The Numbers Behind the Plan
Four research documents combined into one: the deep avatar of the catering buyer, the company profile, the Houston market research with diaspora and competitor data, and the content research on what's working in 2026.
Deep Avatar — Sara, the Office Lunch Buyer
The single avatar whose conversion economics dwarf all others. If we get her right, the rest of the GTM writes itself.
AWhy Deep on Sara Only
1Identity
Age: 32–48 (sweet spot 36–42). Gender: 80%+ female. Income: $48K–$78K — comfortable, salaried, not commission. Tenure: 2–11 years in role. Education: Bachelor's; often business, communications, hospitality, psychology.
Titles (varies, same job)
- Office Manager
- Executive Assistant / Senior EA / Chief of Staff to Partner
- HR Coordinator / People Operations
- Office Services Manager
- Receptionist (in offices <30 people)
- Practice Manager (medical/law) · Office Administrator
It's NOT the buyer's money — but she has a discretionary lunch budget and spends like it's her own.
2Where She Works (Houston-specific)
Tier 1 — Densest concentration, highest priority
- Greenway Plaza (1–9 Greenway Plz) — Apache, Direct Energy, Houston Chronicle, ~40K daytime population, hundreds of suite tenants
- Phoenix Tower / 3200 Southwest Fwy — financial services, law firms
- Galleria towers (Williams Tower) — farther but huge inbound spend
- River Oaks Tower (3555 Timmons) — law firms, family offices
Tier 2 — Smaller offices, easier to reach the decision-maker (start here)
- Upper Kirby low-rise offices along Richmond, Westheimer, S Shepherd — design studios, ad agencies, accounting firms, dental/medical
- Montrose creative offices — studios, architecture firms, nonprofits
- Museum District — university department offices, museum admin
Tier 3 — 10-min drive, very large TAM
- Texas Medical Center — hospital admin, research labs, residency programs ordering for 8–25
3Her Day
| Time | What's happening |
|---|---|
| 6:30 am | Wakes up. Coffee. Phone first thing. |
| 7:15 am | School drop-off if kids (40% have kids under 18). |
| 8:00–8:30 | Arrives at office. Inbox triage. Reads food/catering replies FIRST — they have deadline pressure. |
| 9:00 am | Stand-up. Boss says: "Can you order lunch for Thursday? 12 people, vegan + GF." |
| 9:15 am | THE CONVERSION WINDOW. Opens 2–3 tabs: Google search, last vendor used, sometimes ezCater. |
| 12:30 pm | Eats at her desk. Hungry while researching but wants to transact, not shop. |
| 2:00–4:00 | Closes the lunch loop. Places order. Sends Outlook update. |
| 5:30–6:30 | Pickup, yoga, commute. Emotionally done with work email. |
4Demographic + Psychographic
Lives in: Heights, Inner Loop, Bellaire, Memorial, sometimes Sugar Land or Pearland. Drives: SUV or midsize sedan. HHI: $130K–$220K (two-income). Kids: 40% have kids under 18; 25% have a dog instead. Travel: One big trip per year. She knows what good food is.
She IS
- Detail-obsessed. Will notice a typo in your email.
- Reputation-driven inside her office — "Sara always picks the best lunch spot."
- Burned before. She remembers the late delivery / forgotten vegan.
- Loyalty-soft, frequency-hard. Trust earned = weekly reorders.
She is NOT
- Price-sensitive within reason ($15–$25/head is fine; $35+ needs justification)
- Brand-loyal to the big names (Jason's Deli is "fine," not loved)
- Looking for "the cheapest." She wants predictable + impressive.
5Jobs-to-be-Done
Functional (in her order, not ours)
- "Get my boss off my plate." Lunch is a tax. Wants it gone in 15 min.
- "Handle dietary restrictions without me babysitting." Clean handling = rebuy forever.
- "Make the team happy without choosing wrong." Negative feedback ("ugh, sandwiches again") is her nightmare.
- "Look good in front of the partner / client." Photo-worthy = internal credit.
- "Don't burn budget." Per-head ceiling matters.
- "Easy to expense." Itemized receipt, on time, no surprises.
Emotional
- Avoid embarrassment. Late delivery in front of partners = her worst day.
- Be seen as resourceful. Finding "the new spot" is high-status.
- Care for the team. Especially the introverts / new hires / the woman with celiac who usually gets nothing.
- A break from sameness. Same 4 things on rotation for 18 months — she's bored.
6What She Uses Today (and where it cracks)
| Default | Why she uses it | Where it fails |
|---|---|---|
| Jason's Deli | Reliable, expense-friendly, "safe" | Boring, vegan option = a salad |
| Chick-fil-A trays | Universal liker; morale boost | Greasy, not impressive for clients |
| Local Foods | "Healthier"; looks better | Pricier, salad-heavy, can feel "girly" |
| Torchy's / Tex-Mex | Texan default, sturdy | Everyone has had it 50 times |
| Picos catering | Closer to "real," step up | Limited vegan; high minimum |
| ezCater | One platform for everything | Generic; no relationship; pricing units, not outcomes |
| Greenway Plaza food court | In-building convenience | Cafeteria vibe, no delivery to floor |
- Different — Houston has ~1 visible Venezuelan + Mediterranean spot
- Separate fryer for celiacs — a real claim that beats every competitor
- Story — Venezuelan-Syrian family café; Sara mentions it when she orders (resourceful)
- Photographs well — cachapa + arepas look like effort, not delivery
- Personal phone — a real human picks up
7Her Objections (in Her Voice)
| Objection | What she's actually thinking | Our answer |
|---|---|---|
| "What if they're flaky?" | Small café = unreliable | 24-hr lead time. Confirmed by text within 1 hour. |
| "What about my vegan?" | Last time we forgot her order | Every order ships labeled cards per dish. Separate fryer for celiac. |
| "Is this enough food?" | 10 portions feels small for a hungry team | Caracas Box feeds 10 adults generously — 12 empanadas + 10 tequeños on top. |
| "Where's my receipt?" | Has to expense by Friday | Itemized email receipt within 2 hours. |
| "My team doesn't know Venezuelan food." | Risk of "what is this?" | Every item card has a 1-line description. |
| "Will small orders get screwed?" | Back-of-the-line treatment | Same flat price, same priority. We were a small café first. |
| "Is the food spicy?" | Houston offices skew spice-shy | Nothing on the office menu is spicy. Sauces on the side. |
8Decision Triggers
The 7 most common moments she becomes a buyer, by frequency:
- Weekly recurring team lunch (Mon/Tue/Wed). Holy grail
- Partner / leadership meeting — 8–14 people, monthly cadence
- Client lunch on-site — wants to impress, pays more, photos matter
- New hire welcome / birthday / anniversary — emotional, higher creative ceiling
- All-hands or quarterly review — 25–60 people Big order
- Holiday office party — Nov/Dec spike (Diaspora Holiday Box as corporate gift!)
- "Friday morale" / surprise lunch — tight window, fastest confirmation wins
9Where to Reach Her (in order of leverage)
- Her front desk. The sample drop IS the channel. P0
- Google search / Maps. "Office catering Greenway Plaza." This is why GMB is non-negotiable.
- LinkedIn. For list-building, not ads. Search "Office Manager Houston."
- Email. Closes the deal after the sample drop sets it up.
- EA word-of-mouth. "Who do you use for catering?" — 3–5 referrals/year from ONE happy Sara.
- ezCater (month 3+). Lower-margin commodity buyers. Defer.
- Instagram. Validation, not discovery. She checks IG to confirm the brand is legit.
10Her Language (Verbatim — Use This in Copy)
About the task
Praising vendors (5-star)
Complaining about vendors (1–3 star)
11Buying Process — Who Else Is in the Room
Cares about: price, timing, "did the team like it?" Sara handles them. She'll defend a new vendor once; if it goes sideways, she's done with us.
One vocal vegan or celiac who feels seen generates more reorders than 10 silently-satisfied carnivores.
"Hey, you should try them." The sample drop is hitting this person as much as Sara.
12The Pitch (Memorize This Script)
That's it. That's the entire script for the in-person drop. Memorize it.
13The 12-Month LTV Math
| Pattern | Frequency | Order size | Annual value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly partner meeting only | 12/yr | $175 | $2,100 |
| Bi-weekly team lunch | 26/yr | $175 | $4,550 |
| Weekly team lunch (recurring) | 50/yr | $175 | $8,750 |
| Weekly + 4 large quarterlies | 54/yr | avg $230 | $12,420 |
Plus referrals: 2–5 new accounts/year per happy Sara via EA word-of-mouth.
Plus holiday office gifts: $500–$1,500 one-time Nov–Dec.
14What This Avatar Changes in the Plan
- One-pager copy leads with: dietary clarity, flat price, 24-hr lead, labeled-card system. Cut "authentic" / "experience" language.
- Sample-drop pitch: the script above. Print on a card. Memorize.
- Email subject lines:
- "Different lunch option for your team — Greenway Plaza"
- "10-person team lunch, $175 flat, 24 hrs notice"
- "We do the vegan / GF / celiac thing right"
- The 1-hour confirmation text is a feature. Bake it into the workflow.
- Labels per dish in every catering order. Tiny investment, massive reorder driver.
- IG carousel slide 1 = "We feed offices, too." Sara validates on IG, doesn't discover. Don't bury catering.
- Add a corporate-gift play to the Diaspora Holiday Box — "Order 30 mini boxes for the team, $1,200 total."
- Recurring-account pitch: "Lock in your monthly team lunch slot — we hold Thursdays for you." The slot is the hook, not the discount.
Disqualifying Saras (Who NOT to Chase)
- Offices over ~200 people — they have procurement, on ezCater/Sharebite contracts
- Tech offices with daily meals (Phillips 66, large law firms with in-house chefs)
- Buildings with strict delivery protocols — verify first
Sweet spot: 15–80 person offices in Tier 2 + small-suite tenants in Tier 1.
Company Profile
Everything we know about Gusto Gourmet — menu, signature items, current catering, gaps, brand voice, competitive position.
1Identity & Location
Tagline (current): "We'll take care of the food, you take care of the fun."
Tagline (proposed, sharper): "Houston's Venezuelan + Mediterranean café — and the city's most quietly underrated catering option."
| Address | 3306 South Shepherd Dr., Houston, TX 77098 |
| Neighborhood | Montrose / Upper Kirby / Neartown — Inner Loop, S Shepherd corridor |
| Proximity | Adjacent to River Oaks, Museum District, Rice. 10-min to Med Center. 7-min to Galleria. |
| Hours | Mon–Sat 9am–7pm · Sun 10am–2pm (no dinner) |
| Phone | (713) 344-0892 |
| Web | gustogourmettogo.com |
| @gustogourmethtx | |
| Yelp | 4.4 stars · 362 reviews · 463 photos · Claimed |
2Ownership — The Single Most Important Asset
Yelp reviewers spontaneously cite this in 5-star reviews:
Strategic implication: Owner-on-camera content (Reels, GMB photos) is the highest-leverage move they can make. They have not made it yet.
Reputational pattern: "Hidden gem" / "Slept-on" / "Cute café that's secretly legit." They are underrated by reputation, not by quality. The fix is visibility, not improvement.
3Business Model
| Channel | Today's contribution | Capacity ceiling | 90-day growth lever |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dine-in | ~50% | Hard cap ~$2,500/day · 6 tables | GMB rebuild, Sunday in Caracas prix fixe |
| Takeout / online | ~25% | Soft cap from kitchen throughput | IG content, GMB Posts |
| 3rd-party delivery | ~15% | Margin-lossy | De-emphasize |
| Catering | ~10% | Effectively unlimited | THE growth channel — 80% of plan focus |
5Current Catering Menu Snapshot
| Item | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mini arepitas tray | $39.75 | |
| Mini cachapas tray | $39.75 | |
| Empanadas tray | $39.84 | |
| Tequeños tray | $83.00 | The signature — hero item on one-pager |
| Antojos | $32.88 | |
| Pabellón plate for 10 | $179.50 | |
| Breakfast combo for 10 | $149.50 | Underused — "office breakfast meeting" play |
| 12-piece mixed arepa tray | $125.00 | |
| Pan de jamón (seasonal) | $35.00 | Holiday — high-margin diaspora play |
| Hallacas to-go (seasonal) | $12.95 each | Holiday |
| Chicken salad | $17.00/person |
- No named "office lunch package" → fix with The Caracas Box
- No flat per-person catering price → menu reads as à la carte (too much work)
- No dietary options marked → fix
- No 24-hr lead-time call-out → fix
- No delivery radius stated → fix
6Reputation Snapshot
Cross-platform footprint
| Platform | Rating | Reviews | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yelp | 4.4 ★ | 362 | 463 photos · Claimed · strong baseline, neglected |
| 4.8 ★ | 44 | 96% recommend · diaspora-heavy audience | |
| Tripadvisor | 4.1 ★ | 12 | Small footprint · tourist-skewed |
| Google Business Profile | TBD | TBD | Pull from GMB dashboard — Google blocks automated scraping; need direct read from the owner's GMB |
| DoorDash / Grubhub | — | — | Listed; ratings not core to plan |
Common 5-star themes
- Authentic Venezuelan food (diaspora-recognition factor)
- "Sweet couple" (owners as a draw)
- Cachapa + tequeños as signatures
- Mediterranean-Venezuelan fusion as differentiator
- Gluten-free/vegan accommodation
- "Slept-on gem" — visibility problem, not quality
Common 2-3 star themes
- Occasional food inconsistency
- Wait times for takeout
- "Cute café" perception undersells the food
7Competitive Position
What Gusto IS
- The only visible Venezuelan + Mediterranean fusion café in Houston's Inner Loop
- A casual neighborhood café with restaurant-quality food and a real owner story
- A capable but un-marketed catering operation in Houston's most lucrative catering corridor
What Gusto is NOT
- A dinner destination (Underbelly, March, Tris, Ostia own that market)
- A nightlife spot
- A scaled franchise concept
- "Fast-casual" competing on price with Chipotle / Cava
Dine-in: "The friendly Venezuelan family café in Montrose that knows your name." Brunch and lunch only.
Catering: "The Houston catering option that's actually different — Venezuelan + Mediterranean, family-run, separate fryer for celiacs, 24-hour lead time, $175 flat for 10."
8What's Missing — Build Order
| Asset | Status | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Optimized GMB | ❌ neglected | P0 Week 1 |
| Catering one-pager (PDF + landing page) | ❌ doesn't exist | P0 Week 1 |
| Owner-story Reels series | ❌ not made | P1 Week 2 |
| Receipt QR review-cards | ❌ | P0 Week 2 |
| Office target list (100 offices) | ❌ | P0 Week 1 |
| 4-touch reactivation sequence | ❌ | P0 Week 2 |
| Branded catering packaging + labels | ⚠️ partial | P1 Week 3 |
| Holiday box pre-order page | ❌ | P1 by Oct 25 |
| WhatsApp Business number | ? | P2 |
- The default catering option for 2 recurring accounts in Upper Kirby / Greenway
- The most-Googled Venezuelan restaurant in Houston (GMB + reviews)
- The diaspora's de-facto holiday food source for pan de jamón + hallacas
Market Research
The Houston Venezuelan diaspora, the Inner Loop office catering market, and the dine-in landscape — with the numbers and VOC to back the plan.
1Executive Summary
Three structural realities make Gusto's window unusually favorable:
- The Venezuelan diaspora in Houston has tripled in a decade. ~75,000 Venezuelans in metro Houston (2024 Census), up from ~25,000 in 2012. Texas: ~200,000. Katy is "Katyzuela."
- Houston's office catering market is dominated by interchangeable players. No incumbent Venezuelan or Mediterranean catering option in Greenway / Upper Kirby. White space.
- Restaurant content has shifted to short-form video with character-driven owner stories. 50%+ visit a restaurant after seeing it on TikTok. The Venezuelan-Syrian story is a perfect fit — and almost no Houston restaurant in their tier is executing it.
2The Diaspora Market (Avatar 2 / Carolina)
Hard numbers
| Venezuelans in US (2024) | ~1.2 million | Pew Research, 2026 |
| Growth since 2019 | +119% (+639K) | Pew Research |
| Venezuelans in Texas | ~200,000 | The World Data, 2026 |
| Venezuelans in Houston metro | ~75,000 (tripled 2012–2022) | Houston Chronicle / Census |
| Largest enclave | Katy, TX ("Katyzuela") | Marketplace, Feb 2026 |
| Median Venezuelan-American age | ~32 (family-forming) | Pew |
What this means for Gusto
- 75,000 people in metro Houston with cultural and emotional ties to Venezuelan food. Even a 1-2% capture rate = 750-1,500 active households.
- Katy is 25 miles west — far for weekly dine-in, perfect for catered delivery of holiday boxes.
- Most arrivals are recent. Homesickness for "real" flavors is at an all-time high. Pan de jamón at Christmas is literally a cultural anchor.
- Houston-Maracaibo oil-industry ties seeded a wealthy/educated older diaspora decades ago. New arrivals layer on top. Spans low to high income.
VOC — Voice of the Diaspora Customer
Pattern: The diaspora speaks in gratitude + protective loyalty. They WANT Gusto to exist. They are pre-sold — we just have to be findable and reliable.
Where the diaspora lives (online)
- Facebook groups: "Venezolanos en Houston" (large, food-rec heavy), "Venezolanos en Texas," Katy groups
- WhatsApp: Word-of-mouth referrals travel fast in community chats
- Spanish-language IG: @venezolanosenhouston, @soyvenezolanaenusa, @venezolanosintexas
- Catholic parishes with Venezuelan congregations — bulletin opportunities
3The Office Catering Market (Avatar 1 / Sara)
Market context
- Houston's office population: ~530K metro, with the Greenway / Galleria / Med Center cluster representing ~150K–180K
- Office catering is a $14–17B US market, growing ~6%/year, recovered fully from COVID by 2024
- Average per-head office lunch budget in Houston mid-market: $15–22/head
- ezCater and aggregators have ~25%; the rest is direct restaurant-to-office
Competitor landscape — Greenway / Upper Kirby / Med Center
| Competitor | Strength | Weakness | Gusto's edge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jason's Deli | Reliable, expense-friendly | Boring; weak dietary handling | Different cuisine, real dietary moat |
| Chick-fil-A trays | Universal liking | Greasy; not for clients | Photographs better; story |
| Local Foods | "Health-positive," known | Pricier, salad-heavy | Heartier, family-run |
| Picos | Local "real" food | High minimum; same Tex-Mex category | Different cuisine, smaller min |
| Sami's Kitchen | Polished operation | Generic; no narrative | Family story, smaller-batch trust |
| Corporate Catering Concierge | Galleria/Greenway focus | Commoditized box lunches | Differentiated cuisine |
| ezCater (platform) | One-stop | Generic; no relationship | Direct relationship moat |
VOC — Voice of Sara
What's working in 2026 office catering
- DIY bar formats are hot — bowl bars, taco bars, mezze. Add an "Arepa Bar" option for catering.
- Mediterranean Mezze ranks top-10 in office catering themes. Gusto has half this covered already.
- Dietary-labeled trays with clear cards — baseline expectation, executed poorly elsewhere = still an edge.
- 24-hour notice with text confirmation is gold standard. Anything faster is a moat.
- Recurring weekly accounts ("Taco Tuesday" etc.) are the highest-value pattern.
TAM math (conservative, 90 days)
| Tier | Office count (2-mi radius) | Realistic conversion | TAM contribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 2 (15–80 person, Upper Kirby/Montrose) | ~250–400 | 3–5 accounts | $13,500–22,500 |
| Tier 1 (Greenway Plaza suite tenants) | ~150–250 | 1–2 accounts | $8,000–16,000 |
| Tier 3 (Med Center) | ~80–120 | 0–1 account | $0–5,000 |
| Total 90-day catering TAM | 4–8 accounts | $22K–43K annualized |
4The Dine-In Market (Avatar 3 / Alex)
Neighborhood context
- ~150+ restaurants within 1 mile
- High % of food-curious residents — younger, urban, higher income
- Active food press: CultureMap Houston, Houston Eater, Houston Chronicle
- Active food creator community: ~30–50 Houston creators with >10K followers
Trends to leverage
- Owner-story surge in Houston food press — immigrant-family stories are hungry-for. Pitch the Venezuelan-Syrian couple.
- Montrose brunch culture is mature but rotating — Sunday in Caracas as a named prix fixe is a wedge.
- TikTok-driven discovery — see Content Research section.
Press / PR targets
- CultureMap Houston — owner-story angle to their dining writer
- Houston Chronicle (Greg Morago / Bao Ong) — diaspora + Christmas pan de jamón = natural feature
- Houston Eater — list inclusions ("Best Venezuelan in Houston")
- 365 Things to Do in Houston — IG-heavy account
- My Table magazine — Houston dining quarterly
A single feature in CultureMap or Eater typically drives 200–800 new Yelp views in the following 30 days for restaurants this size.
5The Holiday Diaspora Market (Avatar 4 / María)
Why this matters disproportionately
- Venezuelan Christmas food (hallacas, pan de jamón, ensalada de gallina) is non-substitutable. Diaspora households will buy somewhere.
- Most buy from informal home sellers via WhatsApp/Facebook. Gusto's commercial kitchen + reliable supply is a real advantage.
- Price elasticity is essentially zero in Nov–Dec for these items. Pay a premium for quality and convenience.
Pricing benchmarks (Houston diaspora, late 2025 / 2026)
| Hallacas (informal sellers) | $10–18 each | Gusto: $12.95 — market-rate |
| Pan de jamón | $25–55 | Gusto: $35 — mid-range |
| Christmas combo box | $90–180 | Gusto Holiday Box: $145 — well-priced |
Activity windows
| Window | Activity |
|---|---|
| Nov 1 | Open Diaspora Holiday Box pre-orders. Launch in Venezolanos en Houston FB group, email, IG. |
| Nov 15 – Dec 22 | Peak orders. Daily monitoring. |
| Dec 22 | Hard cutoff for orders. |
| Dec 23–24 | Pickups. |
| May (Mother's Day) | Secondary peak. Pan de jamón + traditional plates as gift. |
6Pricing Sensitivity & Margin
What the market bears (Houston Inner Loop, 2026)
- Dine-in lunch: $12–22/head — Gusto is right where it should be
- Sunday brunch prix fixe: $25–45/person — Sunday in Caracas at $15/head is under-priced. Consider $75/4 ($18.75/head) after 4 weeks.
- Office catering: $15–25/head — Caracas Box at $17.50/head is competitive. Resist undercutting further.
- Date-night tasting: $40–60/head — Gusto's $47.50 is right at median.
- Diaspora Holiday Box: $145 for 6–8 ($18–24/head) — competitive. Room for an "upgrade" box at $195.
7Risks & Watch-outs
| Risk | Severity | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Operational capacity (catering + dine-in collision) | Med-High | Stagger deliveries Tue–Thu off-peak. Hire prep/driver week 3. |
| Owner burnout | High | Henry/paid help runs marketing layer. Owners cook + 30 min/day approvals only. |
| Food consistency (flagged in some Yelp reviews) | Medium | Simple catering QA checklist: taste-test, count, label, photo before delivery. |
| Large-tower delivery security | Low-Med | Don't waste sample drops on secured towers in month 1. |
| Competitor copycat | Low | The Venezuelan-Syrian story is non-copyable. Lean in harder than feels comfortable. |
| Holiday capacity overload | Medium | Cap Holiday Box at 80. Reject above cap — "sold out" is a marketing asset. |
Content Research
What to actually post on Instagram, TikTok, and Google Business Profile in 2026 — with a 30-day calendar.
1The Headline
- 50%+ of users visit a restaurant after seeing it on TikTok
- 7–30 second Reels/TikToks perform best
- Local creators outperform national creators 3–5x
- Owner-on-camera "story" content is the breakout pattern of 2025–2026
Format winners
| Format | Why it wins | Gusto application |
|---|---|---|
| Cheese pull / steam shots (3–6 sec) | Universal stop-the-scroll hook | Tequeños breaking open, cachapa folding |
| Owner POV / "behind the counter" | Authenticity premium | Mom prepping hallacas, dad making coffee |
| "Day in the life" of small restaurant | Story arc + character | 30-sec Reel of opening Sunday morning |
| Recipe / process clips (15–30 sec) | Saves + shares | How an arepa is made, hallaca-wrapping |
| Carousels with hooks | High completion rate | The Caracas Box: 5-slide carousel |
| Local micro-creator collabs | $50–200/post; high conversion | Pay 3–5 Houston food creators/quarter |
Format losers (skip)
- Static food photo grids only
- Long-form videos (>60s)
- Heavy graphic-design Canva carousels (looks like an ad)
- National hashtags (#foodporn, #yummy)
- Influencers with national reach (low Houston conversion)
2The Three Content Pillars
Every post falls into one of three lanes. 40 / 30 / 30 split.
Top-10 priority shots (batch in one Saturday)
- Cachapa fold + cheese pull — close-up, vertical, 4–6 sec
- Tequeño breaking open — backlit, cheese stretch
- Pabellón hitting the plate — overhead, plate-spin
- Reina pepiada being stuffed — slow-motion
- Coffee pour with steam (chicha variation)
- Tres leches slice — fork through, milk pour
- Empanada bite-through — cross-section
- Hallaca unwrapped from banana leaf (seasonal — film in November)
- Pan de jamón slice — spiral cross-section (seasonal)
- Falafel pita assembly (Mediterranean angle)
Tech requirements: Phone is fine. Vertical 9:16. Natural light. Capture B-roll (hands, steam). Use trending IG audio, not custom soundtracks.
This is where Gusto wins because no Houston competitor has this story.
Owner-story Reel priorities
- "How a Venezuelan and a Syrian fell in love and opened a café in Houston" — 30-sec story Reel. The single highest-leverage piece of content they could make.
- Mom making hallacas from scratch (November)
- Dad's Syrian side of the menu — why falafel
- A Sunday morning at Gusto — opening up, prepping
- "How an arepa is made" — Mom's hands, voiceover Spanish + English subtitles
- Behind the counter for a busy lunch — 15 sec
- Mother's Day from a Venezuelan mom
- "The dish I miss the most" — owners answer in Spanish, English subs
Five carousel templates
- The Caracas Box (office lunch) — 5 slides: hero / price / dietary / delivery / how-to-order
- Sunday in Caracas — 5 slides: photo / menu / $60 for 4 / reservation / how to book
- Diaspora Holiday Box (Nov 1 launch) — Spanish + English versions; post in Venezolanos en Houston FB group
- Date Night Tasting — 5 slides: Fri/Sat 5–7pm / 5-course / $95 / reserve via DM
- New menu item / seasonal — refresh quarterly
3The 30-Day Content Calendar
4–5 posts per week. Don't try to post daily.
Week 1 — Foundation Drop
| Day | Pillar | Content | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | A | Cachapa fold + cheese pull | Reel, 6 sec |
| Wed | B | "Owners' story" intro | Reel, 30 sec |
| Fri | C | Sunday in Caracas (this Sunday!) | Carousel |
| Sat | A | Tequeño cheese pull | Reel, 4 sec |
| Sun | A | "Sunday morning at Gusto" | Reel, 20 sec |
Week 2 — Catering Launch
| Day | Pillar | Content | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | C | The Caracas Box launch | Carousel |
| Wed | B | Mom making arepas | Reel, 20 sec |
| Thu | A | Reina pepiada close-up | Reel, 5 sec |
| Fri | C | Sunday in Caracas reminder | Story + Reel |
| Sun | B | Behind the counter, Sunday rush | Reel, 15 sec |
Week 3 — Story Push
| Day | Pillar | Content | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | B | Dad's Syrian-side menu Reel | Reel, 25 sec |
| Wed | A | Pabellón plate-spin | Reel, 6 sec |
| Fri | C | Caracas Box (re-share new copy) | Carousel |
| Sat | A | Tres leches fork-through | Reel, 4 sec |
| Sun | B | Sunday in Caracas customer faces | Carousel |
Week 4 — Authority + Reviews
| Day | Pillar | Content | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon | C | "We accommodate every diet" carousel | Carousel |
| Tue | B | Customer review screenshots | Carousel |
| Thu | A | Empanada bite-through | Reel, 4 sec |
| Fri | C | Weekend reservation push | Story + Reel |
| Sun | A | Sunday brunch montage | Reel, 20 sec |
4Channel-Specific Strategy
Instagram (primary)
- Reels: 2/week minimum. Algorithmic priority surface.
- Carousels: 1–2/week. Best for offers + saves.
- Stories: Daily-ish. Behind-the-scenes, customer photos, soft CTAs. Use stickers.
- Bio: Update to: "Venezuelan + Mediterranean café in Montrose · Family-run · Catering DM 📩 · 📍 3306 S Shepherd". Add Linktree.
- Highlights: Build 4 — Catering · Sunday Brunch · Hallacas + Holiday · Our Story.
TikTok (secondary, start month 2)
- Same Reels, cross-posted. Don't make TikTok-specific content yet.
- TikTok is a discovery engine — even minimal effort is worth it.
- Add tags:
#houstonfood#fyphouston
Google Business Profile (parallel, free)
- Every IG post should be cross-posted as a GMB Post. Free top-of-search exposure.
- GMB Photo uploads: 2/week minimum.
- Highest-conversion surface for "lunch near me" searches.
- Diaspora-targeted only. Post offers (especially Holiday Box) in Spanish in Venezolanos en Houston group.
- Don't grow the FB page itself — use as credibility footprint + diaspora reach.
WhatsApp (under-leveraged)
- Set up a WhatsApp Business number.
- Use for: catering inquiries (Sara prefers text), Spanish-speaking diaspora, customer-list broadcasts for holiday launches.
- Display the WhatsApp number on the one-pager, IG bio, and GMB profile.
5Local Houston Creators to Engage
$50–200/post for sponsored content or free meal in exchange for a Reel. Local creators outperform national 3–5x.
Top tier (start here)
- @houstonfoodfinder — high-engagement Houston-only food account
- @365thingsinhouston — broad lifestyle, food-heavy
- @eaterhouston — official, free to pitch
- @houchronicle — food section, pitch owner-story angle
Mid-tier
- Search Houston food creators on TikTok: filter by Houston tag, 10K–50K followers
- Look at who reviews Picos, Coreanos, Backstreet Café — those creators already cover the same neighborhood
Pitch template (DM)
The owner-story angle is the pitch. Don't pitch "Venezuelan restaurant" — every Houston creator gets 20 of those a week.
6Press Pitches (Earned Media)
Single-feature value: 200–800 new Yelp/GMB views in 30 days.
| Outlet | Writer | Angle | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|
| CultureMap Houston | Dining editor | "Houston's only Venezuelan-Syrian café is the city's most-overlooked gem" | Anytime |
| Houston Chronicle | Greg Morago / Bao Ong | "How a Venezuelan-Syrian couple feeds Houston's diaspora at Christmas" | November |
| Houston Eater | Erin Mauck | List inclusion: "Best Venezuelan in Houston" | Quarterly cycles |
| My Table magazine | Editor | Long-form owner profile | Quarterly |
| 365 Things to Do | IG pitch | Reel feature | Anytime |
| Telemundo / Univision Houston | Community segment | Venezuelan diaspora business feature | Nov or May |
One-line elevator pitch
7Paid Content (Month 2+ Only)
Don't run paid ads until the catering one-pager and GMB are live.
Month 2 — Light test
- $10/day Meta Ads for 4 weeks ($280 total)
- Audience: "Office manager," "EA," "HR" within 5 miles of 77098
- Creative: The Caracas Box carousel
- Goal: 3–5 catering inquiries
Month 3 — Scale what works
- Increase to $25/day if Month 2 worked
- Add Venezuelan-diaspora audience for Holiday Box (Spanish-speakers in Houston/Katy)
- Test brand-awareness video ad of the owner-story Reel
Total Q1 paid budget: $1,000–1,500. Anything more before product-market fit is wasteful.
8Tools & Workflow
| Tool | Purpose | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| CapCut | Reel editing, captions, trending audio | Free |
| Canva Pro | Carousel templates | $13/mo |
| Later or Metricool | Schedule IG + FB + TikTok | $25/mo |
| Ring light + tripod | Food shoots | $40 one-time |
| WhatsApp Business | Customer comms | Free |
| Google Business Profile | Local search | Free |
Workflow
- Saturday 2pm, monthly: Batch shoot 10–15 Reels' worth (hire a teenager at $30/hr for 2 hrs)
- Sunday evening, weekly: Edit + schedule the week's content in Later. 90 minutes.
- Daily, 10 min: Check DMs, reply to comments, post 1 Story.
The single biggest unlock for Gusto Gourmet's content is the owner-on-camera Reels. Houston restaurant content is saturated with food photos. It is not saturated with immigrant-family-story Reels narrated by the actual children of the owners. Henry, on camera, telling the story of his Venezuelan mom and Syrian dad and the café they built — that piece of content doesn't yet exist on the Houston internet. Make it in week 2.