The most effective way is to make direct ordering easier, clearer, and more rewarding than marketplaces at every customer touchpoint. When guests can find your direct link instantly, trust the experience, and see a clear benefit, many will choose it by default.
Most restaurants don’t “replace” marketplaces overnight. They gradually shift repeat customers by using marketplaces for discovery while building direct habits through smart packaging, consistent messaging, and a smooth ordering experience.
Customers often choose marketplaces because they’re familiar and simple. Your direct option has to feel just as easy: one link, minimal steps, clear menu, clear fees, clear delivery or pickup times, and reliable order confirmation.
If your direct experience feels even slightly confusing, customers revert to what they already know. In practice, the “best marketing” for direct ordering is a clean flow that works every time.
Your current customers are your best opportunity. The most widely used approach is to place the direct-ordering message where it can’t be missed, without sounding pushy.
This works because it reaches guests right after they’ve decided they like your food, when they’re most open to reordering.
People don’t change habits just because you prefer it. They switch when the value is obvious and immediate, and when it doesn’t feel risky.
Keep it straightforward: one benefit, one message, repeated consistently. Too many offers can create distrust or confusion.
A common strategy is to treat marketplaces as top-of-funnel and guide repeat guests to your direct channel. You can keep your marketplace presence, but avoid training customers to stay there.
Examples of how operators typically handle this:
Most operators get better results by rolling this out in a simple sequence instead of launching everything at once.
Confirm menu accuracy, item availability, prep times, delivery zones, fees, and payment options. Make sure the direct link works perfectly on mobile.
Packaging, receipts, Google Business Profile, Instagram bio, pinned posts, WhatsApp auto-replies, and in-store signs.
Choose one offer you can sustain, then repeat it for at least a few weeks so customers remember it.
Watch direct order volume, repeat rate, and common issues (late deliveries, missing items, unclear fees). Fix friction quickly.
Uses a “direct-only family bundle” and puts a QR sticker on every bag: the bundle becomes the default reorder choice for regulars.
Promotes “order ahead pickup” via a counter QR and receipt link, plus a simple loyalty stamp for direct orders, reducing line pressure during rush hours.
Highlights direct ordering in Instagram stories and pinned posts, then reinforces it with table QR codes so guests can reorder snacks without opening a marketplace app.
Digital menus help because they reduce friction: guests scan once, see an organized menu, and follow a direct ordering link without searching. They also help you keep items, availability, and pricing aligned across channels, which prevents the most common trust-breakers.
For example, a platform like Menuviel can support this by letting you keep a single menu updated across locations, display clear item options and availability, and place a prominent direct-order link or banner where guests naturally look when scanning the menu.