Restaurant Marketing Has One Job
Get people in the door, get them to come back, and get them to tell their friends. Everything else — follower counts, impressions, engagement rates — is either a lever for those three things or noise. Keep that hierarchy in front of you every time you make a marketing decision.
The Channels That Actually Drive Covers
For most restaurants, the highest-leverage channels are Google (your listing, search ads, and maps presence), Instagram (visual discovery and community), and email or SMS to your existing guest list. That's the core stack. Everything else is supplemental until you've nailed those three.
Google is where hungry people search. If your listing isn't complete, your photos aren't good, and you're not showing up for relevant searches in your area — you're invisible to a huge pool of ready-to-buy customers.
What Most Restaurants Get Wrong
They market to everyone instead of the right people. A cocktail bar and a family-friendly brunch spot need completely different strategies, different content, different targeting. We see restaurants spend money on broad awareness campaigns when what they actually need is a tight local audience and a clear reason to visit.
The other common mistake: treating social media as a broadcast channel instead of a discovery engine. Your Instagram isn't a press release — it's the thing someone looks at to decide if your place is for them. Show the food, the energy, the people. Make it feel like something.
The Basics Worth Getting Right First
- A complete, photo-rich Google Business profile
- A reservation system or clear call to action on every channel
- An email or SMS list you're actually using
- Consistent, high-quality food photography (shot for Instagram proportions)
We Build the Full Marketing Engine for Food Brands
From content and social to performance ads and go-to-market strategy, we've built growth systems for restaurants and food brands from the ground up. If your marketing isn't filling seats, we'd like to look at why.