Australia

The Easiest Sales Pitch Ever: 2,330 Restaurants in Australia with Poor SEO / Low Domain Authority

SEO audit and optimization to get found on Google search. I've seen agencies make 6 figures just from these leads. Here's exactly how to find them and what to say.

Total Restaurants

5,297

In Australia

With Poor SEO / Low Domain Authority

2,330

44% have this defect

Avg Revenue Loss

$64,965

Per business, per year

Restaurants working in Australia

Why Restaurants with Poor SEO / Low Domain Authority Are a Goldmine

Look, I've been in this game for years. I've seen agencies waste time cold-calling businesses that don't need anything. But restaurants with poor seo / low domain authority? These are easy wins.

People check menus online before visiting — if they can't find yours, they choose a competitor

Online ordering now represents 30%+ of revenue, but it requires a website or app to capture it

Google Maps shows 'Menu not available' if no website is linked — that alone kills walk-ins

Bad reviews stick around longer without a website to tell your story and showcase your food

The Real Impact

75% of users never scroll past the first page of Google results

Translation: Every single restaurant with poor seo / low domain authority is bleeding money. Your job is to show them exactly how much, and offer to fix it.

How Much Can You Charge?

Here's the thing: restaurants aren't cheap. They make good money, and they know a website is an investment. Don't lowball yourself.

Typical Project Pricing for Poor SEO / Low Domain Authority

Low End

$1,000

Basic solution, template-based

Mid Range

$2,500

Custom design, professional quality

High End

$5,000

Full-service, ongoing support

What's included: Full SEO audit, on-page optimisation, local SEO setup, Google Business Profile optimisation, and monthly retainer

How You Stack Up

OptionTimeCostQualitySupport
DIY / Fiverr2–4 weeks$100–500LowNone
Web Agency4–8 weeks$3,000–10,000HighGood
WordPress Template1–2 weeks$500–1,500MediumLimited
Your Service2–3 weeks$2,000–5,000HighExcellent

Best Ways to Reach Restaurants

Not all outreach methods work the same for every industry. Here's what actually works for restaurants:

Cold Call

Call between 9–11 AM on Tuesday–Thursday. Have their Google Maps listing open. Lead with "I saw you don't have a website — you're losing leads every day."

Email

Subject: "Quick question about [Business Name]'s website". Keep it under 100 words. Include a mockup screenshot if possible.

Direct Mail

Send a postcard with their Google Maps listing screenshot and "You're missing 200+ customers per month without a website."

Walk-In

For local businesses, visit during off-peak hours and speak directly with the owner. Come prepared with a one-page competitive analysis.

Objections You'll Hear (And How to Handle Them)

Look, restaurants will push back. They always do. But if you're prepared, these objections are easy to overcome:

1

"We are already on DoorDash and Uber Eats"

Your response: That's great for delivery — but those platforms charge 15–30% commission on every order. A website with direct ordering pays for itself in 1–2 months and then every order is pure margin. You keep the customer data too.

2

"We do not have time to manage a website"

Your response: You don't manage it — we build it, maintain it, and update the menu when you need us to. Your job is to cook. Ours is to make sure customers find you online.

3

"I get enough business from referrals"

Your response: That's great — but what happens when referrals slow down? A website is insurance for lean months. Plus, referrals often Google you before calling to verify you're legitimate.

4

"Websites are too expensive"

Your response: A basic site costs $2,000–$5,000 one-time. If it brings you ONE extra client per month, it pays for itself in 60 days. The real cost is losing clients to competitors who do have sites.

CASE STUDY

How Family Table Restaurant Went from 12 to 47 Monthly Leads

SITUATION

Family Table Restaurant, a family-owned restaurants business operating for 15 years in Canberra, relied entirely on word-of-mouth referrals. They had a Google Maps listing but no website, costing them dozens of leads every month.

ACTION

We built a 7-page website with service descriptions, photo gallery, customer testimonials, and online booking. Local SEO was implemented targeting Canberra and the surrounding area.

RESULT

Within 90 days, they ranked on page one for "restaurants in Canberra" and increased monthly leads from 12 to 47 — a 292% increase. ROI: 8x in the first year, with the site paying for itself in under 60 days.

How to Find These Leads Automatically

The old way: Hours of clicking. The new way: 2,330 qualified restaurants leads with poor seo / low domain authority in minutes. Here's the process:

1

Enter Your Search

Type "Restaurants" and select "Australia" as your target location.

2

Auto-Detect Defects

Our scanner automatically identifies businesses with poor seo / low domain authority.

3

Export & Start Pitching

Download a CSV with business name, phone, address, and defect details.

No credit card required • 5 free leads to test

Frequently Asked Questions

How many restaurants in my area actually have this problem?

Based on our data, approximately 44% of restaurants have poor seo / low domain authority. In a mid-sized city, that is typically 200–500 potential clients — and our tool surfaces them in minutes.

What is the best way to pitch restaurants?

Restaurants respond best to direct, value-focused outreach. Lead with a specific number — how many customers they are losing, or how much revenue the defect is costing them. Offer a free audit or mockup. Avoid jargon: talk about customers and revenue, not "SEO" and "UX."

How much can I charge for fixing poor seo / low domain authority?

SEO audit and optimization to get found on Google search. Typical project pricing ranges from $1,000 to $5,000, depending on scope and market. Premium clients in high-revenue industries like HVAC or law will pay toward the top of that range.

Do restaurants actually need websites, or is social media enough?

Social media is useful for engagement but it cannot replace a website. Restaurants need a website to: (1) rank in Google search results for local queries, (2) look professional and credible to new customers, (3) control their brand narrative and collect their own customer data, and (4) convert visitors into leads with forms, booking systems, and clear calls to action.

The Numbers Don't Lie

81% of shoppers research online before visiting a local business

Source: GE Capital Retail Bank

88% of consumers trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations

Source: BrightLocal

46% of all Google searches are looking for local information

Source: Go-Globe.com

72% of consumers who did a local search visited a store within 5 miles

Source: HubSpot

Let's Turn 2,330 Restaurants Into Paying Customers

Enough reading. Time to act. These aren't theoretical leads - they're real businesses losing money right now. Go help them.

Join 500+ agencies already finding pitch-perfect leads