Psychology of Restaurant Design
How to Influence your Guests Through the Science of Seating
Are your Customers Sitting Comfortably?
Have you thought about the perceptual factors of your furniture design, such as the comfort, style, colour and touch of the upholstery fabric?
Did you know that the layout of a restaurant can influence whether your guests enter, how long they stay and even how much money they might be likely to spend? Discover our restaurant design tips and understand how you can use the psychology of restaurant design to influence your guests.
What is the Intended Use of your Restaurant Furniture?
Matching the specific design features of your chairs with the considerations of physical need and what the guest will be using the chair for is clearly important. Zoning of your furniture can encourage quiet personal spaces for reading, working and relaxation or more sociable areas to sit, for example, within a lively bustling bar.
The length of time that you expect a customer to be seated can also be reflected in the ergonomics of your seating design. If you would like to influence the customer to perch for a little while before moving on (for example within a reception area), a more upright, low-backed, shallow seated armchair or ottoman would be an ideal seating option.
Equally, if you would like the customer to stay seated, sink into the chair and enjoy a few drinks while socialising in the bar lounge, a larger deeper-seated and softer upholstered lounge chair would be a better option for the customer to relax into.
What to Consider in Restaurant Design
The Furniture you Should Choose for your Restaurant
Getting the right furniture for your restaurant is imperative to making sure your clients are comfortable. But thinking about the layout of the new furniture shouldn’t be missed either. For example, once you’ve mapped out the size and capacity of your restaurant space, you’ll want to make sure that your furniture is aesthetically inviting but also serves a specific purpose depending on what your customers want, and how much time (and money) you would like them to spend in that spot of your restaurant.
If you’re going through a re-design and need to rethink your restaurant seating layout to capitalise on the psychology of seating, some examples you could choose to create specific areas of interest within a bar, lounge or restaurant include:
Restaurant chairs
Banquette seating or restaurant bench seating
Bar stools
Restaurant Seating Styles
If you’re revamping your restaurant seating layout, you have a variety of styles to choose from, all of which could have an impact on the way your customers interact with your business. Want to keep your customers socialising for longer? Choose seating that encourages them to relax with higher back chairs and luxurious upholstery giving your staff the opportunity to upsell coffees and drinks while your customers sink comfortably into their seats.
Does your business rely on high turnaround? Go for a strategic seating setup that is simple and chic, inviting your diners in for a quick bite but not letting them get too comfortable on a sofa or armchair so that you’re missing out on the next batch of customers that walk through the door.
Banquette or Fixed Restaurant Seating
Not only can banquette seating or fixed booth seating highlight key features such as wall features in your restaurant, but it brings a welcoming layer of privacy for your customers. A booth is more of an enclosed, relaxed space for a group of customers to enjoy their dining experience.
Banquettes can also help to create natural walkways for diners and waiting staff to ease the free flow of foot traffic through the restaurant.
Banquette seating can result in guests not feeling so exposed in the wider restaurant space and a more private or intimate space might just encourage them to stay a little longer. What’s more, when people can relax their back against comfortable fixed seating and settle into the experience they tend to be more comfortable, which can often lead to them spending more money. In fact, ‘Spend Per Minute’ in full-service restaurants has been known to increase when customers are sat within a booth which is why so many large restaurant chains encourage the deployment of banquettes within their establishments.
Did you know that two-top tables (where diners sit directly opposite one another) aren’t always the best way to go if you’re trying to give customers a positive restaurant experience? a professional in Hotel Administration, explains one of the secrets to restaurant design layout.
According to Robson, research indicates that when people are huddled around booth seating at a 120-degree angle, compared to directly opposite each other at a two-top table, they felt in a more natural position for conversation.
Bar Stools
Mingling over a drink could be the first part of your customer’s experience in your hospitality environment, which will build the first impression. Alternatively, they may choose to relax at the bar before or after they’ve eaten, which means your bar stools really do need to be comfortable enough to sit on for a while.
Find out more about what to consider when you’re choosing the right bar stool.
Choosing the Best Restaurant Seating Layout
One of the secrets of the psychology of restaurant design is knowing how to make the most of every area in your restaurant. Add outdoor seating to encourage clients to dine ‘al fresco’ or consider rooftop seating if you have the flexibility. It will add a whole new level to your clients’ restaurant experience and will clearly increase your volume of covers and revenue.
Think carefully about how you would like your customers to move from one space to another. How long do you want them to sit and eat? What’s the optimum amount of time for them to spend at their table that encourages them to order another bottle of red? There is certainly a clear science behind seating that you can explore that will benefit your bottom line. Here are some restaurant seating layout ideas that could help you maximise space and encourage your customers to spend.
How Guest Duration Affects your Restaurant Seating
The longer your guests are seated, the more you’ll need to maximise the space and seating you provide. If your restaurant’s profit is based on the volume of guests and table turnover, consider furniture arranged for more casual dining. Whereas if a longer guest duration brings you better profits, choose restaurant tables and chairs that encourage your guests to relax for a finer dining experience.
Psychology of Seating Arrangements: Colour is Key
Choosing the right colour palette for your furniture is also key to influencing your guest’s mood. Whether that be dramatic red tones which are believed to induce hunger which would be a perfect choice for a restaurant, or perhaps pink, a perfect calming colour for spaces in which to relax.
Get in Touch
If you’re redesigning the layout of your restaurant, we can help you with our space planning service we offer. We’re experts in creating bespoke and custom hospitality furniture for restaurants, bars, and hotels.