Welcome to do this not that, the podcast for marketers.
Speaker AEach episode is packed with quick tips.
Speaker AThey're super short and at the end we have some fun.
Speaker ALet's jump into it and thanks for being here.
Speaker AWe are back for do this not that podcast presented by Marigold and we have a very cool human being here.
Speaker ASo who's here?
Speaker AWe got Jennifer Bell.
Speaker ANow, Jennifer is the chief marketing officer at Let us entertain you.
Speaker ASo Jennifer's been at Le Champaign you for over 25 years leading branding and marketing and loyalty and digital and guest experience, all this stuff.
Speaker AAnd you're like, well, what has Let us entertain you?
Speaker AYou probably know their brands because they manage and license more than 60 brands and 130 restaurants in a dozen states.
Speaker AAnd it's wild what Jennifer has oversee because it's everything from Michelin star stuff, fine dining to, you know, fast casual, all the all RPM restaurants that you know, like RPM Steak and Italian, all that down to things like wow Bow and Frankie's by the Slice.
Speaker AI mean, you name it, they've got it all.
Speaker ASo Jennifer is going to share with us how do you handle marketing all these brands that are so different?
Speaker AHow do you build loyalty?
Speaker AIt's going to be amazing.
Speaker AJennifer, welcome to the show.
Speaker BOh, thank you, Jay.
Speaker BWhat an intro.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker BYou should intro me in every case I have.
Speaker BSo I will, I'll follow you around.
Speaker BHow do I manage it?
Speaker BI manage it with a very large group of very smart people.
Speaker BPeople as we all manage it.
Speaker BBut I think the best part of my career is starting my career with lettuce.
Speaker BWhen I was in, you know, I was 23 years old, so I got to see it in a stage what's very different than what it is today.
Speaker BAnd I got to grow up essentially with the company.
Speaker BAnd the company is now 54 years old.
Speaker BAnd Let us entertain you.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BOur biggest distinctive strength that we have is our variety of brands and it makes us unique.
Speaker BWe're not going to open 1,000 wildfires or a thousand RPMs.
Speaker BThat's not our business model.
Speaker BRich Melman, who's our founder, his motto is not to be the biggest or the richest, but to be the best we can be.
Speaker BAnd working for a company who just strives to be better every day and pursues excellence is what kept me here all those years.
Speaker BPlus I got to really flex so many different parts of my brain.
Speaker BI started as the assistant to the vice president of marketing.
Speaker BI went into pr, then I went into web web development and I brought a web team in house.
Speaker BThen I went into loyalty and gift cards and building apps and the 25 year journey that I have has just been full of wonderful learnings, a lot of failures and a lot of fun.
Speaker BYou know, marketing tip for restaurants is incredibly fun.
Speaker BAnd now go ahead.
Speaker ANo, no, that's.
Speaker AIt's a, it's an amazing journey that you've been on and your background is so perfect for it.
Speaker ABut what I, I'm curious.
Speaker ASo you have these.
Speaker AI don't like saying disparate, but I'm just going to say disparate.
Speaker AThese kind of disparate kind of types of restaurants.
Speaker AVery different.
Speaker ASo like when you go in to talk about marketing, do you have like on your calendar?
Speaker AAll right, let's have a meeting of all the fast casual brands and then we have a meeting of all the fine dining.
Speaker ALike how do you.
Speaker AActually, that's an excellent question.
Speaker BOur setup is really unique.
Speaker BSo the way we're set up is we're comprised of operating partners.
Speaker BSo I am a partner of Lettuce Mertanium, also the cmo, but there's also operating partners and there are some operating partners that have a collection of different brands and then we call them divisions.
Speaker BSo we have about nine to 10 different divisions.
Speaker BAnd in those divisions they have marketing people.
Speaker BSo those are brand marketers that go out and they do the marketing specific for the RPM brand or the Wildfire brand.
Speaker BAnd they are doing the email marketing, the SMS marketing, the social media, the brand marketing.
Speaker BBecause I really believe that in order for you to really connect with a brand and be that brand ambassador, you gotta be in those restaurants.
Speaker BYou've got to know those people.
Speaker BYou gotta really understand what the customers are experiencing.
Speaker BAnd no two brands are the same and we never approach the brands in the same.
Speaker BThe only thing that is a common thread throughout all of the brands is number one, they're part of something bigger called Let us entertain you, which includes loyalty and gift cards that they all participate in.
Speaker BAnd number two, that they have this ability to be distinct and on their own and they have the ability to do things that are different from the brand across the street that we also may own.
Speaker BSo it's really fun.
Speaker BAnd I get to get all of the marketing managers together every month and we talk and we tackle problems and challenges.
Speaker BAnd I have a team here at the corporate office that works on loyalty, gift cards, pr, social.
Speaker BI have a team of graphic designers and I have a team of developers that help us with our app and website.
Speaker BSo my team's job is to really provide the resources for these field marketing teams that just go out there and do incredible content and incredible storytelling.
Speaker ASo, all right, that's amazing.
Speaker AI love that structure.
Speaker ABut I'm curious about something because a lot of people listening, you know, they may be part of the organizations that have different product lines, different service lines, different all this stuff.
Speaker AAnd so let's say you're like, okay, you know what?
Speaker AWe're now excited.
Speaker AWe found this new thingamabob, new SMS tool, new AI thing, new way to optimize this new whatever is it, let's make sure every location, every brand now uses this thingamabob.
Speaker AOr does everybody operate on their own?
Speaker AThey're operating, it's like their own martech stack.
Speaker AEverything's just do your thing.
Speaker BExcellent question.
Speaker BBecause I've been here so long, I've seen it both ways.
Speaker BSo in the beginning it was, you're an entrepreneur and you do what you want.
Speaker BSo we had seven different reservation systems and three different POS systems and nothing was the same, right?
Speaker BThere was no foundation.
Speaker BAnd then a few years ago, one of the strategy teams here at Lettuce led a project with a digital transformation.
Speaker BAnd just like most companies who are going through digital transformation, it is scary.
Speaker BYou don't know what we're going to tell you, things that you don't want to hear.
Speaker BAnd we took away some of that flexibility from the restaurants, right?
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut what we focused on are the things that do apply to not maybe every single location in our portfolio, but most of the brands majority like pos.
Speaker BEveryone's now on the same POS system, everyone's now on the same reservation system, Everyone now is on the same loyalty platform, they're on the same gift card platform.
Speaker BSo because of that, we can layer in new technology much faster, easier, that benefits all the restaurants we're now on, all on the same online ordering platform.
Speaker BSo all of those things allow us to grow and expand.
Speaker BAnd our theory and my philosophy, and this has been ingrained in me by the Melman family, is that marketing needs to enhance hospitality and the guest experience.
Speaker BSo when I think about what new thing we're going to do, the first thing I think about is how is this going to make life for our guests better and how is it going to make lives for our employees better?
Speaker BI go back to my days as a server.
Speaker BI started as a server, I was a hustler, I love my job.
Speaker BBut people would bring in this coupon or they were running this promotion and as a server and you have all these tables and you have to Remember all these different things.
Speaker BIt could be quite cumbersome and confusing.
Speaker BAnd quite honestly, I just wanted to get guests in and out.
Speaker BThat's what I love about my job, is because I understood the restaurant industry, because I worked in it, and now I can take away some of those pain points that they experience.
Speaker BI'll give you an example.
Speaker BSo we run a promotion called Scratch off and it's every August and September and years ago we used to send out this giant mailer.
Speaker BIt literally was like a direct mail piece that had a coupon with every brand and you'd bring it in and we'd scratch it off at the table and like a lottery ticket and unveil a reward.
Speaker BWe thought to ourselves, okay, we have this app, let's make this digital.
Speaker BWith the digital experience, the interaction was with the guest and the server just processed the loyalty points the way they would normally.
Speaker BAnd there was no extra step on their part.
Speaker BWe made it better for the server and more convenient for the customer.
Speaker BThat's how we approach everything, is if we only tackle things or get things out of the way that are actually going to really enhance our customer experience or our employee experience.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker ASo I'm curious though.
Speaker AOkay, you have a lot.
Speaker AMost of the locations kind of on all the similar platforms or all the similar stuff.
Speaker AIs there some sort of like test mentality?
Speaker ALike, okay, we're going to pilot this over here and we're aggregating all the metrics from all the different marketing across all the locations so we know that this is working over here.
Speaker AAnd then there's like a knowledge share saying, hey, by the way, all you locations, look at the pilot weight over here.
Speaker AYou guys should try it too.
Speaker AAre you organized in that way?
Speaker BYeah, I think that's been a very interesting testing and learning is always how you want to approach anything.
Speaker BYou want to get some information, you're going to dip your toe in right first.
Speaker BAnd now we finally, because of the technology, when we add something new on, like we added pay at the table and we didn't add it across all of our restaurants, we added it one or two first just to see if people would do it.
Speaker BIf they like the user experience, to get feedback from it, we would survey them.
Speaker BWe would get the data and the analytics to your point, establishing benchmarks and understanding what we could expect.
Speaker BAnd then we did two more and then we did five more and then we did.
Speaker BAnd that is how we roll things out.
Speaker BIt's never, you know, everybody has to do this.
Speaker BIt's, let's try it here, see how it works, learn from it, understand the product and then work with the partner.
Speaker BWhat I love about the restaurant industry too is that when people are getting into the restaurant industry, they want to act as a partner.
Speaker BAnd a lot of the great vendors that I work with really want to be an asset to our team and they see us as an opportunity to learn and we see them as an opportunity to give them feedback to make their product better, better.
Speaker BAnd so really choosing those types of people in the very, very beginning, at the start of the project of knowing that we're aligned in our mindset of like your goals and our goals are the same, and then doing a little pilot launch, a proof of concept and then what the rollout will look like.
Speaker BAnd that's really how we're going to approach everything going forward.
Speaker BI think it's extremely important to do that.
Speaker AAnd it seems like you all have loyalty as a North Star.
Speaker AAnd what I'm curious about is your loyalty program.
Speaker ASo if I go to RPM Stake and I'm a, I'm a member, there are those, are you seeing like crossover like that that same person's going to have a loyalty card that they're going to go get a pizza by the slice at your pizza place or is it like high end people go to high end?
Speaker AWhatever, whatever.
Speaker ALike, like is.
Speaker AHow does loyalty, is that a big deal for you all?
Speaker BLoyal loyalty is one of our greatest assets because there's no other loyalty program like us.
Speaker BI don't know of any other loyalty program that has the sheer variety of restaurants in which you can earn and redeem points.
Speaker BAnd so that is our distinct advantage and that is what I leverage.
Speaker BSo you can earn points going through to three dots and a dash, which is our tiki bar at the bottom of one of our restaurants, to, you know, Eiffel Tower restaurant in Las Vegas, you know, a four star fine dining experience and anything in between.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo that's the, the whole benefit of the program.
Speaker BAnd so what we love about that is to your point, there are some people that will go to RPM and only RPM and never another brand.
Speaker BAnd that's okay.
Speaker BBut then there are some people who visit 5, 5, 10, 15 brands in a year.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so we want both of those people.
Speaker BWe, you know, if you're joining the RPM loyalty program because you love RPM and only rpm, great, that's still beneficial for us.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut if you want to try other brands or you're traveling and in a market and you see one of our restaurants and you can easily make a reservation, get points and use your reward dollars.
Speaker BThat's great too.
Speaker BSo that's why we run promotions that are cross selling, like that scratch off promotion where it encourages you to go to different brands.
Speaker BAnd we do all kind of things to encourage people to go to different brands.
Speaker BOne of the things that we just recently did is I told you, we're all now on the same online ordering platform is we now added points and reward redemptions with online ordering too.
Speaker BSo if you go directly through us, it's seamless.
Speaker BAnd if you're a loyalty member, you are getting points, you're redeeming your world dollars and you're enjoying that experience.
Speaker BAnd we have some people now that are only ordering online, which is okay too.
Speaker BAnd so we look at our data and the data is really nuanced and it's really, it's actually kind of challenging because if we had the same concept, the same menu and roughly the same customer, that's pretty easy to see.
Speaker BSort of their visits, their average visits, their average spend, all of those things.
Speaker BBut you know, I mentioned Eiffel Tower in Las Vegas.
Speaker BIf you go there once a year, every year, that's considered loyal to me.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BNever in a metric, in a loyalty program would one time a year give you that high loyalty experience.
Speaker BSo for us, we have to really break apart that data and understand the guests on how they want to use it and meet them where they're at.
Speaker BWe do distill it down to five major segments that I because it.
Speaker BBecause I would drive myself crazy if I didn't.
Speaker BAnd we kind of hone in on those segments because of the core segments of our list and those types of behaviors and the psycho demographics of the those segments are important to us.
Speaker BHow they behave, why they behave, how often they interact with us.
Speaker BBut that's something we're constantly tweaking, evaluating and trying to understand.
Speaker BI don't think we're perfect at it, but we're pretty good.
Speaker AWell, it's always a moving target.
Speaker AI'm curious about moving target related to something else.
Speaker ASo I live down here in South Florida and every time a new restaurant opens now, and I'm curious how marketing has changed about opening up a new brand or a new location because whenever they open something down here, there's some random influencer who I don't even know in the local market who goes on Instagram and blows up this new location.
Speaker AAnd I gotta go there because everybody else is going there.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIs that like, is that the marketing playbook?
Speaker ANow and you open up, you gotta have it.
Speaker BMacro and micro influencers, you gotta have it.
Speaker BI think, you know, I've.
Speaker BI've definitely showed my age.
Speaker BSo it was really tough for me to be like.
Speaker BSo anyone can post about our restaurants.
Speaker BAnd it was tough for me to sort of embrace, but now I'm all in.
Speaker BAnd you have to be.
Speaker BIt's like if somebody tells you that they don't want to do AI, you're like, well, okay, you're going to be back.
Speaker BGood luck with us, right?
Speaker BLike, you have to.
Speaker BWe are all in with these influencers, and, man, are they powerful.
Speaker BAnd for me, it's like anything.
Speaker BPairing the right restaurant with the right influencer, right?
Speaker BIt's like matchmaking.
Speaker BIt's understanding that I want this to be an authentic experience.
Speaker BI don't want it to be like, oh, this.
Speaker BWe're forcing this influencer to do something that they don't normally do.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BSo it's really.
Speaker BWe do a ton of research, and my team loves this, to really connect with the influencers, just like we would the media.
Speaker BI mentioned my background was pr and I was going out with media people every week.
Speaker BNow it's changed.
Speaker BYou know, I'm not going out personally with the influencers now, but my team is, and they're connecting with them and they're understanding what's important to them.
Speaker BAnd as you said, as we go into new markets, so we're opening up in Nashville later this year, and.
Speaker BAnd we don't have any restaurants in Nashville.
Speaker BAnd I am obsessed about learning about that customer in so many different ways.
Speaker BAnd the first place I went was TikTok and Instagram and tried to find as many Nashville influencers as I could just to learn.
Speaker BAnd I learned the food scene pretty quickly, and it's a great place, like.
Speaker BAnd I think now most of us, when we travel are kind of looking on Instagram or we're looking on TikTok, and we're trying to see what excites us.
Speaker BAnd I think we're human beings at the end of the day, and whatever connects you to a brand that is going to be what, you know, forms that solid relationship.
Speaker BAnd I started my career obsessed with brands and the.
Speaker BThe emotional connection that it brings.
Speaker BAnd I think that's what influencers do.
Speaker BThey just bring that emotional connection to a brand, and I think it's important.
Speaker AI love your energy and excitement about the industry that you're in because you've been in it for a minute.
Speaker AGets me excited because I've been doing.
Speaker AI'm in the same world for a really long time and I gotta, like, rev myself up.
Speaker ASo I.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's amazing.
Speaker AAnd so along those lines, what gets you excited about what's coming, like, is AI have anything to do with.
Speaker BOh, I love it.
Speaker BI love everything about A.I.
Speaker Bi love it, love it, love it.
Speaker ABut how does it impact your business?
Speaker ALike, what's going to happen to the restaurant?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, the only thing we joke about this as AI is not going to allow you to, like, eat.
Speaker BBut other than that, I think it could do everything.
Speaker BI really do.
Speaker BI. I am obsessed right now about using AI to number one, really understand guest sentiment.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThere's all these tools out there that pull all the reviews and all the things being sent about, said about restaurants and aggregating them.
Speaker BBut I think AI does the best in this.
Speaker BAnd the fact that I can change a prompt that can really go specific and deep down a path to really understand my guests better is incredible to me.
Speaker BI've spent hours and hours perfecting prompts and going in and trying to find things.
Speaker BAnd then another thing I do is I use AI to try to find out, like, who's coming in the restaurant and if there's anybody that we should be paying attention to, anybody that we could bring that hospitality experience to, anybody that we could who's celebrating a birthday or doing something special.
Speaker BIf there's anything I can provide the restaurants with ahead of time to make the guest experience better, of course I'm going to do that and prioritize that, because I think that's really important, and I think those are the really big opportunities of course content and things like that.
Speaker BI mean, I use AI every day, and I think if you don't, you're behind.
Speaker BAnd as a leader, I really felt it's important to establish an AI strategy within the team to really encourage them to do it.
Speaker BAnd I was at a webinar and they talked about the fear that people have that AI is going to take jobs.
Speaker BAnd there's a couple consulting companies that did.
Speaker BThey went all in with organizations and they helped them really transform all kinds, all parts of organization with AI and they actually hired more people because there's still a human element that you need to review.
Speaker BThis was a law firm specifically, and one of the use cases they said is that they could review a lot of the paralegal stuff much, much quicker than a person.
Speaker BI could do it, but a person still had to read through it and still had to see what the AI did.
Speaker BAnd so, for me, it's about being more productive and focusing on the things that are more meaningful to us.
Speaker BWe're all bogged down every day with those tasks that we have to do because they're important to do.
Speaker BBut if we could free up our time and really focus, like, if I could spend more time learning about our customers or coming in the door and then me greeting them and making sure they had a better experience, that's where I think the best use of my time would be.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ATotally agree.
Speaker ASo, all right, one final question here.
Speaker AI'm curious.
Speaker AYou're in the restaurant world for a long time now.
Speaker AYou go out to dinner.
Speaker AYou're not going to one of your restaurants.
Speaker ALet us entertain your restaurants.
Speaker AYou're going out, whatever with friends, family, whatever.
Speaker AAre you able to participate like a normal human, or are you like, this menu's trash.
Speaker AThey're not doing good service.
Speaker AThe lighting.
Speaker BI gotta get two drinks in.
Speaker BI'll be honest.
Speaker BAnd then I relax.
Speaker BNo, I. I am.
Speaker BLike, I look at things.
Speaker BLike, my husband really gets irritated because I'm like, you know, look at that.
Speaker BSee that there?
Speaker BThey use that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I am.
Speaker BBut then I'm also doing it in such a positive way.
Speaker BLike, I can't remember.
Speaker BIt was a restaurant.
Speaker BWe were in Arizona, and I want to say it was steak 48.
Speaker BAnd we walked in, and as you're walking by, every employee, they stop and look you in the eye and they say hello right on the way to your table.
Speaker BAnd we were walking through, and I just thought I was blown away by that.
Speaker BI felt so welcomed when I came.
Speaker BI personally felt welcomed.
Speaker BThey did it to every single one of us.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike.
Speaker BBut I personally felt welcomed.
Speaker BAnd so when I feel like that, I pay attention to that.
Speaker BThat's really, really important.
Speaker BBut otherwise, sometimes you, like some of my friends, like, I'm really not forthcoming coming with what I do, so I could just relax and chill.
Speaker BBecause I love doing that, too.
Speaker BI love going out to eat.
Speaker BI love food.
Speaker BI love everything about the industry.
Speaker BSo sometimes that's the focus of just having a great time.
Speaker AWell, the next time I go anywhere, I'm going to message you back.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AWhere should I eat in this city?
Speaker ABecause I love that.
Speaker BThat's my favorite question.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AOh, we know everything everywhere.
Speaker AListen, everybody's got to follow Jennifer Bell on LinkedIn.
Speaker AWe're going to put it in the show notes.
Speaker AAnd also, they have an amazing app, Lettuce and Tanu.
Speaker AWhat is the app called?
Speaker BIt's called Lettuce eats and it's incredible.
Speaker BYou can make your reservation, you can do loyalty, you can store gift cards, you can order online.
Speaker BIt's a great app.
Speaker BIt's custom built.
Speaker BPlease download.
Speaker BIt's great.
Speaker AAll right, we're going to put that in the show notes.
Speaker AAmazing.
Speaker AAnd we're going to put the links to Les Hair and Tan.
Speaker AYou can find all the restaurants.
Speaker AJennifer, thanks so much for being here.
Speaker AYou are awesome.
Speaker BThank you, Jay.
Speaker BIt's fun.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AYou did it.
Speaker AYou made it to the end.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker ABut the party's not over.
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