One-Page Restaurant Landing Page

Mixiebite's

Project Type: Landing Page

Industry: Food & Beverage

High-volume local restaurant

landing-page-desktop-layoutVisit Site

Overview

This project is a one-page landing site built for a rapidly growing restaurant in East Montréal.

The goal was not to “tell a story” or over-design the experience — it was to direct customers to take action quickly, especially on mobile.

The site is intentionally simple and focused on one primary outcome: placing an order.

What This Page Was Designed to Do

  • Get customers to order with minimal friction
  • Communicate what the restaurant offers in seconds
  • Support a growing customer base without adding operational complexity

This is a utility page, not a brand showcase — and that’s exactly why it works.

landing-page-mobile-layout

Page Structure & Flow

1. Hero Section — Primary Call to Action

The page opens with a clear value proposition and a prominent “Order” call-to-action.

Customers don’t have to scroll or search — the main action is immediately visible.

2. Short Business Introduction

A brief section explains who they are and what they offer.

This is kept intentionally concise so returning customers aren’t slowed down, while new customers get just enough context to feel confident.

3. Product Showcase + Menu CTA

High-quality product images are used to:

  • Reinforce trust
  • Trigger appetite
  • Encourage exploration

A secondary call-to-action directs users to view the full menu.

Why This Works

  • Single purpose: no competing actions
  • Mobile-first: designed for quick decisions
  • Low cognitive load: customers immediately know what to do
  • Operationally simple: no unnecessary features to manage

This is a utility page, not a brand showcase — and that’s exactly why it works.

How This Example Relates to Our Services

This project reflects our Web Design & Development (Foundation) service.

It demonstrates how:

  • A focused landing page can outperform larger websites
  • Clear structure matters more than complexity
  • Design choices are driven by usage, not aesthetics

Not every business needs a multi-page site.

Simple Pages, Clear Outcomes

Not every business needs complexity — just a page that works.