| Boost Your Business With A Restaurant Newsletter |
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| Written by Jose Riesco | |||
| Wednesday, 01 July 2009 06:53 | |||
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A restaurant newsletter is an ideal way to boost your business and develop a relationship with customers. It can be done in electronic form and sent to email lists and posted on your restaurant website, in print form to be mailed and given to customers at the restaurant, or a combination of both. Your restaurant newsletter should have the same image than your restaurant. If you are a formal dining establishment, you newsletter should look upscale and sophisticated and be written with flair. If you are a casual, family restaurant, then your bulletin should have a fun and friendly look and be written in an upbeat, casual tone. In any type of printed or online materials about your restaurant, relevant information should be provided somewhere, whether in a box off to the side, as part of the title box, or as an informational line at the bottom. Pertinent information includes name of restaurant, street address, phone and fax numbers, hours of operation, website address and email address. The content of your restaurant newsletter should be less self-promoting and more customer-focused. The restaurant newsletter should not be self-promoting, it should be customer focused. The customer wants to know about your monthly specials, your charitable commitments, any new seasonal menus, a story behind this month's recipe, your new celebrity chef, industry trends, or new features of your restaurant. It is important that you maintain a consistent delivery date (even if it's only quarterly). If you overdo the communication, customers will view it as advertising rather than information. A monthly publication is probably best if you have a lot going on, but if you change menus seasonally and don't hold many special events or fundraisers, then consider a quarterly one. A good restaurant newsletter is one that customers can quickly read. You don't need to write long articles. Short articles with short sentences will do better. Catchy headlines and dividers to separate articles also help. Be sure to break up text with white space. Include only one or two small images, whether of food, staff, or other appropriate photo, so as not to jam a persons email box. With any restaurant newsletter, be sure to provide links. If you're doing a printed publication, include the links so customers can visit when they have available computer access. And remember to include instructions on how to subscribe to your newsletter list, as well as a forward to a friend link. You should think about offering incentives to new subscribers and setup a formalized referral system for your existing subscribers. Encouraging feedback by asking a question or taking a poll is also a great feature to include in a newsletter. ------------------------------ Jose Riesco worked in the IT industry for 18 years and owned a restaurant. Jose has brought top proven marketing practices to the restaurant industry, making a unique contribution to this business. By creating a unique client-centric Strategy, restaurateurs will be able to dramatically increase their sales while having happy and repeated clients. To find more about his Restaurant Marketing Strategies visit: http://www.myrestaurantmarketing.com Advertisement
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 01 July 2009 06:53 |
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