build-catering-list

How to Build a Catering Prospect List From Scratch (Without Spending a Dime)

Michael Attias Apr 8, 2026
Michael Attias

Let me ask you something.

You've got CaterZen catering software set up. You're ready to send targeted campaigns, follow up with prospects, rebook past clients. The system is ready to work.

But who's on your list?

This is the part most caterers skip. They get excited about marketing, set everything up, and then realize their database is a mix of old orders, a few business cards stuffed in a drawer, and their cousin's email address.

That's not a list. That's a mess.

The good news: you don't need to buy a list. You don't need to hire anyone. You don't need a big budget.

What you need is a simple system, a few free tools, and 30 minutes a week.

Let me show you exactly how to do it.

First, Understand Who You're Actually Hunting

Before you open a single tool, get this straight.

There are two kinds of catering prospects, and the way you find them is completely different.

The Repeat Buyer

Pharma companies feeding doctors. Law firms hosting client lunches. Corporate offices ordering box lunches every Tuesday. These are companies first - you find the business, then dig until you find the person who actually places the order. Usually an office manager, HR coordinator, or executive assistant.

These are your best long-term customers. They order again and again without you having to resell them every time.

The Life-Moment Buyer

Graduation parties. Weddings. Retirement celebrations. These people self-identify - they post in Facebook groups, ask for recommendations on Nextdoor, and show up in community spaces. The timing window is short, but if you're paying attention, so is the competition.

Most caterers focus on one or the other.

The strongest operations work both lists at the same time.

Map It Out Before You Start Searching

For every type of catering you do, answer three questions before touching a single tool:

Occasion Type Who Actually Orders Where to Find Them
Corporate drop-off Office manager, exec assistant, HR Google Maps, LinkedIn, Chamber of Commerce
Pharma lunches Pharma/device reps + clinic admins LinkedIn, clinic websites
Graduation parties Parents, PTA/PAC contacts School websites, Facebook parent groups
Weddings Couples, event planners Wedding platforms, Instagram, venue referrals
Church & nonprofit events Event coordinator, program director Google Maps, org websites
Youth sports & schools Athletic director, coach, school admin Google Maps, school sites

Knowing the buyer role before you start saves a lot of wasted effort.

"Pharmaceutical companies near me" is a decent search. "Pharmaceutical companies near me, find the person who orders the lunch-and-learns" - that's actionable.

The Free Toolkit

You need almost nothing to start:

  • Google Maps — your single best free local business database
  • LinkedIn (free tier) — people search and company discovery
  • Google Sheets — collect and organize before importing to CaterZen
  • ChatGPT or Claude — compress hours of research into minutes
  • Facebook and Nextdoor — for social and event-based prospects
  • Hunter.io (free tier) — find email formats for any company domain

That's it. No paid tools required. If you want to go deeper later, Apollo.io's free tier gives you a limited number of verified emails per month. But you can build a solid list of 200+ contacts before you ever need it.

Building Your Corporate & Pharma List

Google Maps: The Most Underused Free Tool in Catering

I'm consistently surprised how few caterers use Google Maps for prospecting. Here's the workflow:

  1. Search a niche phrase + your city:
    • "pharmaceutical companies near [city]"
    • "medical clinics near [city]"
    • "law firms downtown [city]"
    • "insurance offices near [city]"
    • "tech companies near [city]"
  2. Open each promising result. Do the photos look like a real office with actual people? Visit their website.
  3. Hunt for a Team, About, Staff Directory, or Contact page. You're looking for titles like "office manager," "practice manager," "operations coordinator," "HR director," or "executive assistant."
  4. Add what you find to a Google Sheet:
    • Business name
    • Address
    • Website
    • Contact name (if found)
    • Contact title
    • Email or phone
    • Niche tag (Corporate, Pharma, Legal, etc.)
    • Source

Once you've got 20–50 records, import them directly into CaterZen and tag by niche in the CRM.

That tag is everything. It's what makes a "Box Lunch Promotion" email land on your corporate list only - not your wedding leads. Garbage in, garbage out. Good tags in, targeted campaigns out.

The Pharma Angle Most Caterers Miss

Here's something I've said before and I'll keep saying it: the person who pays for pharma catering isn't always sitting inside the medical clinic.

It's the pharmaceutical or medical device sales rep who brings food to doctor's offices to get face time with physicians. These reps are constantly looking for reliable caterers. If you wow them once, they'll use you for every lunch-and-learn on their route.

To find them on LinkedIn (free tier), search:

  • "pharmaceutical sales representative" [your city]
  • "medical device sales" [your city]
  • "territory manager" pharmaceutical [city]

Look at their activity. Reps often post photos from their lunch-and-learn visits - which surfaces the clinics they're servicing. You can add both the rep and the clinic to your list.

Build two connected lists in CaterZen: one for the medical offices (where the food goes), one for the pharma reps (who actually order and pay). Over time, that relationship map becomes a real competitive advantage.

Chamber of Commerce & Business Directories

Most local Chambers publish a searchable member directory online - often free and public. These are active, engaged businesses. Higher intent than any scraped list you'd buy.

Also worth checking:

  • City or county economic development websites (often list "top employers")
  • Business park property managers' websites (frequently list their tenants)
  • State or local industry association directories - bar associations, medical groups, biotech industry groups

Target the Building, Not Just the Business

Commercial real estate sites like LoopNet sometimes list office park tenants publicly. You can also use Google Street View to identify which companies are in a specific park, then look each one up individually.

Here's the payoff: serve one company in an office park really well, and word spreads to the other tenants fast. One delivery address can become five clients.

Building Your Graduation & Social Events List

Social and seasonal catering is a different animal. You're not finding companies - you're finding people in a transition.

The evergreen niches - weddings, graduations - are called evergreen for a reason. There's always a new crop of prospects. The work is knowing where to find them before the competition does.

Schools as Your Starting Point

Search Google Maps for every high school, middle school, private school, and community college within your delivery range. Visit each school's website and collect:

  • Main admin email or phone
  • PTA/PAC contact (almost always listed under "Organizations" or "Athletics")
  • Booster club contacts
  • The graduation date from the academic calendar

The parent and booster contact is more valuable than the school's main number. These are the people organizing graduation parties, senior dinners, and team celebrations.

Add an "Event Month" field so you can time your CaterZen outreach properly. Hitting a parent in March about May graduation catering is perfectly timed. Hitting them in August is money in the garbage.

Facebook Groups: Where the Planning Happens Out Loud

Join 5–10 local community groups:

  • "[City] Moms" or "[City] Parents"
  • "[City] Community" or "[City] Neighbors"
  • Local high school parent groups

Inside the group, search for:

  • "caterer" or "catering"
  • "recommendation"
  • "graduation party"
  • "anyone know a good..."

Note the names of people actively planning events. Even if they've already found someone this year, add them to a "Future Social" list in CaterZen for next season. They'll need catering again. The question is whether they'll think of you.

Nextdoor

Hyperlocal and almost completely ignored by caterers.

People post here asking for vendor recommendations for birthday parties, retirements, and neighborhood gatherings all the time. Passively monitor the feed. When someone asks for a caterer, reach out directly. These are warm leads - they raised their hand in public.

Wedding Planners and Event Professionals as Force Multipliers

Instead of chasing individual couples one at a time, build relationships with the people who serve multiple couples at once.

Search "wedding venues [city]" and "event planners [city]." Build a Partner List in CaterZen. Getting on one event planner's preferred vendor list can generate a dozen referrals without a single cold call.

Using AI to Compress the Research Phase

This is where modern list-building gets genuinely useful. AI doesn't replace the work - it collapses the research phase from hours to minutes.

Generating a Starting List Fast

Instead of manually combing Google results one by one, try a prompt like:

"List the 30 largest law firms and tech companies in [City, State] with their estimated headcount and physical address."

"What types of companies in [city] are most likely to order recurring corporate catering? Give me 20 examples across different industries."

AI results aren't always accurate. Verify the top candidates manually. But even so, you're starting from a solid draft instead of a blank page - and that saves significant time.

Perplexity.ai is worth a mention here: it cites its sources, which makes verification faster. Free tier is generous.

Enriching What You've Already Found

Paste a "Team" or "Staff Directory" page into an AI chat and ask:

"List each person's name, title, and email from this page in a table."

Or paste a list of company names and ask:

"For each company, what's the most likely job title of the person who orders catering?"

This is AI at its most practical: turning a messy web page into a clean, importable row.

Cleaning and Normalizing Messy Data

Paste 20–50 rows of raw data into an AI chat and ask it to standardize company names, split address fields, and tag industries based on business name. The output pastes directly into your Google Sheet and imports cleanly into CaterZen.

Drafting Your First-Touch Outreach

Once your list is built and tagged, use AI to draft niche-specific messages:

"Write a short email from a local caterer to an office manager at a small pharmaceutical company offering to cater their next lunch-and-learn. Under 100 words. Focus on convenience and reliability."

Three versions in 30 seconds. Pick the best one, personalize it, load it into CaterZen.

Make It a Weekly Habit

Here's the thing most caterers get wrong.

They treat list-building as a one-time project. They spend a Saturday afternoon building a list, feel good about themselves, and then never touch it again.

Six months later, their database has stagnated. Sound familiar?

The operators who consistently win are doing a small amount of this every single week. Not a marathon. A 30-minute walk.

Here's a rotating weekly schedule:

  • Week 1: Add 15 nearby offices or business park tenants from Google Maps
  • Week 2: Add 10 medical clinics with one contact name per clinic
  • Week 3: Add 10 schools, PTA contacts, or booster clubs (especially February–March for graduation season)
  • Week 4: Add 10 contacts from LinkedIn or the Chamber directory; clean up and tag what you've collected

The math over time:

  • Month 1: 80–100 contacts
  • Month 3: 250–300 segmented, tagged contacts
  • Month 6: A real outreach engine, organized by niche, ready to run in CaterZen

You're not building a list for today. You're building the system that makes next year's busy season run like a machine.

Where CaterZen Fits In

A list sitting in a Google Sheet is potential.

A list inside CaterZen is pipeline.

Once your contacts are imported and tagged by niche, you can send a "Graduation Catering Special" only to your school and PTA contacts. A "Box Lunch" promotion only to corporate and pharma. Seasonal follow-ups timed to when those clients actually buy. And every campaign you run teaches you something - who ordered, who didn't, which niches are worth doubling down on - so next season's outreach gets sharper.

The effort you put into list-building pays forward every single time you hit send.

A 200-person list you built yourself - organized by niche, tagged correctly, sourced locally - will outperform a 5,000-name purchased list almost every time. You know these people. You know why they'd order from you.

CaterZen just makes sure you actually reach them.

Quick Reference: Source by Niche

Niche Best Free Sources AI Assist
Pharma / Medical Google Maps, LinkedIn (rep search), clinic websites Generate clinic lists, identify buyer roles
Corporate / Office Google Maps, Chamber of Commerce, business parks Categorize leads, suggest contact titles
Graduation / Schools School websites, Facebook parent groups Extract contacts from directory pages
Weddings / Social Facebook groups, Nextdoor, venue websites Draft outreach messages
Nonprofits / Churches Google Maps, org websites Suggest niche search phrases
Youth Sports Google Maps, school athletic pages Normalize and tag list data

Five new contacts a day is 25 a week.

By the time busy season hits, you're not scrambling. You're just hitting send.

Start small. Stay consistent. Let CaterZen do the rest.

👉 Start your free trial and see how CaterZen can simplify your catering operation.

Or if you'd rather see it in action first:

👉 Schedule a walkthrough and see how it works in your operation.

Either way — the list you build this week is money in the bank next season.

See more posts about: catering marketing

 

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