Sales techniques for waiters
- Suggestive selling
- Upselling (suggesting a more luxurious option)
- Always deliver it in a friendly manner
- Don't push
- Explain the added value
- Cross-selling (Offering extras)
- Aperitif before the meal
- Extra sauce with main course
- Dessert after the meal
- Using product knowledge
- Which dishes are popular
- Which wine pairs with which dish
- What the homemade specialties are
- Which dishes are seasonal
- Selling the experience (emotional selling)
- Using scarcity
- Faster decisions
- A sense of exclusivity
- Timing of selling
- Water & aperitif upon arrival
- Wine when ordering the main course
- Dessert after clearing the table
- Coffee after dessert
- Body language during selling
- Smile
- Eye contact
- Calm voice
- Speaking with confidence
- Showing enthusiasm
- Customer-oriented selling
- Business dinner → wine advice important
- Young people → cocktails or sharing plates
- Family → Child-friendly options
- Subtle technique: limiting choices
- Important: what you must not do.
- Being pushy
- Insisting after refusal
- Offering too much at once
- Interrupting the customer
- Focusing only on sales without service
Instead of asking: would you like something to drink You better say: May I recommend our house cocktail or a refreshing gin-tonic?
Upselling means: suggesting a more expensive or more extensive version
example: Would you like the regular zaowang mix boat or our special maki mix for the complete experience?
Important
For example: This wine pairs perfectly with your sushi and has a fresh finish.
This means suggesting complementary products
examples
Good timing is everything here don't offer everything at once
A waiter who knows his products, sells more
You need to know:
The more enthusiastically you describe something, the more appealing it becomes
For example: Our chef makes this dragon eyes roll fresh daily, with fresh salmon and kanikama
People don't buy food, they buy an experience.
Instead of: that is a boat with mixed fish.
You say: That is our Zaowang mix boat, a journey through Japanese cuisine with fresh sashimi, classic nigiri and crispy futo maki rolls all on one beautiful boat.
You sell the feeling.
Example: We only have a few portions of our fresh hamachi left.
This creates:
But this must remain honest
A good waiter knows when to make a suggestion.
Too early = irritation Too late = missed opportunity
Selling is also non-verbal:
Doubt in your voice = less sales
Not every customer wants the same thing.
You adapt your sales technique to the type of customer
Instead of open questions: ❌ "what would you like to drink?" ✔️ "Would you like still or sparkling water?"
The customer decides faster when you limit options.
Selling must always go hand in hand with hospitality.
Summary
A waiter sells by:
- Making recommendations
- Suggesting more luxurious options
- Offering extras
- Using product knowledge
- Communicating enthusiastically
- Maintaining good timing
But always with respect and hospitality