Here is the deal - often restaurants blame problems they are having on slow sales without looking at the reason behind the dip in profit. Some restaurant owners even resolve themselves to believing that their restaurant just has an ongoing sales problem, blaming the reasons on the market, the competition, and a dozen other factors “out of their control”. But slow sales are always a symptom and never, ever, the problem. There is a huge difference when it comes to the terminology. Labeling declining sales as a problem instead of looking at it as a symptom is an incredibly critical distinction to make, and here is why.
Viewing sales as the problem means that restaurants will hyper focus on solving the problem. Their objective to solve the problem narrows in on only sales while ignoring other issues that are contributing to it. Usually this tunnel vision produces only one plausible solution - more marketing to help increase sales.
Don’t get me wrong - marketing is absolutely an important part of generating sales! But trying to use marketing as a solution to fix a sales problem is like providing electricity to a dead frog. Sure, it will jump, but the frog is still dead. You may seem random bursts of sales increases in marketing, but that is not an ongoing solution to your sales symptom.
Marketing changes when there is already an existing issue will not build guest loyalty, repeat business, and positive word of mouth marketing. More likely, the sales problem has more to do with what you are doing correctly or ignoring in your restaurant every day. The problem is also affected by how the overall experience is perceived by your guests including food quality, service, and atmosphere.
If your sales are too low at your restaurant, it is not just happenstance! There is a reason behind the downturn in profit margins and fixing that problem will be the solution to improving your sales. To figure out some of the many factors that grow a sales problem into a sales symptom, it is important to step back and take an objective look at your restaurant operations as well as the temperature of the local restaurant market. Consider the following:
Whenever you take the time to look at every aspect of your restaurant and your local market, you will learn valuable information that will help you identify factors that you may be missing out on when you believe that a sales problem is the only thing wrong with your restaurant. Without identifying the symptom of low sales, you are missing out on the big picture of your restaurant.
This is why throwing money at marketing when you have a low sales symptom is not the answer. This will make things worse if you spend time bringing in new customers to a restaurant that has ongoing sales problems. Instead, you must look at the restaurant from an intellectual perspective. Thinking objectively about all these factors that are keeping customers away will help you identify the real problem with your restaurant sales. When you look at the symptoms of low sales, it is the only way to come up with effective and lasting solutions.
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