Third-party apps make it easier to navigate this process. As a bonus, they also provide you with a set of contest analytics.

Here are a few providers:

Instagram lets you use content engagement for contests, but be aware that: “You must not inaccurately tag content or encourage users to inaccurately tag content (don’t encourage people to tag themselves in photos if they aren’t in the photo).”

Here are some contest ideas for Instagram.

Here are some contest best practices for Instagram.

Restaurant Marketing: Direct Mail Campaigns

Direct mail campaigns use your post office’s business program to send marketing materials to specific zip/postal codes. While you can’t weed out recipients who don’t match your target market, you can market to people who may try your restaurant due to proximity alone.

To get the most out of your direct mail campaign, include an incentive for the recipient. In the design, make sure you’ve included your logo, address, phone number, links to social media pages, and your website.

Use the following services to distribute your direct mail campaign:

Restaurant Marketing: Events

By becoming involved at local festivals, you have the opportunity to:

While many events and festivals charge vendor fees, you may be able to make up your costs if you can successfully capture future business from the event. How do you do this? By providing incentives, making personal connections, and capturing festival-goers’ email information to ensure future correspondence.

You should also be aware of the risks. The success of outdoor events can be compromised by inclement weather. Some events might look enticing on paper, but in actuality fail to attract a relevant audience. With this in mind, approach the event with a clear goal in mind and a way to measure that goal.

Your goals could be any of the following:

Ways to measure success include:

Tips for choosing and attending festivals: