Case study · Food & drink · Two campaigns

How Saffron Table went from "we don't do TikTok" to a Saturday queue.

A 34-seat ramen restaurant on a Jumeirah side street, brilliant reviews, invisible online. Two campaigns and AED 3,950 all-in later: 115,460 platform-counted views, both guarantees beaten, and a queue the owner now schedules staff around.

🍜 Saffron TableJAPANESE RESTAURANT · JUMEIRAH, DUBAI · 34 SEATS · EST. 2021 LHLayla HaddadOWNER
2Campaigns
115,460Total views
AED 3,950All-in spend
2 / 2Guarantees beaten

CHAPTER 01The problem: 4.8 stars and an empty Tuesday

Saffron Table had the problem nobody sympathises with until they have it: a genuinely great product that only the same hundred people knew about. A 4.8 rating across two hundred-odd reviews. Regulars who ordered the tonkotsu without opening the menu. And, between Friday rushes, rows of empty tables — because in three years, almost nothing about Saffron Table had reached anyone who didn't already walk past it.

"Our marketing was the smell of the broth getting out the door when it opened. That was it. That was the strategy."
— Layla Haddad, owner

Layla had been told, repeatedly, to "get on TikTok". She'd resisted for the reasons most owners do: no time, no idea what to film, and a deep allergy to the idea of dancing next to a noodle station. What changed her mind wasn't a pitch — it was the maths. A friend with a bakery in Dubai Marina showed her a campaign report with a number she didn't believe: a written guarantee of views, with a refund formula attached.

📐Why this case is worth reading even if you're not a restaurant: nothing below depends on the food. The mechanics — reviews into hooks, locals reaching locals, scarcity into demand — port to salons, gyms, garages and bookshops. The library has all of them.

CHAPTER 02Campaign 1: the AED 1,199 test

Layla did what every skeptical owner should: she bought the smallest thing we sell. Starter — two creators, two videos, 30,000 views guaranteed in 14 days, or the difference back.

Onboarding took her four minutes, most of it reading. The Business Context engine pulled Saffron Table's public footprint and surfaced what her customers already kept saying: the tonkotsu, mentioned in review after review, often with the word "finally" — as in finally, proper ramen this side of the city. That sentence pattern became the campaign's spine.

CAMPAIGN 1 · STARTERThe gatekeeping angle
2Creators
2Videos
30,000Guaranteed
14 daysWindow
The hook that ran"I found the ramen spot Jumeirah is gatekeeping."

Two local creators — matched by neighbourhood, not follower count — visited a week apart. Both ordered like customers: queued, paid at the till, filmed the steam, the chashu pull, the first slurp. Layla approved both scripts on her phone between services and changed exactly one word ("ramen joint" → "ramen-ya"; she was right).

Campaign 1 · The bill
Starter packageAED 1,199.00
Creator orders (AED 113 × 2)AED 226.00
Total paidAED 1,425.00
Delivered vs 30k guaranteed41,200 · 137%

The campaign cleared its guarantee with four days to spare and kept going: 41,200 views against 30,000 promised. But the number Nadia actually remembers is smaller.

"People started mentioning TikTok at the till within the first week. Not 'I saw an ad'. 'I saw this place'. There's a difference, and you can hear it."
— Layla Haddad

CHAPTER 03What changed between campaigns

The fortnight after campaign 1, Saffron Table's quiet middle of the week stopped being quiet. Layla's own till tracking put weekday covers up roughly a third against the prior month, with new faces skewing exactly the way the creator audiences did: local, younger, arriving in twos. The two videos kept earning after the window too — both creators left them up, and one kept surfacing in "ramen dubai" searches for weeks.

⚠️Honesty box: the views above are platform-counted and guarantee-audited. Till figures and cover counts in this chapter are as reported by the owner — we can verify what happens on the platforms, not inside the till. Every case study we publish keeps that line bright.

Nadia also did the thing we beg every owner to do: she read the comments. Among the "where IS this" and the tagged flatmates, a pattern — people asking whether it worked for dates. She didn't act on it yet. (Hold that thought.)

Comments312

RECREATED FROM CAMPAIGN-1 COMMENTS · USERNAMES ANONYMISED — SWAP FOR REAL SCREENSHOTS

CHAPTER 04Campaign 2: scaling what worked

Six weeks later, Layla came back for Growth — not because we chased her, but because the report's maths made the case: the first campaign's all-in cost per thousand views had landed at AED 34.57, cheaper than anything she could buy herself, with the content thrown in.

CAMPAIGN 2 · GROWTHSame spine, four voices
4Creators
4Videos
60,000Guaranteed
14 daysWindow
Top hook this time"I found the ramen spot Jumeirah is gatekeeping." — @layla.eats, reprising her campaign-1 original (and no relation to Layla the owner; Jumeirah is apparently full of Laylas)

Four creators this time — the two originals back, plus two new voices — and four angles: the gatekeeping reprise, a rating-the-tonkotsu test, a date-night framing, and a lunch-deal piece aimed squarely at the nearby offices.

Nadia watched it happen live. The campaign crossed its 60,000 guarantee on day 9 of 14 and finished at 74,260 views — with the top video reaching 2.9× its creator's own following.

app.supername.example/campaigns/saffron-table-growth/live
Saffron Table × Growth — live trackingDAY 9 OF 14
61,000OF 60,000 GUARANTEED ✓

THE DASHBOARD AS IT LOOKED THE MORNING THE GUARANTEE CLEARED — RECREATED FROM CAMPAIGN DATA

The comment analysis on this one earned its keep: 504 comments, 78% positive, and 29 separate people raising "date night" unprompted — the same pattern Nadia had spotted by hand after campaign 1, now counted and undeniable. That insight is the booked-in hook for campaign 3.

🧾See the actual artefact: the full campaign-2 report — every video's numbers, the comment intelligence, the suggested replies — is published as our example report. What you'd get, with Saffron Table's data in it.

CHAPTER 05The numbers, all of them on one receipt

Case studies love hiding the spend. Here's the whole thing — both campaigns, orders included:

Saffron Table × Supername · Two campaigns
Campaign 1 all-inAED 1,425.00
Campaign 2 (AED 2,149 + AED 113×4 orders)AED 2,601.00
Total investedAED 3,950.00
Views guaranteed90,000
Views delivered115,460 · 128%
Refunds neededAED 0.00
All-in cost / 1,000 viewsAED 34.21
Guaranteed Delivered

And the part the receipt can't show: six licensed videos Saffron Table now reposts and embeds on its site — a content library most restaurants would pay a videographer four figures for, acquired as a side effect.

CHAPTER 06What's next for Saffron Table

Campaign 3 is scheduled: Growth again, built on the validated date-night angle — the hook 29 commenters wrote for free — timed for the pre-Valentine's weeks, with early-evening bookings opened after the Saturday-wait feedback. The system that found the first hook in Layla's reviews found the next one in her comments. That's the flywheel.

"The first one I bought to prove it wouldn't work. I'd like that on the record."
— Layla Haddad, owner
Steal the playbook

Four moves that port to any local business.

1Buy the smallest thing first

Layla's AED 1,425 test de-risked everything after it. The guarantee makes the small test honest: worst case is a refund and two licensed videos.

2Let your reviews write the hook

"Finally, proper ramen" was sitting in Saffron Table's reviews for years. Your customers have already written your campaign — the Context engine just counts the repeats.

3Read the comments like a strategy doc

The date-night angle was free market research, ×29. The report counts these patterns for you; acting on them is the highest-leverage thing an owner can do.

4Scale the spine, vary the voices

Campaign 2 didn't reinvent — it took the proven angle to four creators and four audiences. Repetition with new voices reads as confirmation, not spam.

Chapter one of yours

Your reviews already wrote the hook. Come see it.

Type your business name — the same engine that found Saffron Table's angle reads your reviews and drafts your script, before any payment.