2 Restaurant Tricks that Will Boost your Business Sales
You've sat at a restaurant table, menu in hand, and felt the subtle pull. A dish description catches your eye, a price seems to vanish.
You’ve sat at a restaurant table, menu in hand, and felt the subtle pull. A dish description catches your eye. The price seems to drift out of focus. A few minutes later you’ve ordered something more expensive than you planned and you don’t quite know why.
Restaurants have an advantage most businesses don’t: the customer is in the room. For an hour or more, the owner watches the decision happen in real time — what gets read, what gets skipped, what gets ordered. That captive audience is a research lab. The plays the best restaurants run inside it transfer to almost any growth-traps playbook a founder is trying to fix.
Two of those plays are worth stealing.
1. Draw attention to the product, not its price
Think about what you do the first time you open an unfamiliar menu. You don’t know the dishes. So you do the only comparison you can: you read prices. The cheapest one anchors you. The most expensive one becomes “too much.” The decision is being made on the wrong axis, and the restaurant knows it.
The fix is to move the customer’s attention off the number and onto the dish.
Get rid of the dollar signs
In the customer’s head, the dollar sign is what links the number to money. The digit itself is abstract; the symbol is what triggers the wince. Drop the symbol and the price reads more like a label than a cost.
That’s why menus from corner diners to high-end rooms — the kind of menu you’d find at La Fermette Marbeuf in Paris — quietly leave the dollar sign off. It’s the rule of thumb, not the exception.
Use short, sensory descriptions
How many times have you scanned a menu where half the dishes are names you don’t recognize? You don’t ask. You order something safe, or you fall back to comparing prices. The restaurant just lost the upsell.
The fix is the same one I wrote about in consumer decision making and things to consider before starting a business: tell the customer what the product is, in language that paints it. A short, specific, slightly flowery description does two jobs at once. It tells the customer what they’re getting, and it pulls attention off the price.
Done well, a customer pays $20 for a salad and doesn’t feel mugged — provided the salad delivers what the description promised. The promise is the contract. Break it and the play stops working forever.
2. Set the right mood
Music isn’t decoration. It’s tempo control.
I’ve made the case before, in benefits of listening to music at work, that music shifts stress, work rhythm, and productivity. Inside a restaurant — or a store, or a showroom — it does something more specific: it sets the speed at which customers decide.
A Loyola University study found that restaurants and stores playing slow music saw a 38% increase in sales over those playing loud or fast music. The mechanism is simple. Fast, loud music accelerates the decision. When a buyer is ambivalent — when the positive cues aren’t loud enough to make “yes” obvious — speeding up the decision biases it toward “no.” Slow the room down and you give the “yes” room to land.
The point isn’t that music is magic. It’s that the room is part of the offer. Price framing on the menu and tempo in the air are both doing the same job: lowering the friction between the customer and the product. Restaurants run those plays because they get to watch them work. Most other businesses don’t watch — and run them by accident, in the wrong direction.
If your average ticket is stuck, the lever isn’t always a new product or a discount. Sometimes it’s the dollar sign on the page and the BPM in the speakers.