How to Create a Restaurant Delivery Experience That Satisfies Customers From End-to-End

How to Create a Restaurant Delivery Experience That Satisfies Customers From End-to-End
Here’s how to ensure customers have a great delivery experience from end to end, and add your business to their list of favourite places to order from.
by Kaitlin Keefer May 20, 2021 — 4 min read
How to Create a Restaurant Delivery Experience That Satisfies Customers From End-to-End

The food delivery experience a customer has with your business starts the moment the thought to order a delicious meal pops into their mind.

From that point on, their experience of discovering your business — heading to your ordering page, selecting what to order, checking out, waiting for their delivery and opening up that takeout box — is an important part of how they view your business.

Here’s how to ensure those customers have a great delivery experience from end to end, and add your business to their list of favourite places to order from.

Finding your restaurant

Hungry consumers are always on the hunt to find a new restaurant to add to their favourites. With the high brand awareness of third-party marketplaces and no shortage of competing restaurants, promoting your restaurant and your direct delivery channel can seem like a difficult feat.

One of the biggest barriers to a booming ordering and delivery business might simply be that current and future customers might not know you offer that service. Diners might be more in the habit of ordering through one of the many third-party ordering marketplaces. However, they are likely unaware of — or have just gotten used to — the high markup on their meals from paying service fees. Restaurants often have no choice but to mark up their prices on these marketplaces due to the high commission fees that the marketplaces charge them, ultimately leading to a higher cost for customers, or smaller margins for restaurants, neither of which are good for business.

Your best strategy is to take advantage of the marketing channels available to you to get the word out about your business and direct online ordering through your website. By making your business easily discoverable, you’re also eliminating barriers for your customers to engage with your business, which is where their experience begins.

Website pop-ups and banners: Create a banner or pop-up for your website advertising online ordering and delivery services. With banners and pop-ups you can communicate delivery details, special promotions or other important information in a way that is hard to miss.

Getting customers to your website can be challenging, but once they’re there you’re tasked with keeping their eyes on the prize — ordering your delicious food.

Customers can get easily overwhelmed by a messy or hard-to-navigate website. Here’s how you can help hungry customers navigate through your website from first click to checkout.

Avoid analysis paralysis

It might seem like the more menu options you have, the greater the chance for a sale, but it turns out having too many options can overwhelm your customers, resulting in them leaving your page without ordering. This can be attributed to something called analysis paralysis, which causes people to choose nothing when faced with too many options. To lower the risk of your customers getting scared off by too many choices, keep your menu simple and direct. Offer variations and customisations to meet the needs of your customers, but for individual menu items remember that less is more.

Optimise your menu for delivery

Nothing gets mouths watering like pictures and descriptions of delicious food. Take professional and appetising photos of your menu items to get customers excited to place their order. Also, be sure to let your customers know what each dish or menu item is and what the ingredients are with descriptive menu writeups. If you have dishes that might be new to customers, this is a great place to share information and get them inspired to try something new.

Make checkout easy

Checking out should be as easy as 1-2-3. This is the last step to placing an order and should have as few barriers as possible. For quicker checkout, place “Order Now” buttons in visible spots on your website. Use an Online Store platform that provides customers with all of the information they need, like food total, tax amount, transparent service fees and tipping options.

Your website should also include information about your restaurant that helps customers get to know you and your story. Create an “About Us” page and share some background on why you started your restaurant. Be sure to include links to your social media channels and any other contact information in a visible place, so that customers can always contact you easily if needed.

Receiving their delivery

Once their food arrives, unboxing their meal is also an important part of their ordering experience. When customers dine in, they expect you to pay attention to the small details. This extends to delivery, as well. Little gestures, like including extra sauces on the side or including a free treat, go far with customers.

Coming back for more

A happy customer is a loyal customer. All of the individual touchpoints are part of the overall delivery experience for your customers. Each part of the process can affect how they feel about your business and how likely they are to come back. But, their experience doesn’t have to end after their order is finished.

To stay connected with your customers, keep them engaged with your restaurant. You can do this by:

Offering discounts and promotions

Reward customers and entice them to come back by providing meal deals, family bundles, and other advanced discounts and promotions. Send out special promotions for moments in time and holidays, like the big match or Valentine’s Day date night — or for no reason at all — to surprise and delight your customers.

Rewarding loyalty

Reward customer loyalty and encourage word-of-mouth marketing by incentivising them to come back to you with a loyalty programme. This could be by offering a subscription for your meals, and discounts or promo codes to newsletter subscribers.

Whether a customer is dining in or having food delivered to their home, the experience matters. A customer’s delivery experience doesn’t start and stop once they place their order and receive their food, it happens at every touchpoint that they interact with your business. Keep customers engaged and happy with an end-to-end delivery experience that focuses on attention to detail and customer satisfaction for happy customers that want to come back for more.

Kaitlin Keefer
Kaitlin is a Content Marketing Lead at Square where she covers everything from how small businesses can start, run, and grow, to how enterprise companies can use tools and data to become industry leaders.

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