Extra facebook tips for your restaurant
Facebook’s most recent design changes have made them a mecca for the restaurant industry. Their business pages have become another way for restauranteurs to connect with new customers while helping their old clients feel needed.
The engineers have made it easy to use their platform to build your business, whether it’s a food truck or a national chain. Let’s look at some of the ways Facebook can help you win over new clients and connect with the world.
Starting with a business page, your restaurant can have a presence with Facebook in a matter of minutes. The home page gives you plenty of room for a picture of your storefront, or your signature dish at the top.
Along the left-hand side, the template has room for pertinent information. Under the “About” heading, customers can find out what hours you are open, the type of food served, the price range and a short description of the atmosphere. There is space to add your web address, allowing postential patrons to look at a digital menu. The section also includes the phone number, address, and a small map. This is especially important for potential diners who are looking for a place to eat on their phone. The map feature links directly with the phone’s navigation feature, seamlessly directing the diner to your restaurant.
The final portion of the “About” section helps you gauge how you engage with your customers. It lists how long the page has been active, how many people have “liked” the page, and how many people have checked in while eating there. This can be an important part of showing how many people who are active on Facebook have visited your establishment. It shows that you are active in the community, and that you post regular content to keep clients coming back to both the page, and the restaurant.
Facebook is social media. So, it’s all about what you post and when. What you post should be simple: post the best moments of your business. On a day when the weatherman predicts sun and heat, you might point out that there are cool, fruity drinks just waiting for your favorite customers. You might even make it worth their while by adding a discount to anyone that shares the deal or shows the post when ordering. Little enticements such as this will grow your engagement while keeping your regulars happy with perceived status.
Choosing the right time to post can be tricky. You can post first thing in the morning, but, if you do mainly dinner business, your viewers might forget about you before they eat. According to Facebook’s own data, many people don’t choose a place to eat until about an hour before they order. So, try posting in morning for lunch diners or the late afternoon for a dinner crowd. Don’t have time? No problem. You can write all the posts at one time and schedule them to appear on your page at specified time. There are several add-ons such as Hootsuite that will schedule your posts for you.
Pictures are often what makes or breaks a restaurant’s page. While it’s tempting to take pictures with your phone and post them quickly, don’t rely on that strategy. Instead, hire a professional. You can prepare a wide range of food and drinks and hire a professional photographer to take pictures at a variety of tables and light settings when the restaurant is closed. In a couple of hours, most photographers can take hundreds of pictures from a variety of angles that you can pop into your posts for months, or even years to come.
But you also want to show people in your posts. This is where it can get sticky. It’s tempting to ask patrons if they would be willing to have their picture taken while enjoying a meal. If they’re happy, a lot of people are willing to be involved. But, what about the people in the background? It’s great that you have a picture of a happy family celebrating Grandma’s birthday. But that guy behind them who’s out to lunch with his secretary isn’t going to be too happy to have his face spread all over the internet. If you take the picture, you can be liable for the outcome.
Instead, watch for families that are taking pictures. Ask them to tag your Facebook page when they post them. You are free to repost anything they make public, but you are not liable for the original picture. It might even be worth offering such patrons a small discount or a treat.
Facebook not only allows, but encourages live video to share those times when your place is buzzing with business. But be careful. Live video posts, are just that, LIVE. You could be showcasing your star bartender making the most beautiful boutique cocktails in town, but if a couple gets into a screaming match at the bar, or a child throws a temper tantrum at table three, that goes out too. While you can delete the video, that doesn’t mean it will stay gone. Video archives exist. There are people that search through deleted videos for the most embarrassing moments for their own webpages.
Instead, try filming videos when there are few or no people around. Not only does this give you more control of the environment, but you can also post them before you expect to have diners.
Facebook has also created a group of Restaurant Entrepreneurs to help you get your Facebook page up, running, and profitable. Facebook for Restaurants offers a wide range of instructional articles, videos and slide shows to help you get the most out of your Facebook page. There you will also find out how to use your page for advertising, take out strategies, and how to use Facebook advertising.
But you don’t have to spend a lot of money to get a lot out of Facebook. You can use their free services to help build your business and make it more accessible to your target consumer.
Natalie is a seasoned restaurant industry expert with over 10 years of experience in hospitality consulting. Having worked in roles ranging from manager to consultant, Natalie has a deep understanding of the challenges and rewards of running a successful restaurant.
Beautiful, hygienic, contactless QR code menus for restaurants, bars and cafés.
QR Code is short for Quick Response Code. A QR code (sometimes referred to as a 2D barcode) is similar to the barcodes you find on the products that you scan at checkout at your local supermarket. The biggest difference, besides how it looks, is that QR codes can store more information. Barcodes store basic product information like type, weight, and color. QR codes can store the same information as barcodes, and more. They can contain text, website links, geographic coordinates, and even images. QR codes, can be scanned by anyone using a phone.
A QR restaurant menu is a website that contains a menu for a restaurant. It is an online menu that can be accessed just like any other website. The QR part of it comes from the fact that people usually access it by scanning a QR code at the restaurant they are eating at. QR codes add convenience; instead of typing the website address of the menu, you just scan the code with your phone camera, and the menu opens up automatically.
Just a few reasons your restaurant needs a QR menu are: hygiene, saving on printing costs, instant updates, customer experience, customer feedback, promotions, increased sales, increased table turnover, saving on staffing costs, customer data for marketing, and so on. If your restaurant does not have a QR code menu, you are leaving a lot on the table.
Creating a QR code menu is easy and just takes a few minutes.
We know our customers are small, independent businesses, so we try to keep our monthly fee as low as possible. We charge a very cost-effective $27 a month for QR restaurant menus. If you choose to turn on ordering, credit card processing fees and application fees are applied to orders. We use Stripe for processing payments. We chose Stripe because they give us the tools to build cutting-edge applications, and their pricing for credit card processing is competitive for our customer base. Compare their pricing to what your POS provider charges for online payments. Please refer to their fees here.
We have created a qr code menu example. Click here to see it and play around with it. Sign up for a free trial if you would like to create your own QR menu and customize it the way you want.
QR code menus are online menus that are accessed when a QR code is scanned. Customers use their mobile phone to scan a QR code that is usually located on a restaurant table. When the QR code is scanned, the restaurant’s online menu appears on the customers phone.
QR code menu’s are easy to scan and only take a couple of seconds to open.
There are two types of PDF menus available. There is a PDF QR code menu, which is offered by some of our competitors, and an interactive QR code menu, which is what we offer. Both kinds of menus are accessed by scanning a QR code, but PDF QR code menus just show a PDF of a menu, and interactive QR code menus (the type Happy Menu provides) show an interactive menu website with all the advantages and benefits of an online menu. PDF QR code menus cannot be edited, have no interaction, no navigation, no filtering, etc. PDF QR code restaurant menus do not take advantage of most of the benefits that having an online menu provides.
No, you do not have to use the table-ordering feature. Some restaurants choose to use our QR menu for browsing only; their staff still come to the tables, take the orders, and run them through their POS system. If you do not wish to use table ordering, do not turn the feature on.
Happy Menu is the number one restaurant QR code menu generator. Sign up for a free trial and you will be able to see why we are the best QR menu generator out there.
According to a 2022 Deloitte Study, consumers spend an around 20% more when they order via QR code menus or online menus.
Happy Menu QR code menu’s are 100% web based. All your customers need is a phone, no special software to access your Qr code menu.
Yes, your QR menu is a website with it’s own web address. You can link to it from your website, facebook, linktree etc.
Beautiful digital menus for small restaurants bars and cafes
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