According to restaurant
consultants interviewed by Restaurants USA magazine, re-designing your
menu can improve your sales on average from 2 to 10 percent.
Use
the methods below to achieve a more profitable menu and a good menu design.
1. Price Point Justification.
Move your prices into your descriptions to avoid price-shopping
by customers. Using the same typeface and removing the dollar sign can
further help the customer focus on the product, not the price. |
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2. Item Placement. People
most often remember and buy the first two items or the last menu item in each menu category.
Place your menu items with the highest gross profit in these
spots on the menu.
3. Boxing. Impact 10 to
15 percent of the space on your menu by boxing menu items. As
a general rule box one out of every 7 to 10 items.
4. Page Positioning. On
three-panel (page) menus, people most often look at the center
panel first, and then move counter clockwise. On two-panel (page)
menus people most often look at the top right-hand side first.
Consider putting your high profit items such as specials or specialty
drinks in these spots.
5. Hospitality Symbols and
Icons. Stars, bullets, or other food symbol icons can make your
menu unique and draw attention to menu items that you would prefer
to sell. Graphics can set items apart and increase sales on those
items as much as 15 percent. (Be careful with the ubiquitous Heart symbol
that usually denotes 'heart-healthy' as people have learned to
translate that into 'tastes awful'.)
6. Hold the Hyperbole.
Keep food descriptions short because only one third of your menu
is actually read. People don't want to read a novel when they
sit down to dine. Use wherever possible 'word pictures' rather
than lengthy descriptions. And do not fear white space - it allows the eyes
to pause and rest.
7. Showcasing. Highlight
types of foods by including menu headings such as "Fresh
Pasta" or "Our Specialties" rather
than using generic terms such as Entrees.
8. Know your customers. If your customers are mostly over 50, keep
the typeface (font) large enough to read in dim lighting and the design
uncluttered. If you're a family style restaurant, make your menus appealing
to children by including colorful artwork, unusual fonts, and lots of boxed
items. A white tablecloth setting calls for a more understated, simple yet
tasteful design including a good quality paper stock. 9. Menu Inserts. Brand
your restaurant by offering a specials menu insert that creates
a sense of "You can only get this here". Menu
inserts also give your servers something to talk about and keep
your menu fresh. Additionally, you can use them to promote high
profit specials or new items that could eventually move onto
the regular menu.
10. Keep your menus clean. Customers often associate a dirty menu
with a dirty kitchen. They may not walk out this time, but they are less
likely to return if your menu isn't clean and sharp. So keep your menus
clean by using protective menu covers that can be washed or replaced.
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