Restaurant Customer Service Tips
When you open a restaurant for the first time, the way that you treat your customers is of
the utmost importance. You want your first few guests to not only return but also to speak favorably of your
establishment when they talk to their friends about the new restaurant in town. Even once you are known and loved
by customers for the way you make them feel when they visit it is easy to slip up and lose ground if you are not
vigilant in your attention to the customers overall experience with your restaurant. Here are some restaurant
customer service tips.
People return to a restaurant for very specific reasons. They like the food, the service
makes them feel special, the prices are great or they like the fact that they can always find a great parking
space. However, it's usually the service and the food that will keep you in the number one spot on their list of
favorite restaurants.

Good service starts the moment a customer comes through the door. Nobody likes to be ignored
and many people are uncomfortable waiting to be seating while standing in full view of the entire restaurant. If
you have a large restaurant it makes good sense to have a host or hostess greet diners and summon a server to show
them to their table. This kind of personalized service makes customers feel welcome and valued.
Set out a written service standard for your employees to read. Let them know the processes
that you want them to follow. For example you may decide that customers should have around five minutes to look at
the menu so they don't feel rushed when you have your waiting staff first approach them asking if they are ready to
order. Some standards may be your own and some may be commonly used by all restaurants, such as serving meals at
the same time to everyone at the table.
Your manager needs to do more than supervise the staff. He or she also needs to be observant.
By taking a look around the dining area several times an hour, problems that management may not be aware of can be
brought to attention and solved. A manager that sees a guest with a significant amount of food left on their plate
might do well to ask if everything is to the patron's liking. Many people would rather not return after a bad
experience rather than complaining to a manager. By being proactive a good manager can recognize a situation and
resolve it before it becomes a problem.
Cleanliness is important, not only to the restaurant but to the diners as well. With
increased awareness of the role germs and bacteria play in our health, diners will quickly leave an establishment
that doesn't meet their standards of sanitation and cleanliness even if it complies with the law. Be sure that your
staff is responsible for cleaning the tables, wiping down chairs and child seats and checking the underside of
tables too.
Be sure to provide your clientele with sparkling bathrooms! If you have room for it in your
budget you may even want to post an attendant in those areas to keep the sinks clean and dry, replace the towels
when needed and watch for spills or plumbing problems. Most restaurants have done away with the restroom attendant
due to the unnecessary cost so arrange to have the restrooms checked at least once per hour by an employee willing
to give the sinks a quick wipe or replace paper towels and tissue paper.
There's nothing more irritating to a customer than a delay in leaving a restaurant once they
have finished their meal. If there is not a cashier available for some reason and they are left standing at the
register they may not return. Alleviate these situations by allowing the server to present the check and return for
the payment, a real convenience for the customer as they can avoid lines at the cashier.
Instruct your servers to stop by their tables at least once during their guests' meals and
ask if everything is alright. Some of the more progressive restaurants are instituting signaling systems so that
diners can summon their servers if they need them rather than waiting to attract their attention.
Customer service can really make or break a restaurant. If you open your restaurant with the
attitude that the customer is the king and do everything within reason to make their experience in your restaurant
enjoyable and memorable then you will be well on your way to success.
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