Post: Restaurant Press Release Singapore: What Works and What Doesn’t

Writing a restaurant press release in Singapore that actually secures media coverage shouldn’t feel like guesswork. From Lunar New Year collaborations to festive season launches, your story deserves to reach the heart of Singapore’s dining scene. This process is a vital component of a broader strategy explored in our guide, Choosing an F&B PR Agency Singapore: What Restaurants Should Know, which breaks down how to select the right partner to amplify your brand.

What Media Actually Looks For

Editors and journalists receive long lists of press emails every day. What makes them pause is not hype, but relevance, structure, and clarity.

Effective restaurant press releases in Singapore usually:
  • Present one clear story, not a full list of updates.
  • Explain why now — a September launch, festive season, Lunar New Year, or a new partnership.
  • Offer context about the cuisine, chef, or heritage behind the concept.
  • Respect the reader’s time with clean formatting and useful details.
Putting crucial news in the first paragraph is critical. For example, a press release announcing a new seafood set menu in a hotel grand ballroom should quickly explain the inspiration, the flavours, the price, and who the experience is for — not lead with generic excitement.

What Doesn’t Work (And Why)

Many restaurant press releases fail for simple reasons:

  • Overuse of emotional language: phrases like “We are excited, delighted, proud, and honoured” appear in almost every press inbox.
  • Too many ideas at once: new menus, flowers, renovations, founder stories, and future plans bundled together.
  • No clear angle: announcing without explaining what makes the restaurant or collaboration relevant to Singapore’s food media.
Phrases like “a celebration of taste and love” or “bringing the world to your plate” sound nice, but without specifics, they won’t earn a spotlight.

Common Mistakes in Singapore F&B PR

From cafes to resorts and hotel restaurants, we see recurring patterns:

  • Copying press formats from Europe or other parts of Asia without local adaptation.
  • Writing for guests instead of for media.
  • Forgetting to include practical contact details, date, location, and set menus.

A well-written press release should feel grounded — whether it’s a modern space inspired by tradition or a memory lane concept serving home-style flavours.

Restaurant Press Release Singapore: What Works in Practice

Successful releases focus on one core idea:

  • A chef named to helm the kitchen, bringing spices and techniques from a specific cuisine.
  • A Lunar New Year menu rooted in heritage, designed for family celebration.
  • The addition of a new menu or a partnership between a restaurant and hotel host for a limited-time experience.

Including a quote from the executive chef or founder can convey the inspiration behind the menu. Instead of announcing everything, they present one story clearly, then drive it forward with facts. Media can then decide whether it fits their list, audience, and timing.

Festive Season Press Releases: Where Many Restaurants Go Wrong

A cheerful woman wearing headphones laughs while looking at a tablet screen in the foreground, while a man seated behind her holds his own device and smiles. They appear to be relaxing at a cafe table with a wooden board of appetizers placed between them.

During festive season, Singapore’s media inboxes fill with announcements about set menus, early-bird discounts, and celebratory dining experiences. What works is not simply announcing a festive menu, but explaining why it’s different and who it’s for.

Strong festive season press releases tend to:
  • Focus on a single festive angle, such as a chef’s personal interpretation of Christmas flavours or a cultural twist on traditional dishes.
  • Clearly state the dining format (set menu, sharing plates, buffet, takeaway) and price upfront.
  • Explain relevance to Singapore guests, whether family-friendly, corporate entertaining, or intimate celebrations.
High-quality photos and videos capture the beauty and visual appeal of your offerings, making them shareable for food media. For example, a year-end release should clarify whether the offering suits office gatherings, family reunions, or couples seeking a quieter celebration — rather than trying to appeal to everyone at once.

How Media Grid Approaches Restaurant PR

As an F&B-focused agency, Media Grid looks beyond the single press announcement. We consider:

  • Whether the press release matches the restaurant’s website and brand tone.
  • If messaging supports long-term positioning, not just one day of coverage.
  • How press fits into the broader marketing calendar for the year.

A Problem Many Restaurants Share

A film crew is actively shooting a scene inside a diner that features a large red and yellow map mural on the wall, with two actors seated in a booth. The production team surrounds the actors, managing essential equipment including a boom microphone, a clapperboard, and a camera mounted on a tripod.

If your press efforts haven’t delivered results, it doesn’t mean your restaurant lacks quality or appeal. Often, the issue is structure, clarity, and alignment — all common, solvable problems. By crafting focused, timely, and media-friendly press releases, your restaurant can earn the spotlight it deserves in Singapore’s vibrant food scene.

Struggling to get noticed? It’s rarely about the quality of your food and almost always about the clarity of your story. At Media Grid, we transform these challenges into opportunities. We refine your messaging and timing to ensure your press releases don’t just sit in an inbox, but actually command the attention of Singapore’s top food media.

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