Cabana Bar is a restaurant business supported under a government-backed digital initiative aimed at helping local businesses modernize [kit-digital] their operations and improve their online presence. Cabana Bar was delivered through our collaboration with Sarah Katrina, our strategic vendor, who manages multiple small business clients under the same digital enablement program.
At the time of engagement, Cabana Bar had no existing website, no digital menu, and no structured online presence. Cabana Bar relied entirely on offline operations, which limited visibility, scalability, and customer convenience especially in a market where tourists and seasonal customers expect instant online access to menus and business information.
The objective was clear and non-negotiable: Build a complete digital foundation from scratch, starting with a professional website and a digital menu, while ensuring the solution could scale into online ordering and payment integration in future phases.
Cabana Bar approached the project with practical, business-first requirements. There was no interest in fancy features that didn’t serve customers or staff. Every requirement had to justify its existence.
Mobile-friendly
Easy to update
Visually aligned with a restaurant brand
Clear presentation of menu, location, and business details
Replace printed menus
Easy price updates
Structured categories (food, drinks, specials)
Visually appealing, not just a text list
Visibility on Google Search and Maps
Accurate business details
Foundation for reviews and local SEO
The client should not need technical knowledge
Content updates must be manageable internally
Online ordering
Online payments
Delivery or pickup workflows
Cabana Bar had real constraints, not textbook ones. Ignoring them would have produced a weak solution.
There was:
No website
No hosting
No domain strategy
No menu in digital format
No structured brand assets
Everything had to be created from the ground up.
The client team was focused on running a restaurant, not managing websites. Any system that required technical skills would fail after launch.
This meant:
No complex CMS setup
No fragile custom code
No dependency on developers for simple updates
The restaurant’s peak operations were planned for the summer season, which meant:
Phase 1 had to be completed early
Phase 2 (online ordering & payments) had to be planned, not rushed
Architecture decisions needed foresight
Because this was tied to a government-supported digital program:
Cost efficiency mattered
Tools had to be proven and reliable
Overengineering was not an option
This is where execution mattered. No fluff. No buzzwords.
We chose WordPress as the core platform for one reason: it balances flexibility, cost, scalability, and ease of use better than any alternative for this business type.
Using Elementor, we built a custom-designed restaurant website that focused on:
Clear navigation
Strong visual hierarchy
Mobile-first layout
Fast load times
This was not a template dump.
It was a structured build aligned to restaurant user behavior.
Instead of embedding a clunky plugin or forcing a PDF-only experience, we took a hybrid approach.
Designed as a clean, book-style layout
Structured categories for clarity
Branded visual consistency
Created using Canva for flexibility and speed
Allows future edits without design dependency
Menu uploaded and embedded seamlessly
Optimized for mobile viewing
Easy to replace or update
This gave the client control, not dependency.
We handled:
Google Business Profile creation
Accurate business information
Category selection
Initial optimization for local discovery
This ensured Cabana Bar was discoverable where customers actually search.
We configured:
Reliable hosting
Secure WordPress setup
Performance-ready foundation for future integrations
No shortcuts. No cheap hosting mistakes that cause pain later.
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