Write with a Clear Message

[You can download the ebook of this series in our Subscribers' Vault.]

By Denise McGill
This is the 3rd article in a series of four to help small and rural businesses write sales-generating web content, product descriptions, sales letters and more. In last week’s article, Write to “Benefit” Your Customer, we touched on creating catalog and web product descriptions that promote the desire to purchase your company’s products. This week, we will fine tune a little more and touch on writing clear, tight copy so that every word works toward building customer confidence, appealing to customer emotions, creating a strong call to action, and ultimately making the sale.

Don’t make Customers Read Sentences Twice...

because they won’t! To begin writing clear copy your customers must get the meaning of your message the first time. If you have long, rambling sentences, they tend to complicate your promotion and your catalog or sales letter may end up in the trash. Break into smaller sentences to make your message much more palatable and keep your customers reading. Long, rambling sentences seldom come to the point and leave customers confused.

Especially with web or catalog product descriptions – every word must count. Catalog space is typically limited and too many neutral words or phrases such as:
  • with this…
  • there is…
  • these are just a few…
  • you’ll be sure…
add no value to content and waste space. With online users, you typically have just a few seconds to grab a potential customer’s attention, so make sure you don’t waste their time with content that adds nothing to the product’s description. Remember their finger is on the mouse and losing a potential customer is just a click away.

With the compliments and permission of Sturbridge Yankee Workshop, I’ve picked a product description I wrote for them to highlight an example of tight copy. As you read the description, pay attention to what other unique factors are in play with this particular piece of writing.

Americana Patchwork Throw – ©Sturbridge Yankee Workshop - 2008

Bundle up in the glory and heritage of early Americana. Patches of firecracker reds, linen whites and sparkling sea blues bring a nostalgic, warm touch to décor. Made of 100% tufted cotton, this throw is the perfect lightweight solution for summer and autumn evenings. Place across the foot of the bed or drape over the sofa arm for a cozy warmth when you need it. 50”x 60”.

Besides the tight and clear description, did you catch some of the subtle and not so subtle attributes of this description?
  • Right off the bat, the copy begins with a verb – action is noted immediately. You want to move the customer from a passive state to an active state. Here, the customer envisions himself/herself – bundling up in this throw.
  • This copy also has emotional appeal to your customer– pride in American heritage and sense of patriotism. This product makes a customer feel good about the purchase.
  • Benefits of the product are also noted and key to a successful description. In this example, uses for this throw are suggested: lightweight solution for summer and autumn evenings, place at the foot of the bed… Let your customer know how your product is of value to them.

This description not only makes every word count, it appeals to an emotional hot button and has the customer envisioning himself or herself using the product. In 65 short words, this description covers a lot of territory! Questions about the product itself are answered and it engages the customer with clear benefits.

Next week, my 4th and final article will focus on sales letters and promotional materials for marketing purposes. We’ll talk about building credibility, distinguishing yourself from the competitor and a basic formula for a successful promotion.

Author Bio:
Can’t seem to find the right words to sell your product? Denise McGill is a freelance copywriter specializing in catalog product description, copy makeovers, web content, landing pages, promotional materials, sales letters, articles and more. Visit her website at http://www.mcgillcopywriting.com for more information on giving your business the competitive edge. Also, take a moment to subscribe to her online newsletter to receive more writing tips and hints.

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IRS Offers Small Business Owners Help

The IRS has a very nice video/audio section for Small Business issues.

I realize that many small business owners do not like to consider the tax side of their business. This is a bad idea. Eventually you will have to pay attention even if only once a year when you file your tax returns.


You can watch each video as many times as you want until the tax ramifications become clear. Then you will have a better basis from which to discuss your unique situation with your tax adviser.

Check it out.


Twitter resources for small towns

Hutch 306More rural and small town folks are getting on Twitter. As I get to speak to more and more groups about it, I think we need a special guide to link you up with some friendly faces on Twitter and some resources to help you get started. Like a bus full of friends to show you around.

First off, feel free to follow me. I'm @BeckyMcCray. More friendly small town people on Twitter include:
Once you follow some of these folks, be sure to say hello to them. Do spell the username right, or they won't see it! So to connect with @OkieJ, you might tweet this:
@okiej Hi! Found you in the small town Twitter list.
Get the idea? Great!

Here are some more rural resources:

Beginning guides to Twitter:

My top tips:
  1. Fill in your profile and add your photo. I want to know you're a real person.
  2. Use Twellow.com to find folks in your industry or your region. It's like yellow pages for Twitter.
  3. Share great links and favorite resources. Those are always interesting.
  4. Let your personality show. We'd love to get to know you a bit better.
  5. Give it some time. You might not connect with Twitter right away; most people don't. So give it some time as you get used to using it.
Suggestions? Ideas? People I left out? I did this off the top of my head, so I know there will be. Please, leave them in the comments!


Photo by Becky McCray
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Your new friends from Michigan

Traverse CityAt the Rural Partners of Michigan, I met some wonderful folks. Maybe you saw some of the live-tweets with the tag, #ruralconf. Together, we launched a whole new group of Twitter users and social network participants.

Here are the folks from the conference who I've found so far:

AlHooper / Allan Hooper, conference chair
BL5GR7 / Linda Kotzian
Tim_Hardesty / Tim Hardesty
Leonrc / Ronnie Coleman
Cathyfairbanks / Cathy Fairbanks
jimdraze / Jim Draze
EricJTobin / Eric Tobin
RoniWeaver / Roni Weaver
leavitt9 /
LisaHadden / Lisa Hadden
sjwyman / Sherry Wyman
BGarmon / Brad Garmon

If I missed anyone, let me know in the comments.

I encourage you to meet some of these great folks, and make some new networking connections.

Tomorrow, I'll have a post on small town resources on Twitter, along with some getting started resources.


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Third Thursday is changing Hutchinson

When I saw what an exciting thing the Third Thursday downtown in Hutchinson was, I grabbed my cell phone, and Jim Seitnater, the Downtown Development Director for Hutchinson, and did a quick interview. The quality of my cell phone video is awful, but the content is terrific.



Jim explains how one committed artist took a terrific annual art walk evening, and convinced everyone to make it a monthly affair. Now on Third Thursday, the downtown is alive with music and people.

Anne Dowell of Apron Strings in Hutchinson was super busy with a Third Thursday night crowd. She took one minute out to do another cell phone interview with me. The sound is terrible, but Anne says you can never outguess the customers!


Caught on the #Hutch blogger tour.


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Share your good news

Each Friday, I open the Brag Basket for the weekend. It's designed as a fun place for you to share your projects and accomplishments. But you can also cheer for other people, give shout outs, congratulate, and even give someone a well-deserved pat on the back.

Think that bragging is a bad thing? Read how Tony explains the Brag Basket.

The Brag Basket is open for everyone, whether from a small town, a big city, or anywhere in the world. (But it's true that I love small town brags!)

Will you put something in the Brag Basket this week? You can brag on a friend, your own project, yourself, others, anything! (Don't copy and paste an ad, though, OK?) You don't need special permission, and you don't have to be from a small town. Just leave a comment right here. There's no deadline, so you can brag anytime during the weekend, and I'll open a fresh Brag Basket each Friday.


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Good News in NW Iowa

From Jack Shultz Boomtown Institute April 21, 2009


Take Charge of Your Community Within the past couple of weeks, we have received two great stories from community leaders telling about the positive things happening in their hometowns. Each involves a powerful Can Do Spirit.

Estherville, IA You spoke at our chamber banquet in Estherville, Iowa about five years ago in our new community complex. Remember? That spirit you felt at that time is alive and well today! Today, the national economy is in a recession. But in Estherville, we just opened two new industries (25 new jobs), will open two new retail stores in the next few days and weeks, opened a new coffee shop and have several new business prospects. Wow! Sure, we've had some layoffs by local industries. We do our best to assist with that but we don't let the negative dictate how we operate here. We completed a 10-year strategic plan last year and now have more than a 100 volunteers working on the nine overall goals and 38 specific strategies identified to get us started. We raised $100,000 in 100-days to get folks started. In the next few years, I believe we will re-open a local downhill ski facility, develop a new ATV trails park, develop a new RV camp ground, develop a new moto-cross riding and racing facility, expand our trails system and much more. Lyle Hevern, Mayor, 24th year
reposted from Jack Shultz Boomtown Newsletter.


I re-post this from Jack’s newsletter because it really hit home to me. Before my move to Oklahoma 33 years ago, Estherville Iowa was a second home to me. I lived in neighboring Minnesota and Estherville was a short drive that I made often. I still have many friends in that area and in fact, two of my now grown sons live 12 miles from Estherville. I understand from them that employment is getting a little tough there and this article makes me feel a little more positive about their future ability to stay employed. Raising $100,000 in a rural farm community is no small feat, not to mention they did it in 100 days.

So what can we learn from Estherville Iowa?

  • They have a plan for 10 years strategic devlopment
  • They have over 100 volunteers working together
  • They have identified goals with specific strategies

And, most important they have a positive, can-do attitude!

The re-opening of the downhill ski slope and additional development plans will be a plus for the whole rural area. Kudos to Mayor Lyle Hevern!

Carls Bar in Hutchinson




Carl's Bar had a long history in Hutchinson, Kansas. Then an upstart new owner, Dan Heimerman, who moved back home, moved it to a new location, and revived a local tradition. While on the #Hutch blogger tour, I got a minute of Dan's time to talk about what it takes to be an entrepreneur.
Dan is a hands-on owner. I caught him fixing bar stools after our interview. :)
Hutch 115

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What I Learned About Tourism Promotion in Hutchinson Kansas

Hutch 252Serving on a tourism board is fun and challenging. Sometimes we get a little set in our ways and need a good jolt to move on to new ideas. My recent trip with fellow bloggers to Hutchinson Kansas was the jolt I needed. These are some of the things I learned while I was having fun!
  • Think outside the box. It is not always the brochure or the printed map or the billboard that gets new visitors to my attraction or event.
  • Know what I want to promote
  • Decide who I want to tell my story and where I want it told.
  • Find a few experts and let them tell others.
  • Get everyone involved in the process; feel the importance of the tour.

A recent invitation to Hutchinson Kansas gave me a new perspective on tourism promotion. Forget about the traditional flyers, brochures, press releases and radio spots. Invite a BLOGGER to come to your location and show them around. Do they have to be travel bloggers? Not always. In Hutchinson bloggers were invited and came from Iowa, Oklahoma, and Texas and of course Kansas. Not just “travel bloggers” but a mix of interested people who just love to write and share what they know and see and learn with others. This is the think outside the box theory times 8 or 10. This is the “decide who will tell my story” and this is “finding those experts who want to tell others”. The invitation included lodging and meals, which was a real treat for the bloggers.

Know what you want them to see and where you want to take them

In this case the Hutchinson folks had a plan. The group was diverse not only in where they came from, but a mix of male and female, young and old with a common twitter connection. We visited the Cosmosphere and the Underground Salt Mine Museum. We saw a beautifully restored Fox Theater; we experienced Third Thursday downtown Hutchinson. We toured the Amish community of Yoder and visited Indian Creek Bison Ranch. We were fed very well and enjoyed stimulating atmosphere at the Airport Steak House and Carl’s Bar & Grill. Armstrong's Loft was a personal favorite, a great place to end our Hutchinson visit with Amish pie. All of the “providers” knew their role; friendly, accommodating and informative.

Allow time for blogging!

If bloggers had a single complaint it was not enough “down time” to write! We photographed everything we saw, we shot mini video clips from cameras and phones and promptly posted those as we toured. The twitter line was steaming and thousands of followers knew what we were doing almost instantly. The city of Hutchinson Kansas got a massive amount of tweet time in two days. And all of the posted comments were included in the package deal and the best part is that those comments continue in a steady stream almost a week after the event.

Most important, what did this trip do for me that will also benefit Hutchinson? http://okiejontheroad.blogspot.com/ yep, I realized that I travel a lot and that I just might have some things to share with others. so OkieJ is going to be sharing travel fun from a new blog. Feel free to drop by!

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Write to Benefit Your Customer

[You can download the ebook of this series in our Subscribers' Vault.]

By Denise McGill

feed store signIf you can answer this one question in your sales materials, “How will this product make my customer’s life better?” you have a formula for a successful promotion. Whether your product is hardware supplies, medical supplies, quilts or rustic furniture, focus on how the merchandise fulfills a need or solves a problem for your customer. In this second part of my four part series on writing for your small business, I will be concentrating on writing copy jam-packed with product benefits! The focus of this article will be writing descriptions for your print catalog or website products.


Remember, you are writing to sell product! Great copy is just another tool you can use to run a successful, profitable business. Copy that successfully combines a product’s features with customer benefits makes the sale. So let’s take a closer look at these two components - features and benefits. Both are necessary for a copy description that generates sales.

First, what exactly is a product feature? Features provide the description and specifications of an item. You can find a product’s features in the instructions or user guide that come with the product. Some examples of typical features would be:
  • product material ( stainless steel, cotton, plastic, etc)
  • product function (tells time, toasts bread, slices meat, etc)
  • size and dimension
  • colors available
  • # of pieces
  • Price




Next, look at the second component - benefits. Incorporating benefits, not just features, into your copy descriptions, promote the desire to purchase product. They make an appeal to the customer and fulfill a need. Benefits show your customer what he stands to gain by purchasing your product. Benefits answer questions such as:



  • Will this product make life easier or provide a convenience?
  • Does the product solve a problem?
  • Will the product save time or money?
  • Does this product alleviate a fear?
  • Does the product flatter?
  • Is the product exclusive?

Below, is a description a medical supplier might use for one of his products. This supplier’s customer base would be hospitals, clinics and doctors, so the writing must focus on this particular clientele’s needs. This example is for a skin stapler often used after surgery.


Skin Stapler 35W Sterile:

Shorten surgery time and get consistent, professional results with this welcome companion. An alternative to stitches, this compact design holds a generous 35 staples and fits comfortably in the palm of your hand for maximum control. With no need to disinfect, stapler provides a sterile and affordable option for every medical professional. $19.99

Having just discussed the need for features and benefits in your writing, let’s dissect this sample and list the product’s features first. They would be:

  • Stapler
  • Holds 35 staples
  • Sterile
  • $19.99

Would the above features alone sell this particular product? Most likely, they wouldn’t. You want to take the basic features of the product and turn them into a product your customer can’t live without. If a product solves a problem or makes life easier for your customer, you are more likely to make the sale. Here I have listed the features again and how that feature benefits the customer.

  • Stapler = shorter surgery time, professional results, alternative to stitches
  • Holds 35 staples = compact for comfortable use, ease of control, fits in palm
  • Sterile = No need for disinfecting
  • $19.99 = affordable, saves money.

Also, note that the introductory sentence in your writing should be the most important. Customers tend to skim copy so the introductory sentence should draw them in immediately and with your most important benefit.

Lastly, but one of the most important things to do with your writing when you are through is to Retire and Revise. When you have finished writing several descriptions for the day, retire the writing and come back to it in a day or two. Then…read it aloud. You will be amazed at the awkward sentences you stumble over or sentences that need to be clarified. Look for typos, revise and make sure the description reads smoothly and clearly.

About Denise

Can’t seem to find the right words to sell your product? Denise McGill, of Naples, ID (pop. 600), is a freelance copywriter specializing in catalog product description, copy makeovers, web content, landing pages, promotional materials, sales letters, articles and more. Visit her website at http://mcgillcopywriting.com for more information on giving your business the competitive edge. Also, take a moment to subscribe to her online newsletter to receive writing tips and hints.


Feed store sign photo by Becky McCray

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Yoder Hardware

We're still gathering the Point of View of small businesses all over.




This time I'm at Yoder Hardware in Yoder, Kansas, talking to Rod Fry, proprietor. How can a business survive in a town of 70 people? Personal service and serving the community.

Captured on the Hutchinson Bloggers Tour #Hutch 

Hutch 103Hutch from Jeanne 113



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Bragging is just sharing

Each Friday, I open the Brag Basket for the weekend. It's designed as a fun place for you to share your projects and accomplishments. But you can also cheer for other people, give shout outs, congratulate, and even give someone a well-deserved pat on the back.

Think that bragging is a bad thing? Read how Tony explains the Brag Basket.

The Brag Basket is open for everyone, whether from a small town, a big city, or anywhere in the world. (But it's true that I love small town brags!)

Will you put something in the Brag Basket this week? You can brag on a friend, your own project, yourself, others, anything! You don't need special permission, and you don't have to be from a small town. Just leave a comment right here. There's no deadline, so you can brag anytime during the weekend, and I'll open a fresh Brag Basket each Friday.


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Host a blogger invasion of your town

Hutch 189
Ready to spread the word about your town or tourism attraction? Maybe you want to run a "fam" or familiarization tour. That's what Hutchinson, Kansas, is doing today.

The usual fam tour targets travel agents, tourism consultants, tour operators, or others who can send direct customers to your town. But Hutch is targeting bloggers.We may not book any tours, but we sure talk, a lot.  They aren't the first town to try it, but they may be one of the smaller towns to pull it off successfully.

Cody Heitschmidt was one of the instigators of the idea, then helped recruit the group of bloggers. You can read a bit more about who's here, and what's on our agenda at "Bloggers Invade Hutchinson."

Any small town tourism business could spearhead a similar event for their own area. You could band together with other towns to generate a truly memorable couple of days for some influential online leaders.

My travel reports will be posted at Out Standing in My Field . So far, it is way, way, way cool.

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Write to Generate Sales


[I'm pleased to introduce a new series of articles by Denise McGill, of Naples, ID (pop. 600). Denise is here to help us all write better in our businesses. You can download the ebook of this series in our Subscribers' Vault. - Becky]

By Denise McGill

Whether your small business is located in the Smoky Mountains, the plains of Nebraska, or a coastal Oregon burg, all business owners have one goal in common…to sell their product or service. So, what is one of the best ways to get customers to take notice of your products? You’re looking at it…the power of words. Fresh, sales-driven writing grabs and holds a customer’s attention. It makes them say, “I gotta have that” and keeps them coming back again and again to your product offerings.

You can use the writing techniques I will be introducing in more places that you imagined. Every time you sit down to create a sales letter to promote your business or introduce a new product line, you will have the need for persuasive, sales-oriented writing. Your website presents an immediate first impression and has the tremendous power to retain customers if your writing is tight, clear and fresh. Catalog descriptions, direct mail pieces, email promotions, ads and flyers sell product – write to create a strong bottom line!

Know who your customer is

Before you begin writing extraordinary marketing materials, flyers or catalog product descriptions, get to know who your customer is. As simple as this seems, it is important to have a good understanding of your basic customer profile. Things like age group, demographics, income, interests and hobbies all play into who you are writing for. This allows you to get a good picture of your typical customer so you can better serve their needs. Most of us know who our local customers are, but if you have internet sales – you will have nationwide and even global customers. It pays to know your entire customer base.

Just as importantly, listen to what customers have to say. They can offer valuable insight into your product offerings, merchandise they would like to see offered or suggestions for improvement. Most customers are more than happy to offer feedback because you have acknowledged them as vital to your business.


As easy as talking to a neighbor

Now that you have established who your customer is, let’s talk about the style of writing. The trend is to keep your writing (also known as copy) conversational and informal. This means:
  • build rapport with your customers and keep your writing understandable for EVERYONE. Don’t make customers drag out the dictionary. Unless you are targeting a very specific customer niche, you stand to lose a broader customer base.
  • keep hype to a minimum. No one likes to feel he or she is being “sold.”
  • create accurate, trustworthy copy. Not only does writing “honest” copy keep you out of hot water with your customers, it builds customer loyalty.
  • be passionate about your business and products. It is infectious!

Writing so everyone can understand your copy keeps potential customers from tossing your promotion or catalog in the trash out of frustration. So keep it simple, friendly, engaging and conversational.


Appeal to the Senses

To create this engaging, conversational copy, appeal to your customer’s senses. When a customer receives your catalog in the mail or are viewing products on your website, they don’t have the luxury of handling the merchandise. They can’t taste your award winning cinnamon rolls or hear your harbor wind chimes.

To sell product, your words must be the eyes, ears, nose, hands and taste buds for potential customers. The following fruitcake example lets your customer see, smell and taste the cake through description:

Simply Sinful Fruitcake

Bite sized pieces of luscious fruit cake smothered in creamy milk chocolate is an alluring temptation around the holidays or any occasion. Not to be confused with your plain jane fruit cake, this cake is loaded with cherries, candied pineapple, walnuts, pecans and raisins. Add 100 proof bourbon, premium dark rum and 84 proof brandy to this mixture and you have a treat no one can resist!

By engaging a customer’s senses, you create a fruitcake description that a customer can literally taste and see. Bite sized portions, smothered in creamy milk chocolate and loaded with cherries…provide a mouth-watering description to let the customer experience the product as if they were in your bakery.

This is the first of four articles to give insight into writing copy for selling your goods and services. This first article lays a beginning foundation for creating sales-generating copy. Know your customer, keep the writing conversational and appeal to their senses. The next article will focus on product benefits. Today’s copy must do more that list product features; it must let the customer picture a better life!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Denise McGill is a freelance copywriter specializing in catalog product description, copy makeovers, landing pages, promotional materials, sales letters, articles and more. Visit her website at http://mcgillcopywriting.com for more information.





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Business consultants or business coaches

What is the difference between business consultants and business coaches? And how do you use them differently?

Bryan NolandEntrepreneur Bryan Nolan put it this way, "A coach is for you, a consultant is for your business."

A consultant is usually called in to work on a specific project or to address a problem. A coach is there for you, to improve your business skills over a long term.

Agi Lurtz"Tiger (Woods) has five coaches," entrepreneur Agi Lurtz pointed out. "My business coach, the very first meeting, made it real clear to me, 'I'm going to be your friend, but I won't be nice.'" 

"I thought I knew it all after seven business," Agi said. "I knew nothing. Nothing."

"Get a business coach, period," she said. "I don't care how much money you have or don't have."

Agi and Bryan spoke at the Innovation Interactive Oklahoma Entrepreneurship Conference. Agi Lurtz is founder of Online Med Source, and Bryan Nolan is founder of Technology Mavericks.

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Tool: InvoiceMore

Another online invoice service? Yes, and for good reason. We need an online invoice service that excels at recurring invoices. That's what Vance Lucas decided, so he started InvoiceMore.

Here's an example. You create and host websites for customers. You bill customers for monthly hosting, annual domain names, and quarterly maintenance. With most invoice services, that would mean making three separate recurring invoices. With InvoiceMore, it means three recurring products, but just one invoice. Better for you, better for customers.

Vance put it this way, "Clients don’t ask for recurring Invoices. They ask for recurring products and services."

You can try it out with a limited free account, at Invoice More. Support your local technology startups!

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A brag can be a great thing

Each Friday, I open the Brag Basket for the weekend. It's designed as a fun place for you to share your projects and accomplishments. But you can also cheer for other people, give shout outs, congratulate, and even give someone a well-deserved pat on the back.

Think that bragging is a bad thing? Read how Tony explains the Brag Basket.

The Brag Basket is open for everyone, whether from a small town, a big city, or anywhere in the world. (But it's true that I love small town brags!)

Will you put something in the Brag Basket this week? You can brag on a friend, your own project, yourself, others, anything! You don't need special permission, and you don't have to be from a small town. Just leave a comment right here. There's no deadline, so you can brag anytime during the weekend, and I'll open a fresh Brag Basket each Friday.

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the handwriting on the wall

Gino's makes great pizza. They take a long time baking it. We're not talking 20 minutes long time. We're talking 45-50 minutes from the time the order is taken until you start to eat.
That's a long time, no matter how good the pizza is.

So Gino's, in Chicago, somehow came up with a great distraction. They let you write on the walls.

Really. You can write on the walls. You can write on the table. You can write on the chair (if you use a sharpie so it dries right away.)

You can't write on the walls in the bathroom, though some people write on the signs forbidding it. You can't write on the tablecloth, though they do have crayons and placemats.

I'm loved Gino's for years. I didn't realize until last week, however, that by giving customers, fans really, the opportunity to break the cultural rule that says "don't write on walls", they have permission to keep people waiting for a kind of food that is almost a commodity. Yes, the pizza is terrific--thick, cheesy, chunks of tomato and sausage. But still, fifty minutes?

Why does this matter? Because I'm convinced that there are other rules that, if we didn't worry about them, would help customers become fans. It may not be writing on the walls. It may be using dry erase markers on windows instead of white boards. It may be begging customers to leave comments on your blog, reviews on your website. It may be giving away handfuls of candy with every order of sound equipment (Sweetwater Sound does this, even if the order is a single microphone cable.)

But do something that says, "They care more about a great pizza than they do the walls of their restaurant."


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Hotter Than Hell Night

Collect great ideas everywhere you go. At SXSW, Jim Storer told me about a restaurant that does a Hotter Than Hell Night.

It's the East Coast Grill in Cambridge, MA. They do a whole menu of torturous treats, from cocktails through entrees. Read through their creative names, recipes and descriptions. They do offer a bit of "food for wimps" and even an antidote, for a small wimp charge. (See page 2 of the menu.)

The whole night is eagerly awaited. Crowds form. People drive for miles and miles to get there. Servers dress up in firefighter gear. The whole staff gets into it. It is an experience.

That's what you want to build with your business: experiences.What great ideas have you collected lately?

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Is failure an option

"Failure is always an option." --Adam Savage, Mythbusters

"Options are optional - failure is a failure to see options - food for thought" --Geo Geller, @geogeller on Twitter
If you are in business, you face the possibility of failure. If you have the typical attitude toward failure, then you fear it, try to hide it, or find excuses when it happens.

How can you make a better attitude? Realize that failure usually means a learning opportunity. Chose to accept that bad things can and will happen. Recognize that you might be better off after you fail than you were before, even if you can't see it right away.

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Friday means Brag Basket

Each Friday, I open the Brag Basket for the weekend. It's designed as a fun place for you to share your projects and accomplishments. But you can also cheer for other people, give shout outs, congratulate, and even give someone a well-deserved pat on the back.

The Brag Basket is open for everyone, whether from a small town, a big city, or anywhere in the world. (But it's true that I love small town brags!)

Will you put something in the Brag Basket this week? You can brag on a friend, your own project, yourself, others, anything! You don't need special permission, and you don't have to be from a small town. Just leave a comment right here. There's no deadline, so you can brag anytime during the weekend, and I'll open a fresh Brag Basket each Friday.

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Farmers Market Webinar April 8 2009

farmers marketWhy are we sharing the farmers market webinar?
  1. We get quite a few searches on farmers markets.
  2. Local foods are a huge trend in small town business.
  3. Their next two topics are finding your target market and youth entrepreneurship.
Here's the info from the nationwide eXtension group:

Tips and Tricks for Successful Farmers' Markets

On Wednesday, April 8, 2009, at 2:00pm (EST) the eXtension Entrepreneurs and Their Communities webinar topic will be Tips and Tricks for Successful Farmers' Markets. Farmers' markets are increasing in popularity. They provide an excellent way for beginning farmers, craftspeople, and artisans to get established. Successful markets are those that know their customers and have a good market structure. Dr. Jennifer Dennis of Purdue University will discuss key consumer trends that will aid vendors in selling as well as key traits of a good market master.

Join Dr. Dennis,Specialty Crop Marketing Extension Specialist, for an overview of how to maximize the potential of your Farmers' Market. If you are a farmers' market manager, a vendor or a farmer considering adding farmers' markets to your marketing mix, be sure to join us on Wednesday, April 8 at 2:00pm Eastern Time (please adjust for your time zone).

Help us to spread the word about this session. No pre-registration is required and there is no fee to participate. About 10 minutes prior to the start time simply go the Adobe Connect Pro meeting room at http://connect.extension.iastate.edu/ecop/. You will be presented with a login screen that has an "Enter as Guest" option. Enter your first name, last name and state, then click "Enter Room" to join the conference. To hear the audio of the workshop and participate in the Q and A portion of the workshop we will be using a built-in teleconferencing capability of Adobe’s Connect Pro conferencing software. Once you log into the meeting you will be presented with the option to enter your call-back number, your phone will automatically be called. After entering your number you will be automatically called and joined into the audio portion of the Web conference on your phone.

Newcomers to online learning are welcome!

Mark your calendars now for upcoming topics!
  • May 13, 2009 - Finding Your Target Market using Marketmaker
  • June 10, 2009 - Youth Entrepreneurship Programs
By the way, there are some EPA grants for farmers markets: 
EPA has announced an opportunity to seek grant funds (no match required) for local governments and non-profit organizations (among others) to promote, expand or improve domestic farmers markets, roadside stands, etc.  Approximately $5M is available with awards ranging from $2,000 to $5,000.  Logon to http://www.ams.usda.gov/fmpp for program details.
Photo by Becky McCray.
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