Anything illegal.
Customers love happy hours and drink
specials, but check your state/city regulations to make sure the
promotion you’re offering is legal. Different areas have different
alcohol laws, and it can be illegal to offer drink discounts, specials,
or free drinks. Breaking the law might bring in a few more customers,
but it won’t be worth it if you end up with a hefty fine.
Restaurant week.
Participating in your city’s restaurant
week seems like a good idea on the surface. You get visibility, tons of
new customers, and you show that you’re part of the community. But does
this promotion actually benefit your business? Many restaurants can’t
make up for the deep discounts they offer during restaurant week and
they end up losing money. What’s more, the customers who buy meals at a
significant discount often don’t bother to come back later to buy the
same meal at full price.
All-You-Can-Eat.
While all-you-can-eat deals work
sometimes, restaurants must be very careful to make sure they’re not
losing money. In 2003, Red Lobster offered an all-you-can-eat snow crab leg deal
that ended up costing the company $3 million. Not only did Red Lobster
vastly underestimate how much snow crab each customer could eat, but
they also launched the promotion when snow crab costs were up. The
lesson to learn here? Always do research if you decide to offer an
all-you-can-eat deal so you’ll be sure to make money. Chances are, your
restaurant can’t afford to lose $3 million!
Coupons.
Coupons can be great—after all, who
doesn’t love a discount? But just printing coupons without any other
promotional strategy to go along with them isn’t effective. What’s worse
is that it conditions customers to expect your food at a discount.
Promotions with a bit more creativity and customer involvement are much
more successful.
Anything that gets the wrong kind of attention.
All press is certainly not good press
when it comes to restaurant promotion. Sure, you want to get your
restaurant’s name out there, but not at the cost of your reputation.
Don’t ever do anything that compromises your customers’ privacy or takes
advantage of people or animals. This might seem like a no brainer,
right? It wasn’t for one LA restaurant
that decided to chain a donkey to a fence outside the restaurant in 85
degree heat as a Cinco de Mayo promotion. You want people talking about
your restaurant, but not if it also involves a PETA protest. Before
running a promotion involving anything living, be sure to consider if
there’s any way it could be considered offensive or harmful.
When you’re coming up with restaurant promotions, keep these ideas in
mind. Remember that while you want people to talk about your
restaurant, you want them to talk about the right things. The real focus
should be on your food and service, not on an embarrassing promotional
stunt that loses money, business, or respect. Follow these tips next time you’re ready to plan your next promotion.
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