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time you go out to eat and the waiter brings you a menu, take a deep breath. Open it up. Turn it over. Start on the left side first, then go immediately to the back of the menu. Read the right side of the menu last. Why? Read on….a little knowledge makes for a nice appetizer.

Let’s start with some statistics: Americans are eating out more than ever, and they’re spending more than ever before. Consider this: the nation’s 935,000 restaurants should hit $537 billion in sales this year. This means that the average American adult will spend nearly 48 per cent of his or her food budget in restaurants.

Some American cities are positively addicted to eating out. Houstonians eat out more than four times a week. So do folks in Atlanta. And they spend money. The average per person restaurant tab in New York City, the highest in the U.S., is nearly $40. But hold onto your wallets: in Tokyo and London, it jumps to more than $70 per person. And that doesn’t include wine. (More on that later)

Ok, so much for statistics. Now for the surprise.

One of the reasons the tabs are going up is because of something you probably don’t realize. Then again, you’re not supposed to realize it: the secret science of menu psychology. Smart chefs (or their menu consultants) know that when most of you open a menu, your eyes go right to the top of the page on the right side. And, armed with that knowledge, chefs place the menu item that will give them the most profit at the top of the page. Hence, it soon becomes their biggest seller. Then, your eyes normally drift to the center of the page. That’s where many chefs place their absolutely most expensive item. They do that not because they expect you to buy that item, but because the psychology of menus indicates you’ll probably then look at the items immediately above and below the high ticket item and order one of those. Again, those two items rank second and third for generating profits.

I’ve tested this in a dozen different restaurants – and then asked the chefs about their menus. Sure enough, they’ve admitted the practice. “Millions of dollars have been spent to understand what makes a profitable menu,” one chef told me. “By rearranging the order and relaying it out, it can mean tens of thousands of dollars of additional revenue. It has to do with everything from wording or naming, length of description, the number of columns, visuals of icons and pictures, price points, and not using dollar signs.”

At one popular Miami restaurant, the chef actually annotated the menu for me. At the center of the page; caviar at $202 per ounce. Immediately above and below it were tuna tartar at $26 and tiger shrimp at $24. On the top right side of the menu, the most profitable item; wild king salmon.

One microbrewery redesigned its menu with this kind of psychology. On the old menu: hamburgers and sandwiches. They decided they wanted to sell higher priced items. So the menu was reformatted to place more expensive items on the inside right page, toward the middle, in bigger type. The burgers and sandwiches went to the back page in smaller type Within a week, I’m told, the average check went from $16 to $21.

More about menu reading, HERE

also, do check out Pinoy Henyo at http://www.pinoyhenyo.com

 

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Comments

  • starchini said on Aug 21, 2007....
    This doesnt apply to me lol, i always buy the cheapest thing on the menu i dont care where i read it. hehe...im cheap
  • SeanRenaud said on Aug 22, 2007....
    Not that I'm denouncing anything here but I would like to see how the math works out here and if they are implying that it is bad that we spend 48% of our food money at restaurants. That doesn't sound THAT high to me.  Not when you consider the following for me.  Loaf of bread: 1.39, 30 eggs 2.00 (I buy them from a local market who does nothing but eggs) gallon of milk 1.25,  Box of cereal 5 bucks.  We'll round everything up real quick.  That brings me to 11 bucks.  That will likely last me most of a month if not more.  At Mc Donalds a bare minimum is like 1.08 and that's if you order off the dollar menu.  Denny's you'd be lucky to escape bellow 5 bucks.  I think going out to eat twice a month and not being an absolute cheapskate would probably =50% of your food money.
  • lalaine1 said on Aug 22, 2007....
    Starchini, yea, I do the same when eating out on not-so-special days. Find the yummiest and cheapest and there you go... :)
  • lalaine1 said on Aug 22, 2007....
    Seanranaud, well, from your point of view, you have a good point. buying those stuffs will last  a month or less and its still a lot cheaper, and  I agree that you are going to shell out a lot more when eating out because everything is overpriced out there. just imagine, a simple breakfast at mcdonalds can cost you around 2 to 3 bucks.
  • SeanRenaud said on Aug 22, 2007....
    That's my point a simple a breakfast can cost you 2-3 bucks.  If I'm not being picky I can get a loaf of bread and 30 eggs for four bucks and that's a hell of a lot more than one meal.  I mean hell how much money do most of us spend on groceries a month?  A hundred, maybe? 
  • starchini said on Aug 22, 2007....
    I disagree sean...buying breakfast at mcdonalds for me would either be a suasage biscuit with cheese or one of those yogurt parfait things. The yogurts rounded is 2 dollars. The biscuit rounded is 3 dollars. If i were to buy groceries to make the same thing. I would need pillbury biscuits 3 dollars, sausage, 4-5 dollars, cheese 4 dollars. If your like me and will only eat this once a month. All the extra has been wasted. So its totally cheaper for me to spring for food at mcd's than to buy food at the grocery store.
  • SeanRenaud said on Aug 22, 2007....

    Only if you are trying to make the same things.  I don't know about you but I don't ever make the same kinds of meals that I order (save burger and fries.)  I never cook eggs and pancakes or sausage AND bacon.  A grand slam breakfast isn't something that would ever happen in my house. 

    Though you make a solid point, if I'm trying to make the same things and I'm going to eat it once then it's cheaper to eat out.  My point though was for an over all budget home cooked meals are relatively cheap in comparison.  I can easily see how two meals at say Applebees could easily make up a sizable chunk of a budget.

  • starchini said on Aug 22, 2007....
    true...i did the math a while ago and if i buy lunch everyday for five bucks that like 150 dollars!!!  If i were to buy bread, ham and cheese i could eat lunch all month for less than $15.00.  Even though i know how much money i could save i still buy lunch everyday...thats awfull
  • SeanRenaud said on Aug 22, 2007....
    If you can afford it then it's not a problem.
  • lalaine1 said on Aug 23, 2007....
    well, this is my conclusion.
     
    you have money to spring, you eat out, you spend a lot more, but you eat what you want.
     
    your saving for something, you keep the money, eat at home, eat the same thing.
     
    Quantity also matters.
     
    If for example, 10 people are going to eat pancakes at mcdonalds, it would cost around 20 bucks. If you eat at home with those people, im sure it would not reach 10 bucks for a box of pancakes and some eggs.
     
    if only you, are eating the pancake, cheaper to buy at mcdonalds since, you cant eat the remaining  stuffs, thus wasting it if it expires.
  • starchini said on Aug 23, 2007....
    lol- sean i cant afford it!!! I live on 600 dollars a month...

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