Chicago

restaurants

Recipe for Dining Social with Chicago Magazine

A delicious look at Facebook and Twitter for chefs, foodies, and restaurateurs.

Ingredients

  • 5 foodie panelists
  • 1 founder of Restaurant Intelligence Agency
  • A bunch of Tweets
  • A sprinkle of Facebook posts
  • A variety of blog content
  • 4 oz. of a good red wine

Directions

1. Preheat your digital presence. Heating up to the idea of social media can be a challenge. Hoosier Mama Pies’ Paula Haney, who admits she’s not very tech savvy, thought that social media was a waste of time. For Liz Mendez of Uva Chicago, traditional PR and marketing wasn’t effective for the brand that she and her husband wanted to build for their restaurant. Both Paula and Liz realized that they needed to get online and get engaged – or else they would be missing out on a huge opportunity for connecting with their customers and fellow foodies.

2. In a large bowl, combine promotional content with general industry content. Then, throw in a handful of “@ replies” and give other blogs some love. Keep your content homegrown and fresh by balancing posts about your bar’s drink recipes with general industry content, like a Chicago magazine article on new trends for autumn cocktails. Paula of Hoosier Mama Pies insists that you need to keep your tone sweet (much like her pies, I’d image), while Liz Mendez follows a simple rule: Don’t talk about anything that you wouldn’t talk about at the bar (i.e., no politics, religion, or bad mouthing anyone else in the business).

3. Hand select who will be creating and posting social media content for your restaurant. Figure out if you’ll be in charge, or if you’ll have a sous-chef, so to speak, in charge of running your blog, Twitter handle or Facebook account. Chef Curtis Duffy thinks that someone inside the restaurant needs to be the one tweeting. Paula of Hoosier Mama Pies says she can tell when it’s not the right voice or when it’s a “canned” tweet, so it’s important to keep the tone authentic.

4. Don’t let online criticism simmer. Use your social media assets to respond to your customers. Phillip Foss, Chef and Owner of EL Ideas and The Meatyballs Mobile, says that if one person is commenting about a particular dish or a customer service issue, then probably another 10 customers have thought the same thing. Both Shelby Allison of The Whistler and Liz of Uva agree that you need to address customer complaints posted online with a brief public apology and then, follow up with the customer by an email or a phone call to pacify the issue.

5. Let your social media concoction bake for a few weeks and continue to stir in new content. People are equally interested in being “regulars” at your food joint as well as being “pals” with the owner, said Shelby of The Whistler, who thinks her social media presence has allowed their restaurant to make these personal connections. Liz of Uva says being active on her blog makes her more approachable in real life and that their customers are more likely to reach out and connect in person. Social media allows restaurateurs to connect with their customers at a whole new level, which grows loyalty and satisfaction – a recipe that is delicious for everyone!

Yields: The opportunity for a top-notch business with customers who keep coming back – to both your blog and your restaurant – for more.

Note: The red wine is optional. But who doesn’t love a good red wine?

 

In this photo: Rich Gamble, Publisher & General Manager of Chicago Magazine

Social Media Week Chicago advisory board member Q&A: Geoff Alexander

In this Q&A feature, Social Media Week Chicago introduces local online media users and Social Media Week advisory board members to share, in their own words, the role social media plays in their lives, personally and professionally. Next in this ongoing series:  Geoff Alexander, Executive Vice President and Managing Partner of Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises.

Q: What was your “ah-ha moment” with social media?

In February of 2009 I started learning about Twitter.  I remember being at home and seeing a tweet someone posted about eating at Wow Bao.  I immediately called the restaurant and described the person based on their avatar.  That person was still in the restaurant so we sent them a dessert.  Not only was that person impressed; she posted her experience and pictures on Twitter, TwitPic, Facebook and her blog.  Ironically enough, this all occurred on her first day of tweeting.

The power and immediacy of customer service was not lost on me.  We made a conscious effort to become heavily involved in the conversation.

Q: How do you measure success in social media?

I measure social media ROI based on three factors: 1) Are my sales up? Yes, they are. 2) Are people talking about my brand? Obviously they are because here I am talking to you about it. 3) Am I having fun? More than one can imagine.

Q: What does “transparency” mean to you?

Transparency is honesty.  If you are going to put yourself out there in a public forum, you need to be ready, willing, and able to answer and address all topics people want to discuss.  The more honest you are to people, the more respect you will earn.  We had a situation where a guest posted a pretty negative comment about the restaurant on Twitter.  Not only did we respond to this guest, we reposted his comment for all who may have missed it.  We wanted people to know that we were addressing his concern.

Long story short, this person is now a brand ambassador for us, telling all who will listen how great we are.  We did not ignore the post.  We did not take the conversation offline. Instead we were confident enough in our brand, product and customer service to openly address the issue.  As a side note, that example was picked up by the AP and sent around the world in many online publications including the USA Today, Huffington Post, and CNBC.

Since joining Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises in 1993, Alexander has worked with more than 10 LEYE concepts, including Shaw’s Crab House, Big Bowl, Vong’s Thai Kitchen, and Frankie’s Scaloppine.  In 2009 Alexander took over the leadership role for Lettuce’s Wow Bao Concept.  Under his guidance the concept has added a fourth location (opening this fall), satellite locations at both Soldier Field and US Cellular Field, self ordering kiosks, online ordering, bicycle delivery and a social media presence.  Wow Bao was recently awarded the title of one of the top 20 most influential restaurants in social media.

Social Media Week Chicago advisory board member Q&A: Billy Dec

In this Q&A feature, Social Media Week Chicago introduces local online media users and Social Media Week advisory board members to explain, in their own words, the role social media plays in their lives, personally and professionally. Local restaurateur and Social Media Week advisory board member Billy Dec kicks off this ongoing series.

Q: What was your “ah-ha moment” with social media?

I got pooped on by a bird on the way to work! I tweeted about it and my replies went through the roof for the first time. I spent six months [after that] working hard at tweeting all about cool celebrity, red carpet, VIP events I was trying to promote at my venues. No one cared like they did when I got pooped on. It baffled me. I mean, really baffled me.

No one I knew at the time could help since it was relatively early on [in Twitter's popularity], so I immediately went to Twitter and asked my followers what I was doing right and wrong and what they want more or less of and began to hear things I never expected. They wanted to know the bad, the good  and everything in between; what I do and what I go through as just another human being. Basically, they wanted the truth. They wanted reality. And they wanted all of it.

It seemed really awkward because I was in charge of marketing, PR and branding for my businesses for years, and that meant I made sure we controlled and communicated the final product in its finest form. But my gut told me that organic, instantaneous communication of reality was now the wave of the future, or the present, so I tried it.

Immediately, when I began to tweet my “behind the scenes” work– pain, happiness, confidence, creativity, confusion, obstacles, solutions, passion– personal and business, people began to recommend me to others who worked hard to create, love and enjoy the same things. And before you know it, I not only have 18,000+ followers, I– more importantly– have a ton of new relationships that I can share real things with. Guess the old saying is right, it is good luck to get pooped on by a bird!

Q: How do you measure success in social media?

A: For Twitter, I’d be lying if I didn’t say, “by numbers of followers, retweets and replies.” I just think it gives you some indication of positive response to your efforts to communicate, [the] value [of] having a relationship and demand around the things you care about and share. I consider it successful when [people] are having fun and being active, giving, honest, relevant.  All of which positively effects the numbers of followers, retweets and replies.

Q: What does “transparency” mean to you?

A: Transparency is like nudity: The fact is, you pretty much always need a some sort of clothing when it comes to interacting with others.  There are very few people in this world that should see you without it totally, and only then is it OK when done at the right time and in the right way.

People require less clothing in certain circumstances, more in other circumstances.  Sometimes you have to approach a situation with a very specific kind of clothing you may not like but others require it. Some situations allow you to just be you and you can wear whatever you want. It’s an important decision, because whether completely nude, or way over and inappropriately dressed, if at the wrong place at the wrong time, you could really be exposing yourself to a very bad look for eternity.

 

Billy Dec is an Emmy winning entertainment TV contributor, restaurateur (owner of Sunda, Rockit, Underground), attorney alum of Chicago-Kent Law and Harvard Business School and shares entertainment, events, arts and culture news in Chicago as @BillyDec on Twitter, on Facebook, his blog, A Chicago Thing and Live on ABC TV’s “Windy City Live” every Thursday at 9 a.m. This feature is part of an ongoing series of brief Q&A sessions with Social Media Week Chicago advisory board members.  

 

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