In Toronto’s Crowded Restaurant Scene, Success Depends on What Happens Before Opening

A leading PR strategist reveals what separates successful launches from forgettable ones in Canada's most competitive hospitality market

The mistake happens three months before opening night. Maybe six months. It’s when the restaurateur, knee-deep in permits, sourcing, and construction delays, decides to handle their own marketing. After all, how hard can it be to post on Instagram?

Lori Harito

Pretty hard, according to Lori Harito, who’s spent the last eight years watching Toronto restaurants succeed and fail based on decisions made long before their first customer walks through the door. As founder of Boulevard of Dreams PR, she’s worked with everyone from the BISHA Hotel to TIFF to neighbourhood spots that most people have never heard of but somehow always have a wait list.

“Toronto is incredibly experience-focused right now,” Harito says during our conversation at her downtown office. “We see what looks great on Instagram, people flock to it, then move on to the next thing. That’s a real struggle for hospitality.”

It’s a cycle she’s witnessed repeatedly since launching her boutique firm in 2017, after a decade-long media career that included stints at Global News, Shaw Media, and TVOntario, followed by agency roles and in-house at Indigo. With experience covering everything from breaking news to major events like the Academy Awards, plus a journalism background from Ryerson University, she’s developed strong opinions about what separates the survivors from the casualties in what might be Canada’s most competitive restaurant market.

The biggest mistake? Waiting too long to get professional help. “Professional help must come in at least three months before your opening, but honestly? Four to six months is ideal,” says Harito, whose firm operates on flexible partnership models rather than the rigid retainers that scare off smaller operators. “That gives us time to truly understand your needs, pivot our strategy alongside yours, and build sustained attention.”

She pulls up examples with ease—campaigns that worked versus ones that didn’t. The pattern is always the same: restaurants that plan early build momentum, while those that scramble at the last minute create perfect storms of missed opportunities.

“I’ve seen grand openings executed flawlessly with media and influencers in attendance, only to discover there’s no menu online and no way to actually book a table when doors open to the public,” she says, shaking her head. “You’ve just missed the entire momentum we spent months building.”

@mandysalads YORKVILLE WE’RE OFFICIALLY OPEN!!! 🌴🤩✨ Come say hi and grab your fav Mandy’s salad! #mandysalads #torontolife #torontorestaurants ♬ original sound – Mandy’s Salads

Working with major brands like Campari and Mandy’s Salads alongside Toronto restaurateurs has given Harito a front-row seat to the city’s unique challenges. The permit process alone can derail the best-laid plans.

“With restaurants in Toronto, it is so hard to nail down a date, which is why you have all these fluctuating invites,” she explains. “There are so many permits our restaurants need to get before they can finally open.” Liquor licenses, health department sign-offs, fire department approvals—the bureaucratic maze that makes Toronto particularly challenging compared to other markets.

Her hard-learned recommendation? Don’t bring media and influencers through before you’re at least 80 to 90 percent complete. “It is not a great experience to have people come through a restaurant before they have a liquor license, before they have everything.” 

The sweet spot she’s discovered through trial and error: opening to the public just two days after your grand opening event. “You will see that uptick in coverage, whether social coverage or media coverage. It gets people’s attention. They’re clicking through. They want to make a reservation. And if you’re not open yet, you’ve already missed that client.”

After handling years of restaurant launches, Harito has seen the same mistakes repeatedly. The three most common mistakes at grand openings? Insufficient food and beverage, people not understanding why they’re there, and overcrowding that creates a miserable experience for everyone.

Weather’s another curveball, especially for patios and rooftop spaces. “Always have Plan B and Plan C ready. Have an awning on standby and a clear strategy to move people inside if you’re hosting outdoors.” 

But here’s what really gets under her skin: cutting costs in ways that show. “You will see this in not being able to offer Uber codes to attendees, really hacking an event. You can do it on a shoestring budget, but then certain things will fall to the wayside.”

There’s something unique about Toronto diners that Harito calls the “Toronto Paradox”—they’re simultaneously fickle and fiercely loyal, which sounds contradictory until you really think about it. “Just because they love you for one month doesn’t guarantee loyalty—there’s always someone new opening. But Torontonians are fiercely loyal to beloved neighborhood staples that make them feel comfortable. That’s the balance you need to strike.”

Etiket at The Well Grand Opening (Image: Boulevard of Dreams PR)

The solution? Look at what’s actually working in neighborhoods like Ossington and Little Italy, where restaurants are finding success with cozy taverns offering exceptional cocktails rather than chasing whatever’s trending on TikTok this week.

“Do not turn people off by gaslighting them on Instagram,” Harito warns, getting more animated. “If your prices are extravagant, you’re going to turn people off. Have a menu that isn’t just trendy but has evergreen cocktails and food that people love.”

Traditional wisdom about event timing has been completely upended in Toronto’s post-COVID landscape. “People never used to do Monday and Tuesday events. That’s completely gone out the door because there are so many events,” Harito explains. Wednesdays and Thursdays were once the golden days, but she’s successfully executed Saturday events that exceeded capacity—something that would have been unthinkable before 2020.

Evening events have shifted too, now frequently starting at 7 or 8 PM and running until midnight, a significant change from the traditional 6-8 PM window.

One of the most frustrating oversights Harito encounters? Restaurants are launching their social media presence too early. “Another major mistake: launching a social media presence one week before opening without understanding your audience or establishing core brand identity. That’s not a strategy—that’s hoping for luck.”

Her Instagram bio essentials for every Toronto restaurant are surprisingly simple: location, reservation link, and either hours of operation or a clear description (think “Italian steakhouse,” not some vague artistic statement). She also recommends pinning an updated menu as one of the top three posts—seems obvious, but you’d be surprised how many miss this.

Mott 32 One Year Anniversary (Image: Boulevard of Dreams PR)

So how do you actually know if a grand opening worked? Harito looks for specific signs after launch, not the immediate social media buzz that fades in a week. “Success means getting the right people—those who understand why they were there and deliver a strong message to their audience. Six months later, look for continued organic media interest, award nominations, sustained social growth, and genuine DM engagement.”

The most telling indicator? When the media naturally writes about you because your food and beverage program is spectacular, without any PR push. “That’s when you know you’ve built something real.”

There’s a mistake that seems smart but backfires: offering media and influencers exclusive menu items that regular customers can’t access. “That level of exclusivity doesn’t attract the masses you’re trying to reach—it feels exclusionary,” Harito argues. “Having a viral moment is great, but if there’s no follow-through, you’ve failed. Restaurants need repeat customers, not one-time spectacle.”

Her rule is straightforward: anything showcased at a grand opening should be available to customers afterward, with the obvious exception of one-time theatrical elements like champagne on an ice sculpture.

For Toronto restaurateurs navigating an increasingly crowded market, Harito’s advice comes down to three things: start earlier, invest properly, and prioritize authenticity over trends.

“People return to places that make them feel seen,” she concludes. “That happens through exceptional service and a genuine love of hospitality at the operational level. We’re seeing a return to neighborhood-focused, comfortable, cozy environments. PR’s job is to bring media in to witness that authenticity and share it—but the foundation must be there first.”

It’s advice that applies whether you’re opening in the Financial District or a quiet corner of the Beaches. In Toronto’s restaurant gauntlet, the fundamentals still matter most.

Behind the scenes at TIFF AFTER PARTY (Image: Boulevard of Dreams PR)

More from 6ix Retail

Dark Horse Espresso Bar Is Opening Two New Toronto Locations This Summer

At West House on Bathurst and a former Starbucks on College Street, the brand that helped define Toronto's third-wave coffee movement is betting on where the city is heading next.

ShopAGO and Cafe Renovation Set for November Reopening

The Art Gallery of Ontario is overhauling its 5,068-square-foot retail shop and cafe with support from the RBC Foundation Community Spaces Grant, with CHIL Interior Design and B+H Architects leading the project.

Avi Behar on the Future of Toronto Retail

Inside the mixed-use leasing philosophy behind two of Toronto's most significant developments, with fresh insights from ICSC Las Vegas 2026.

Craig’s Cookies x Sam Cooks: The Handwritten Note That Started It All

Toronto's food community talks about community-first retail constantly. Craig's Cookies and Sam Cooks just showed what it actually looks like in practice.

Redberry Bets on Downtown Toronto With Jersey Mike’s

Redberry CEO Ken Otto on why downtown Toronto is the right market, how the company picks its sites, and what a $1 million Make-A-Wish pledge says about the kind of operator Redberry is building into.

Las Muns Opens Fourth Toronto Location at Bay and Bloor

Spanish empanada brand Las Muns opens its fourth Canadian location at 1250 Bay Street as the Bay/Bloor corridor undergoes a significant tenant transformation.

PLANTA Exits Canada

PLANTA has closed all Toronto locations for good. Here is what happened to the brand that started in Yorkville and what it means for the city's hospitality scene.

Vivobarefoot Coming Soon Signage Appears on Queen Street West

The UK barefoot footwear brand is taking over the former Oak + Fort space at 666 Queen Street West, with in-store fittings, community runs, and events planned from day one.

Inside the Store: Sad Nuggie Adoption Centre at CF Toronto Eaton Centre

Sad Nuggie's first Toronto location opened May 1st on the lower level of CF Toronto Eaton Centre. Here is what the space looks like and what to expect when you visit.

Canadians Already Know Flying Tiger Copenhagen. Now They Won’t Have to Leave the Country to Shop It.

Flying Tiger Copenhagen is opening its first Canadian stores in the Greater Toronto Area starting June 2026, marking the brand's entry into its 45th market and first on the North American continent.

Exclusive: Toronto Tea Festival Is Moving to the Metro Toronto Convention Centre in 2027

The Toronto Tea Festival is leaving the Toronto Reference Library. After years of sold-out weekends, waiting lists, and lineups out the door, founder Tao Wu has signed a deal to bring Canada's largest tea festival to the Metro Toronto Convention Centre for January 16 and 17, 2027. 

Dunkin’ Is Coming Back to Canada

Peter Mammas on why Foodtastic bought the Canadian rights to one of the world's most recognized coffee brands, where the first locations are headed, and what is coming next.

While Canadian Retail Was Pulling Back, Best Buy Canada Was Building

As legacy chains collapsed and mall staples disappeared, Best Buy Canada kept investing. Twenty-five years in, VP Chris Sallans on omnichannel, the Express format, store-within-a-store, and what comes next.

Warehouse One and Bootlegger Are Closing Every Store in Canada

Warehouse One Clothing Ltd. has filed for CCAA protection and is closing all 128 Warehouse One and Bootlegger stores across Canada. Liquidation sales begin around May 16.

Destination Toronto Launches Ten-Year Master Plan for Toronto’s Visitor Economy

Destination Toronto CEO Andrew Weir breaks down the city's new ten-year Master Plan, what it means for retailers, restaurateurs and operators across Toronto's neighbourhoods, and why the window to position for what comes next is open now.

How AI Is Changing the Way Canadians Discover Where to Shop

One in four Canadians now use AI to make purchase decisions. Retail Rewired founder Chris Parsons explains what that means for operators who are not yet paying attention.

Mirvish Village Reveals Commercial Tenant Lineup as Summer 2026 Completion Nears

The former Honest Ed's site at Bloor and Bathurst will include a 19,000-square-foot food hall, restored heritage retail on Markham Street, and a Tokyo-inspired micro-retail alley

Juice Dudez Enters Toronto at The Well, Eyes Second GTA Location Before End of 2026

Seven years after opening in Westboro, Nasr Nasr is bringing his fresh juice and Belgian chocolate concept to Canada's biggest market, with a second GTA location already in the works.

Brewing at the Market: C’est What Opens Inside St. Lawrence Market

Thirty-eight years on Front Street, and now a corner of the lower level at St. Lawrence Market. George Milbrandt on the ten-year idea that finally became real.

Toronto Has 192 Acres of Waterfront Sitting Underused. Not for Much Longer.

The Board voted yes. The planning and consultation work is underway. And the operators who understand where this is heading will be better positioned than those who wait.

Most Read on 6ix Retail

Hundreds of Starbucks Workers Face Job Loss as Chain Closes Stores Across Toronto

Chain shutters underperforming stores as part of $1B restructuring, leaving baristas seeking new employment

Tim Hortons Opens First Standalone TimShop at CF Toronto Eaton Centre

Coffee chain tests experiential retail strategy with plushie activation targeting holiday shoppers

What We Know: Toys “R” Us Canada Files for Creditor Protection

The iconic toy retailer seeks creditor protection after closing more than 50 stores in two years, owing $120 million to vendors as it evaluates strategic alternatives

Dunkin’ Is Coming Back to Canada

Peter Mammas on why Foodtastic bought the Canadian rights to one of the world's most recognized coffee brands, where the first locations are headed, and what is coming next.

Warehouse One and Bootlegger Are Closing Every Store in Canada

Warehouse One Clothing Ltd. has filed for CCAA protection and is closing all 128 Warehouse One and Bootlegger stores across Canada. Liquidation sales begin around May 16.

Healthy Planet to Open 12,000 Square Foot Store at Yonge and Eglinton

Canada's largest family-owned organic grocer is opening a 12,000 sq ft two-level store at 2529 Yonge Street, targeting Q1 2026 opening in midtown Toronto.

Photo Report: Yorkdale Shopping Centre Transformation (August 2025)

Exclusive photo tour of Yorkdale Shopping Centre's August 2025 transformation, featuring Simons flagship, luxury corridor expansion, and major tenant changes.

SHEIN Pop-Up Returns to CF Toronto Eaton Centre Amid Major Retail Transformation

Ten-day pop-up occupies former Banana Republic space as Hudson's Bay fights for survival and Optimize Wealth moves into historic Bank of Toronto building

MUJI to Open Its Latest Toronto Location at The Well This September

Japanese lifestyle retailer takes over former Design Republic space as downtown mixed-use destination continues tenant expansion

EXCLUSIVE: Crunch Fitness Secures Landmark Financial District Location for Downtown Toronto Debut

Crunch Fitness signs 21,000-square-foot lease at 20 King West, transforming historic RBC gold vaults into premium PATH-connected gym targeting Gen Z demographic with fall 2025 opening.

Mandy’s Announces Multi-City Expansion, Adding Yonge & Eglinton and Canary District to Toronto Portfolio

Fast-casual chain Mandy's Salads reveals next phase of national expansion, adding new locations in Toronto and Ottawa while growing Montreal presence

Shake Shack Reveals Strategic Six-Site GTA Expansion

Premium burger chain announces six new GTA locations through 2026, creating 400+ jobs while expanding from downtown Toronto to suburban markets across the region.

Black Friday’s Latest Date Creates 26-Day Shopping Crunch for Canadian Retailers

Toronto liquidation expert Alex Hennick warns compressed holiday timeline will separate struggling retailers from survivors

Photo Report: Yorkdale Shopping Centre Update (December 2025)

Tom Ford, Gentle Monster, and AMI Paris open as luxury corridor expands while Club Monaco Men closes and pop-up strategy fills transitional spaces

NRG Haus to Bring Social Wellness Club to Liberty Village

Fit Factory Fitness founder Ivan Ho bets on sober-curious movement with contrast therapy venue featuring immersive cold plunge and functional mocktails

Decathlon’s GTA Exit Opens Door for Experience-First Retail Revolution

Decathlon Canada closes five GTA stores in Brampton, Burlington, Markham, Scarborough and Vaughan, creating opportunities for experiential sporting goods retailers as Canadian market shifts toward community-focused retail.

Beyond Points and Purchases: How Starbucks Masters the Science of Personalized Loyalty

Toronto retail loyalty consultant shares insights on how coffee giant's data-driven approach can be applied across sectors

Discount Grocery Expansion Is Dominating the Toronto Retail Market in 2025

No Frills leads urban push with multiple new locations as Canadian grocers focus on value-oriented growth

Panera Bread To Make Downtown Toronto Comeback with College Street Location (Update: Now Open)

Popular bakery-cafe chain Panera Bread is returning to downtown Toronto with a new location at College and Spadina, marking its first urban presence since 2020.

Poulet Rouge Expands to Queen West Amid Transit Construction

Quebec chain's ninth Toronto location joins evolving retail mix as transit construction reshapes prime shopping corridor