Last Friday I wanted to try a new restaurant in Kimihurura. Found it on Google Maps. 4.5 stars. Great. Tapped the website link. Nothing — “This site can’t be reached.” Tried their Instagram. Hadn’t posted in three months. I had no idea what the menu looked like, what the prices were, or whether they took reservations.
I went somewhere else. That restaurant lost a table of four because they didn’t have a working website.
What a restaurant website actually needs
Forget complicated features. A restaurant website needs five things:
- Menu with prices — this is the #1 thing people are looking for. Put it in text, not a PDF. PDFs are terrible on phones
- Location and hours — embedded Google Map, opening hours, parking info
- Phone number and WhatsApp — clickable, so people can call or message to reserve in one tap
- Photos of the space and food — real photos, taken in decent light. Not stock images of food you don’t serve
- Reservation option — even if it’s just a WhatsApp link that says “Reserve a Table”
That’s it. Five things. You don’t need online ordering (unless you do delivery). You don’t need a loyalty programme integration. You need a clear, fast page that answers the three questions every potential diner has: what do you serve, how much does it cost, and how do I get there.
“But I have Instagram”
Instagram is great for showing today’s special and yesterday’s ambiance. It’s terrible for:
- Showing your full menu in a readable format
- Being found on Google (Instagram posts don’t rank)
- Giving people your hours, address, and phone in one glance
- Looking professional when someone Googles your restaurant name
When an expat Googles “Italian restaurant Kigali”, Instagram won’t save you. A website with the right keywords will.
“But I have Google Business Profile”
Google Business Profile is essential — but it’s not yours. Google controls the layout, the features, and what shows up. A website is yours. You control the story. You control the brand. And a website linked from your Google profile massively increases your click-through rate.
The investment
A simple restaurant website costs about RWF 30,000–50,000/month through services like Kisimenti. That’s roughly what you make from two tables on a Friday night.
How many tables are you losing because people can’t find your menu online?