“The secret of a successful chef is to
put yourself in the customer’s position,” says Ramsay. “By that I mean
thinking about what they want.”
During one of the restaurant makeovers for the television series
“Gordon Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares,” Ramsay paid a visit to a
restaurant in Glasgow that had become the local go-to place for special
occasions. It was fully booked on Saturdays and Sundays, but “from
Monday to Thursday no one was going there because people thought, ‘Oh,
that’s where we’ve got to go for a celebration,’” says Ramsay. “It was
too fancy, and it was a big learning curve.”
Ramsay took the restaurant’s menu, which was filled with fancily-named
high-end French cuisine and went to the streets, where he asked some
local Scots to read from it. There was not a single one of them who was
not left confused about what dishes each of the names represented. Even
if they could pronounce the names, they had no idea about what they
would be eating. The food that was being served might have been
Michelin star worthy, and indeed it was, but because the locals could
not even understand what they were ordering, the restaurant was losing
money.
“We streamlined it, knocked it back and embedded ourselves into the
community as opposed to becoming the destination for every 50th wedding
anniversary, and every gran and grandpa’s 80th party” says Ramsay. When
he visited the restaurant a few months after the makeover, it was a
weeknight and it was filled to capacity. Ramsay had correctly
identified who the customer was and changed the menu accordingly. The
restaurant still specialized in French cuisine, since that was both the
chef’s niche and his passion, but it was made simpler both in name and
taste to accommodate the market.
“You can’t have your menu laced with offal, fois gras and 50 or 60
pounds worth of caviar,” says Ramsay. “You need your mainstream lamb
and your simple salads. Not everyone who comes into your restaurant is
going to be a foodie. There'll be two foodies out of six on one table.
You can't overdo it. You've got to find that balance. I put myself in
the position of the customer, not the chef. That means excitement and
creativity.”
Ramsay also pays close attention when it comes to serving his
vegetarian customers. Although he received much negative publicity for
once admitting he served meat stock to a group of vegetarians, he has
since tried to make amends by adding to the vegetarian menus at his
restaurants. “For me, the biggest frustration about vegetarians is that
chefs don’t look after them enough,” says Ramsay. “They oust them as if
they’d been diagnosed with leprosy. They don’t treat them as normal
customers. Here, we make sure they have just as exciting food.”
By knowing who his customers are and refusing to take any of them for
granted, Ramsay has proven what success can come from taking a
realistic look at your target market.