0 Comments

Recession or not, the restaurant industry is here and growing. Consumers spend a huge percentage of their food budgets on eating out at restaurants, and restaurant sales are expected to top $600 billion this year. And yet according to the National Restaurant Association’s 2011 Restaurant Outlook, 60% of restaurant owners said it was harder to attract new customers than previous years. One in three said it was harder to keep customers. What does this mean?

Most likely, consumers are sticking with what they know and love, and restaurants are working harder to deliver that. Not surprisingly, the same study found that repeat customers represent 75% of sales at quick service restaurants, 75% of sales at family-dining restaurants, 70% of sales at casual-dining operations and 6% of sales at fine-dining restaurants. Those are high numbers, making loyal customer turnover rather costly in today’s market.

Clearly, loyalty is the name of the game in this business. But how do you build something so ambiguous and in a predictably measurable way? The key may actually not be the actual scores of your customer satisfaction measures, but instead how you interpret and act on those results.

On a satisfaction scale from 1-5, most restaurants would take an average response of 4 to be quite good. But according to research recently conducted by Market Force, an average satisfaction score of 4 is costing restaurants millions in loyalty dollars. Why? Because it takes not just a positive experience but an exceptional one to rise above the competition for every dollar of that $600 billion.

The study also found that in the restaurant industry, customers who rated their satisfaction as a 5 on a 1-5 scale were four times as likely to return than those who rated their satisfaction at a 4. Four times as likely, all within a difference of one point on the satisfaction scale. One truly exceptional experience could earn you a loyal customer for life. And with most restaurant customers these days, you only get one blind date before you either lose her forever or buy a big house in the suburbs. The moral of this story? Never settle for a “good” customer experience when you could be finding ways to deliver an “exceptional” one in the minds of your cusomers. It could earn you a killing in loyalty dollars.

Related Content

Reader Comments

Add a Comment

We welcome your thoughtful comments. All comments will display your real name.

Want to participate in the discussion?

Or log in for complete access.

  • Clear
  • Post
Be the first to post a comment for this story.
Products & Services

Executive Briefing and Exchange

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4237.png

4237/Executive-Briefing-and-Exchange

Interactive Kiosks

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4758.png

4758/Interactive-Kiosks

True Refrigerators & Freezers

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4868.png

4868/True-Refrigerators-Freezers

Digital Signage

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4756.png

4756/Digital-Signage

Presentation: Unleashing the Retail Customer Experience

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/webcast_small.gif

3099/Presentation-Unleashing-the-Retail-Customer-Experience

Customized Turn-Key Digital Signage and Interactive Media Solutions

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4253.png

4253/Customized-Turn-Key-Digital-Signage-and-Interactive-Media-Solutions

Menu Innovation and Ops Simplification

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4238.png

4238/Menu-Innovation-and-Ops-Simplification

iiX Custom Points Program

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/custompoints.gif

1423/iiX-Custom-Points-Program

LG M3704CCBA - 37" class (37.0" measured diagonally)

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/4316.png

4316/LG-M3704CCBA-37-class-37-0-measured-diagonally

Hiring

http://global.networldalliance.com/new/images/products/1860.png

1860/Hiring

Industry Trends & Insights

Latest posts by Janet Eden-Harris
Janet Eden-Harris
Janet Eden-Harris is the CMO and SVP of Strategy for Market Force Information. She joined Market Force from J.D. Power and Associates, where she was VP of its Web Intelligence unit.
Foodservice Social Media Universe
Request Information From Suppliers
Save time looking for suppliers. Complete this form to submit a Request for Information to our entire network of partners.