One of the things most of y’all (I don’t have a shop) don’t have is huge volume and multiple stores. You don’t have huge corporations with stores across the globe where each customer is just a (phone) number.
You have to build customer loyalty. Obviously food that the customer enjoys is a requirement. But how do you keep them coming back? Good food isn’t enough; great pricing isn’t enough either. You must have decent food at a decent price for what you’re serving (an upscale place has a higher “decent price” than a lower scale place), but there’s also the customer service side of things.
I frequently go to a Mexican restaurant. There are probably more Mexican restaurants in this area than anything else, so I have my pick. This particular place greets everyone with “hello Amigo” which doesn’t work in a pizza joint, but it immediately conveys friendliness. They also use the phrase “Hello my friend” but it also works better with a Mexican accent than with an Italian one. One of the things that I feel sets them apart is that they sound like they mean it. However, I can walk in an Olive Garden and no matter how friendly the hostess is or how big she smiles, I just don’t feel like he/she means it when I hear “Hi, welcome to Olive Garden”. Being attacked by “hi, welcome to CiCi’s” as soon as you hit the door doesn’t work either. It feels like I’m the latest contestant in the store’s game of “see who can welcome the customer first”.
I also feel more “wanted” at independant stores than corporate stores. I had a Chili’s I used to go to (we moved) where I felt “wanted”, but not normally in other stores. Of course in that store, it was the manager stopping by and saying hi and all that jazz, but it was more in how she did it. I can’t put my finger on it, but her method was just a little different.
Do you have any suggestions on how to make your customers feel appreciated when they come in to your store? You can control what happens inside your store, but deliveries are one of those places where you don’t have that level of control. Do you have any “methods” for making your delivery customers feel special?
You have to build customer loyalty. Obviously food that the customer enjoys is a requirement. But how do you keep them coming back? Good food isn’t enough; great pricing isn’t enough either. You must have decent food at a decent price for what you’re serving (an upscale place has a higher “decent price” than a lower scale place), but there’s also the customer service side of things.
I frequently go to a Mexican restaurant. There are probably more Mexican restaurants in this area than anything else, so I have my pick. This particular place greets everyone with “hello Amigo” which doesn’t work in a pizza joint, but it immediately conveys friendliness. They also use the phrase “Hello my friend” but it also works better with a Mexican accent than with an Italian one. One of the things that I feel sets them apart is that they sound like they mean it. However, I can walk in an Olive Garden and no matter how friendly the hostess is or how big she smiles, I just don’t feel like he/she means it when I hear “Hi, welcome to Olive Garden”. Being attacked by “hi, welcome to CiCi’s” as soon as you hit the door doesn’t work either. It feels like I’m the latest contestant in the store’s game of “see who can welcome the customer first”.
I also feel more “wanted” at independant stores than corporate stores. I had a Chili’s I used to go to (we moved) where I felt “wanted”, but not normally in other stores. Of course in that store, it was the manager stopping by and saying hi and all that jazz, but it was more in how she did it. I can’t put my finger on it, but her method was just a little different.
Do you have any suggestions on how to make your customers feel appreciated when they come in to your store? You can control what happens inside your store, but deliveries are one of those places where you don’t have that level of control. Do you have any “methods” for making your delivery customers feel special?
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