Every morning deciding what to post is not a social media strategy — it's stress. Here is a system that lets you plan an entire month of restaurant content in a single sitting, so the rest of the month runs on autopilot.
Most restaurants manage social media the same way: reactive, unplanned, exhausting. The result is irregular posts, dropping reach, and eventually an account that just fades out. The fix is not more effort — it is a better system.
Step 1: Define your content pillars
Before deciding what to post, decide which categories you post in. These are called content pillars, and they let you pre-structure every week of the month without starting from scratch.
Four pillars that work for restaurants:
- Menu and product. New dishes, seasonal specials, the chef's pick, "dish of the week." Visually driven and sales-oriented. Aim for 8-10 posts per month.
- Behind the kitchen. Prep videos, deliveries arriving, a day in the life of the team. These build trust; people want to know who made their food and how. 4-5 posts per month is enough.
- Customer content (UGC). Guest photos, reviews, tagged posts — reshared with permission. This reduces your content production load and acts as social proof. Target 3-4 per month.
- Campaigns and announcements. Special occasions, reservation openings, early-bird offers. Use this category 3-4 times a month; more and the account starts to feel like a flyer.
Four pillars, roughly 20-23 posts per month. That is 5-6 pieces of content per week — the right frequency for Instagram without burning out your team.
Step 2: Build the month's calendar in four sessions
With your pillars set, block the first week of each month for a planning session. It takes less time than it sounds.
Session 1: Mark the special dates (30 min). What holidays, local events, or seasonal hooks exist this month? Put those on the calendar first. If it is November: Republic Day, World Vegan Day (1 Nov), a pre-winter warmth angle.
Session 2: Shoot the month's menu content (2-3 hours). Batch all your food photography and video in one session. You do not need a professional — good light, a clean background, and a close-up lens are enough. One hour of shooting produces 10-15 usable frames.
Session 3: Write the captions (1 hour). Photos are ready. Now write a short caption and 5-8 hashtags for each. Keep them in a Google Sheet or Notion table — one row per post.
Session 4: Schedule everything (30 min). Use Meta Business Suite (free) or a tool like Later or Buffer to queue all posts in advance. Best times for restaurants: 11:30-12:30 and 17:30-19:00.
These four sessions remove the daily "what do I post today?" problem for the entire month.
Step 3: Tools, numbers, and what to watch
No need for a complex stack. The setup that actually works:
For the calendar: Meta Business Suite (free), Later (~$18/month), or just a Google Sheet. The tool does not matter; what matters is having the visual, the caption, and the date in one place.
For performance tracking: At the end of every month, look at three things only:
- Which three posts got the most engagement? Make more of that type next month.
- Which days and times performed best?
- Did profile visits and website clicks go up — not just follower count?
A real example: A 40-seat bistro in Istanbul moved to monthly planning and saw a 40% increase in reservation requests coming through Instagram within three months. Nothing changed except consistency and timing.
Three mistakes to avoid:
- Posting in a different visual format every day — aesthetic inconsistency tires followers.
- Only posting product shots — without story, there is no connection.
- Ignoring comments — engagement is not a one-way broadcast.
Want this running without lifting a finger?
Litmus Universe manages restaurant social media end to end — content production, scheduling, and monthly reporting.
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