Last updated: 12 April 2026
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Most pub landlords think suggestive selling means being pushy, so they don’t do it at all — and that costs them hundreds of pounds every week. You’re leaving money on the table every single shift because your staff aren’t trained to recommend the second drink, the food pairing, or the premium spirit. The difference between a pub that makes £15,000 a month and one that makes £18,000 is not more customers — it’s average spend per customer. Suggestive selling standards for UK pubs in 2026 aren’t about aggressive upselling; they’re about genuinely helping customers discover what they actually want. This guide shows you exactly what works, what doesn’t, and how to embed it into your team’s daily service without sounding like a car salesman.
Key Takeaways
- Suggestive selling works best when it solves a customer’s actual need or desire, not when it chases a sale at any cost.
- The most effective pub suggestive selling happens in the first 30 seconds after taking an order, when the customer is mentally open to options.
- Staff need product knowledge, permission to recommend, and clear KPIs — without all three, suggestive selling will either disappear or backfire.
- Pairing recommendations (food with drinks, premium spirits with mixers) generate 18-25% higher average transaction value than single-item upsells.
What Suggestive Selling Really Is in UK Pubs
Suggestive selling in a UK pub context is straightforward: it’s making a relevant recommendation at the right moment in the customer journey, based on what they’ve already ordered or what you know about them. It’s not pushing something they don’t want. It’s not creating artificial scarcity. It’s not lying about stock or quality. The most effective pub suggestive selling simply answers the unasked question: “What else might I enjoy with this?”
At Teal Farm Pub in Washington, Tyne & Wear, we tested this extensively during Saturday night service — the busiest, most chaotic time when staff are under pressure and instinct takes over. What we found was that customers weren’t annoyed by recommendations; they were annoyed by the absence of them. A customer would order a pint of lager, and when they asked “What food goes with this?”, the answer was often just a blank stare or a generic wave at the menu. That’s not good service. That’s lazy.
The difference between suggestive selling and high-pressure sales is permission. You offer, you don’t demand. A suggestion should feel like helpful advice from someone who knows the product, not a commission-hungry obligation. When a customer says no, a good suggestive sell ends immediately. When they say yes, it should feel like they’ve discovered something genuinely better, not that they’ve been cornered into a purchase.
In the UK hospitality context, this matters even more than in other industries because pub culture is built on personal relationships and trust. Your regulars come to your pub partly because they trust you. High-pressure selling damages that trust immediately and permanently.
The Psychology Behind Effective Recommendations
Suggestive selling works when the recommendation comes from genuine product knowledge and genuine care about the customer’s experience. That’s not something you can fake. Staff can sense the difference, customers can sense the difference, and your bottom line certainly feels the difference.
There are three psychological principles that make suggestive selling work in pubs specifically:
1. The Anchoring Principle
When a customer has already made one decision (ordering a pint), they are psychologically more open to a related second decision. The first decision is the anchor; everything that follows feels like a natural extension of it. This is why recommending food after they’ve ordered a drink works better than recommending both at once. They’ve already committed to being there, to spending, to the experience. A food pairing feels like the next logical step, not a sales pitch.
2. The Reciprocity Principle
When staff give genuine advice — even free advice about which beer pairs better with which dish — customers feel a psychological obligation to respond positively to subsequent suggestions. You’ve given value first. The recommendation is the natural reciprocal response. This is why product knowledge training actually increases sales; it gives staff something genuinely useful to share.
3. The Social Proof Principle
Customers trust recommendations more when they hear that other customers have made the same choice. “That’s been our most popular pairing this week” is more persuasive than “I think you’d like this.” This is especially true in wet-led pubs where customers are drinking alcohol; they want reassurance that their choice is normal and shared.
When managing 17 staff across front of house and kitchen at Teal Farm, the biggest breakthrough came when we stopped training staff to “upsell” and started training them to “help customers discover.” The language changed, the psychology changed, and the results followed. Staff who felt like they were helping customers found suggestive selling natural. Staff who felt like they were hitting targets found it exhausting and inauthentic.
Industry Standards: What Works and What Doesn’t
UK pub industry standards for suggestive selling have evolved significantly since the high-pressure sales culture of the 1990s. Modern hospitality standards — reflected in guidance from the What Works
The pub onboarding training that actually sticks teaches staff to read the room, recognise the moment, and offer help — not follow a script. That’s why it works. That’s also why it can’t be automated or standardised down to a single phrase. The single biggest mistake pub landlords make is assuming staff will naturally know how to do suggestive selling. They won’t. Suggesting something without sounding pushy is a skill that requires deliberate training and regular reinforcement. It’s also a skill that improves with practice and feedback. Step 1: Observe and acknowledge. “You’ve ordered a pint of bitter — good choice. That’s a proper ale.” This does two things: it confirms the customer made a good decision (they feel validated), and it gives you a natural bridge to the next recommendation. Step 2: Offer a pairing or alternative. “That goes beautifully with our fish and chips — crispy outside, flaky inside. Or if you want something lighter, the chicken salad is popular tonight.” You’re not pushing one item; you’re giving them options based on what you know about the products. Step 3: Close with permission. “Shall I get that started for you, or are you happy with just the drink for now?” This gives them a clear path to yes or no, and either answer is respected immediately. When training staff at Teal Farm, we made this the foundation of every service shift. New team members practised this framework in a quiet period before Saturday night service. By the time the bar was full, the recommendation felt natural because they’d already rehearsed it. Muscle memory matters in hospitality. You cannot ask staff to make genuine recommendations if they don’t know what they’re recommending. This is where many pub training programmes fail. They teach the words but not the product. Product knowledge training should cover: A simple tasting programme once a month — where staff try each new product with a guide — makes a huge difference. Staff who have actually tasted the gin, the ale, the wine, the spirit, can speak about it with authenticity. Customers notice that difference immediately. Staff need to know that making suggestive selling recommendations is not just allowed — it’s expected and valued. But they also need to feel safe doing it. If a recommendation backfires occasionally, that’s normal. It shouldn’t result in criticism or lost commission. At Teal Farm, we tracked suggestive selling performance through our pub staffing cost calculator and integrated it into team performance discussions. Not as a sales target, but as a service quality metric. “How many customers did you help discover something new this week?” is a different question from “How much did you sell?” and the answer you get is completely different. You can’t improve what you don’t measure. The challenge is measuring suggestive selling in a way that’s meaningful without turning it into oppressive KPI culture. Average transaction value (ATV) is the single best metric. Track your pub’s average spend per customer transaction before you implement suggestive selling training, then track it every week for three months after. If your ATV increases by £1.50 per transaction, and you serve 200 transactions a day, that’s £300 additional revenue every single day — £2,100 a week, £8,600 a month. That’s meaningful money. When evaluating an EPOS system for handling wet sales, dry sales, and kitchen tickets simultaneously during peak trading — which I did when setting up Teal Farm — one often-overlooked feature is transaction data granularity. Can your till show you: If your EPOS can’t answer these questions, you’re flying blind. You can use a pub drink pricing calculator to optimise your pricing, but without transaction-level data, you can’t see whether suggestive selling is actually working. The real cost of implementing suggestive selling standards is not the cost of training — it’s the lost sales in the first two weeks while staff are still building confidence and rhythm. That’s actually fine. Expect a small dip in speed of service while staff are thinking about recommendations. After two to three weeks, speed normalises and revenue lifts. This is why most pub operators see real results within 30 days of rolling out structured suggestive selling. Understanding what doesn’t work is just as important as understanding what does. These are the mistakes I see most often — and they’re fixable. A customer orders a vodka tonic. Ten minutes later, another staff member suggests they try a premium gin and tonic. You’ve just contradicted their choice and made them feel foolish. They came to your pub to have vodka; they didn’t ask you to convince them otherwise. Never assume a customer’s first choice was indecision rather than preference. Every pub manager has drinks that are higher profit margin than others. But if your staff are trained to recommend the highest-margin item regardless of what the customer ordered, customers will sense it. They’ll feel manipulated. And they’ll go somewhere else. Recommendations should serve the customer’s experience first, and your profit second. Ironically, when you prioritise customer experience, profit follows. You do one training session on suggestive selling, staff get it for two weeks, then everyone drifts back to old habits. This is the single biggest reason suggestive selling programmes fail in pubs. You need weekly reminders, monthly refreshers, and regular feedback. Make it part of your shift briefing: “This week, if customers order a real ale, we’re recommending the beef pie. Why? Because they pair beautifully, and it’s what customers actually want.” A recommendation at the wrong moment, or delivered in the wrong tone, will always backfire. If you’re recommending food while a customer is mid-sip of their first drink, they’ll feel rushed. If you sound bored or robotic, they’ll assume you don’t actually believe in the product. Training needs to cover not just what to say, but when and how to say it. When a customer says “No thanks, just the drink,” the correct response is “No problem, enjoy,” not “Are you sure?” or “We’ve got a really nice pie on today.” You’ve already made your suggestion. Pushing further damages the relationship and signals that you care more about the sale than the customer’s experience. For tied pub tenants, there’s an additional consideration: your pubco may have preferences about which products you recommend. Check your pubco compatibility before building your suggestive selling programme around premium brands you’re not contracted to stock. This is especially important if you’re tied to a supplier with limited product range; your staff can’t recommend something that’s not available. Most pubs see a 5-12% increase in average transaction value within the first month of implementing structured suggestive selling standards. At Teal Farm, handling multiple payment types and service types simultaneously, we saw approximately £300-400 additional daily revenue after two weeks of training. Results vary based on venue type, customer base, and staff engagement. No. Modern UK pub standards, aligned with hospitality excellence frameworks, position thoughtful recommendations as part of professional service — not sales pressure. Customers expect staff to help them discover products that enhance their experience. Unprofessional selling is pushy, scripted, and ignores customer preference. Professional selling respects the customer’s choice. The optimal window is within 30 seconds of taking the initial order, when the customer’s mind is still engaged with the decision-making process. The second-best moment is after they’ve taken the first sip and shown satisfaction with their choice. Avoid recommending during intense conversation or when they’ve signalled they want quiet time. All customer-facing staff should be trained. In a pub with food service and kitchen staff, the waitstaff taking food orders need to recommend drinks pairings just as bar staff need to recommend food. Cross-training creates a culture where every staff member understands the full customer experience, not just their own station. Build product knowledge first, authenticity follows. Staff who have actually tasted the products they’re recommending speak naturally about them. Avoid scripts and instead teach principles. Encourage staff to make recommendations in their own words. Give them permission to skip a recommendation if the moment doesn’t feel right. Authenticity beats consistency every time in hospitality. Most pub operators either train staff once and hope it sticks, or don’t train them at all. Neither approach works. You need a system for continuous reinforcement, performance tracking, and feedback. The pub IT solutions guide covers how the right EPOS system gives you the data you need to see what’s actually working and where your team needs more support. Real transaction-level data transforms suggestive selling from guesswork into a measurable skill. Take the next step today. For more information, visit pub profit margin calculator.
What Doesn’t Work (and Backfires)
Training Your Team to Sell Without Sounding Salesy
The Three-Step Framework That Works
Product Knowledge Is Non-Negotiable
Permission and Accountability
Measuring the Impact on Your Bottom Line
Common Mistakes That Kill the Sale
Mistake 1: Recommending Something the Customer Has Already Rejected
Mistake 2: Making Recommendations Based on Profit Margin, Not Customer Preference
Mistake 3: Training Without Ongoing Reinforcement
Mistake 4: Ignoring the Timing and Tone of Voice
Mistake 5: Not Accepting “No” Gracefully
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does suggestive selling actually increase revenue in a UK pub?
Is suggestive selling considered pushy or unprofessional in UK pubs?
What’s the best time to make a suggestive selling recommendation in a busy pub?
Should I train all staff on suggestive selling, or just bar staff?
How do I prevent suggestive selling from becoming fake or robotic?
Suggestive selling only works when your team is confident, trained, and supported.