Archive for the ‘small business’ Category

Small Business Should Embrace Content Marketing

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Content marketing is a tactic any small business owner can use to promote their business.

Why invest time with content marketing?

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Content Marketing: Small Business

GeorgeBowersGrocery

Uh, oh: Everyone is a Publisher

The paradox: marketing your business online is cheap and effective. But, it is time consuming. The effort involved is a commitment many overworked, independent business owners cannot afford. I can relate! There are too many other things to do to keep the lights on—particularly if your business is so “micro” that you’re the entire marketing department!

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Personal Profile to Business Profile on Facebook

 

Friend or foe? No, the question is: friend or business page when it comes to Facebook.

 

In the rush to “get on Facebook” many have made a common mistake. The mistake is setting a personal profile but using it for a business. Are you “friends” with a business? Tsk, tsk. That small business set it up wrong. No worries, though: it’s an easy fix. Here’s the “how” and “why”:

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Welcome, Rich Women

Helen B. Rich & "Chinese Gordon" (LOC)
Image by The Library of Congress via Flickr

Hey, Rich Women!

Thanks for dropping in. I’m pleased to be the latest woman profiled on Kim Kiyosaki‘s site “Rich Woman“. (Thanks, Sara Korn!)

If you are curious about real estate, you can see my Victorian restoration project for sale here.

Questions? Happy to discuss my content marketing and commercial writing business (this website). Or, if you want to discuss the challenges and joy of running a business with your life partner, I’m happy to do that, too. As the profile mentions, my husband and I jointly own and operate George Bowers Grocery, an independent specialty grocery based in Staunton, Virginia.

Thanks for stopping by – hope to hear from you about your creative projects, too.

Sincerely,

Katie
@KatieMcCaskey

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In Cheap (Groceries) We Trust

In Cheap We Trust

In Cheap We Trust

I’ve just finished In Cheap We Trust by Lauren Weber.

It’s a fascinating look at what most of us have probably felt at one time or another: a vexing pull between the extremes of thrift and consumer consumption.

It is particularly compelling as frugality and so-called “Recession Chic” are edging into the mainstream again. The book discusses why some groups are maligned as “cheap” and how the term itself has evolved.

I read it with an eye towards what the concept of “cheap” means for our small business (a “Mom-and-Pop” neighborhood grocery) and other independent retailers.

Our grocery store will celebrate its 1st year next month. We’ll make that milestone thanks to some decisions that directly relate to the concept of “cheap”. We made some of these decisions intuitively and some after great thought and focus.

For example, we realized early on that we couldn’t compete with grocery chains on price. We couldn’t “race to the bottom” with discounts. You simply cannot compete with volume and deep pockets of big box stores.

Nor did we want to attract the kinds of customers who were loyal only to price.

So, we don’t compete on price. We compete on value.

We define “value” a few ways. Service is paramount. Our store is modeled on one that existed in 1881. We strive to recreate a vital hub in the community and an experience. We know our core customers by name and know their dietary preferences. People come for the conversation. In modern life where do you find that kind of service?

Could we use improvement? Of course.

We are aggressively moving our product assortment to specialty food items unavailable elsewhere in the local market. These are premium food products with premium prices. But, unlike a hectic trip to a mega-retailer our customers are paying for quality food and value in the form of service and experience. For many, they are also paying for the walkable convenience.

I would caution other small retailers from trying to “compete with cheap”. It is a losing battle for two reasons. First, you’re competing with bigger companies with greater sales volume. Secondly, you compete against yourself. What does your customer do when you tell them you’ve stopped your special buy-one-get-one-free promotion? If they are price-only shoppers you’ll never see them again.

After reading In Cheap We Trust I felt really satisfied with our rule that nothing in our grocery is ever “on sale”. It’s not because I’m uninterested in getting a “bargain” (who isn’t trained to think this way?). Rather, it is because I agree with Weber’s words in the conclusion when she asks, “what kind of customer do I want to be?”

Personally, I’d like to be one who chooses to spend carefully, and with the greatest positive benefit to my community and world.

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Class: Facebook for Business Use

Image representing Facebook as depicted in Cru...
Image via CrunchBase

Introduction to Facebook for Business Use

Today, there are more grandparents on Facebook than teenagers. This broad demographic shift reveals the ever-growing trend of connectivity between all of us. Is your small business capturing this trend?

This hands-on class will showcase specific steps you should take to harness Facebook for promoting and marketing your small business. I’ll use our small business, George Bowers Grocery, as a case-study for interacting directly with our most dedicated core customers.

You will learn:

  • How to set up a Facebook business profile and its benefits
  • When and how to update your business page
  • How to send updates to your fans
  • How to feature your page on related business pages
  • How to connect your business blog to your Facebook business page

Each participant will leave with a detailed to-do list as well as recommended apps to extend the productivity of your business’s Facebook page.

NOTE: This class is extremely limited due to the personal and direct attention given to all participants.

This class is two hours.

Price: $175
Location: 9 South Augusta Street, Staunton at the Staunton Creative Community Fund offices
Next Session: Saturday, October 17th

Reserve your space now by paying online via debit or credit card.



You may also pay at the door if enrollment space allows.
For more info: 540-466-4141

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