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The Korean BBQ That Nearly Closed Its Dining Room

How AI handles bilingual bookings and guides first-time diners through Korean BBQ -- so you don't need to choose between answering phones and running service.

4 min readUpdated 2026-04-03Based on Claude Sonnet 4 / GPT-4o

The Real Problem

Minjun owns a Korean BBQ restaurant on Dominion Road. Last year he nearly closed the dining room and went delivery-only. Not because the food was bad -- the reviews are great. Because he couldn't find staff.

Specifically, he couldn't find bilingual front-of-house staff. Korean BBQ isn't like a normal restaurant where you hand someone a menu and bring them a plate. Staff need to explain the cooking process to first-timers: which cuts to cook first, what temperature the grill should be, how long each meat needs, how to wrap in lettuce, which sauces go with which meats, what the banchan (side dishes) are and how to eat them. That explanation takes 5-10 minutes per table -- and half the customers in Auckland have never done Korean BBQ before.

Training a new server to handle this takes one to two months. And because Minjun serves both Korean-speaking and English-speaking customers, staff need to do it all in two languages. That combination -- bilingual, hospitality-experienced, Korean BBQ knowledgeable -- is nearly impossible to recruit in Auckland right now.

Meanwhile, the phone rings 30+ times during the 6-8pm dinner rush. The staff who answer speak Korean fluently but struggle with English callers who want to book, ask about the menu, or inquire about dietary restrictions. English-speaking callers get frustrated. Korean-speaking callers calling during peak service get voicemail.

And then there's no-shows. Auckland hospitality has a massive no-show problem. For Korean BBQ, a no-show of a group of 6 means an empty table-with-grill for two hours during prime dinner service. That's NZD 400-600 in lost revenue from a single no-show.

Auckland's Korean food scene is booming -- The Spinoff has called it a "culinary boom" with 20+ Korean BBQ spots across the city. Competition is fierce, and the restaurants that deliver a great experience win. The ones where confused customers burn their meat and leave disappointed don't get a second visit.

Why Existing Tools Don't Solve This

Booking platforms (ResDiary, Quandoo, First Table) handle reservations but don't solve the bilingual problem. They don't answer phone calls. They don't explain to a first-timer how to cook galbi.

Training manuals help, but new staff turnover in hospitality is extreme. You spend two months training someone and they leave. Generic restaurant chatbots handle English-only FAQ but can't switch between Korean and English mid-conversation, and they certainly can't teach someone how to eat Korean BBQ.

There's no tool in the NZ market designed for the specific combination of problems that Korean BBQ restaurants face: bilingual communication, interactive dining guidance, and high-stakes booking management.

How AI Solves This

The AI works across two touchpoints: phone and web bookings and at-the-table dining guidance.

Bilingual Booking Agent

When customers call or message (WhatsApp, Facebook, web chat), the AI detects the language and responds accordingly:

Customer (WhatsApp, in Korean): "토요일 저녁 6시에 4명 예약할 수 있어요?"

AI (in Korean): "안녕하세요! 이번 토요일 6시에 4분 예약 가능합니다. 예약자 성함과 연락처 알려주시겠어요? 참고로, 예약 확정을 위해 NZD 20 보증금이 필요합니다 (방문 시 식사 금액에서 차감됩니다)."

Customer (phone, in English): "Hi, I want to book for 8 people on Friday. Some of us haven't done Korean BBQ before -- is that OK?"

AI (in English): "Absolutely! Friday for 8 -- let me check availability. We have a spot at 6:30pm or 7:30pm. And don't worry about being new to Korean BBQ -- every table has a QR code that opens an interactive guide with photos and cooking tips. Your server will also get you started. Which time works better?"

The AI handles the booking, sends a confirmation with a deposit link (reducing no-shows), and schedules automated reminders 24 hours and 2 hours before the reservation. For groups of 6+, the deposit is non-refundable for no-shows -- the AI explains this clearly in both languages.

At-the-Table Korean BBQ Guide

Every table has a QR code. First-time diners scan it and get an interactive guide on their phone:

Welcome to Korean BBQ!

You'll cook your own meat on the grill at your table. Here's how to get the best experience:

Step 1: Start with the banchan (the small dishes already on your table). These are refillable -- just ask!

Step 2: Heat your grill -- your server will turn it on. Wait until the grill surface is hot before placing any meat.

Step 3: Cook in this order (for best results):

  • Samgyeopsal (pork belly): 2-3 min per side, until edges are crispy
  • Bulgogi (marinated beef): 1-2 min per side, don't overcook
  • Galbi (short rib): 3-4 min per side, medium is perfect

Step 4: The wrap -- Take a lettuce leaf, add meat, a dab of ssamjang (the brown paste), a slice of garlic, and wrap it up. One bite!

[Photos for each step] [Sauce pairing guide] [What to drink: soju, beer, or both?]

The guide is available in English and Korean. It's not a static PDF -- customers can tap on any item to see photos, cooking times, and sauce recommendations. This replaces 5-10 minutes of server explanation at every table.

How We Set This Up

None of this works if the AI is just a standalone chatbot with no connection to your actual business. That's why BestAI builds a custom integration program -- a piece of software that bridges your AI assistant with the systems you already use.

For this kind of setup, that means:

  • Connecting the bilingual AI agent to WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, phone (via missed-call redirect), and your website chat
  • Integrating with your booking system or calendar so reservations appear in your real schedule
  • Setting up the deposit payment link (Stripe or bank transfer) that the AI sends automatically for group bookings
  • Building the interactive QR-code dining guide with your specific menu items, photos, and cooking instructions
  • Configuring automated booking reminders in the customer's language

Here's our process:

  1. We map your current workflow -- We sit down with you and understand how bookings currently come in, what languages your customers speak, and where the bottlenecks are during service.
  2. We build the connections -- Our developers write a custom program (an API connector) that lets the AI manage bookings, send deposit links, and deliver the dining guide. No manual data entry, no copy-pasting between apps.
  3. We test end-to-end -- We test with real bilingual scenarios: Korean callers, English web bookings, mixed-language group enquiries. Nothing launches until it handles both languages reliably.
  4. We maintain it -- When you update your menu, add seasonal items, or change booking policies, we update both the AI and the dining guide to match.

You don't need to be technical. We handle all the development -- you just tell us how your restaurant runs, and we make the AI fit into that.

The Result

  • Bilingual booking coverage -- Korean and English enquiries handled instantly, even during dinner rush
  • 70-80% fewer no-shows -- deposit requirement and automated reminders dramatically reduce empty tables
  • 5-10 minutes saved per table -- the QR guide replaces repetitive cooking explanations for first-timers
  • New staff productive faster -- servers don't need to memorise the full Korean BBQ explanation; the guide handles the basics
  • Better customer experience -- first-timers feel confident instead of confused, leading to better reviews and return visits

What AI Can't Do Here

  • AI can't physically help customers at the grill -- if someone is genuinely struggling, a staff member still needs to step in
  • AI can't handle complex dietary requirements in real-time (e.g., severe allergies mid-meal) -- that needs a human conversation
  • The dining guide works for standard menu items but can't cover every possible question a curious customer might ask
  • Bilingual AI is strong in Korean and English but may struggle with mixed Korean-English slang or very informal speech
  • AI can't replace the warmth of a Korean host greeting regulars by name -- hospitality is still human

Who This Is For

  • Korean BBQ restaurants struggling to find bilingual front-of-house staff
  • Any Korean restaurant where first-time customers need guided through the dining experience
  • Restaurants losing revenue to no-shows on group bookings
  • Korean hospitality businesses serving both Korean-speaking and English-speaking communities in Auckland
  • Owners who are personally answering phones in the kitchen because nobody else can handle both languages

Want This for Your Business?

Book a 45-minute workflow review and we'll show you exactly how this applies to your specific situation, no obligation, no fluff.

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