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“I think it is very
important that the public
knows who their chef is,” says Keith Yonker, corporate chef for Casa
Restaurant
Group and member of the U.S. Pizza Team. “The perception of a chef
being an old
guy who carries a big knife, wears a tall white hat and yells a lot has
changed
since we as chefs have began marketing ourselves to the public.”
Richard
Ferrara, marketing manager for the oven company Marsal & Sons,
Inc., says
that having a famous chef is very beneficial to his business. Chef
Santo Bruno
is a big part of the marketing, Richard says. “At restaurant shows, we
have
booths where he cooks at our ovens. He shows how the ovens work and
really puts
on a show. His sense of humor and personality really draws a crowd.”
Keith says
the marketing of chefs is now becoming a big thing since the Food
Network has
evolved. Marketing your chef to the public can put his or her name out
and at
the same time bring publicity to you restaurant. If your chef has
originality,
talent and a great personality, he or she can be a prime marketing tool.
One way to
turn your chef into a brand name is to put his or her name everywhere.
Sofo
Foods, who sponsored Keith for the U.S. Pizza Team, wanted to get as
much
exposure for him as they could. “We also knew that Sofo Foods would
receive media
[exposure] along with Keith,” says Angie Lazzaro at Sofo Foods. “Both
were
strong motivating factors for us. I mailed press releases, sent e-mails
and
placed phone calls to a wide variety of media (local newspapers, radio,
TV and
the mayor’s office…). I even tried national talk shows. In addition to
media
contacts, we also had chef coats, Sofo hats and shirts made up for
Keith with
his name and our logo along with his restaurant (Casa Restaurant Group)
logo.”
Focusing
and capitalizing on your chef’s creativity, expertise and personality
is a
great way to market him or her and grow your own “super chef.” Another
good way
to get the chef’s name out is to send him or her out of the kitchen and
into
the restaurant meeting the guests. “I sit with them, buy them dessert
and wine
and make a fuss over little kids,” Chef Bruno says. “And then I take my
customers to the kitchen and give them tours to let them see it is
clean. The
secret to success is giving customers a lot of attention.”
But chefs
need to go farther than the dining room to get their name out. It helps
to go
into the community and participate in cooking contests, festivals and
restaurant showcases. “I do local competitions for charity such as
Chefs on
Stage—a charity for the local food bank—and the March of Dimes food
stage,”
Keith says. “I try to market myself as much as possible, using the
media as
well as networking with other businesses. Right now, I am working with
a local
radio station as their ‘consulting’ chef.”
While
having a “super chef” can boost a restaurant’s image, any kind of chef
can help
in the marketing mix. “They can answer the questions we don’t know the
particulars about,”
While there
are many benefits to having a well-known chef, some restaurants are
reluctant to
market them too much, especially in the case that the chef and owner
are not
the same person. “Casa Restaurant Group does not per se ‘market’ me, as
they do
their restaurants,” Keith says.
– PMQ –