Do You Automate Customer Communication?
Most restaurants communicate with guests. Few do it consistently.
Manual messages depend on time, memory, and staff availability. Automation turns communication into a reliable system that works every day, even when your team is busy on the floor.
Automation is not about replacing human touch. It is about making sure the right message is never forgotten.
Let’s break it down step by step.
Step 1: Map Every Moment You Communicate With Guests
Before automating anything, understand where communication already happens.
Common touchpoints include:
Reservation confirmations.
Booking reminders.
Post-visit thank-you messages.
Review requests.
Rebooking or win-back messages.
👉 Pro tip: If a message is sent more than once a week, it should not rely on memory. It should be automated.
Step 2: Start With the Basics That Reduce Friction
The first goal of automation is operational relief, not marketing.
Automate essentials such as:
Reservation confirmations.
Reminder messages before the visit.
Cancellation or no-show follow-ups.
👉 Pro tip: Automated reminders alone can reduce no-shows significantly without any discounts or penalties.
Step 3: Add Post-Visit Communication
What happens after the guest leaves matters more than most restaurants realize.
Set up simple automated messages like:
A thank-you message a few hours after the visit.
A review request the next day.
A follow-up message with a soft invitation to return.
👉 Pro tip: Timing matters more than wording. Messages sent too early or too late lose impact.
Step 4: Build Simple Automated Flows
Once the basics are in place, connect messages into short sequences.
Examples of automated flows:
Thank-you → review request → rebooking reminder.
First-time guest → introduction offer → loyalty invitation.
Inactive guest → win-back message after 60 to 90 days.
👉 Pro tip: Automation works best when flows are short and purposeful. Three messages outperform ten.
Step 5: Keep Automation Personal and Controlled
Automation should feel helpful, not robotic.
Best practices include:
Using the guest’s name.
Referring to the visit or occasion.
Limiting frequency so guests don’t feel spammed.
👉 Pro tip: Automation should support your brand voice, not overpower it. Silence is better than irrelevant noise.
Final Thoughts
Automated communication is not about sending more messages.
It is about sending the right messages, at the right time, without relying on human memory.
When communication runs in the background, your team can focus on service and guests feel consistently cared for.
🤖 Signature Mantra: Automate the routine. Elevate the experience.
If your Automation score in the VISITA™ Diagnostic was low, start with one flow.
Automate one confirmation, one reminder, and one follow-up. Build from there.
👉 Take the Restaurant Diagnostic below and see how your restaurant performs across all six VISITA™ pillars. From Visibility to Automation.
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