Brand-new charcuterie business. One organic conversion a week.
A few receipts.
Building a brand from a blank page.
Tami’s Tasty Tables is a brand-new charcuterie service in Kansas City — a one-person operation building a business from her own kitchen, trying to break into a category (event grazing tables) that’s visually saturated on social and notoriously hard to scale on word-of-mouth alone.
No existing brand book. No archival content library. No follower base. Just one founder, one product, and a feed that needed to look as polished as competitors with five-figure marketing budgets.
The mandate from KC Media Team: build a feed that converts. Not vanity metrics. Not engagement-for-engagement’s-sake. Real bookings, from real strangers, who saw a post and reached out.
Four plays
Make every board
In food, the product photography is the marketing. Every board got the full shoot — overhead, three-quarter, detail crops, lifestyle context — so the feed could hold a steady cadence without asking the founder to stage new content every week.
A booking-first feed structure
Every post answers a buyer’s question — “What does it look like for 8 people?”, “How much for a graduation party?”, “Can you do dietary restrictions?” — instead of generic food content. The feed reads like an FAQ in board form.
Custom Meta Ads
Built a custom Meta audience for IG and Facebook — KC-metro hosts, party planners, brides, gift-givers. A/B-tested carousel vs. static creative, multiple headline and description variants, then scaled what converted. Paid acquisition stayed lean because organic was already pulling weight.
Convert in the DMs
Built simple, copy-pasteable response templates so the founder can reply to inquiries fast. Most charcuterie buyers research on a Sunday and book within 24 hours — every minute of delay loses bookings to faster competitors.
A few posts from the feed.
Every social account starts at zero. The brands that pull ahead aren’t the ones with the biggest budgets — they’re the ones whose first 30 posts sound like they already know who they are.
- Production overhead first. Shoot enough at launch that the feed can run for 6 weeks without asking the founder for new content.
- Convert, don’t just engage. Likes don’t book parties. Posts that answer buying questions do.
- Speed wins in DMs. The fastest response in the inbox is often the booking — even if it’s not the most polished.
- Paid follows organic, not the other way around. The feed earned its identity first. Meta Ads then poured fuel on what was already converting.
A real DM.
A real booking.
A converted lead landing in Facebook Messenger — exactly how the strategy is supposed to work. Stranger sees a post, drops into the inbox, books the board.
