Restaurants and Social Media

BusinessMarketing & Advertising

  • Author Joyce Kuras
  • Published April 17, 2010
  • Word count 863

How Restaurants Can Use Social Media

Every kind of business and service is getting on the bandwagon of Social Media. Whether you are using email bulk campaigns or e-newsletters, Social media has given the Internet a new intimacy of virtual relationships. Reaching out to your customers and prospects has never been easier.

This indeed is another great marketing channel for every restaurant looking to grow their brand awareness. If your restaurant has been in business for years, and is known in the neighborhood, trust me, people are talking about you online.

Make no mistake that there is chatter happening. The question remains, what are they saying? Most restaurants know that having a spectacular dish or menu is not the end of it all. Your customers want to be appreciated and connect personally with you in some way.

I don’t know about you, but when I enjoy a meal, and feel very satisfied and happy with the service, I start talking about that restaurant almost immediately. Don’t you? We tell our friends, you need to check this place out, great food, fabulous service. You want to share a good thing when you find it. How much better it would be if we could actually connect with our favorite restaurants online, or see what they are talking about. It sort of completes the experience.

Here is a list of tools that any restaurant owner could use to connect with their customer that in return could produce a type of brand evangelist.

Social Media Tools for Restaurants

• SEO: – your website must be optimized with your key words. That is a must. Being found on a search and ranking high in the SERPs is the first step for brand awareness.

• Sign up with the local restaurant search engines: Yelp.com, Urbanspoon.com, and TripAdvisor.com – Request that any positive feedback be shared on the site publicly.

• Twitter: – Create a Twitter Account – publish you profile and use it to announce special family deals and discounts on meals.

• Create an E-Newsletter: – Ask your repeat customers for their email addresses and send a double opt in to subscribe to your e-newsletter. Send a new recipe once a month, include some food preparation tips. Ask for feedback for your next newsletter. This is a great way to start your database list for future use along with acquiring a solid lead of customers.

• Blog on your Website: – Bring your customers into the kitchen, behind the scenes. Let them feel they are part of the action - as if they are participating. We all want to feel a little more than just being filled with good food. We all want to belong.

• YouTube – sign up for a free account. Make a YouTube video of one of your most popular dishes. Send out the URL on your newsletter and announce it in your blog. As for feedback from those who have tried the recipe. What a great way to engage people.

• GoMobile – Collect your client’s cell numbers and send SMS messages about specials and coupon deals.

If you need some guidance with marketing ideas, see this free online source: Virtual Restaurant

BEFORE you Jump into Social Media Marketing:

• Create a plan: First, know your audience; says L. Michelle Smith, president and CEO of Dallas-based media-strategy firm M Strategies Inc., whose clients include Atlanta-based Church’s Chicken. Are your customers on social networks, and if so, which ones? Next, know what you want to accomplish: Is your goal to build a relationship through dialog with an audience? To tell people about the brand, or about news and events? "It’s not a strategy just to be there," Smith says.

• Listen to what customers are saying: Search social-media sites and read what already has been posted—not just in reviews but in comments and conversations. "You’ll learn a phenomenal amount," says Van Vandegrift, president and emerging-media consultant with Matrixx Pictures, a Santa Monica, Calif., production company whose clients include Austin, Texas-based Schlotzsky’s Deli. "They’ll say all the things they love and all the things they hate, and that’s incredible business knowledge.

• Know your Voice: Decide whether you want to speak to consumers in your personal voice (i.e., as the owner, chef or general manager), or as the overall brand, says Christina Wong, restaurant and chef publicist at JS² Communications in Los Angeles.

• Create brand ambassadors: Find the people who really love your restaurant. Share your vital info with them, let them spread the good word.

• Make your conversations interesting: Just listing menu items, unless they’re particularly unusual, makes for a boring post. "Say something that shares part of who you are, like, ‘Chocolate ice cream is the only worthy ice cream’ or ‘Just finished making my grandmother’s bread-pudding recipe and it rocks,’ or ‘Completely slammed in the kitchen, no end in sight,’" says publicist Ellen Malloy.

Remember, social media is just a tool, but you are the one to make it happen. Listen, answer questions, and connect with people online. Take these opportunities to reach out to your customers. When you do, they will be telling others about you, building your brand, and making you visible.

http://virtualrestaurant.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=SFNT&Store_Code=VR

Joyce Kuras - SEO Content Writer

http://il.linkedin.com/in/joycekuras

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