Title: MENU Design
1MENU Design
- From design to evaluation for
- all types of menus
2Rationale
- Everything starts with the menu. The menu
dictates much about how your operation will be
organized and managed, the extent to which it
meet its goals, and even how the building itself
- certainly the interior - should be designed and
constructed.
3Priority Concerns Of The Menu Planner
Priority Concerns of menu
Planner
Wants and needs
Guest
Flavour
Concept of Value
Quality of Item
Consistency
Cost
Item Price
Texture/Form/Shape
Availability
Object of Property Visit
Peak Volume Production and Operating Concerns
Socio-Economic Factors
Nutritional Content
Visual Appeal
Sanitation Concerns
Demographic Concerns
Aromatic Appeal
Layout Concerns
Ethnic Factors
Equipment Concerns
Temperature
Religious Factors
4Basic Rules Of Menu Planning
- Know your guest
- - Food preference
- - Price
- - Age
- Know your operation
- - Theme or cuisine
- - Equipment
- - Personnel
- - Quality standards
- - Budget
5Menu Design
-
- The menu primary sales tool at your
establishment - Your menu appears online - on a review site,
social media, your website, or an online ordering
system. - It is a standalone ambassador for your brand,
giving customers the first taste of what your
restaurant is all about.
6Must be Accurate
- Truth-in-menu laws exist cannot mislabel a
product - fresh must be fresh, not fresh frozen
- USDA Choice actually USDA Good
- Point of origin must be correct as well as items
offered must be delivered.
7Menu Order
- Sequence
- Items should be listed in the order they receive
them is served at a specific set timing. - Placement
- Use negative space boxes watermarks, etc.
8Elements Of Menu Copy
- Headings Help Categorize
- - Appetizers Soups/Salads, etc.
- - Hot Desserts, etc.
- Sub-heading
- - Description written under entrée title. Match
writing style throughout.
9Menu Balance
- Business balance
- - balance between food cost, menu prices,
popularity of items, financial and marketing
considerations - Aesthetic balance
- - colors, textures, flavors of food
- Nutritional balance
10Techniques to influence buying decisions
- Keep customer focus on Descriptions
- Black truffle-fines herb Dumpling
- Parisienne carrots and turnips, horseradish
bavarois and port reduction
- Strawberry Shortcake
- Sautéed foie gras, house made drop biscuits,
viridian farms strawberries, fennel-strawberry
marmalade
11Reduce Price Influence
1
Pan Seared Duck Breast Over Kalamata Olive and
Rosemary Ravioli, with a local Blackberry Demi
Glace -26
Warm Peaches Donuts Fresh Whites Farm Poached
Peaches with Belgian Chocolate filled donut Holes
Toasted Pistachios -10
2
- Place prices after the description centering
makes it difficult for customers to scan for the
lowest price.
12No
- Not putting a dollar sign next to prices makes a
customer feel like they can spend more. The
dollar sign signifies the picture of actual cash
in the wallet being spent, where random numbers
add up to a total which we can quantify with the
experience, not the cost. - Its a quick and simple removal of information
that leads to more and higher sales. Try it with
your next menu!
13Featured Areas
- Eyes are drawn to featured choices placed in
boxes
14Supplemental Merchandising Copy
- Includes information such as
- Address/Map
- Telephone number
- Days and hours of operation
- Meals times served
- Additional Info (3 fold inside panel or back,
1 page back) - Reservations info/min. and payment policies
(Gratuity ) - Other services provided
- History of the restaurant or a statement about
managements commitment to guest service (theme)
15Menu Fonts
- Format
- Menus size
- General makeup
- Typeface
- Printed letters
- Font size
- Type face
16Reading Ability
- Use fonts that make it easy for all to read.
- Nothing less than 10 pt font.
17Menu Layout
- Artwork
- Drawings, photographs, decorative patterns,
borders can enhance. - Paper Selection
- Incorporate texture
- Paper choices affect overall theme.
- Color
- 2 Colors strong no more than 3 ea.
18Menu Marketing
Menus need to match the ambiance of your
establishment to build your brand and promote
satisfying dining experiences.
19Background Color Use
- The background colors have a major impact on
overall ambiance customers experience. - Fiery red or orange spicy entrees trendy food
selection. - Cool blues and sea greens lead to a calmer frame
of mind and smooth flavors with subtle accents. - Black and white is a classic choice for high-end
food that speaks for itself.
20Common Menu-design Mistakes
- Menu is too small
- Type is too small
- Every item treated the same
- Some of the operations food and beverages are
not listed - Graphic problems
- Basic information about the property and its
policies are not included. - Spelling errors
21Common Menu Mistakes
- Failing to conduct a competitive and
profitability analysis at least 2x p/yr. - Failing to update the menu and prices at least 2x
p/yr - Selling like-items that are competitively
comparable - Failing to have a specialty drink menu (even if
you dont serve alcohol there are opportunities) - Physical menus overly susceptible to wear and
tear (food, grease, tears, water stains, etc) - Resource Atlanta Restaurant Real Estate Brokers
- http//www.shumacher.com/restaurant-consultant-rev
eals-80-most-common-restaurant-mistakes/
22Evaluating Menus
- Print your menus 2-3 times on regular paper to
review edits OFF the computer screen. - Read out loud if reviewing alone.
- Print your final copy on professional paper,
once you have reviewed and are COMPLETELY
satisfied.
23Menu Evaluation Questions Most Often Asked
- Is the menu attractive?
- Do the colors and other design elements match the
operations theme and decor? - Are menu items laid out in an attractive and
logical way? - Is there too much descriptive copy? Not enough?
Is the copy easy to understand? - Is attention called to the items managers most
want to sell, through placement, color,
description, type size, etc.?
24Food Truck Menu
25Bar Type Menu
26Graphic Fonts Sell Casual
271 Page Menu
28Bar Menu
291 page Desserts Menu
30Beverages
- Put your drinks first. Your wait staff offers a
round of water when most people sit down, but let
me assure you, people dont want the water. - If the beverages are listed as the first thing on
the menu above the appetizers, consumers are
more likely to order one.
31Food Pics Dont Sell Words do!
- Pictures are always deemed unrealistic in diners
eyes, written descriptions are taken more to
heart. - Crafting a back-story or short description for
your dishes will work the imagination of your
diners, while showing them a picture replaces the
memory with it. When the delivered meal is not
exactly like the picture, the disappointment is
inevitable.
32Kids Menus w/ Combos Options
- Price as a combo - entree, side or dessert, and a
drink. - Pricing strategy removes the burden from parents
to patch together an appropriate portion size
with a la carte options, and eliminates some
decision-making stress. - Parents do expect the freedom to customize their
child's meal by selecting a beverage, side, or
dessert. - Selections should also account for food
allergies list all ingredients and allow
substitutions (e.g. corn tortillas instead of
flour).
33Designing Kids Menus
- Activities
- Word puzzles ages 6-10.
- Coloring or maze activity for pre-readers (5 and
under). - Designs
- gender neutral robots, animals, or adventure
scenes - Use a sans-serif font easily legible for young
readers ("silly" fonts or fonts that mimic kids
handwriting not the best) - And of course, coloring menus should be printed
on crayon-friendly paper.