How to Find New Restaurant Accounts: A Guide for Food Distributors
For a food distributor, the hardest part of growing isn’t closing — it’s finding the right restaurants before someone else does. By the time a new spot shows up on a rep’s radar, it usually already has suppliers. This guide covers how distributor sales teams can find new restaurant accounts earlier, and work them more effectively.
Where new restaurant accounts come from
New revenue rarely comes from restaurants that have run the same way for ten years. The best opportunities cluster around change:
- New openings — restaurants being built or about to launch, with no supplier relationships yet.
- Ownership or concept changes — a new operator or a menu overhaul often means new buying decisions.
- Expansions — a successful restaurant opening a second or third location.
- Underserved operators — places frustrated with their current distributor’s reliability, range, or service.
Of these, new and soon-to-open restaurants are the highest-leverage, because there’s no incumbent supplier to displace.
Why timing decides who wins
In distribution, the first credible supplier in the door often becomes the default. Once a restaurant has a working relationship and a standing order, switching is friction they avoid. That means the rep who reaches a new operator first — before opening, ideally — has a structural advantage that has nothing to do with price.
The flip side: if you find a restaurant after the “Now Open” sign goes up, you’re already negotiating against an incumbent.
A repeatable approach
Finding new accounts consistently comes down to a process you run every week, not a quarterly scramble:
- Watch for new and soon-to-open restaurants in your territory continuously.
- Qualify by fit: does their cuisine and menu match what you carry? A seafood-forward concept is a strong fit for a seafood supplier; a national burger chain probably isn’t.
- Find the real decision-maker — owner, operator, or chef — not a generic info@ inbox.
- Lead with relevance: reference their concept and menu, and bring a specific reason you can help — not a catalog.
- Track every touch and follow up on a cadence; most accounts aren’t won on the first call.
Common mistakes
- Buying a static lead list — it’s a stale snapshot the day you download it, and your competitors bought the same one.
- Waiting for the opening — by then you’re late.
- Generic pitches — “we’re a distributor, can we quote you?” gets ignored; a pitch tied to their menu doesn’t.
- No follow-up system — leads fall through the cracks without a CRM and a cadence.
How FirstSeat helps
FirstSeat makes this process automatic for distributor sales teams. It surfaces new and soon-to-open restaurants across your territory, enriches each with menu intelligence and contacts, ranks them by how well they fit what you sell, and gives reps a built-in CRM to work them. Instead of hunting for leads, your team starts each day with a prioritized list of the restaurants most worth a call.