AUTHOR'S SUMMARY:
Guest-Based Marketing is about how to build sales without breaking your budget;
about how to build volume from your existing customer base. More specifically,
it is about how to treat your guests in such a way that they want to come back
more often and say wonderful things about you to their friends!. Every
restaurateur wants to build sales but nobody has an endless supply of money and
most operators have had only limited success with more traditional
sales-building techniques and approaches. GBM will show you a way to boost
volume that is simpler, more effective and much less risky than anything you
have ever tried before.
DUST JACKET COPY:
"...operators are spending
more and more time worrying about the market, looking over their shoulders,
counting cars and trying to outguess the new guys. When they ask me what they
should do, I tell them to stop trying to compete!" - Bill Marvin, The Restaurant
Doctor
Increase sales by not competing? No, this isn't
some sort of New Age Marketing mysticism. It's part of an amazingly successful,
common sense approach to restaurant marketing that author Bill Marvin calls
Guest-Based Marketing.
What exactly does "guest-based" mean? It's
really pretty simple. The dynamic marketing approach described in this book is
based on the notion that in the restaurant business, customer satisfaction is
the real bottom line and that any successful sales-building effort begins on the
floor with the guests you've already won.
In Guest-Based Marketing you won't
find clever new ways to squander your precious resources trying to beat the
competition and steal their customers away. You will find
sales-boosting techniques that will help you to motivate your customers to keep
coming back for more, even if it means driving an extra mile or two. Using
numerous case studies and real-life anecdotes, Marvin describes proven
techniques to help you:
- identify and build on your strengths
- build customer loyalty
- increase the number of visits customers make
- get your customers to spread the word and
attract new diners
Marvin teaches you how to launch an effective
customer loyalty program and use an array of incentives to build sales. He helps
you hone your all-important people skills. You'll learn techniques for
remembering guest' names, as well as their individual likes and dislikes. He
shows you how to conduct customer surveys and make the best use of the
information you gather.
Designed for quick reference and featuring Bill
Marvin's trademark warm, humorous style, Guest-Based Marketing is an
indispensable tool of the trade for restaurateurs of every variety - truly a
working book for working people.
In this groundbreaking guide to restaurant
marketing, expert Bill Marvin demonstrates that success doesn't come from
beating the competition, it comes from pleasing your guests. He shows you how to
work from the inside out - to build on your strengths and to take advantage of
intrinsic advantages you didn't even know you had. He also suggests dozens of
successful, low-cost techniques for mining the most precious resource at your
disposal - your existing customer base. Among other valuable lessons, you'll
learn how to:
- educate your guests about why they come to
your restaurant
- implement sure-fire incentive and customer
loyalty programs
- manage a successful word-of-mouth campaign
that gets your guests to do your advertising ... for free
- get your staff involved in an ongoing
commitment to customer satisfaction
- enhance the personal connection between your
restaurant and your guests
Perhaps the most important lesson you'll learn
in Guest-Based Marketing is, as Bill Marvin puts it: "Monetary joy will
come when your sole concern -- your driving passion -- is how you can excel."
COMMENTS FROM THE PROS:
"Bill Marvin has been laying a foundation
for practical hospitality marketing for years and now Guest-Based Marketing is
the capstone of a masterpiece - hands-on, practical stuff for those in the
industry and for those who would be in the industry. Today's very competitive
marketplace demands guest-based marketing skills and focus - a most valuable
book at precisely the right time."
-- Michael E. Hurst, Professor, Hospitality Management,
Florida International University, Past President of the National Restaurant
Association and owner of Fifteenth Street Fisheries Restaurant, Fort Lauderdale,
FL

GUEST-BASED MARKETING
How to Increase Restaurant Sales Without
Breaking your Budget
CONTENTS
OPENING OBSERVATIONS
Preface
BUILD LOYALTY, NOT THE CHECK AVERAGE
01. Selling Techniques Can Be Dangerous
02. Job One
03. The Problem with Selling Techniques
04. Raising Revenues
05. Understanding Service
06. Sunset Grill: A Case Study
FOCUS ON GUEST DELIGHT
07. Satisfaction Stinks
08. Expectations
09. - service expectations
10. - product expectations
11. Delightful Practices
12. - operating policies
13. - unexpected touches
14. - special occasions
15. - service
16. - food & beverage
17. - teens
18. - families
19. - disabled
20. - elderly
GIVE GUESTS SOMETHING GOOD TO TALK
ABOUT
21. Understanding Word-of-Mouth
22. Basic Principles of WOM
23. Why Do People Talk?
24. Who Do People Listen To?
25. A Few Thoughts About People
26. Goals of a WOM Program
27. Differentiate the Basics
28. What Can You Talk About?
29. - concept
30. - operating policies
31. - food & beverage
32. - decor
33. - design
34. - restrooms
35. - pleasant surprises
36. Give Them the Words
37. Establishing a WOM Program
38. What Makes a WOM Program Work?
39. What Will Not Work?
40. Lambert's: A Case Study
41. El Puerco: A Case Study
PROVIDE INCENTIVES TO RETURN
42. Incentives Work
43. Discounts
44. - business card drawings
45. - internal coupons
46. - meal period discounts
47. Promotions
48. - birthdays and anniversaries
49. - holidays
50. - special events
51. - festivals
52. Customer Loyalty Programs
53. - punch cards
54. - point systems
55. - percentage of purchase plans
BUILD PERSONAL CONNECTION
56. It's About People, Stupid!
57. Presence
58. Guest Recognition
59. Get to Know Your Guests
60. - learn and use guests' names
61. - remember guests' likes and dislikes
62. - personal information
63. "Clubs"
GET YOUR STAFF INVOLVED
64. Your Staff Is the Restaurant
65. Tips and Tipping
66. 50 Tips to Improve Your Tips
67. Show Gratitude
68. Make a Personal Recommendation
69. Invite Guests to Return
70. Get the Message to Your Staff
PREFACE
Customers for life. The idea is so simple and
so elusive. All it means is that you operate in such a way that once a guest is
exposed to your restaurant, they will never be satisfied with any of your
competitors. It means that your serious sales-building work happens on the floor
with the guests, not in the office with the marketing plan and advertising
schedule.
I maintain that the focus of foodservice
management should not be to make a profit but to make sure that the guests are
happy. I also concede that management skill is ultimately measured by the
consistent profitability of the operation but focusing on the bottom line alone
will not assure success.
If you take care of your guests, your sales
will tend to take care of themselves. If the sales volume is there, the odds are
that your costs will be in line.
Evolution of an idea
If you accept that profitability is what enables you to continue to play the
game, my books represent a logical progression toward helping operators do a
better job of pleasing guests at a profit.
Restaurant Basics deals with the small
irritations that can accumulate and cause guests to become disenchanted. It is
the only book on customer service written entirely from the guests' point of
view and effectively defines the actions that diners lump into the category of
"bad attitude.
The Foolproof Foodservice Selection System
is about how to get the right people ... the first time. You cannot make quality
products with substandard ingredients and your staff is the raw ingredient in
your service recipe.
Then came From Turnover to Teamwork which
describes how you can keep those good people once you have found them. More
specifically, it is about how you can run your organization in such a way that
people want to hang out with you! The environment that causes your staff to stay
is the same environment that causes your guests to want to return more often.
The groundwork having been laid, now comes
Guest-Based Marketing which examines how to build volume from your existing
customer base. It is an examination of the factors that make you the restaurant
of choice for diners who increasingly have more and more options to choose from.
It provides practical, tested ideas that can help you create the sort of
experience that will draw guests back again and again ... and at little or no
cost.
The groundwork is important. You cannot entice
guests back to a restaurant where they were treated impersonally or
unprofessionally. This uncaring attitude is more likely to be displayed by staff
members who were hired haphazardly into a restaurant with a poor work climate.
Now that all the pieces are in place, we are
ready to examine the principles that will cause diners to be delighted with the
restaurant, vocal in their support and loyal in their patronage.
Restaurant Reality
Every restaurateur I know is engaged in the exercise of increasing (or trying to
increase) sales. There seems to be some sort of preoccupation with the notion
that bigger is better or that if we do not exceed last years sales we are
somehow falling behind. Both of these points are debatable but the obsession
with maintaining growth is undeniably a stress factor for many operators.
The increasing number of competitors in the
market only complicates the process and adds to the frustration. In addition to
the normal increase in independent operations, many chains are now entering
second and third tier markets as their primary markets reach saturation.
Multi-Unit Operators
Chains are serious competitors who bring some real clout to the market. Their
sheer size evokes a fear response in many independent operators. They typically
have a clearer sense of identity in the market and may enjoy a positive
reputation before they even open.
Typically multi-unit operators can bring more
professional expertise to the market if for no other reason than that they have
more money and can buy what they need. In many markets, chains are a breath of
freshness. They are certainly serious about what they do and have a depth of
capital that makes them hard to beat.
But chains also have vulnerabilities. They are
not local and the need for corporate control is often at odds with the need for
market responsiveness at the unit level. Chain restaurants are often impersonal
and can leave guests with a feeling of being processed rather than being served.
Their "cookie cutter" consistency has pros and cons but often can be a
disadvantage.
They are necessarily slower to react and less
flexible in dealing with unique problem-solving than their independent
counterparts. Their focus is often more on costs and percentages than it is on
making the guest happy. They also typically have less latitude to be
experimental.
Independent Operators
Independents are at a disadvantage for many of the reasons noted above, but they
also have some advantages that a chain cannot match. The typical independent has
a local identity. The operation was started by someone from the area to serve
people in the area. Since hospitality is a business based on personal
connection, the local tie can be a strong plus. Interestingly, independents may
be seen as more personal and friendly because of their imperfections.
Many locally-owned restaurants literally grew
up with the owners and reflect the learning curve in uniquely quirky ways.
Independents have to answer to only themselves and the market, making them far
more flexible than their chain competitors. A local restaurant will have a
longer history or tradition than a recently-arrived national or regional
operation.
Without the need to support a corporate
overhead and with sites that were developed when market prices for land and
construction were lower, the local operator often enjoys lower operating costs.
This permits them flexibility that is difficult for newcomers to match.
Independents can be more innovative than chains
because they are more often operated by entrepreneurs. All the successful chain
concepts grew from an entrepreneurial dream that worked! Chain executives are
quick to admit that they are better at growing an idea than they are at
conceiving the idea in the first place.
Finally, the local operator has an established
staff, often with workers who have served guests for generations. There is a
legacy there that no chain will be able to match.
My point in bringing all this up is that
competition is a fact of life. If you are successful, someone will move in
beside you to try to get a piece of your business. But no matter where the
competition comes from, the savvy operator will play off of his or her strongest
market advantages to stay ahead. Too often local restaurateurs try to compete
head-on with the newcomers -- a stressful tactic at best.
Don't Compete - EXCEL!
Nearly every market I visit is experiencing a major influx of new restaurants
and it doesn't matter if they are chain operations with deep pockets and smooth
formats or independents trying to carve out a niche or pursue a dream. In either
case, operators are spending more and more time worrying about the market,
looking over their shoulders, counting cars and trying to outguess the new guys.
When they ask me what they should do, I tell
them to stop trying to compete! Competing can be dangerous to your professional
survival! Let me explain:
Have you ever been driving down the road and
had a police car behind you? I don't know about you but when that happens to me,
I suddenly become fixated on the speedometer and fascinated by the rear view
mirror. In this condition, I have a lot less time to pay attention to where I am
going! The closer an eye I keep on the cop, the higher my anxiety level rises. I
am definitely not as good a driver!
The same thing applies in the business world.
When you are watching the competition, it drains vital energy away from your
primary focus which should be on making sure you run the very best restaurant
you can. An obsession with your competitors can interfere with giving your
guests a memorable time! Wake up!
Be competitive ... but don't compete. Monetary
success and personal joy will come when your sole concern - your driving passion
-- is only how you can excel!
The Best Defense
The best competitive strategy is to never let your guests get to the
competition. People are creatures of habit and once the habit is formed, they
are not likely to break it ... unless you give them a reason to do so. But they
only come back because they want to!
Every time a guest eats with you is one less
shot anyone else has to impress them and win their patronage. So not only do you
get the sales but your competitors do not have a chance to make an impression
and win them over.
So the safest way to build sales is to foster
repeat business and to be sure that your guests know all the wonderful things
you do for them so that they will be sure to think of you when they dine
elsewhere.
Shrinking Market Area
As competition increases, as more and more restaurants enter the market, the
distance people are willing to drive is steadily declining.
Mike Hurst of 15th Street Fisheries in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida estimates that ten years ago, his guests came 15-20 miles
for dinner. Today, he says, the majority of his diners live within 2 miles of
his restaurant and the radius is slowly tightening. People may drive past two or
three other restaurants to get to you but, unless you are a destination
restaurant, they are not likely to drive past twenty or thirty.
Guest-Based Marketing
So your most realistic option to build sales has to come from guests who are
already within the acceptable travel distance ... and your dining room is full
of them! The trick now is to be able to get them back again and again and that
is the basis of what we are calling GBM or Guest-Based Marketing.
You will find the following pages full of hints
on how to build volume from your existing customer base without losing your
shirt in the process. But a word of caution before we get started: you will do
better to understand the reasoning behind the ideas offered than to simply adopt
the ideas. The notions I present are not extensively documented for precisely
that reason. Too much detail might make this look like a how-to book when it is
really a why-to book. Not every suggestion is appropriate for every restaurant
(and adopting all of them is inappropriate for any restaurant!)
My goal is to increase your understanding of
how to build volume from your existing customer base not necessarily to put more
toys in your toy box. If you understand what I am pointing to and the principles
that make it work, you will be able to identify and implement your own unique
programs and never run out of ideas.
I encourage you to share your stories, both
good and bad, and to contact me with any comments, suggestions or questions. My
address and phone are included at the end of the book for just that purpose.
Good luck and have fun!