Your directory goes live, and diners land on a profile page. Menu pricing displays inline, photos load in grids, OpenTable's widget sits above the fold. They book without leaving. That's the technical stack. What separates your platform from another Google Maps clone is the editorial layer — your critics write reviews, your team curates neighborhood walking tours, your best-of lists link directly to live profiles with reservation buttons. Map-based discovery lets diners browse SoHo by dragging pins, not scrolling text. Programmatic location pages rank for "Italian restaurants in SoHo" while you sleep. The revenue model: restaurant owners pay monthly for featured placement via Stripe, you earn affiliate cuts from OpenTable bookings, your newsletter drives 40% repeat visits. Without this editorial + monetization architecture, your directory becomes free marketing for Resy — you send traffic, they capture the transaction, you earn nothing and can't prove ROI when investors ask.
Wo Projekte scheitern
Compliance
Editorial Review CMS
Reservation Integration
Curated Collection Engine
User Review System
Map Discovery
Programmatic SEO Pages
Was wir bauen
Yelp and Google own discovery through paid placement, burying neighborhood gems you can't afford to promote
Zero editorial curation makes your directory identical to Google Maps — no reason for diners to switch platforms
Reservation widgets send users to OpenTable's site, leaving you with no tracking, no revenue, no proof of value
Best-of lists live as orphaned blog posts with no profile links, wasting your highest-traffic editorial content
Text-only browsing blocks visual discovery — diners who think in neighborhoods, not cuisine tags, bounce immediately
Manual menu updates lag weeks behind, showing closed restaurants and wrong hours that kill trust in one visit
Unser Prozess
Editorial Strategy
Platform Architecture
Core Directory Build
Revenue & Content Features
Launch & Editorial
Häufige Fragen
How much does a restaurant directory website cost?
Custom restaurant directories kick off at $12,000 for basic features—restaurant profiles and editorial content included. Full-featured options with reservations, reviews, collections, and SEO pages go from $18,000 to $25,000. No hidden costs—you'll know the price upfront before any coding starts.
How do restaurant directories make money?
Revenue streams range from featured listings ($50–$500/month per restaurant) to referral fees ($1–$2 per cover via OpenTable and Resy), ads and sponsored pieces, affiliate commissions, subscriptions, and event ticketing. A successful directory blends three or four income sources.
Can you integrate OpenTable and Resy for reservations?
Yep, we integrate OpenTable, Resy, and SevenRooms widgets directly on profiles so diners book right there with no redirects. No reservation system? We'll create an inquiry form with email confirmation. And thanks to referral fees, every booking boosts your revenue.
How do editorial reviews differ from user reviews?
Editorial reviews penned by your critics and curators offer expert takes and ratings that engender trust. User reviews let diners add their thoughts with stars and snaps. Our systems support both—an editorial CMS and a user-friendly review interface with moderation features.
What are curated collections and best-of lists?
Curated restaurant collections—like "best pizza in Brooklyn" or "rooftop dining in Manhattan"—drive organic traffic and fuel social sharing. These pages become some of the most linked and bookmarked content, thanks to a collection CMS your editors can leverage for keeping lists current.
Can you build a restaurant directory for a specific city or cuisine?
Niche directories often beat generalized ones by a wide margin. Focusing on a city or cuisine, like Time Out London or a dedicated ramen guide, builds deeper authority and strengthens SEO. We design this focus into the taxonomy, content structure, and SEO plans to maximize traffic and loyalty.
How does map-based discovery work?
We craft a Mapbox-powered search where users explore by location, with name, cuisine, rating, and price visible on hover. Users can apply filters for cuisine, price, rating, neighborhood, and more without waiting for pages to reload.
How long does a restaurant directory take to build?
Initial core directories take between 8 to 10 weeks from start to rollout. For full-featured builds—reservation systems, editorial CMS, reviews, collections, SEO pages—it's around 10 to 14 weeks. We'll layout a timeline upfront so you know what to expect.
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