Showing posts with label restaurant marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restaurant marketing. Show all posts

Friday, November 2, 2018

How Top Restaurants Can Work On The Failed Strategies?

There are many restaurants in the market and each and every restaurant is competing with the other. They make strategies to attract customers but many of them fail. Strategies fail due to improper designing and execution. There is no business that is perfect and every business whether big and small make mistakes. Mistakes happen due to insufficient search, poor execution and bad timing. The restaurants need to focus more on their advertising efforts to withstand the fierce marketing competition. It is crucial to work on the marketing strategies to achieve the goal and also the growth of the business.

Many huge corporations also faced failures in their business due to wrong implementation and execution of marketing strategies. Not just the right marketing strategy for restaurants is important but also getting on the top of the list to beat your competitors. Marketing strategy can fill the difference between success and failure, but it depends on the business that how they deal with it.

This Is How Top Restaurants Can Work On The Failed Strategies.


• Stay Current: It is very important for restaurants to stay current and to know what is going on in the market. They need to update their restaurant by knowing the customer demands to make it a success. Collect your restaurant's facts, figures and trends and analyse it to compare the difference.

• Have A Functional Website: It directly relates to the restaurant's reputation i.e. a functional website. Keep it up to date, and introduce the latest techniques. Also, make it simple for the customers to use.

• Enlist Local Food Bloggers:Ask the local bloggers to review your website by offering them free food. This increases your website's customer review listing and makes it easy for customer search.

• Use The Online Restaurant Reservation Tool:Top restaurants are popular so there are times when customers face a waiting list. An online booking reservation tool helps customers in reserving their seat prior to their arrival.

• Grow Your Email Database:To attract more potential customers, it is quite necessary to grow your email database.


These strategies for restaurants will help in boosting your business growth by increasing your potential customers. For more details, please visit our website.

Friday, January 31, 2014

The Next Idea Group Opens, their test kitchen, TNI Kitchen, to the public

Next Idea, the world renowned restaurant consultants opened its new kitchen concept called the TNI Kitchen located at 5577 Reseda Blvd, Tarzana, CA 91356.
                                                  TNI kitchen
What Makes TNI Kitchen The Place To Eat?
TNI Kitchen was founded on the premise of reinventing healthy, organic when possible, but always quality locally sourced foods that bring a highly innovative tapestry of tastes and a new world flare to  the classic lunch menu of homemade soups, salads, sandwiches, burgers and deserts. The deeply trained staff of TNI Kitchen work from before sunset and throughout the day to prepare fresh food daily, no frozen or pre-pared meals at this location. They even make custom food to order, [with customer minimum purchase].
"We are excited about this new TNI Kitchen concept for our urban customers," said Robert Ancill CEO of Next Idea [International] LLC. "We are committed to providing great taste, quality and service to a generation of busy, fun-loving customers who appreciate innovative fresh foods, and healthy quality ingredients.”
TNI Kitchen’s menu consists of a mouth-watering three bean chili made with jalapenos aged cheddar cheese and topped with fresh made sour cream or need something to keep you warm from the winter chill you should sample the tomato fennel soup made with Manchego and toasted pumpkin seeds.
Of course, if you are just looking for that light but gourmet lunch try the salt roasted beet salad with baby greens, goat cheese, candied pecans, grilled pears and orange-honey vinaigrette or the big fat Greek Salad with baby greens, feta, olives, red onion, compressed watermelon, cherry tomatoes, cucumber, pepperoncini, tabbouleh and finished with a lemon-oregano vinaigrette. There is no need to go grab a tuna sub at the local gas station, when you can buy a gourmetneo-classical tuna salad sandwich.  This is not your typical tuna sandwich, instead TNI Kitchens prepares olive oil poached Ahi Tuna combined with smashed avocado mixed with tomato compote and dressed with Bibb lettuce all on a freshly baked toasted country white bread. Creating an amazing ensemble of flavors all working together for a light and fresh, fully satisfying meal. For meat lovers, TNI Kitchen offers their signature Steak House Sandwich which includes a perfectly grilled rib eye smothered with caramelized onions, fresh roasted red peppers, arugula all balanced with a homemade horseradish cream within a freshly baked brioche type French roll. TNI Kitchen also recommends the Spanish Grilled Chicken made with Manchego Cheese, bacon, arugula, almonds, and a homemade Romesco sauce all in a fresh made brioche bun.
TNI Kitchen also provides healthy and vegetarian fare including the Mediterranean Vegetable Focaccia Sandwich with its superbly grilled zucchini, red bell peppers and eggplant balanced perfectly with a homemade sundried tomato hummus topped with a freshmade yogurt-feta dressing all within fresh-made focaccia bread.
Fresh made side salads and desserts are also made daily.
TNI Kitchen at 5577 Reseda Blvd, Tarzana, CA 91356 Monday through Friday from 10-6.  You can also call your order ahead at 818.457.4599 or utilize our new next generation online ordering system at tnikitchen.com, and have your food ready for pick up at your convenience.
TNI Kitchen is the Test Kitchen of The Next Idea [International] LLC, a Restaurant and Hospitality Consulting Company based in Los Angeles, with offices in Dubai and India.
Read more about this newly opened restaurant at tnikitchen.com or call 818 457 4599.
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Saturday, October 12, 2013

The Next Idea Wishes you a Happy Everything!

The Next Idea, an international restaurant consulting firm is wishing you all, a very happy everything on this festive season.
With the holiday season approaching, do you have plans in place to capitalize on the festive spending season? The Next Idea can tailor any holiday season offer to suit your individual customers. Who also provides an opportunity to market your business and any offers you may wish to promote. We are ready to maximize your business holiday season activities.
                                                          Restaurant consultants
The Next Idea is a team of skilled industry professionals specializing in restaurant consulting and hotel consulting services with a proven track record of running remarkable restaurants. At The Next Idea we have systematic combination of all strategies, tips and tools involved in our services in order to initially assess what you want to become and where you are right now. We will put together a clear and efficient plan and effort to bringing your restaurant on top of the industry.
Some of the attractive services offered by us, this festive season are:-
  • Holiday Menu Development
  • Holiday Catering
  • Holiday Menu Design
We are equipped to operate across the world with network support in the following countries:  United Arab Emirates, (Dubai & Abu Dhabi), Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, West Bank Territories, India, Bangladesh, SriLanka, Vietnam, Croatia, UK, USA, France, Spain, Italy, South Africa, Angola, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Tunisia, Morocco, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, Russia, Turkey, Kuwait, Indonesia, Lebanon, & Brazil.
For more information about holiday menu development, holiday catering and holiday menu design, concept development, business planning etc., please visit our website: http://www.thenextidea.net.
The Next Idea is committed to provide international food and restaurant consulting and offers advice and consulting in all aspects of restaurant operations, designing, development and management. The company is a highly innovative and experienced team of restaurant consultants and leisure consultants, who have successfully opened and managed more than 250 restaurants, bars, and hotels worldwide. Our team includes established experts in the restaurant, food, retail and leisure industry, offering a combined 70 years of restaurant, hotel and leisure experience.
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Tuesday, September 10, 2013

8 Ideas for a More Successful Restaurant Web Site

According to The Next Idea Restaurant Consultants; what consumers want from a restaurant web site may differ from what you think.

At the top of the list was "current menus with up-to-date prices" - no surprises there. But also of high interest were: descriptions of dress codes, driving instructions, hours of operation, and information regarding special needs. For example, is the site wheelchair-accessible? And are large-type menus available?

                                                                                      

What diners don't want from a restaurant website, according to the Washing Post, is flash, animation, and as one respondent put it, "music that makes my co-workers think I'm on a porn site when I'm just trying to find a menu".

As the Boston Globe points out, "No one would build a Flash site now for a restaurant. Five years ago, it was ‘Where are the most bells and whistles?’ That’s not a justification for them still being there. For designers and users, the emphasis now is on accessibility. Websites have to be easy to navigate, for computer users as well as people on smart phones and tablets."

A properly and honestly presented restaurant website does not have to be complicated, and with the right information you can bring in new customers and keep frequent customers coming back for more.

Use the methods below to achieve a more successful Web site:

1. Think Brochure. The most effective Web sites concentrate on substance, not glitz. Avoid flash, animation, and especially music. Even a simple website is better than a site that won't or takes too long to load.

2. Use Photos. A picture is worth a thousand words. Not only do photos of your restaurant interior or exterior add color to a site, but they also offer information about the style and approach of your establishment. To most diners, restaurant appearance is an important factor when choosing a dining establishment and photos rated highly in the Washing Post survey of what diners look for in a restaurant web site.

3. Display Your Menu. Your menu is your most powerful marketing tool and is an essential part of a well designed site. It can sway a potential customer to choose your establishment. Especially important is that the menu be up-to-date with current prices. And if possible, focus on a menu format that's fast to load and will display on smart phones as well.

4. Display Your Specials. This feature serves multiple purposes. It gives people a reason to come back to your Web site, it lets frequent customers know when their favorite dish is being served, and it may lure someone in who is bored with your standard menu.

5. Make a Map. Let potential customers see how easy and convenient your restaurant location is. This is especially helpful to out-of-towners.

6. Include Web Coupons and Special Offers. Give people a reason to hit your site and then reward them for doing so.

7. Click to Order or Reserve. With companies like OpenTable.com and iMenu360.com, (both integrated into SoftCafe'sWebGuider) you can now easily offer Online Ordering or Online Reservations. In both cases you stand to boost efficiency and increase sales to a rapidly growing internet savvy crowd. Being able to make online reservations from a restaurant website was near the top of the list in the Washington Post survey.

8. Strut Your Stuff. Include positive reviews or awards your establishments have received. Good reviews from your local paper can increase your business dramatically.

Connect The Next Idea –

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Skynny Kitchen, a New Calorie-Curbed Fast-Casual Place

One of the most common factors while you travel for either business or pleasure is your search for a restaurant where you can eat your favorite dish at reasonable prices. However, there are plenty of options available, when it comes to eat in restaurants.

 

Following the recent trend of restaurants offering dishes containing under a set number of calories, please welcome the aptly titled Skynny Kitchen, which opened July 9 in the NoHo Arts District replacing Otis Jackson's Soul Dog. Owner Matt Flinn, formerly a private chef, has a breakfast-lunch-dinner menu with all plates under 500 calories.

For breakfast there are inexpensive sandwiches and a frittata, with a plethora of soups, salads, sandwiches, wraps plus sides and shakes on offer the rest of the day. All food is really quite reasonably priced too, all less than $11. And, by the way, Skynny Kitchen is next headed to West Hollywood this fall.

So, what are you waiting for? Visit Skynny Kitchen and enjoy your breakfast, lunch and dinner with ultimate taste. Here, you can customize your breakfast according to your liking and they would happily attend to you. All these reasons should prompt you to go for this economical option of eating.

The Next Idea is a highly innovative and experienced team of restaurant consultants and interior designers. You can visit their Website - http://www.thenextidea.net/, if you have any query about restaurant interior designing, restaurant marketing plans etc.

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Monday, June 3, 2013

Food Sampling Builds Sales and Relationships with Customers

Giving your product away for free to build sales may seem like a business oxymoron. But as the old saying goes, you have to spend money to make money. And although there is no such thing as a free lunch, food sampling is the next best thing for operators and for customers.

For operators, it gets their product into the mouths of current and potential customers, and for customers, it gives them an opportunity to try something new, risk-free. In that exchange, operators and customers can connect while breaking bread. And, seriously, who doesn’t love a free sample?

“Food sampling is the cheapest, most effective way to get consumers to try what I’m trying to get them to try and build a relationship. Food sampling is the idiot-proof marketing tool for bars and restaurants,” says Howard Cannon, a food service expert with Restaurant Expert Witness.

Jeff Van Dyke, managing partner of Brixx Wood Fired Pizza with locations in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee, says food sampling is a valuable tool because it establishes goodwill with guests, provides an opportunity for customer feedback for market research and requires minimal cost.

“We use sampling for two different reasons: one, to develop new menu items and get feedback — very effective before you go too far with a new item –– and two, we sample foods with people waiting for tables as a way to thank them for waiting and being patient,” Van Dyke says.

A recent addition to Brixx’s menu, Zucchini Balsamic Toast, was a heavily sampled dish.

“It’s a good item and a little different, so people are afraid to try it,” Van Dyke says. “The advantage of sampling is that it stirs people toward items you want to sell. The Zucchini Balsamic Toast is a healthy item, and we want it to be one of the most popular items on the menu.”

Food sampling also is an effective way to change customer habits, says Robert Ancill, CEO and managing partner of the restaurant and leisure consulting group The Next Idea.

“Typically customers are habitual. There is a small percentage who will try something new on a menu,” Ancill says. “The goal of sampling is for the customer to try something new they normally wouldn’t.”

The rules of food sampling are flexible: the where and when can fluctuate according to the operator’s needs and staff’s availability.

Van Dyke says, food sampling varies by Brixx location, but is definitely used when a new menu is in the works, which is twice a year. He says food sampling is also great when stores are not busy, and managers can get immediate feedback from customers.

“We are big into food sampling; we do it in all of our stores. We sample products in front of our stores, at local farmers’ markets, big school events, wine and food festivals — anywhere we can get an audience of our community to sample our product,” says Adam Goldberg, founder of Fresh Brothers in California. “We hold sampling events at our stores. We do it with a new product and with gluten-free products. We believe in the quality of our pizza so much, that we would rather give it away for people to try it instead of giving away a coupon.”

Cannon recommends his clients do a “business blitz,” which is food sampling offsite; before lunch, staff should bring samples to a business that is within range of the restaurant.

“It all works — dining room, offsite, front door,” Cannon says.

Although the where and when of food sampling differs, its success depends on how it is done.

“If the food is good, let the food sell itself,” Cannon says. “If the food is miserable, don’t do sampling. Operators want to sample things that didn’t sell, but don’t do that. Put your best stuff forward with the best hospitality to customers.”

Food sampling also is a way to grab customers’ attention.

“It’s a chance to impress them with something they wouldn’t normally buy. When customers say no to dessert and pay out the check, bring two samples of dessert to entice them next time,” Cannon says.

Bite-size food samples mean small cost to operators. “Food sampling is never a full portion; for example, sampling a dessert, make two-three extra pies or cakes and use that for the whole shift,” Cannon says. “Bulk offering into portion-controlled options to keep food cost low.”

Food sampling can be a cost-effective sidekick to the big budget demands of couponing and advertising.

“We spend $10,000 a month throughout our chain; we really believe in food sampling our food to potential new customers,” Goldberg says. “It promotes the quality of our product vs. couponing that can hurt the integrity of our brand. We would rather give it away instead of discounting it with a coupon. Couponing is not part of our brand; it doesn’t work for us. By giving it away, we have a 99-percent success rate of people trying our food.”

Van Dyke agrees that these little portions are worth the investment. “You can give a lot of food samples away for less money than you’d spend on advertising, and it is money well spent,”Dyke says.


Although the cost is minimal, location will affect the bottom line.

“Offsite is very effective, but it has to be done right,” Ancill says. “Pizza has to be served hot, packaged right. It’s a bigger investment because you have to think about all those details. It’s a lower cost when the customer is right there. The labor cost will stay the same unless you’re hiring someone solely to hand out samples.”
  
When tracking the success of food sampling, operators have to go with their instincts.“There’s no hard evidence that shows a person is buying because of sampling like there is with a coupon,” Ancill says. According to Cannon, since independent and small chain restaurants are so relationship-based, they can help track the success of food sampling by smiles.

DeAnn Owens is a freelance journalist living in Dayton, Ohio. She specializes in features and human interest stories.

Please visit our Website - http://www.thenextidea.net/, for more information about our services.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

The Next Idea has Successfully Updated its Website

The Next Idea, an international restaurant consulting firm has successfully updated its website. Now, the website has many innovative and creative features for its customers.

              

The Next Idea, an international restaurant consulting firm has successfully updated its website. Now, the website has many innovative and creative features for its customers. In order to access the newly added information, people simply need to access the helpful and innovative website. The Next Idea is committed to provide international food and restaurant consulting offering advice and consulting services in all aspects of restaurant operations, development, and management.

The Next Idea is emerging as one of America’s leading restaurant consulting groups, possessing exclusive and unrivaled international coverage. Their experience provides rare capability and expertise for any client, given their ability to combine the best elements of some of the most advanced food, leisure, and hospitality concepts presently found around the globe.The company retains the knowledge, experience, and ability to take account of regional considerations, such as local demographics, culture and weather, therefore, their skill set is invaluable when developing uniquely differentiated concepts adopted for a specific market(s).

The company is equipped to operate across the world with network support in the following countries:  United Arab Emirates, (Dubai & Abu Dhabi), Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, West Bank Territories, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Croatia, UK, USA, France, Spain, Italy, South Africa, Angola, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Tunisia, Morocco, Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, Russia, Turkey, Kuwait, Indonesia, Lebanon, & Brazil.

For more information on restaurant operations, development and management, restaurants consultants, concept development, business planning, culinary development, etc., please visit its informative website: http://www.thenextidea.net.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Obesity – Who’s fault?? The relationship between Restaurants and Obesity

America – The Land of the free and also……………..the Land of the Fat! The stark reality is that the USA is possibly the fattest country in the world!

 More than one-third of U.S. adults (35.7%) are obese. Approximately 17% (or 12.5 million) of children and adolescents aged 2—19 years are obese.

 Over the past thirty years, the prevalence of obesity and obesity-related diseases in the U.S. has risen sharply. Since the early 1970s, the share of children age 6 to 19 classified as overweight has more than tripled, from 5 percent to 17 percent, while the share of adults classified as overweight or obese rose from one-half to two-thirds of the population. Over this same period, the number of fast food restaurants more than doubled. Exposes such as "Supersize Me" and "Fast Food Nation" along with reports in the popular press have frequently suggested that fast food is at least partly to blame for the U.S.'s rising obesity rates.

                                               
 Despite the popularity of this view, it has been difficult to empirically establish a definitive link between fast food and obesity. The simple fact that fast food restaurants and obesity have both increased over time is insufficient proof of this connection, as are studies that rely on differences in fast food consumption across individuals, since people who eat more fast food may be prone to other behaviors that affect obesity.
 Of course, over the recent years the US media has gone to great lengths to share the risks of obesity and the new concept of wellness, but while there’s a better awareness of the side effects of eating, there is little to show in the way of statistical improvements.

 So what’s the problem?

 Interestingly, while Americans point the finger at the fast food restaurants, its probably not so much the fast food restaurants that are at fault but the consumers themselves and, believe it or not, technological advancement. Remember - a free economy is set up where supply meets demand not the other way round, and there is no economy as free as the USA!

 Consider the Potatoe: Americans ate large amounts of potatoes in the early part of the 20th century, in most cases boiled, baked or mashed. In those days potatoes were generally consumed at home. French fries were not generally available, either at home or in restaurants.This was because French fry preparation requiredwork in peeling, cutting and cooking, and given the cost ofexpensive machinery, these activities took a lot of time. In the postwar period, a number of innovations encouraged the centralization of French fry production. Since then,French fries havebeen typically peeled, cut and cooked in a few central locations using sophisticated new technologies. They are then frozen and shipped to the point of consumption, where they are quickly reheated either in a deep fryer (in a fast food restaurant), in an oven or even a microwave (at home). Today, the French fry is the dominant form of potato and America’s favorite vegetable. This change is prevalent in consumption data. From 1977 to 1995, total potato consumption increased by about 30 percent, accounted for, almost exclusively, by increased consumption of potato chips and French fries.Given the calories in French fries are around 40- 50% higher than a regular baked potato it is quite simple to see the problem.

 However, lifestyle is also to blame. Greater economic demands on families have generated enormous lifestyle challenges for individuals and families. America’s consumer driven economy is largely to blame. The economic realities of running a home in the US usually require that the husband and wife work in full time jobs. Single parent home generally have broad pressures as well, so theUS consumer lifestyle requires a fine balance between work and family time. This balancing act is what created an entirely new food culture – fast, affordable and tasty – wrapped up in one single word: “Convenient”. Since the end of WW2, Americans have migrated towards anything that shaves time from their busy lives. Giventhat food is a life necessity – here lay the golden egg and corporations took advantage of this without considering the ‘side effects’ they were having on their customers. Indeed, the restaurant industry must take a degree of responsibility in the weight of the nation - many times, they are serving consumers products such as sugar-coated burger buns and French fries intentionally to create cravings. Or, adding corn syrup added to a high number of items. Corn Syrup has been proven to slow the metabolism and has many other side effects contributing to the problem of obesity.

Bear in mind that the US restaurant industry captures 49 percent of Americans' food dollar, according to the National Restaurant Association. So these restaurant groups have a big influence on what we eat.
 It is worth noting that many people disagree with the fact that the consumer is indeed its own worst enemy, and it’s always going to be difficult for a percentage of the human population to take responsibility. However, you only have to look at the tobacco industry which actually tells you that smoking will kill you yet this industry continues to thrive – so there is probably a need to consider the reality as opposed to blaming the corporations that are in business to supply a demand. After all – isn’t that was businesses are supposed to do?

However, just as the consumer is broadly at fault for its expanded waistline, it appears that demand is shifting: Consumers spent $61 billion to trim down in 2010 — $200 for every man, woman, and child in the U.S. Diet pills and meal replacement solutions accounted for just $3 billion of that, while the remainder was spent on exercise based products and low calorie or Health based foods.

Additionally, the government is taking an interest, and there are a number of government sponsored proposals in place which are intended to help consumers make up their minds; Among the most controversial of the recommendations: Communities could consider a tax on sugary sodas and offering price breaks for healthier beverage choices.

Unsurprisingly, that prompted outrage from the American Beverage Association.

 "Advocating discriminatory policies that uniquely focus on sugar-sweetened beverages is the wrong approach," said an association statement that added those drinks account for just 7 percent of calories in the average person's diet. This point was seriously subject to tainted statistical weighting and was of course factually incorrect, but the great thing about America is that you can always be assured someone will believe you!

However, the big change, as with many things these days has been driven by the internet. The internet is a restaurant’s best friend and its worst nemesis.Love it or hate it, the internet has been the largest platform to channel concepts such as Wellness, healthy eating, and the health implications of fast food and pre-packed / processed products.

The information age, which has accelerated the consumers understanding of good food and bad food, has driven two major changes:

 1)    Consumer awareness has forced changes in demand – McDonalds now serves salads!!
2)    Underground movements have become mainstream – for example the ‘Farm to Table’ movement has created its own websites and associated restaurants [which are becoming chains]. Any well-known chef in the US is promoting sustainability and locally farmed produce, meats and fish, as well.
Today, just over a third of U.S. adults are obese. By 2030, 42 percent will be, says a forecast released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The data paints something of a mixed picture of the obesity battle. There's some progress: Clearly, the skyrocketing rises in obesity rates of the 1980s and '90s have ended, but Americans aren't getting thinner.

That's not nearly as many as experts had predicted before the once-rapid rises in obesity rates began leveling off. But the new forecast suggests even small increases will add up.

Over the past decade, obesity rates stayed about the same in women, while men experienced a small rise. That increase occurred mostly in higher-income men, for reasons researchers couldn't explain.
About 17 percent of the nation's children and teens were obese in 2009 and 2010, the latest available data. That's about the same as at the beginning of the decade, although a closer look by the study shows continued small increases in boys, especially African-American boys.

The obesity epidemic may be slowing, and while it is too early to identify a reversal, a ‘slowdown’ in a fast growing disease is better than nothing. Clearly, while there are many variables within the modified eating habits of Americans and the obesity challenge,given that 50% of dollars are spent on eating out, the restaurant industry impact is enormous. Nonetheless, businesses serve what their customers want (at least smart ones do!!), so it will be down to the consumer to champion their own health!

Incidentally,  the CDC  forecast that is mentioned in this article also  suggests 32 million more people could be obese in 2030 — adding $550 billion in health spending over that time span – another great thing about America is their innate ability to quantify everything into monetary terms – so let’s just consider this:

$550 billion over 18 years is around $30.5 billion a year which, at, let’s say, $1 million a restaurant is 30,500 restaurants. Let’s say the restaurant industry can demonstrate statistically that its efforts in serving healthier foods will reduce the country’s obesity levels -  then maybe the government  will give some of those billions of dollars in health costs to the restaurant industry to build more health cost saving eateries!!! One can dream, but you never know, maybe it’s the Next Idea!

Saturday, October 15, 2011

The Next Idea Opens Offices In Abu Dhabi

As a result of the increasing demand for both home-grown brands and new inbound franchises in the Middle East, The Next Idea has enhanced its service range and regional capabilities by locating in one of the world’s most energized cities and regions.

The Next Idea is the only consulting agency that provides a comprehensive and proprietary turn-key solution for restaurants and hotels seeking concept development, positioning, product and menu creation, operating standards, infrastructure, design and marketing and overall quality development.

“We create brands,” said Robert Ancill, president and CEO of The Next Idea. “We replace the need for purchasing a franchise by providing the complete array of operational, front and back of the house systems and the design and marketing elements necessary to create a successful restaurant.”

The Next Idea (TNI) is an international restaurant and hospitality consulting group based in Los Angeles, with regional offices in the UK, UAE and India. Its client list includes hotels, food service operations, restaurants, cafes, and leisure and entertainment venues.

TNI clients have included House of Fraser (UK), Albert Roux (UK), Safeway (UK), Virgin Trains, (UK), Panera Bread (US), Hyatt Hotels (US), Fairmont Hotels (US), Starbucks (UK & US), Cable Beach Resorts & Crystal Palace Casino, (BHs), Ritz Carlton (US), SEGA Entertainment (US), Sushiitto (US), Chilis (Qt), Johnny Rockets (Qt), Caesars Palace (US), Saks 5th Avenue (US), HMS Host (US). Presently The Next Idea has concept development projects in: USA, Dubai & Abu Dhabi (UAE), Nigeria, Mexico, China, Qatar, UK, Bangladesh, and India.

For more information, visit: http://www.thenextidea.net or email: <!--[if gte mso 9]> Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE info@thenextidea.net