217% Growth in organic footfall | 4.8★ Google rating achieved | 3.1× Social reach multiplier | 5 months Time to measurable ROI |
Client | A regional hospitality brand in Odisha (name anonymised at client’s request) |
Industry | Food & Hospitality — Restaurant, Catering & Cultural Dining |
Location | Tier-2 city, Odisha, India |
Engagement | October 2025 – March 2026 (6 months) |
Services Used | Local SEO, Google Business Profile Optimisation, Social Media Marketing, Content Creation, Branding & Visual Identity, Vernacular Content Strategy |
Primary Goal | Increase physical footfall, build local brand authority, and grow social media following to drive repeat visits |
The Background: A Great Restaurant Struggling to Be Found
Some restaurants earn their reputation through word of mouth alone. For decades, that was enough. But in 2026, when someone in Bhubaneswar or Cuttack wants to find a good place for a traditional Odia meal, they do not ask a friend first — they open Google and type.
That is the reality this client was navigating when they first reached out to Adfinity Techwave. They had been operating for several years, had a loyal base of regulars, and genuinely good food — the kind that earned genuine smiles from customers who came back. What they did not have was any meaningful digital presence.
Their Google Business Profile existed but had not been updated in months. There were no photos of the food, the interiors, or the team. Their Instagram account had fewer than 400 followers and the last post was from a festival season the year prior. When we searched for their core offering — traditional Odia dining — in the local area, they did not appear on the first page. Competitors with objectively inferior food ranked above them simply because they had invested in their digital presence and this client had not.
The conversation we had in our first meeting was honest. The client said something that stuck with us: 'People who have eaten here come back. But people who have never tried us do not know we exist.' That is a digital marketing problem with a very clear solution.
The Market Context: Why Local Search Dominance Matters More Than Ever in 2026
Before explaining what we did, it is worth spending a moment on why the stakes were so high.
India's digital advertising market crossed ₹1,476 billion in 2026. But the more significant shift for businesses like this client's was not national advertising spend — it was how local consumer behaviour changed. Over 73% of Indian internet users now consume content in regional languages, and the majority of restaurant discovery in tier-2 and tier-3 Indian cities now begins with a Google search, often in a mix of English and the local language.
For a hospitality brand rooted in Odia culture and cuisine, this was both a challenge and an enormous opportunity. Google's local search algorithm was placing new weight on proximity, review recency, Google Business Profile completeness, and local-language content signals. Social platforms — particularly Instagram and Facebook — were evolving from awareness tools into direct commerce channels, where discovery and decision often happened in the same session.
In short, the window to establish local digital authority was open, but it was not going to stay open forever. Every month a business like this one waited, a competitor moved a little further ahead in the rankings.
The Challenges: What We Were Up Against
Our initial audit in October 2025 surfaced four core problems that needed to be addressed before any marketing investment could deliver returns.
1
Zero local search visibility:
The client was invisible on Google Maps and in local pack results for every relevant search term — 'traditional Odia restaurant near me', 'Odia thali Cuttack', 'best authentic Odia food Odisha'. Their Google Business Profile had no photos, no updated hours, and had not prompted a single direction request in the prior 90 days.
2
No consistent brand identity:
The restaurant had a name and a loyal following, but no coherent visual language. Their signage, the fonts they used on printed menus, their packaging, and whatever existed on Instagram were all inconsistent. They looked like three different businesses in three different places. This matters enormously for social media, where visual consistency is one of the strongest signals of brand trust.
3
Content produced only in English:
Their audience — local Odias, particularly the 35-55 demographic who were their biggest spenders — were far more comfortable with Odia-language content. Yet everything the restaurant had ever posted online was in English. This was not just a reach problem; it was a cultural disconnect that undermined the very identity they were trying to build.
4
No review generation strategyThey had 11 Google reviews. Their closest competitor had 340. In local SEO, review volume and recency are direct ranking factors. With 11 reviews, the algorithm had very little signal to trust them.
Our Strategy: A Six-Month Digital Transformation Plan
We do not believe in starting campaigns before the foundation is right. The first thing we told this client was that there were four weeks of foundational work before we would run a single social post or spend a single rupee on promotion. They agreed — and that patience is part of why the results came as quickly as they did.
Phase 1: Google Business Profile Overhaul & Local SEO Foundation (Weeks 1–4)
We treated the Google Business Profile as the single most valuable digital real estate this business owned. Getting it right was non-negotiable.
We started with a full profile audit. Every field was completed — business hours (including special hours for festivals and events), service areas, accessibility information, and the correct business category hierarchy. We then conducted a two-day photography shoot at the restaurant, capturing the food, the interiors, the kitchen team at work, and the cultural elements of the dining experience. Forty-seven photos were uploaded in the first batch, spread across the relevant categories Google provides.
Simultaneously, we built a review generation system. We designed a small table card with a QR code — simple, unobtrusive — and trained the floor staff on how to invite happy customers to share their experience. The language mattered enormously here. We wrote the invitation script ourselves to ensure it felt like a genuine request, not a corporate push. Within the first four weeks, the restaurant went from 11 reviews to 58, with an average rating of 4.7.
For the local SEO work itself, we identified 22 primary and secondary local keywords across three intent categories: discovery queries ('Odia restaurant near me'), occasion queries ('Odia food for family dinner Cuttack'), and cultural queries ('authentic Odia thali'). We created a keyword map and built content around each cluster, starting with the Google Business Profile Q&A section — a consistently underused feature that gives businesses the ability to control what questions appear in their listing.
We also established NAP (Name, Address, Phone) consistency across 18 online directories — Justdial, Sulekha, Zomato, Swiggy, IndiaMart, and others — correcting the inconsistencies that had been silently suppressing the client's local authority for years.
Phase 2: Brand Identity & Visual Language (Weeks 3–6)
While the local SEO foundation was being laid, our design team worked in parallel on the brand identity project.
The brief was clear: create a visual system that could work equally well on a restaurant menu, an Instagram grid, a packaging sticker, and a banner outside the building. It needed to feel authentically Odia — drawing on the region's rich artistic heritage, including Pattachitra-inspired motifs — while being clean and modern enough to work on a phone screen.
We developed a primary colour palette of three colours, a typographic system using two complementary fonts, and a set of recurring design elements — patterns, textures, borders — that could be applied consistently across every touchpoint. We also created a branded photography style guide that the team could follow when taking their own phone photos for stories and reels.
The impact of this work was not immediately visible in traffic numbers. But it showed up immediately in the response to social content. The first three posts we published using the new brand identity received double the engagement of anything the restaurant had posted previously — not because the content was dramatically different, but because it looked trustworthy.
Phase 3: Social Media Marketing & Vernacular Content Strategy (Weeks 5–24)
This is where the bulk of the ongoing work lived, and where the results compounded most visibly over time.
We built a content calendar structured around three content pillars:
Cultural storytelling — content that connected the food to its roots. Posts about the history of specific Odia dishes, the significance of festival foods, behind-the-scenes footage of the kitchen team preparing traditional recipes. This content was produced in both Odia and English.
Social proof & community — customer moments, reposted guest photos, video testimonials from regulars. We made the restaurant's community visible on its own social channels.
Discovery & occasion content — targeted posts and stories for festival seasons (Raja, Durga Puja, Diwali), office lunch occasions, family celebration packages. Each piece of content was paired with a clear call to action: call to book, WhatsApp to reserve, direction request via Google Maps.
The vernacular strategy deserves special mention. We produced 40% of all social content in the Odia language — captions, story text, and for some reels, spoken narration. This was not a token gesture. It was a deliberate decision based on the audience data we pulled from the Instagram insights: over 60% of the restaurant's followers and visitors were from Odisha, and the content that received the highest save-to-reach ratios in the first two weeks was unambiguously the content in Odia.
We also set up Instagram Shopping tags on food photos — a feature that had become significantly more powerful in India through 2025 as Instagram expanded its social commerce infrastructure. This allowed users who discovered the restaurant through a reel or a explore-page post to immediately view the menu items, see prices, and click through to the reservation page without ever leaving the app.
"Adfinity Techwave brought our brand to life digitally. From crafting content in both Odia and English to designing creative campaigns, they truly understood our roots and vision. We have seen a significant rise in footfall and social engagement since the partnership began."
Founder, Hospitality Client — Odisha
Phase 4: Performance Tracking & Continuous Optimisation (Months 4–6)
We believe a campaign without measurement is not a campaign — it is guesswork with a budget. From month one, we set up a reporting dashboard that tracked seven core metrics weekly: Google Business Profile views, direction requests, call clicks, website visits from GBP, Instagram reach, profile visits, and direct message enquiries.
The data gave us the feedback loop we needed to iterate quickly. In month three, we noticed that short-form video content featuring the kitchen team received 2.3× more shares than static food photography. We shifted the content mix to 55% video from 30% video in the following month. By month five, video content accounted for 68% of all social reach.
We also used Google Search Console to monitor which keywords the restaurant's website was gaining impressions for, and refined the on-page content monthly to push those terms from the second page of results to the first.
The Results: Six Months That Changed the Business
We are careful about the claims we make. The numbers below are drawn directly from the client's Google Business Profile analytics, Instagram Insights, and restaurant POS data shared with us at the end of the engagement. They are real numbers from a real business.
Before Adfinity Techwave | After Adfinity Techwave |
11 Google reviews (3.9 avg rating) | 214 Google reviews (4.8 avg rating) |
Not appearing in local pack results | Appearing in top 3 for 14 local keywords |
GBP: 340 views/month average | GBP: 2,890 views/month (March 2026) |
Instagram: 387 followers | Instagram: 4,240 followers (+995%) |
Social reach: ~800 accounts/month | Social reach: 28,400+ accounts/month |
Direction requests: 12/month | Direction requests: 94/month (+683%) |
Phone calls from GBP: 8/month | Phone calls from GBP: 61/month (+663%) |
No branded visual identity | Full brand system across all touch-points |
0 pieces of Odia-language content | 40% of content in Odia — highest-performing segment |
Festival season walk-ins: baseline | Festival season walk-ins: +217% YoY |
What the Numbers Actually Mean
Numbers without context are just numbers. Here is what these results meant in practice for the client.
The jump from 11 to 214 Google reviews is not just an SEO win — it is a trust signal that changed how new customers perceived the restaurant before they even walked through the door. In consumer psychology research, a business with 200+ reviews is treated categorically differently from one with fewer than 20. People stop wondering whether the business is good and start wondering which dish to order.
The 94 direction requests in March 2026 — up from 12 — represent real people who used Google Maps to navigate to the restaurant. These are not passive impressions. These are individuals who made a decision to visit. Assuming a standard hospitality conversion rate of around 70% (people who request directions and actually show up), that is roughly 66 new physical visits per month that can be directly attributed to the GBP work.
The 995% Instagram follower growth matters, but the more important number is reach. Going from 800 accounts reached per month to 28,400 means the restaurant's content is being seen by 35× more people — many of them first-time discoverers who had no prior awareness of the brand. Social media has become their most effective new customer acquisition channel.
And the 217% increase in festival season walk-ins — compared to the same period in the previous year — was the number that genuinely surprised the client. The festival dining occasion posts we had been building toward since November paid off when Diwali and the winter season arrived. The restaurant was fully booked on three consecutive weekend evenings for the first time in its history.
+683% Direction requests (GBP) | 214 Google reviews earned | Top 3 Local pack for 14 keywords | +995% Instagram follower growth |
Key Lessons: What This Case Study Teaches Every Indian Business
We share this case study not just to demonstrate what Adfinity Techwave can do, but because the lessons it contains are broadly applicable to any local business in India navigating the 2026 digital landscape.
1. Your Google Business Profile is your most valuable digital real estate
More searches for local businesses begin on Google Maps than on any other platform. Yet the majority of Indian SMEs have incomplete, outdated, or unverified Google Business Profiles. Fixing this is the single highest-ROI activity available to any physical business — and it is mostly free. Every rupee we spent on other activities produced better returns because the GBP foundation was solid.
2. Reviews are not vanity — they are a ranking factor and a conversion driver
Google's local search algorithm explicitly factors in review count, recency, and average rating. Going from 11 reviews to 214 with an average of 4.8 moved this client from invisible to dominant in local pack results for their core keywords. Building a review generation system — simple, ethical, human — is one of the most important things any local business can do.
3. Vernacular content is not a trend — it is a strategic advantage in India
73% of Indian internet users consume content in regional languages. For a brand rooted in Odia culture, producing content in Odia was not just culturally authentic — it was strategically sound. The Odia-language content consistently outperformed English-language content on saves, shares, and profile visits. Any brand serving a regional audience in India that is only producing English content is leaving significant reach on the table.
4. Brand consistency is a trust multiplier, not a design luxury
The visual identity work we did in Phase 2 had no direct line to any traffic metric. But it showed up in engagement rates, in the quality of user-generated content that tagged the restaurant, and in the way the client's social presence began to look like a business worth trusting. Brand consistency compounds slowly — and it compounds consistently.
5. Patience in the foundation creates speed in the results
We spent four weeks on foundational work — GBP, brand identity, NAP consistency — before we published a single promotional post. Some clients find this frustrating. This client trusted the process. By month three, the results were compounding in ways that would not have been possible if we had started running campaigns on a broken foundation.
The Services Behind the Results
This engagement drew on five distinct service lines from Adfinity Techwave's full portfolio. Each played a role at a specific stage of the strategy.
Services Deployed in This Engagement |
Local SEO & Google Business Profile Optimisation — keyword mapping, GBP overhaul, NAP consistency, review strategy |
Social Media Marketing & Management — content calendar, platform strategy, Instagram Shopping, community management |
Branding & Creative Design — visual identity system, colour palette, typography, photography style guide |
Content Creation & Strategy — Odia & English content production, cultural storytelling, festival campaign content |
Data Analytics & Reporting — weekly performance dashboards, keyword ranking monitoring, content mix optimisation |
What Comes Next for This Client
Six months in, the foundation is solid and the results are self-sustaining in important ways — the review generation system now runs on its own, the brand identity is established, and the content team has internalised the brand voice well enough to produce content without constant oversight.
The next phase of the engagement, which began in April 2026, is focused on three new objectives: expanding into WhatsApp-based loyalty marketing for repeat customers, launching a structured influencer collaboration with Odia food creators, and building a content cluster around Odia cuisine for organic search — targeting informational queries like 'what is Odia food' and 'traditional Odia recipes' to capture discovery traffic from outside the immediate local area.
The goal is to move from a business that is dominant locally to one that is known regionally — and eventually, to make this restaurant a destination that brings food-curious visitors into Odisha specifically to experience it. That is a longer-horizon ambition, but the foundation built in the first six months makes it credible.









