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How To Market Your Bar or Restaurant On Instagram

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Instagram is becoming more competitive by the minute.

 

With over 100 million new photos and videos posted every day, you'll need to work smart to reach your fans and customers.

 

 

Here are 5 tips to grow your bar or restaurant on Instagram.

 

1) Don’t show photos of food!

 

I bet that caught your attention! And yes, I'm serious. 

 

You should NOT show photos or videos of your food....

 

....ALL. THE. TIME. 

 

Do your photos look at least this good??

 

We get it, you can plate a dish and take a solid photo. The thing is, attractive food & drinks are but one element of a quality restaurant, neighborhood pub, or dive bar.

 

Think about it for a second...

Our favorite bars and restaurants are the culmination of 100’s of intentional decisions regarding the location, design, decor, lighting, music, products, partners, ingredients, tableware, suppliers, staff, etc…

 

100+ decisions that result in a unique experience. 

 

Tell this story.

 

A bar or restaurant's unique blend of attributes has a tremendous impact on the perceived quality of the experience, which can even influence the perceived quality of the food.

These combined qualities are essential to differentiating yourself in your market and offer you countless opportunities to share your unique story with the world on Instagram. 

 

Show us the space and tell us what inspired the design.

Show us the space and tell us what inspired the design.

 

Keep in mind the majority of restaurants are stuck in the same groove of posting food shots, so you are competing with every other bar and restaurant for Instagram Likes and Followers if this is all you post. 

 

People can only see so many plates of food in their Instagram feed before they decide they’ve had enough and choose to Unfollow (or refuse to Follow) restaurants that don’t offer something unique, interesting, and useful.

 

IDEAS To get You Started:

 

  • Post a beautiful photo of the local farm where you get your cheese/produce/meat (or even better, tell us the story of the farmer who works their ass off to provide it).

 

  • Reveal the diligence and daily effort that goes into prepping your food, or bring us into the kitchen to learn how to make a unique dish.

 

  • Introduce us to the story of your best customer, complete with their favorite menu items, a bit about them, and what keeps them coming back.

 

  • Teach us how to mix the original craft cocktail your bartender just came up with.

 

  • Show us smiling patrons celebrating a special occasion, or an impromptu night out (be sure to get permission to post).

 

 

At the end of the day, the best bars and restaurants on Instagram bring in new customers by:

 

 1) Standing out with original and dynamic content that gains/retains new Followers 

 2) Showcasing a unique experience/promise that conveys value

 3) Sharing stories that inspire people to show up at their door and tell their friends.

 

 

Customers need to be energized to visit, not simply shown a visual menu like a Chinese takeout restaurant menu board!

 

 

 

2) Make your customers the hero

 

Smiling faces of happy customers = guaranteed likes

 

Share their photos!

 

Create a dialogue by asking them questions. Seek feedback on how you can get better.  

 

Develop an original Instagram hashtag that includes your brand name (like #XYZrestaurantlove), encourage patrons to use it, then repost quality user photos with credit. 

 

Reply and like every comment and direct message (especially any negative comments). 

 

Host contests to give back to your Followers (think gift cards, branded apparel, cooking lessons, private dining events….)

 

Send direct messages to your best customers that you haven’t seen in a while. Invite them in with their friends. Offer them something for “free” to say thank you and incentivize them to visit.

 

 

3) Plan to get serious

 

Instagram enables bars and restaurants to directly engage their Followers (for free) on a daily basis, but that doesn’t mean you should spend valuable time each day trying to figure out what to post. 

 

The most successful Instagramers plan their posts many days in advance, organizing the messages and media they want to share according to the story and key selling points they want to convey.

 

They know what the goals are for the restaurant or bar on a macro level and organize that into a plan for communicating their story on Instagram

 

We’ve developed a simple planning calendar for our clients that organizes and streamlines the planning process, so they never have to wonder what they will post that day, who is responsible for executing, or what is the best time to post. 

 

This tool helps them be consistent with the posts, which is essential to growth. Ask about getting a copy for your restaurant. 

 

 

4) Mix up your media

 

Still photos are nice and all, but like Facebook, Instagram is beginning to reward video posts with extended reach, and short videos are a perfect format for Instagram Stories. 

 

Give us a tutorial, a tour, or a time-lapse of a dish coming together.

 

Boomerangs can be a cool way to show “the perfect pour”, ninja knife skills, a beautiful plate served to a table, guests raising a “cheers”…etc…

 

Check out this cool Cinemagraph by The Wayfarer:

202 Likes, 5 Comments - The Wayfarer (@thewayfarernyc): "Drop by 💧☕️ for #NationalCappuccinoDay ✨ #WalrusWednesdays #TheWayfarernyc #wayfarer #cappuccino..."

 

You might also try going Live in Stories from a staff event or outing. 

 

Why not Broadcast a wine education class/staff training or shoot a clip of the tour you take of a brewery/vineyard that you source from. 

 

Whatever you do, mix it up. Your target audience will appreciate that your content is always fresh. Remember, you are competing with EVERYONE who is vying for attention on Instagram, not just other bars and restaurants.

 

 

5) Post at the right time

 

The right time to post is different for every bar and restaurant, but generally, you should post when the majority of your Followers are online (obviously).

 

To reveal this data, convert your profile to a business account (tied to your Facebook page) and use the in app analytics to see the highest traffic times for your account. 

 

 

Access Follower activity here in Instagram App analytics:

 

 

 

Instagram chunks these times into 3 hr blocks, so you will have to experiment with the best times for your account. 

 

Based on our work growing Instagram accounts with 50+ clients across industries over the past year, 6-8pm is generally a good default time to post, but you may also find success around 9am, or 12pm. These times can vary Friday-Sunday.

 

 

Post to Stories any day, all day. Stories are fast becoming the best way to resonate to the top of your Followers feeds, and you can be a bit more casual and of the moment. Get creative!

 

 

Pro tip: We have seen evidence that posting to Stories at the same time you upload a new gallery post helps extend the reach of the Gallery post. The Instagram algorithm is complex to say the least, so try this technique for a week to test it for your account.

 

 

Finally....

 

These are the basics of how smart bars and restaurants are growing with Instagram marketing.

There a many other ways to optimize and refine your Instagram marketing strategy, but if you execute in these areas first, you have the best chance to improve your Following, increase engagement, and drive the ROI for your business!

 

 

Drop us line if you would like to dramatically accelerate your growth on Instagram!

 

 

 

 

More from the Journal....

 

 

These are the Advanced Techniques To Improve SEO

 

Ranking on page 1 of Google can help a business leap ahead of the competition, but it’s not easy ...

 

You may have executed the SEO basics, built content over time, and launched a new mobile friendly website, but still don't rank as high as you would like for your prime keywords.

 

Hopefully, you have done these things well:

  • Defined your target audience and their interests

  • Created Categories of Keywords

  • Identified gaps and opportunities on your site

  • Researched & Learned from your competition

  • Customized your efforts for your situation

 

Awesome. That's a fine start which might be enough to rank well in a niche local market. 

But, what if your rank is still subpar?

 

If you believe you’ve done a great job with SEO Fundamentals, then these are your next steps:

  • Ensure proper Indexing and accessibility

  • Optimize Site Speed & Performance

  • Create semantic appropriate search terms

  • Write content for long tail keywords

  • Build link backs with great content that is worth linking to

  • Optimize for multiple search verticals - image, local search, etc...

 

Phew, yes indeed, that’s a lot of work and much more than most businesses might ever tackle...

 

but, there are a few more things you can try. 

 

Upgrade to HTTPS and/or HTTP/2

Google rewards sites with HTTPS, and it’s considered a best practice, so it can’t hurt to make the switch. You might even try switching to HTTP/2, which may increase site speed and rankings.

 

 

Double down on a mobile first approach

Write content that is mobile friendly. Ensure that your site is not only responsive to different screen sizes, but that the content is laid out on page in a way that allows it to appear clean and uncluttered. 

 

For example, a 3 photo horizontal layout may line up well on a desktop (Figure 1), but will look less desirable as 2 photos stacked on top of 1 in a smaller screen (Figure 2).

Don't assume that your responsive site will ensure proper design - you must refine each page of content.


Figure 1

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Figure 2

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Hone in on Technical SEO

These are the parts of your site that help assist search engine spiders to crawl your content, checking for: site speed, mobile friendliness, and HTML/XML sitemaps.

 

Tend to your Structured Data

Structured data explains to a search engine what everything on your site means.

Google’s Structured Data Markup Helper will easily guide you.

 

Reduce Duplicate Content

If you have multiple URLS pointing to the same page, it could be considered a duplicate and you may be penalized.

To avoid this, you need to create a canonical tag to tell the search engine that you have a preferred URL for a post, but there may be others which should not be considered duplicates. Again, Google will help you

 

Additionally, Here is what Google recommends:

  • Use 301s

  • Be consistent

  • Use top-level domains

  • Syndicate carefully

  • Use Search Console to tell us how you prefer your site to be indexed: 

  • Minimize boilerplate repetition

  • Avoid publishing stubs

  • Understand your content management system 

  • Minimize similar content

 

 

If you’re struggling with SEO, try these techniques, and...

 

If you need assistance, please send a note or call today!

We'd love to help you.


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Specializing in Strategy, Planning and Design, we help you Make Your Move™.