74% of diners use social media to decide where to eat. 88% trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations. Yet most restaurants still wing their digital presence. Here’s a channel-by-channel playbook for turning online visibility into seated guests and delivery orders.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min
Restaurant digital marketing is the practice of using online channels to attract new guests, encourage repeat visits, and build a direct relationship with your customer base. It includes Google Business Profile, social media, local SEO, email, SMS, online ordering, and review management.In 2024, restaurants reported an average 9.9% increase in revenue as a direct result of social media strategies (Cropink, 2026). 90% of restaurants say social media is very or extremely important to their overall digital marketing. These aren’t vanity metrics. Restaurants that invest in digital marketing are measurably outperforming those that don’t. Email and loyalty programs deliver the highest ROI of any restaurant marketing channel: $36 per $1 spent on email, and up to 7x returns from engaged loyalty members (ChowNow, 2026). The shift in 2026 is toward owned channels, where you control the customer relationship, not third-party platforms.
“Most restaurants treat their Google Business Profile like a set-it-and-forget-it listing. The ones winning local search treat it like a second social media channel. Weekly posts, monthly photo updates, responding to every review within 24 hours. A fully active GBP profile is worth more than any single ad campaign for a local restaurant.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
| Metric | Benchmark | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Google Business Profile views | 5,000-20,000/month (varies by market) | Top-of-funnel visibility indicator |
| GBP actions (calls + directions + website clicks) | 500-2,000/month | Direct intent to visit |
| Online order volume (first-party) | Grow 10-15% quarter-over-quarter | Revenue you keep 100% of |
| First-party vs. third-party order ratio | Target: 40%+ first-party | Higher margins on direct orders |
| Email list size and open rate | 20-30% open rate, growing list monthly | Owned audience for repeat visits |
| Review velocity and average rating | 10-20 reviews/month, 4.3+ stars | Trust signal and ranking factor |
| Social media engagement rate | 2-4% on Instagram, 3-6% on TikTok | Measures content resonance |
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Most restaurants allocate 3-6% of gross revenue to marketing, with 50-70% of that going to digital channels. For a restaurant doing $50,000/month in revenue, that’s $1,500-3,000/month on marketing, with $1,000-2,000 dedicated to digital. The highest ROI typically comes from Google Business Profile optimization (free), email marketing ($50-150/month for the tool), and organic social media (time investment). Paid social and Google Ads can supplement during slow periods or for new location launches.
Yes, if your target demographic skews under 45. 61% of diners say TikTok food content influences where they eat (Restroworks, 2025). TikTok engagement rates for food content range from 3.7% to 6.2%, far higher than Instagram. The content that performs best is authentic and unpolished: kitchen action shots, plating close-ups, staff personality clips, and behind-the-scenes footage. You don’t need a videographer. A phone and good natural lighting are enough.
The most effective methods: train servers to mention reviews after positive interactions, place a QR code on the check presenter or table card linking directly to your Google review page, and send a follow-up text or email after dine-in or delivery with a review link. Target 10-20 new Google reviews per month. Respond to every review within 24 hours. 88% of diners trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations, so a strong review profile directly impacts your foot traffic.
Build your own online ordering through platforms like ChowNow, Square Online, or Toast, where you keep 100% of the order value minus a small flat fee. Use third-party apps for discovery (new customers finding you), then convert them to direct ordering. Include a card in every delivery bag: “Order direct and save 10% at [your website].” Over time, shift your order mix to 40%+ first-party orders. This alone can save a restaurant doing $10,000/month in delivery orders $1,500-3,000/month in commissions.
User-generated content drives 4x higher conversion than branded photos (Cropink, 2026). Beyond UGC, the top-performing content types are: behind-the-scenes kitchen footage, close-up plating videos, chef and staff personality content, menu item features, and customer story reposts. Post 2-3 times per week minimum on Instagram and TikTok. Consistency beats production quality. The algorithm rewards active accounts that post regularly over accounts that post sporadically with perfect content.
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What social media strategy works for restaurants in 2026?