Why trivia nights, bingo, singo, and live music won't save your restaurant — and what will.
Walk into almost any bar, brewery, or restaurant on a Tuesday night and you'll see it: a whiteboard out front. Trivia Night! 7PM. Free to Play!
Pull up their Instagram and the calendar tells the same story. Singo on Thursday. Drag Bingo on Friday. Live music Saturday. Poker night next week. It looks busy. It looks like a plan. It's not.
What's actually happening is an owner chasing the next thing — hoping this event finally cracks the code on bringing people in, getting them to come back, and getting them to spend real money. And this week's event will outperform last week's. Until it doesn't. Then it's on to the next one.
I've been in the room during a trivia night where half the tables were nursing waters. No alcohol. No appetizers. No second visit. Just people who showed up for the free entertainment and left when it was over.
That's not a business model. That's a charity event you didn't sign up to run.
Let's be clear: trivia nights, live music, bingo, poker nights — none of these are bad ideas. Done right, they create real energy, fill slow weekdays, and make your place feel alive. A well-run game night can add $750–$1,250 in additional weekly revenue at a mid-sized venue. Some operators report that trivia night revenue outpaces their entire day's sales in a two-hour window.
Those numbers sound great. Until you ask the harder questions:
Here's the reality: most event nights attract event-chasers, not loyal customers. They generate one-time foot traffic, not a customer base. And the moment the competitor down the street adds their own trivia night — and they will — you've lost half your crowd with no way to call them back.
The events aren't the problem. Running them without a foundation is.
Every bar, brewery, and restaurant owner wants three things:
These aren't complicated goals. They're the only goals that matter in a business running on margins as thin as restaurants do.
When I ask owners honestly whether their events are consistently delivering all three — not one, not two, but all three — the answer is almost always no.
Special events can spike foot traffic. But research shows that 70% of first-time restaurant visitors never return. Not because they didn't have a good time. Because no one gave them a reason to come back. No one captured their information. No one followed up. The night ended, they went home, and the relationship died at the exit door.
That's an enormous amount of energy — booking, promoting, staffing, running — poured into a leaky bucket.
Here's what the numbers say about the difference between a guest and a member:
Loyalty members visit 20% more frequently and spend 20% more per visit. For a customer who normally spends $40 and comes in twice a month, that's an extra $19.20 per month — per person. Multiply that across a few hundred members and you're adding tens of thousands in annual revenue without a dollar of new ad spend.
The data gets sharper from there:
That's not a gap between good marketing and great marketing. That's the gap between building a business and starting over every Monday.
A customer shows up when something catches their eye. A member shows up because they belong.
A customer responds to a trivia night flyer. A member responds to a text that says, "We've got something special for you this Thursday."
A customer leaves and forgets about you. A member leaves already thinking about when they're coming back.
When you have a real membership system — one that enrolls guests, tracks behavior, and lets you reach people directly — the economics of every marketing move change. Including the events.
A trivia night with no member database is a one-off event marketed to strangers on Facebook. A trivia night backed by 600 active members is an invitation sent to people who already trust you, already spend money with you, and already consider themselves part of your community. Same event. Completely different result.
This is exactly what we see with our clients. Martin City Brewing's member base drives over $200,000 in monthly revenue. Made in KC has built a community of 800+ members who are regulars by every measurable metric. Their events don't succeed instead of having a system. They succeed because of it.
Let's be conservative.
Say you run a weekly trivia night and it adds $1,000 on a night that would otherwise be slow. Good. Worth doing.
Now say you build a member database of 400 people over the next 12 months. Each member visits just once more per month than they otherwise would, spending 20% more when they do. At an average ticket of $35:
That's $168,000 per year — from people who already know you, already like you, and didn't cost you a Facebook ad to reach.
And when you host trivia night with that database behind it? You're not hoping people show up. You're sending 400 people a message that says, "See you Thursday." Now the event has teeth.
A real system for a bar, brewery, or restaurant does three things:
Captures new guests — actively. A QR code that doesn't just link to a menu. A first-visit offer that gives people a concrete reason to sign up before they leave. A staff process that runs consistently, every shift.
Activates existing guests. A direct communication channel — SMS, email, or both — that keeps you top-of-mind between visits. Not just when you're running a promo. Regularly enough that you're the first place they think of when they're deciding where to go.
Rewards behavior that grows your business. Not complicated points programs no one remembers. Immediate, tangible value that makes members feel seen — and makes non-members want to sign up.
When those three things are in place, every event becomes a revenue amplifier. The trivia night fills because you marketed it to people who already care. The bingo night moves early because members got first access. The live music night becomes a standing reservation because your best guests put it on their calendar.
If you're running special events to drive business — keep running them. Some of those nights are worth it.
But the events are only as good as the system behind them.
Without a member database, you're marketing to strangers every week and starting from zero every Monday. With one, you're building equity. Every new member compounds. Every repeat visit is proof the system works. Every event you host is a message sent to people who already want to hear from you.
The most successful operators in this industry didn't win because they found the perfect event format. They won because they built a community — and then gave that community reasons to show up.
Stop chasing the shiny object. Build the system.