You can move customers by having pictures or cam on ads for certain specific products:
1. Open house for visitors
2. Celeb on coffee shops
In 2011, a tiny seaside restaurant in Cebu was dying.
No foot traffic.
No reputation.
No online presence.
Nothing but salty air and empty tables.
The owner tried flyers, local ads, even begging bloggers to come… no results.
Then one afternoon, a tourist stood outside the restaurant, pulled out a DSLR camera, and snapped a photo of the entrance.
Ten seconds.
One click.
Then he walked away.
But something strange happened.
People nearby stopped.
They stared at the tourist.
They looked at the restaurant door… and suddenly a small line began to form.
Within an hour, the place was full.
Sales tripled that night.
The owner was confused and asked customers why they came in.
Their answer was simple.
“We saw someone taking photos. We thought this place must be good.”
But his presence created a perception.
A camera signals importance.
Importance signals value.
Value brings curiosity.
Curiosity brings customers.
People trust what they think other people are paying attention to.
This is why:
• Street vendors hire “fake first customers”
• Real estate agents stage open houses with actors
• Markets grow when they look active
• Influencers record everything because cameras create legitimacy
Attention creates belief.
Belief creates buyers.
You do not need a crowd.
You need the appearance that someone cares.
The first visible customer is not just a customer.
They are a catalyst.
If you want more buyers, show people paying attention.
Record. Photograph. Highlight. Display.
Make your business look like the place where things are happening.
Because in marketing, the camera moves customers before the product does