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Bad Restaurant Review? Be Proactive with Publicity


By Joan Stewart
The Publicity Hound

Few things can put a restaurant out of business faster than a bad restaurant review. If it happens to you, don’t just complain. Take proactive steps to ensure that the public knows your side of the story.

Here are tips for the hospitality industry on how to offset bad reviews—and make the most of good ones:

  • If you take issue with anything in the review, consider writing a letter to the editor or an opinion column. The advantage is that these are usually not heavily edited. So you can explain your side of the story in your own words. Be sure the letter or column does not exceed the number of words that will be accepted. See Special Report #4: How to Write Crisp, Compelling Letters to the Editor.
     

  • If your food was indeed bad and your service substandard, don’t offer a lot of excuses like “two people called in sick the day the reviewer was here.” Instead, write a letter to the editor apologizing to patrons and promising that you will do everything you can to serve the best food possible, provide the quickest service and win back customers. Public apologies often draw sympathy and support.
     

  • If there are factual errors in the review and you don't want to write a letter or a column, at the very least, call the publication and ask for a correction. If you don’t set the record straight, there’s a chance the incorrect information will be printed again. See How to Ask for a Correction.
     

  • After a bad review, resist the temptation to pull your advertising to "get back at" the newspaper or magazine. It can hurt you in the long run and do much more damage than a bad review.
     

  • To offset a bad review, consider an advertising campaign with testimonials from famous local celebrities who love your restaurant. Include posters that can be put in your window. After getting a less-than-favorable review, a popular restaurant in Milwaukee, Wisconsin  asked one of the most well-known women in the city to offer a testimonial and appear in paid ads. See Special Report #31: Sell More Products and Services by Getting and Giving Powerful Testimonials.
     

  • If you recognize food reviewers in your restaurant, do not give them a hard time or order them to leave. Instead, politely ask them if they will call you before the review is printed and "fact check" information, such as types of ingredients and how the food was prepared. Also, ask them to let you know several days in advance when the review will be printed. Five-star reviews can hurt, too, if you’re suddenly swamped with customers as the result of a great review but don’t have the wait staff to serve them.
     

  • Restaurant reviewers have a legal right to comment on whether they like your food. However, if you can prove that a bad, inaccurate review was the result of a blatant disregard for the truth, the article might constitute libel. Court cases can prove costly, even if you win. And by that time, the damage can be done. Sometimes all it takes is a sharply worded letter from your attorney to the editor of the newspaper to force them to agree to run your rebuttal column. Use this tactic only as a last resort.
     

  • Remember that little things—like the condition of your rest rooms—are often mentioned by reviewers. They pay particular attention to bad plumbing, a lack of paper towels and toilet paper, and overall cleanliness. Would your restroom pass inspection on busy nights?
     

  • If you receive a good review, use sentences from the review as testimonials in your paid advertising, on signs in the window, and elsewhere throughout the restaurant.
     

  • Frame and post favorable reviews on the wall where customers can see them. Consider reproducing them with type larger than it actually appeared so the review is easier to read, particularly in a dark restaurant.
     

  • Make reprints of favorable reviews and use them in your direct marketing campaign. Post favorable reviews at your web site. See Special Report #13: How to Recycle Publicity--for Serious Publicity Hounds Only.
     

Need more help offsetting bad restaurant reviews?

See "Publicity Tips for Restaurants, Chefs & Foodies"

 

Joan Stewart, a former restaurant reviewer and newspaper editor, presents "Hey Boss, Mike Wallace is on Line 2," a half-day workshop on how to deal with the media when the news is bad. Ideal for your trade association seminar or in-house training session for your management team. Contact Joan at JStewart@PublicityHound.com  or at 262-284-7451.  

See Special Report #1: Damage Control: How to Keep the Media from Making a Mess of Your Story.  

See The Dangerous Hidden Secrets of Print and Broadcast Reporters.

See How to Keep the Media Wolves at Bay


Direct comments or questions about this article, including requests for reprint rights, to:

Direct comments or questions about this article, including requests for reprint rights, to:

Joan Stewart
The Publicity Hound
3434 County KK
Port Washington, WI 53074
Phone: 262-284-7451
JStewart@PublicityHound.com

 

 

 

 

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Joan Stewart 3434 County KK, Port Washington, WI 53074
Phone: 262-284-7451 Fax: 262-284-1737 Email: jstewart@publicityhound.com