A catering growth plan
Where to start with corporate, weddings & luncheons.
You already have the kitchen, the sourcing, and the reputation. This is the plan for turning that into a steady stream of booked events: what to do yourself, what to hand off to automation, and the bigger bets worth lining up.
First, the honest read
Greenville's event market has entrenched, premium players (Larkin's, Table 301, Reid's) who run their own venues and book CEO-level events. You won't out-muscle them on scale, and you shouldn't try.
The wedge is the thing they can't copy: real farm-to-table sourcing, the in-house butcher shop, and the Overbrook restaurant buyout. So the move isn't to do everything at once. It's pick a lane, fix the way leads come in, then market. Generating demand you can't catch is the fastest way to waste a strong first 90 days.
01
Do on your own
Free · This month
- Pick one beachhead, not three. Corporate luncheons are the easiest first win: repeatable, weekday, lower stakes than weddings, and they turn into standing weekly orders. Land those, and let weddings build on the portfolio.
- Build a drop-off corporate lunch package. One fixed menu, set price per head, 48-hour notice, branded packaging. An easy yes for an office manager, and your volume engine.
- Mine the existing client list. Anyone who has booked a funeral or party already trusts you. A simple "we also do office lunches and rehearsal dinners" note is your warmest lead source.
- Walk into 20 nearby offices. Overbrook and downtown are full of law firms, agencies, and medical offices. Drop a sample box and a one-pager. Old-school, but it's how local catering actually grows.
- Build relationships with 3 to 5 venues and planners. You don't need your own event space if you're the preferred caterer at someone else's. Planners send repeat business.
- Shoot a real photo library. There's no wedding or corporate portfolio yet. A half-day of photos of plated spreads, buffets, and a styled table is the single biggest credibility upgrade you can make.
- Refresh the 2023 PDF menu. Date-stamped old collateral quietly signals "we don't really do this." Quick fix, real impact.
02
Hand off to automation
Where Handled comes in
- An online inquiry form that captures event type, date, headcount, and budget, instead of "call us." It routes straight to your inbox and a tracker, so leads stop evaporating after hours.
- Instant auto-reply and quote starter. The moment someone inquires, they get a branded "we've got you, here's the menu and next steps" email. Speed-to-lead is the number one thing that wins catering bids, and most competitors are slow.
- A lead tracker. Who asked, what stage, when to follow up. You'll be juggling dozens of conversations at once in wedding season; nothing should fall through the cracks.
- Automated follow-up. Most leads go cold from silence, not from "no." A three-touch nudge over two weeks recovers a real chunk of them on its own.
- Proposal generation. Turn your menu plus headcount into a clean branded proposal in minutes, instead of rebuilding a document every time.
- A monthly "what's in season" email to past clients and corporate contacts, tied to the farm-to-table story. Keeps Fork & Plough top of mind with near-zero effort.
This is exactly what Handled builds. It's the difference between chasing leads in a notebook and a system that catches, replies, and follows up while you're running a service.
03
Worth considering
Bigger bets · Later
- Niche down the wedding offer. Don't fight for 300-guest ballroom weddings. Own "intimate farm-to-table weddings and rehearsal dinners" under ~120 guests, plus the restaurant buyout. That's a story the big caterers can't tell.
- Make the butcher shop and local sourcing the brand. That's the real differentiator. Every piece of marketing should say "from the coast of SC to the NC mountains," not just "we cater events."
- A standing corporate account program. Recurring weekly office-lunch contracts are predictable revenue that smooths out the wedding-season feast and famine.
- Get listed where buyers shop. The Knot, Zola, ezCater, WeddingWire, and the Upstate Business Journal events directory. Reviews are the currency in this market.
- Host quarterly tastings. An open tasting for planners and corporate buyers does more than any ad, and it feeds the photo library and social at the same time.
Suggested sequencing
Catch before you cast.
The automation should go in early, because there's no point generating demand you can't catch. Weddings are the higher-margin prize, but they're slower to build and depend on the portfolio and venue relationships, so treat them as the month two to three build.
01
Month 1
Corporate luncheons + fix the intake. Land repeatable, weekday revenue and stop losing leads.
02
Month 2
Photo library, venue + planner relationships, proposal flow. Build the wedding credibility kit.
03
Month 3
Launch the intimate wedding offer, list on the marketplaces, run the first tasting.
Next step
Want a hand building the system?
The "do it yourself" list is yours to run. The automation piece is what we build at Handled. If the second column looks like something you'd rather not hand-wire, let's grab 20 minutes.
Book a quick call
or email keegan@handledagency.co