DEON is the AI marketing manager built for Miami bakery owners. From Little Havana panaderías to Doral Argentine pastry shops, Hialeah quinceañera cake counters, Aventura kosher bakeries, and Wynwood modern bakeries — DEON audits your Google Business Profile in English and Spanish, drafts captions in your voice, and replies to reviews across Google, Yelp, and TripAdvisor. Free plan, no card.
A Miami bakery doesn't sell pastries — it sells a piece of someone's morning ritual. The cafecito-and-pastelito stop on Calle Ocho is a Cuban customer's daily routine. The medialuna run in Doral is an Argentine family's Sunday. The cachito in Wynwood is a Venezuelan transplant's small piece of Caracas. And the rosca de reyes on January 5th, the pan de muerto in early November, the turrones at Noche Buena, and the wedding cakes for the May-and-October peak are all in the same shop, in the same week, served to customers who switch between Spanish and English in the same sentence. Miami runs as a Latin American capital that happens to be in the US, and a bakery here that markets in English alone is invisible to half of its market.
DEON is the AI marketing manager built for that reality. Type your bakery's name. DEON reads your website, Google profile, Instagram, and the reviews across Google, Yelp, and TripAdvisor — which carries unusual weight in South Beach, Brickell, and Wynwood thanks to international tourist volume — and tells you which categories you're missing. Most Miami panaderías are using 'bakery' alone when 'pastry shop,' 'wedding bakery,' 'cake shop,' and 'Cuban restaurant' or 'Argentine restaurant' would all qualify. Pre-order pages for Día de Reyes roscas, Noche Buena trays, Mother's Day boxes, and quinceañera cakes get surfaced. The pastelito photo from 6 a.m. gets a bilingual caption drafted before the cafetera is empty. And the hurricane-season closure messaging — the part nobody remembers to update until the storm is already named — is drafted ahead of time.
What's actually hard about marketing bakeries in Miami
An English-only Google profile makes you invisible to half of Miami
A meaningful share of Miami bakery customers search in Spanish: 'panadería cerca de mí,' 'pastelitos de guayaba,' 'torta de quinceañera.' Most Miami panaderías still run an English-only Google Business Profile and are silently absent from the Spanish search results sitting on the same map. DEON generates bilingual GBP content, drafts Spanish captions and review replies, and audits your rank in both languages — not just English.
Tourist TripAdvisor weight is heavier in Miami than almost anywhere
In most US cities, Google and Yelp run the review game. In South Beach, Brickell, and Wynwood, TripAdvisor drives a surprising share of bakery foot traffic from international visitors — especially during snowbird season and Art Basel week. Most Miami bakeries don't monitor it. DEON watches TripAdvisor alongside Google and Yelp and drafts replies in the language each review was written in.
Hurricane season disrupts marketing and nobody's content calendar accounts for it
June through November in Miami, your marketing has to flex around weather. A pre-storm push for pickup orders, a closure-window communication plan for Google and Instagram, a re-open campaign — none of it is in a generic social template. DEON's content calendar builds Miami's hurricane window in by default, so you have drafted messaging ready instead of writing it from a phone with the power flickering.
Quinceañera and wedding cakes are buried four clicks deep
Quinceañera, Sweet Sixteen, and wedding cakes are the highest-margin orders a Miami bakery takes. Most Miami bakery websites bury the inquiry form behind a vague 'Contact' page while competitors put 'Pedir un Pastel de Quinceañera' or 'Order a Wedding Cake' as the first link on their Google profile. DEON audits your site, profile, and Instagram bio so custom-cake orders are one click from any search, in both languages.
Snowbirds, tourists, and locals each behave differently and your marketing speaks to one
South Beach in March is mostly tourists searching TripAdvisor. Coral Gables and Aventura serve snowbirds with standing weekly pastry orders. Hialeah is daily local routine. DEON tailors content, SEO targeting, and review-reply tone for the audience your bakery actually serves and tracks where customers are coming from — so you stop spending marketing energy on the wrong group.
A Miami marketing agency is $2,500+ a month and most of it is posting and replying
A bakery-savvy Miami marketing agency starts around $2,500 a month; a freelance social hire runs $900 to $1,800. For a panadería doing $20K to $60K a month with Miami-Dade rent, that's a serious chunk of profit on work that's mostly posting consistently, watching reviews, and updating the holiday board. DEON does the recurring work at $20 or $40 a month.
DEON drafts Google profile content, Instagram captions, and review replies in English, Spanish, or the natural code-switch a Miami panadería actually uses. Your shop on Calle Ocho or in Hialeah shows up in 'panadería cerca de mí' instead of being silently absent.
Miami-tuned Google Business Profile audit
DEON checks the categories that move the Miami bakery map pack — 'pastry shop,' 'wedding bakery,' 'cake shop,' 'Cuban restaurant,' 'Argentine restaurant,' 'kosher bakery' where it fits. Fixing categories often moves a Little Havana or Doral bakery into the top three for 'bakery near me' inside a few weeks.
Holiday calendar tuned to the Miami bakery year
DEON tracks the dates that drive Miami bakery revenue — Día de Reyes, Easter, Mother's Day, Noche Buena, Christmas, quinceañera and Sweet Sixteen season, wedding peak in May and October, snowbird arrival in November. Each one gets reminders to announce, open pre-orders, and close them.
Hurricane-season content, drafted ahead
DEON pre-drafts the pre-storm pickup push, the closure messages for Google and Instagram, and the re-open campaign so you're not writing copy with the power flickering. The content lives in your dashboard until the moment you need it.
Review monitoring across Miami review surfaces
Google, Yelp, TripAdvisor, and Facebook — DEON watches every public surface that matters. South Beach, Brickell, and Wynwood get heavier TripAdvisor weight from tourists. DEON drafts replies in your voice, in the language the review was written in, with SMS alerts on Unlimited.
Priced for Miami bakery margins
Free covers 20 searches a day. Pro at $20/month replaces a freelance social hire. Unlimited at $40 replaces a Miami marketing agency. 7-day money-back guarantee on paid plans.
What DEON actually delivers — sample output for a Miami bakery
Sample SEO finding
Your Google Business Profile lists only 'bakery' and 'Cuban restaurant' as primary categories — missing 'pastry shop,' 'wedding bakery,' and 'cake shop,' each a separate set of 'near me' searches you're invisible for from anywhere in Little Havana or Brickell. Your profile is English-only; 'panadería cubana cerca de mí' returns three competitors in your zip and none of them is you. Your TripAdvisor profile has 24 reviews averaging 4.4 stars with two unanswered one-stars from snowbird season — both visible in the first page of search for your bakery name. Your quinceañera-cake page is four clicks from the homepage; the shop ranking above you has 'Pedir un Pastel de Quinceañera' as the first link on their Google profile. Adding Spanish profile copy, the missing categories, the one-click cake link, and replying to the two TripAdvisor one-stars should move you into the top three for 'panadería near me' and 'bakery near me' within 30–45 days.
Sample social post — Instagram
bakeries.miami.deon
Sábado en Calle Ocho. Pastelitos de guayaba, croquetas de jamón, y la primera tanda de pan cubano del día. Café colao en la barra. Open at 6 a.m. — cerramos cuando se acaba. 🥐☕
#littlehavana #panaderia #miamibakery #pastelitos #cafecito
Does DEON know Miami bakery neighborhoods specifically, or just 'Miami' as a whole?
DEON works at the neighborhood level. A Little Havana panadería gets different recommendations than a Doral Argentine pastry shop, a Hialeah quinceañera cake counter, or a Wynwood modern bakery. Map-pack tracking, competitor analysis, and content are tied to your specific corner — not citywide generalities.
Can DEON generate Spanish content for my panadería?
Yes. DEON drafts Google profile content, Instagram captions, and review replies in Spanish, English, or the natural code-switch most Miami bakeries actually use. Your shop on Calle Ocho or in Hialeah shows up in 'panadería cerca de mí' searches instead of being silently absent in Spanish.
How does DEON handle hurricane season?
DEON pre-drafts the pre-storm pickup push, closure messages for Google and Instagram, and the re-open campaign during June through November. When a system is named, the messaging is already in your dashboard waiting for approval — not something you write with the power flickering.
How is DEON different from asking ChatGPT to write bakery captions?
ChatGPT writes whatever you ask but doesn't know your Google profile, your Instagram, your reviews, or which Miami neighborhoods your customers come from. DEON audits the marketing system around your bakery and drafts captions, replies, and Google posts in context. ChatGPT is a writing tool. DEON is the marketing manager that uses tools like it on your behalf.
What does DEON cost for a Miami bakery?
Same as everywhere — no Miami surcharge. Free covers 20 daily searches, a website evaluation, and a basic local SEO snapshot, no card. Pro at $20/month adds the full audit, bilingual Instagram and Google posts, review monitoring across Google, Yelp, and TripAdvisor, and the holiday and quinceañera calendar. Unlimited at $40 adds SMS alerts. 7-day money-back guarantee.
Does DEON track TripAdvisor for tourist-zone bakeries?
Yes. DEON monitors TripAdvisor alongside Google, Yelp, and Facebook. In South Beach, Brickell, Wynwood, and other tourist-heavy zones, TripAdvisor matters more than most US cities because of international visitor traffic — DEON drafts replies in the language the review was written in.
Quinceañera and wedding cakes are most of my profit. Can DEON push those?
Yes. DEON surfaces custom-cake work — the inquiry form, the gallery, the tasting booking — across your Google profile, Instagram bio, and homepage in both languages. Captions are drafted for the tasting reveal, the delivery, and the consultation invitation.
Will my Instagram captions sound like every other Miami bakery using AI?
No. DEON learns your bakery's voice from your menu and any past posts you point it at. A Calle Ocho panadería shouldn't sound like a Doral Argentine pastry shop or a Wynwood modern bakery — and they won't. The format may stay consistent across a week; the voice doesn't blur.