Before you begin marketing through a VIP Club, you need to take a step
back and look at your restaurant. Make sure that you are ready for
increased business. Don't attempt to market your restaurant unless you
have above average food and service. Good marketing can actually put a
restaurant that provides poor food and service out of business faster
because more people will have a poor dining experience, and the
negative word-of-mouth will cause them to fail faster than if they do
not market at all," says Brent Davis, Director of Coaching Services
for RestaurantMarketingGroup.org (RMG) a company that specializes in
helping restaurants to build sound, trackable marketing systems through
its easy-to-use software, "How-To" marketing manuals and personalized
coaching.
Gathering the Data:
Once you have taken an internal
inventory and feel good about the food and service that you provide,
it's time to start using and building your database of existing
customers. Remember that in most restaurants 30 percent of the customers
are bringing in 70 percent of the business. For the sake of our
discussion, let's say that Joe's Family Diner has 10,000 customers a
month. That's 322 customers each day. Seventy percent of the diner's
monthly customers would be 7,000. If the restaurant's VIP Club marketing
creates only one more visit per year per customer at an average check
of $25, the volume will increase by $175,000 per year or $14,538 a month
and that's with only
one extra visit per existing customer per year. You can see why it's important to go after additional customer visits.
"Don't
forget that your existing customers are your neighbors. A VIP Club
nables you to market within your neighborhood to existing customers.
It's permission based and therefore considerably more effective than if
you did a
blanket coupon offer to all of your neighbors. These are
folks who know and frequent your restaurant; they took the time to fill
out a VIP card and have shared personal information with you," says
Davis.
"VIP Clubs are a great way to build customer loyalty.
Always give a thank you reward bonus for joining the club. We recommend
that the offers go out by email or regular mail within 72 hours after
signing up. The offer should be
without any strings attached. I like
to suggest that the offer be for a dollar amount. A flat $15.00 or
$10.00 amount could be enough depending on your guest check average. You
could give a FREE, dinner with a $10 or $15 limit. Give them an offer
they can use on anything they want. The offer is now valuable and they
feel compelled to use it," says Teresa Horn, RMG Marketing Program
Development
Specialist.
To enjoy the greatest return on
your VIP Club enrollment campaign, you should train your employees so
that they understand everything about the VIP Club. Have a contest and
give prizes to the employees who sign up the most
customers. Place
VIP Club displays and sign-up cards in very high-traffic, highly visible
areas. Use pre-printed "Post-It" pad messages and put them on your
menus so that your customers and employees will be reminded to fill them
out.
Always emphasize the benefits of VIP Club membership. Enter
the names and additional information into the computer software program
on a daily basis, using a part time employee.
Horn suggests that your VIP Club sign-up cards include the
following information:
Name:
Address:
Birthdates of each family member, so that they can receive a
birthday surprise.
Anniversary:
Email::
Phone: (Optional)
"Carefully
select your expiration date. I usually suggest using a three-week
expiration date. If it's not used by then, it is usually lost. You want
to create a sense of urgency," says Horn.
Processing the data:
Don't
wait until you have built a large database. Start marketing to each VIP
Club member the minute you get their data. You will find that this
information is your most valuable marketing asset.
Creating a
database of your customers and immediately communicating to them on a
regular basis will increase the frequency of visits to your restaurant.
For almost any reason, or sometimes for no reason at all you should
send
the customer a postcard or an email with an incentive to bring
them into the restaurant again. Remember, the goal is to bring the
customers in at least one EXTRA time per year. By sending them a
reminder postcard or email around a
holiday or during a local
community event will remind them to visit your restaurant. And if they
make several EXTRA visits you have exceeded your goal and dramatically
increased the sales and profit of your restaurant.
Create a Birthday Club:
What
is the most popular holiday for eating out? According to the National
Restaurant Association, it's on your birthday. In fact, 55 percent of
all Americans eat out on their birthdays. The best news of all is that
people have
birthdays 365 days a year, spread out over 12 months. Birthdays are the perfect time to encourage additional business.
"Use the information gathered in your database to send out birthday
cards for each VIP customer as you recognize one of the most important
days in their lives. Their celebrations might as well happen at your
restaurant. Always include a FREE offer such as a FREE dinner for the
birthday guest.
Remember that birthday guests rarely party alone; the average size of a birthday group is five individuals," says Horn.
Go
out of your way to make the birthday party a special event when a
customer redeems his/her certificate. Your restaurant needs to become
the "Party Place." Develop definite policies to ensure that it
happens¡ÂȘthat the parties are fun and your birthday guest is treated
like royalty for
their day. You must create a special party
atmosphere. One Northwest seafood chain has a crazy fish hat that the
birthday person wears while they take a Polaroid or digital photo of the
birthday guest and his/her friends. The photo is then slipped into a
cardboard photo holder and becomes a
nice takeaway remembrance of
the evening. Of course, the restaurant's name and address is on the
card. If you include a "year" sticker, it can become a collectable
item.
Celebrate Anniversaries:
Another great marketing
campaign can be centered on your VIP customers' anniversaries.
Forty-three percent of American couples say they go out to eat to
celebrate their wedding anniversaries. If you own a fine dining
restaurant,
try to make your guests dining experience special and
romantic. Doing "little extras" is what will set your restaurant apart
from the competition. Value-added incentives are more important than
discounts on anniversaries. You must
make it a "special occasion."
Quick
Service Restaurants and Pizza Shops can effectively wish mom and dad a
happy anniversary by giving them a great offer for their children's
meals that way, Mom doesn't have to cook for the children before she
goes out to dine.
This let's the children celebrate the anniversary too.
Advertise Specials or New Menus:
"With
a marketing database, you are prepared to communicate with your regular
customers. It's a great way to introduce a new menu or a new menu
item. Always include some special offer just for VIP members," says
Horn.
Many companies have developed a newsletter for VIP members.
Others are sending out e-newsletters. This is a great way to say thank
you to your frequent customers. It's also a great medium to tell them
about new menu items,
new employees, and new recipes. All this helps
to make our customers take an interest in your restaurant and keep your
restaurant's name in front of your VIP members. Be sure to make the
newsletter newsy and fun to read. Always include some sort of incentive
for those members to stop by for a
meal. Change your incentive in each newsletter and track the results.
Sponsor Contests:
One
restaurateur saw a substantial increase in VIP member visits when she
started having a weekly drawing. She sent out a postcard to the VIP
members and asked them to bring in the postcards for a FREE offer. When
redeemed, the
postcards were entered into a weekly drawing for a
free lunch or "Dinner For two". Monthly drawings were also held with
prizes such as a digital camera, CD player, clock radio, etc. Grand
Prize Drawings held twice a year gave away a
grandfather's clock or a cruise. With every mailer, she reminded her customers of the grand prize drawings.
Additional Celebrations:
Create
theme nights to attract your VIP members back to your restaurant. Tie
your theme occasions with holidays. For instance, February is National
Chocolate Lover's Month. Offer your VIP members a special chocolate
dessert promotion for the month of February. One creative Italian
restaurant
owner did a VIP promotion for its St. Patrick's Day
celebration. He sent out an email invitation saying, "Come party with
real Italians on St. Patrick's Day. We'll show you how to celebrate St.
Patrick's Day in style." Any holiday will
do. One restaurant celebrated Agatha Christie's Birthday by offering a surprise entree special.
Remember
that the number of dollars that a customer is going to spend is
limited. To get more than your share, you are frankly going to have to
take
them away from your competition Effective marketing will help you get a
larger share of your customer's dollars and includes the tools to track
each and every promotion to determine your customer response and
return on investment. With good marketing and tracking you will be
able to
keep your restaurant in Top OF Mind awareness with your customers.
"It's
not your customer's job to remember you. It's your obligation and your
responsibility to make sure the customer doesn't forget you! An
effective VIP
Club will do just that," says Horn.
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