The restaurant is good. It is not undiscovered for lack of quality — Yelp reviewers call it "a slept-on gem," "Houston in a nutshell" (Venezuelan-Mediterranean fusion), and "a legit option."
With 6 tables, 9am–7pm hours, and no dinner service, dine-in revenue is structurally capped. The marketing answer is therefore not "more butts in seats" alone — it's a two-track plan:
Track A — Fill the seats (cashflow): GMB + Instagram + customer reactivation. Gets people in the door tomorrow.
Track B — Catering & corporate (the real money): 6 tables max out at ~$2,500/day. One office lunch contract for 25 people = $400+ in a single drop with zero seating capacity used.
One recurring weekly catering account is worth more than a full Saturday lunch rush.
The location is in the strongest catering corridor in Houston: a 2-mile radius covers Greenway Plaza (40,000+ workers), River Oaks Tower, the Museum District, Rice University, and the Texas Medical Center is a 10-min drive. This is the lever.
Nobody markets to "everyone." You market to 3 specific people. For each, we know who they are, what they want, what stops them, and what they'd pay for.
Highest priority
Avatar 1 — Sara, the Office Lunch Buyer
- Who
- Office manager / EA / HR coordinator at a 15–100 person company in Upper Kirby, Greenway Plaza, River Oaks, or Med Center.
- Her job
- Order lunch for team meetings, client lunches, all-hands, training days, monthly birthdays.
- Pain
- Her current options are Chick-fil-A trays, Jason's Deli, Torchy's. Boring. Dietary restrictions are a nightmare.
- Why Gusto wins
- Different, photogenic, accommodates GF/vegan/vegetarian (separate fryer is a real claim), tells a story when guests are in town.
- What we sell her
- A named catering box — one price, one phone call, delivered & set up. See "The Caracas Box."
- Where she lives
- LinkedIn, Google Maps office searches, her own front desk. Tactic: hand-delivered sample tray.
📖 Read full deep-dive avatar →
Already loves you
Avatar 2 — Carolina, the Venezuelan Houstonian
- Who
- 30–55, Venezuelan diaspora, lives in Houston metro, hasn't been "home" in years. Brings family on Sundays.
- Pain
- Misses real cachapa, real hallacas, real tequeños. Tired of Tex-Mex masquerading as Latin food.
- Why Gusto wins
- Authenticity. The owners are Venezuelan. The menu reads like Caracas. Sunday brunch already pulls this crowd.
- What we sell her
- "Sunday in Caracas" prix fixe. Holiday packs (pan de jamón, hallacas) at Christmas and Mother's Day.
- Where she lives
- Spanish-language Facebook groups ("Venezolanos en Houston" — big), WhatsApp word-of-mouth, IG in Spanish, church bulletins.
Word-of-mouth engine
Avatar 3 — Alex, the Inner Loop Foodie
- Who
- 28–45, lives in Montrose / Heights / Museum District, household income $80K+, posts food on IG, dates "interesting" not "expected."
- Pain
- Wants to discover the next spot before friends do. Brunch fatigue.
- Why Gusto wins
- "Venezuelan-Syrian fusion in Montrose" is genuinely uncommon. Cachapa photographs beautifully.
- What we sell them
- The owner story ("Houston's only Venezuelan + Mediterranean café, run by a Venezuelan-Syrian couple") and a date-night tasting in the underused 5–7pm window.
- Where they live
- Instagram Reels, Google Maps "near me," CultureMap Houston, Houston Eater, /r/houston.
Seasonal goldmine
Avatar 4 — Maria, the Special-Occasion Host
- Who
- Hosts birthdays, anniversaries, baby showers, Christmas gatherings at home for 8–20 people.
- Activates
- November–January (holidays), April–June (graduations, Mother's Day, Father's Day).
- What we sell her
- "Diaspora Holiday Box" — pan de jamón, hallacas, tequeños platter, bundled.
Cut intentionally: We are NOT marketing to "everyone who likes lunch." The 10%-off-flyer approach is dead. Nobody changes plans for 10% off.
3Packaged Offers
Replace generic discounts with named experiences. Each offer has a name, a flat price, what's included, who it's for, and a lead time. The customer should be able to say "I want the Caracas Box for Thursday" and be done.
Priority offer
The Caracas Box
Office Lunch Drop · for Sara
$175 — feeds 10
Includes: 10 hand-held arepas (mix of reina pepiada, pelua, vegetarian), 12 mixed empanadas, 1 cachapa platter cut in 12, 10 tequeños with guava-cheese dipping, plates + napkins + utensils, 1 bottle papelón con limón or hibiscus tea.
Lead time: 24 hours.
Delivery: Free within 5 miles of 77098.
Upsell: Tres leches platter +$35 · Venezuelan coffee service +$25.
Why it works: One name, one price. The buyer doesn't think — they just order.
Sunday in Caracas
Family Brunch Prix Fixe · for Carolina
$60 — feeds 4
Includes: 1 cheese cachapa cut into 4, 4 arepas (your choice), tequeños appetizer, 1 tres leches, 1 carafe of coffee or chicha.
Available: Sunday 10am–2pm, reservation required.
Why it works: Turn your proven Sunday crowd into a packaged ticket. Reservations create "I have a reservation at Gusto" social cachet.
Diaspora Holiday Box
Nov 1 – Jan 6 launch · for Carolina & Maria
$145 — feeds 6–8
Includes: 1 pan de jamón, 4 hallacas, 12 tequeños with guava-cheese, 1 tres leches.
Lead time: 48 hours, last orders Dec 22.
Why it works: Pan de jamón and hallacas are sacred to Venezuelans at Christmas. Carolina will pay this and tell five friends.
Date Night Tasting
Fri / Sat 5–7pm only · for Alex
$95 — for 2
Includes: 5 courses — empanada starter, mini cachapa, shared arepa plate, pabellón to share, tres leches. (Wine pairing +$40 if licensed; otherwise BYO.)
Available: Friday & Saturday 5–7pm only. By reservation.
Why it works: Uses dead hours, creates a "date" name, justifies $47.50/person. Test 8 weeks; expand if it sells.
Tequeños & Chicha Happy Hour
Optional · test month 2
$25 — for 2
Includes: Dozen tequeños with guava-cheese dipping, 2 chichas or coffees.
Available: Tue–Thu 4–7pm.
Why it works: Cheap, sharable, IG-friendly. Tests late-afternoon walk-in demand.
4Google Business Profile — Highest-ROI 30-Day Move
GMB is the #1 lever for a restaurant that already has good food. Most lunch decisions in Houston start with "lunch near me." Right now the profile is claimed but neglected. Fix:
Week 1 — Foundation
- Photos. Upload 40+ photos: signature dishes (cachapa pabellón, reina pepiada, tequeños, pan de jamón, breakfast combo), interior, owners on camera, catering setup.
- Categories. Primary: Venezuelan restaurant. Secondary: Mediterranean restaurant, Caterer, Breakfast restaurant, Coffee shop.
- Attributes. Check ALL true ones: GF, vegetarian, vegan, delivery, takeout, dine-in, family-friendly, casual, accepts reservations, Spanish-speaking staff.
- Services. Add: catering for offices, holiday catering, Sunday brunch, breakfast, online ordering, pickup, delivery.
- Menu upload. Upload PDF directly to the profile (most restaurants skip this).
- Hours + holiday hours. Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve, New Year's Day.
- Booking + catering inquiry links in the profile description.
Week 2 — Reviews System
Goal: 4.4 → 4.6 stars and +50 reviews in 90 days.
- Receipt QR cards. Print receipt-cards with a QR code: "Loved it? Tell us in 60 seconds → [QR]". Direct review link.
- Text-back system. Every catering customer + reservation gets a text 2 hours after pickup/delivery, signed by Henry's mom: "Hope lunch was great. If we hit the mark, a quick Google review goes further than you'd think for a small family spot. [link] — [name]"
- Respond to every review within 48 hours. 5-star: thank by name, mention a dish from the review. 1–3 star: apologize, offer to fix offline.
Weeks 3–4 — Posts & Q&A
- Weekly Google Post — same content as IG (Caracas Box, Sunday in Caracas, holiday box).
- Seed 8 Q&A entries from a personal account: "Do you cater offices?", "Are you open Christmas Eve?", "Hallacas during Christmas?"
- Add the catering one-pager as a PDF Post.
Ongoing rhythm: 1 GMB Post per week · 2 new photos per week · 5+ new reviews per week from the receipt + text system.
This is the section that 2–3x's revenue. The TAM around 3306 S Shepherd is enormous. Below is the actual go-to-market, not vague advice.
Step 1 — Build the Catering One-Pager (Week 1)
A PDF and a simple landing page. Sections:
- The owner story (Venezuelan-Syrian couple — more memorable than Chick-fil-A).
- The Caracas Box front and center with price + photo.
- 3 other named bundles (mini-arepa tray, empanada tray, breakfast meeting combo for 10).
- "Accommodates GF, vegan, vegetarian — and we have a separate fryer for celiac guests."
- 24-hour lead time. Free delivery within 5 miles. Phone + WhatsApp + email.
Step 2 — Build the Target List (Week 1)
Goal: 100 offices within a 2-mile radius. Use Google Maps + LinkedIn:
- Upper Kirby & River Oaks: law firms, financial advisors, ad agencies, design studios.
- Greenway Plaza: Phillips 66, Apache, Direct Energy, Houston Chronicle, hundreds of law/finance suites. Highest density office cluster in Houston.
- Museum District: museums (group lunch ordering), university dept offices.
- Texas Medical Center: hospital admin, research labs, clinical groups.
- Montrose / Heights: creative shops, medical offices.
Build a spreadsheet: company, address, office manager name (LinkedIn), email guess, phone. Target 100 in week 1.
Step 3 — The Sample Drop (Weeks 2–6)
This is the conversion mechanism. The food sells itself once they taste it.
- 5 sample drops per week (1/day, Mon–Fri).
- Drop = small tray of mini-arepitas + mini-empanadas + tequeños, branded, with the one-pager.
- The pitch (delivered in person): "Hi, I run Gusto Gourmet down the street — we just opened our catering arm and I wanted to leave samples for your team. If you ever need a team lunch, here's our card."
- Cost per drop: ~$30 in food. 25 drops/month = $750. One landed account pays this back in one delivery.
Step 4 — Email + Text Follow-Up (Weeks 2–10)
3-touch sequence to the office manager list (those not sampled):
- Touch 1 (Mon, week 2): "Different lunch option for your team — local Venezuelan/Mediterranean café, $175 feeds 10, 5 miles from your office." Attach one-pager. Photo of cachapa.
- Touch 2 (Mon, week 4): Soft. "Heads up — we do Father's Day office breakfasts in June. Want to grab a slot?"
- Touch 3 (Mon, week 8): "We just added a holiday catering box for Christmas — pan de jamón, hallacas, tequeños. Limited slots — want me to save one for [Company]?"
Step 5 — The Recurring-Account Pitch
Once one office orders, offer: "If you make us your team's monthly Tuesday lunch, we'll lock the Caracas Box at $160 (10% off) for the year and reserve the slot." Recurring monthly = predictable revenue.
90-day catering targets:
- 30 days: 25 offices sampled, 8 inquiries, 3 first orders.
- 60 days: 1 recurring monthly account locked.
- 90 days: 2 recurring accounts + 10 one-off catering orders/month. Conservative math: ~$3,400/mo from catering alone.
Current IG = photo-heavy food shots. That's table stakes. To grow, 3 content lanes on rotation, posting 4–5x per week:
Lane A — The Food (40%)
Single-image Reels, 6-second clips. Close-up of: cachapa being folded, pabellón hitting the plate, tequeños breaking open with cheese pull, fresh arepa being stuffed. Cheese pulls and steam = the only universally Instagram-friendly food content. Hire a teenager $30 for 2 hours to shoot a batch monthly.
Lane B — The Family (30%) — THE DIFFERENTIATION
The Venezuelan-Syrian couple owner story is the most valuable asset they have and they barely use it. Reels of:
- Mom making hallacas from scratch.
- Dad explaining where the falafel pita came from (Syrian side of the family).
- "How a Venezuelan and a Syrian fell in love and opened a café in Montrose" — 30-sec story Reel.
- Kid-of-owner narrating (Henry — bilingual, kid telling parents' immigrant story = high emotional payload).
Real, unscripted, vertical. These travel further than any food shot.
Lane C — The CTAs (30%)
- "We do office lunches. The Caracas Box is $175 for 10, 24-hr lead time. DM us."
- "Sunday in Caracas is back. Reserve a table — we hold 4 of our 6 tables for the prix fixe."
- "Pan de jamón orders open Nov 1. Limited to 80 boxes."
Use carousels for offers (slide 1–5: photo / explainer / price / how to order / CTA). Carousels save & share more than single images.
Reels frequency
2 Reels per week. Sunday morning shoots are easy — the crowd is there, the staff is busy, content is everywhere. Batch and schedule.
Hashtags (5–8 per post)
#houstonfoodie #houstoneats #venezuelanfood #montrosehouston #arepas #cachapa #houstoncatering #upperkirby
Cross-post discipline
Every IG post also goes on: GMB Posts (free top-of-search exposure), Facebook page (older diaspora demo is on Facebook), local FB groups when it's an offer.
7Customer List Reactivation
You have a list. That's a gift most restaurants don't have. Use it.
Step 1 — Segment (Week 1)
- Visited in last 6 months — warm
- Visited 6–18 months ago — reactivation candidates
- Catering customers — separate, premium list
- Spanish-speaking — flag where known (use Spanish version)
Step 2 — The 4-Touch Reactivation (Weeks 2–8)
Send Tuesday or Thursday 11am. Sign from owner's name, not "Gusto Gourmet Team."
Touch 1 — The story
"It's been a minute. The café is still here on Shepherd. New Sunday brunch — 'Sunday in Caracas,' $60 for a family of 4. Reserve a table."
Touch 2 — The catering ask (with referral baked in)
"Quick one — does your office order lunch? We just launched The Caracas Box ($175, feeds 10). If you forward this to whoever orders lunch at your office, we'll throw in a free tres leches platter on their first order."
Touch 3 — The holiday hook (Nov)
"Pan de jamón orders open Friday. We only do 80 boxes. If you want one, reply 'YES' and I'll save yours."
Touch 4 — The personal ask
"We're trying to grow without losing the family feel. If you have 60 seconds, a quick Google review would mean a lot. [link]"
The catering list (premium, separate)
Quarterly check-in from the owner directly. Hand-written. Office managers remember the restaurant that mailed them a card. $1 per card. Touches 30 contacts in an afternoon.
8What We Are NOT Doing
These are tempting and wrong:
- 10% off coupon flyers. Nobody changes plans for 10% off.
- Paid Meta ads in month 1. Until GMB and the catering one-pager exist, ads have nowhere to send people. Layer in month 2–3.
- Adding dinner hours. Don't restructure the business — catering scales revenue WITHOUT changing operations.
- Going viral. Don't optimize for TikTok virality. The TAM is Houston-local; the buyer is 1 office manager at a time.
- A loyalty app. 6 tables doesn't need an app. A spreadsheet + texts is fine.
930 / 60 / 90-Day Execution Checklist
Days 1–30 — Foundation + GMB + catering one-pager
Week 1
- Photograph 40 dishes + interior + owners (one Saturday, 2 hours).
- Rebuild GMB: photos, categories, attributes, services, menu PDF, hours.
- Build the catering one-pager (PDF + simple landing page).
- Build the office target list (100 offices in 2-mile radius).
- Draft the 4-touch reactivation sequence.
Week 2
- Print receipt review-cards (QR code).
- Start the review-text-back system.
- First 5 sample drops to offices.
- Launch Sunday in Caracas prix fixe.
- Send reactivation Touch 1 to whole list.
Week 3
- 5 more sample drops.
- 2 IG Reels (1 food, 1 owner story).
- GMB Post: Caracas Box.
- Seed 8 Q&A entries on GMB.
Week 4
- 5 more sample drops.
- Send reactivation Touch 2.
- Review week's metrics: new reviews, catering inquiries, Sunday brunch covers.
Days 31–60 — Scale catering, content rhythm
- Launch 4-week email sequence to non-sampled offices (50 of the 100).
- Lock first recurring monthly catering account.
- Add the "Date Night Tasting" Fri/Sat 5–7pm — soft launch.
- 2 Reels/week minimum.
- 1 GMB Post/week.
- 20 new Google reviews target.
Days 61–90 — Holiday push, recurring revenue, lock systems
- Nov 1: Launch "Diaspora Holiday Box." Target: 80 boxes pre-sold by Dec 20.
- Recurring catering accounts: target 2 locked.
- Small Meta ad budget ($10/day) for 4 weeks targeting "lunch near Greenway Plaza" with the Caracas Box video.
- Owner sends hand-written cards to catering customers (30 cards).
- Send Touch 3 (holiday) reactivation to list.
- Measure: GMB stars, IG followers, monthly catering revenue, repeat Sunday brunch customers.
10What "Working" Looks Like
| Metric |
Today (est.) |
30 days |
90 days |
| Google rating | 4.4 | 4.4 | 4.6 |
| Google review count | 362 | +20 | +50 |
| IG followers | — | +200 | +600 |
| Sunday brunch covers | — | +20% | +50% |
| Catering orders / month | — | 3 | 12 |
| Recurring catering accounts | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Catering revenue / month | — | $600 | $3,400+ |
| Net new monthly revenue | — | $1,000 | $4,500–6,000 |
Conservative. Catering alone has 5x upside if one recurring weekly account with a large office hits.
11Who Does What
Parents (owners)
- Cook + run service (no change).
- Approve every package name and price.
- Personally hand-write the catering thank-you cards.
- Show up on camera for owner-story Reels.
Henry (or whoever helps)
- GMB rebuild + photo upload.
- Build the target office list + one-pager + landing page.
- Run the IG + GMB posting calendar (or hire a teenager to shoot Reels).
- Draft the reactivation messages.
- Send the email/text sequences to offices.
Hire if budget allows (week 2)
- Part-time delivery driver for catering ($15–18/hr, on-call).
- Optional: a college kid to do the sample drops ($20/drop, includes carrying the tray and pitching).
Bottom line
The fastest revenue increase comes from
catering, not dine-in. GMB is the leverage on dine-in.
The owner story is the leverage on everything. Start the office sample drops in week 2 and don't stop.