A real menu
A fast, readable menu page, not a pinch-to-zoom PDF. Easy for you to update when prices or dishes change.
A menu that loads instantly, reservations and online ordering built in, and the photos that turn a search into a seat.
When someone searches your restaurant, they want three things fast: the menu, the hours, and how to get a table. Most restaurant sites bury all three behind a slow homepage or a PDF menu that is unreadable on a phone. That is a lost customer who just picked somewhere else.
I build the site around those three things first, then make it beautiful. On the Oregon coast, where a lot of diners are visitors deciding in the moment, fast and clear wins the table.
A fast, readable menu page, not a pinch-to-zoom PDF. Easy for you to update when prices or dishes change.
Book a table in a tap, integrated with the system you already use or a simple request form.
Takeout and pickup ordering wired in, so you capture the order instead of a third-party app taking a cut.
Real, optimized food and room photography that loads fast and makes people hungry.
Hours, map, and parking answered instantly, the questions every visitor asks first.
Sub-second loads so a hungry visitor deciding right now lands on you, not the next result.
A delivery-app microsite or a builder page looks fine and quietly costs you. Every order routed through a third-party app hands over a percentage, and the page itself is slow, generic, and rented. For a decision made in seconds, slow loses the table.
A custom site captures your own takeout orders and reservations without a middleman taking a cut of every ticket, serves a real menu that loads instantly instead of a pinch-to-zoom PDF, and looks like your place. You own it, and it works as hard as you do.
Curious why I write real code instead of WordPress or a builder? Here is the full reasoning, with the numbers.
Yes. Reservations and takeout ordering can both be built in, either integrated with a system you already use or as a clean simple flow. The goal is to capture the order or booking directly, without handing a cut to a third-party app.
Yes. The menu is built to be easy to update, or it is two minutes of a care plan for me to change prices and dishes for you. No wrestling with a clunky dashboard.
It is the most common one. A PDF menu is hard to read on a phone and invisible to search. I rebuild it as a real, fast menu page that diners and Google can both read.
Because the decision is instant. A visitor deciding where to eat right now will not wait for a slow page. Fast mobile loads keep them on your site instead of the next result.
Custom websites and apps for Oregon coast businesses. Modern stack. Days for sites, weeks for apps. Free consult to scope your project.