|

As commodity prices
continue to rise, competition comes out of the woodwork and the general
cost of doing business increases, pizza operators must either slash
overhead or develop cost-effective strategies to increase sales.
Since you can't "save" your way to prosperity, understanding
and using four walls marketing to build your sales is not an option. It's
a must. We are in an overhead
driven business. Once our overhead is covered, we can take up to 50
percent of extra sales to the bottom line. Most operators I consult with
have very limited time, energy and money to market their restaurant, but
without a marketing focused pizza business, you will eventually hit a
brick wall and destruct.

"Never Trust A Hot Blonde In A Short
Skirt"
This is my favorite line to describe the
advertising reps that used to bombard me with the promises of more
customers and higher sales if I'd just give their advertising media a try.
Thousands of dollars later, I found myself poorer with no idea whether
their expensive mass market advertising worked. For the
average operator, buying TV, radio and newspaper that reaches the entire
city is a waste of advertising dollars. It's akin to ordering the buffet
at a Chinese restaurant and just wanting a bowl of fried rice. Most of
your customers live or work within three miles of your
pizzeria. Most ad reps will urge
you to deep discount or coupon to get new customers into your restaurant.
Once they try you, the logic goes, they'll become regulars. Nice argument,
but it's flawed. The problem is that these "coupons" appear the next week
and the next. There's no way to keep the guy who just checked you out from
clipping a coupon each week. It's like creating your own brand of
addicts.
What's A Pizza
Operator To Do? The first place any wise
operator invests his or her marketing money is in four walls marketing.
Four walls marketing is the use of point of sale promotional pieces like
signs, table tents and banners to increase sales. Because some promotions
have permanent places in your restaurant, the cost comes down to dimes a
day over the long haul. There are three ways to build sales:
bring in new customers, get your current customers to come back more often
or raise your check averages. A well-developed four walls marketing
campaign will help you achieve any or all of the
three. Unless you're hidden in a cave, drive-by customers can
be educated and enticed to visit with proper banners. Table tents,
washroom signs and lobby signs will sell your more expensive specials or
bring your existing customers back for an additional visit. These core
customers are six times more likely to buy again or buy more than finding
a new customer.
Four Walls Marketing
Zones
Each month the rent is due whether you
use your building to its potential for raising sales or not. You need to
start mapping out a strategy. Let's take inventory of the marketing zones
you can use: table tops to place table tents, lobby area for signage,
pizza boxes for box toppers, parking lot for signage, the side of your
building or lot that faces your busy street for banners and your drive
thru window lane for signage. My favorite marketing zone is
the restroom: walls and stalls. Odd? Yes, but it's very effective because
you have someone's undivided attention. It reminds me of the days kids had
no television sets in the kitchen and were forced to read cereal
boxes. Other examples of effective zones are brochure racks
up front, message on hold systems, the back side of your business cards
and your staff. The right button with the right message can turn your
servers and drivers into walking salesmen and billboards.
Now, which zone should you choose when marketing a
promotion? I say all of them. It takes about seven impressions for a
marketing message to stick and lead to action. Use as many as you can.
Your customer may miss the lobby sign on the way in, but reads your table
tent while waiting for a dining companion. Leave nothing to
chance.
Promotional
Ideas Here's an idea of the types of
promotions you can run. Use it as a springboard to create your own four
walls marketing campaign:
- Letting Your Customers Know You
Cater - a great profit center.
- Contests or Giveaways - to bring in
new customers and build your database.
- New Menu Item Rollout - adding new
items keeps things fresh and just might attract new folks looking to
break the rut.
- Gift Certificate Sales - perfect
around Christmas.
- Cooking Classes - you can command a
high fee and create your own army of pizza
evangelists.
- Promote Your Party Room - bet you have
customers that don't even know you have one.
- Buffets - Good for slower times of the
week.
- Kid's Clubs - get the kiddies in and
the parents' wallets follow.
The list goes on and on. Besides investing in marketing books and tapes
for more promotional ideas, play detective when out of town. Get a copy of
the local dining guide or Sunday paper to create your own "swipe file" of
ideas.
How Do You Create
Your Four Walls Pieces? I like to create a
four walls marketing calendar for the year. Holidays are a good
inspiration, and you can back fill your calendar with more creative ideas.
Try to create promotions that last at least a month. Your return on
investment diminishes when you have to amortize costs over just one night.
Having a calendar holds your feet to the fire and prevents you from losing
out on promotional opportunities. If a month passes without a promotion,
that's valuable selling you can't get back. Some operators
are gifted in design, and others outsource the creative work. Just make
sure all promotional pieces compliment each other. You must carry the
theme, colors and design to each component. In my early
years, I would design promotions in Microsoft Publisher. Though they have
templates, the end result is still homemade. Your local quick printer
should have a graphic artist on site to help, but you'll need to guide
them. Choosing the right headline can make the difference
between a winner and a loser. Colors and food photography also play a
major roll. Make sure banners are limited to no more than seven words.
Anymore and passersby will be unable to catch your
message. If you feel overwhelmed by the process, look into
using the services of a company that specializes in four walls marketing
for restaurants. However you decide to proceed with your
four walls marketing campaign, it's vital you get your staff on board. On
the front end, a brainstorming session will flesh out some creative and
effective ideas. Your staff will also point out potential pitfalls to
avoid. Before you roll out a new promotion, make sure to get
with your staff and share any selling scripts or ideas for handling
questions. Your staff is on the front line, and without the knowledge you
both look bad. Dollar for dollar you won't find a better use
of your marketing dollars. Many promotions can be saved and used for a few
years. Armed with this information, you'll be more confident of the sales
increases you can drive through four walls marketing.
-- PMQ
--
|