Local investing could solve several rural business problems

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What if we could change investing from a gamble in the stock market into a local development tool? That's the basic question behind Amy Cortese's book "Locavesting: The Revolution in Local Investing and How to Profit From It."

New required reading for rural economic development: @locavesting #ecodev
Locavesting: The Revolution in
Local Investing
now required reading for rural
economic developers. 
This book does a great job of explaining the problems in the current financial system, and laying out the alternatives that are being tried. Cortese talks about the revolution in innovative financing plans like royalty financing and alternative business models like cooperatives. Each one includes an explanation, examples of who is using it, and where to find more information.

Locavesting is now required reading for everyone working in rural economic development. It's that important to find new ways to spur local investment. 

Amy took time for a Q&A with us on local investing. 

 What steps can existing small town businesses take to access financing alternatives today?

Community development loan funds and venture funds exist in most states and are a good option for small businesses that cannot get reasonable bank loans. (To find one near you, try cdfi.org). If you’re a sustainable food or agriculture-related business, look for your nearest Slow Money chapter. Some areas have a local investment club or an active angel network. And “crowdfunding” web sites such as Kiva, Kickstarter, ProFounder, and Prosper all offer ways to ways for entrepreneurs to raise funds. Also, many businesses that fill a need in a community—whether for a bookstore or cafĂ©—have found that their neighbors are often more than willing to invest in the venture. A number of restaurants, for example, have pre-sold meals as a way to raise capital. Others have borrowed money from customers. Finally, if your capital needs are high and you have a good following (and don’t mind giving up some ownership), consider selling shares through a direct public offering, which is a less expensive, “do-it-yourself” version of an IPO.


Several of the tools, like regional stock exchanges, work best when an entire region bands together. But rural regions have a notoriously hard time working together. Is this a realistic goal?
I think that will vary. But state-wide stock exchanges I believe are a workable idea. When financing is confined to one state, federal securities regulations are often superceded by state regulations. That simplifies the process for companies based in a particular state to raise money from residents—the way Ben& Jerry’s did when they raised their first round of funding in Vermont in 1984. (The company went public in an IPO the following year).


What steps can rural and small town economic developers take to support more local investing?

There is a sea change in thinking in economic development policy. Rather than trying lure in the ‘big game’ — in other words, a large factory or big-box store—with taxpayer giveaways, many economic planners are realizing that if they help their homegrown small businesses grow and expand, they can create jobs and boost tax revenues without being dependent on a single employer that might move on to greener pastures. Public-private partnerships and innovative incubator-type programs are being successfully tried across the country. New York City is not exactly rural, but it has created an interesting program to boost the city’s growing ranks of food entrepreneurs with a $10 million fund (funded by Goldman Sachs and the city) that lends to small food manufacturers. You could imagine adding a community-funded option onto that. In Ohio, the Economic and Community Development Institute is launching an Invest Local Ohio program that lets Central Ohians put money in a fund that makes loans to the area’s small businesses, and receive a modest fixed return.

Chapter 2 sounds like a trashing of the financial sector. Do you mean it to be?
Well, I wouldn’t say “trashing.” But I’m certainly not the first to point out that the financial system has become dysfunctional. Wall Street would rather chase trading profits and lucrative derivatives markets than engage in the kind of productive capital raising that was once its mainstay. And that sort of risky finance has brought us to the brink of collapse. The financial sector is doing a lousy job of allocating capital to productive use – when 99% of all the money flying around the stock market goes to trading and speculation, and an ever shrinking fraction goes to funding companies, that is a problem. And the megabanks that dominate the market now are not well suited for small business lending. So many small but worthy companies are falling through the cracks. And let’s not forget that small businesses create 2 out of every 3 jobs in this country.


How do we balance the need for more open financing for small business, against the need for investor protection?

That is a valid concern. But I think we have erred on the side of caution to the point where we have cut off a huge pool of potential capital for small companies, and have prevented individuals from investing in companies they know and trust. The world has changed a lot since the 1930s when our regulatory framework was put into place. Today, information is much more freely available, and investors are able to vet companies in ways that they could not imagine 80 years ago. It’s a little crazy that you can gamble away all of your savings in a casino in Las Vegas—or on the stock market, for that matter—but you can’t easily put money in a private company that is familiar to you and that you believe has good prospects.

More resources on Locavesting: 

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Brag Basket full of candy corn

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The Brag Basket is our tradition of sharing. The basket is always free and open all weekend, this one October 28-30, 2011.

Pumpkin Pie Candy Corn (2)
Oct 30 is National Candy Corn Day. FYI.
Photo by SnarkyGurl
Don't hold back because of that word, "brag." When you hold back, you hide your good news and accomplishments that might inspire others. Even though I call this the Brag Basket, it's not really about bragging. It's about sharing.

What can you do in the Brag Basket?
  • introduce yourself
  • share some great news from this week
  • congratulate a friend
  • laugh about something wonderful that you tried that failed
  • applaud for each other

Speak up and add yourself or another deserving soul in the comments. We all cheer, and everyone feels great. It lets you meet each other a bit. Reading each others' stories brings us a bit closer to being a community.

How does it work? You write a comment on this post.

This is not an ad. (I delete the ads.) It's a conversation with friends. So jump in. And remember to cheer for each other.


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How to search Small Biz Survival

1 comments
Reader Paul Gothier of RTP Designs LLC asked how to search for past articles here on Small Biz Survival, so I thought now was a great time to show you how.

Find our search box at the top left. 
At the top of the page, you'll see a toolbar, including a search box at the top left. That is the built in search-function, and it's the easiest way to find anything you're looking for here.

How else can you find the good stuff? 
Below each post is the "You might also like" section, with a few suggestions of articles that could be related.

Also, don't miss our categories. You'll find those linked underneath the "You might also like" section. At the bottom of each page, there are links to the latest five posts in each of our main categories: entrepreneurship, tourism, marketing and economic development.

We even have a category for the Best of Small Biz Survival, in case you want to see our "greatest hits."

Thanks for asking, Paul!

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What if your business is not making it?

6 comments
Sometimes I ask the hard questions or make the hard points. This is one of those times.

a change is in store
Photo by my friend Gloria Bell.
If your business is not making it, then it is time to change something. 

Let me share a couple of examples.

But I Can't Afford To! Part 1
When I suggested small business people delegate some tasks, one response I got was:
Delegate to whom? Most of the small business owners and farmers I know are owner operators and hire folks on an as needed basis. We have no full or even part time labor other than ourselves.
If you can, grow that business. Then let it hire, either on payroll or on contract as appropriate. You may have to change your thinking. If you have an "I'll do it all myself" attitude, you better change it.

Certainly, there are ways to get by for a while. Here are 10 ways to delegate without hiring, for example. But that doesn't mean you keep limping along forever.  If you can't grow the business up to the point it can pay for its own help, then that business is a candidate to abandon.

But I Can't Afford To! Part 2
In another conversation, I talked about how freelancers could draw the line between what to give away and what to charge for. The discussion veered off with this comment:
How about entrepreneuers that can’t afford to pay someone?
If you really can’t afford to pay anyone, you need to fix your business, and fast. I realize that every entrepreneur has to be frugal, and we all go through rough patches. However, we hold on to a “can’t afford to” mindset much longer than we should. We end up spending our $100 per hour time doing $25 per hour work.

Sounds harsh, I know. Sometimes reality is harsh.

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Who needs to meet you?

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At the Oklahoma Governor's Conference on Small Business, Larry Mocha gave a couple of pieces of pointed networking advice.

Kicking off #okgovcon with Vikki Dearing and Tara Fiechtl
Vikki Dearing from the Oklahoma
Department of Commerce
is a long time friend,
and Tara Fiechtl from CareerTech
was a new friend from the conference. 
You know how it is at conferences; we always gravitate towards the people we already know.

"You're not going to meet anyone new if you just stay comfortable," Larry Mocha said.

"Even if you think YOU don't need to meet new people, there are people out there who need to meet you!"
Too often, we're busy thinking about ourselves. We know everyone here, or we think we do. That may just mean that we owe some amount of debt to those who have helped us along in the past. Maybe it's time to pay it forward by making ourselves open to those who need to meet us.

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I love the Brag Basket

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The Brag Basket is our tradition of sharing. The basket is always free and open all weekend, this one October 21-23, 2011.

2009 they make a jar celebrating that?
I love the Brag Basket. 
Even though I call this the Brag Basket, it's not really about bragging. It's about sharing.

What can you do in the Brag Basket?
  • introduce yourself
  • share some great news from this week
  • congratulate a friend
  • laugh about something wonderful that you tried that failed
  • applaud for each other

Don't hold back because of that word, "brag." When you hold back, you hide your good news and accomplishments that might inspire others.

Speak up and add yourself or another deserving soul in the comments. We all cheer, and everyone feels great. It lets you meet each other a bit. Reading each others' stories brings us a bit closer to being a community.

How does it work? You write a comment on this post.

This is not an ad. (I delete the ads.) It's a conversation with friends. So jump in. And remember to cheer for each other.


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The Biggest Store East of Skiyou

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Cascade Supply, Inc., in Concrete, Washington, is the "You name it - We got it" store. They aren't kidding. There is more packed into this downtown store than you could ever imagine. If you love a good hardware store or lumber yard, this place is a piece of heaven.
Cascade Supply Hardware
Cascade Supply Lumber and Builders Supply. The locals know where Skiyou is. 
Full line hardware store
They aren't kidding about
"You name it, we got it."
The owner, Don, told me that a customer may come wanting three things. If he doesn't have any one of them, the customer is just as likely to leave empty handed, knowing they have to make a trip to the big box store half an hour away. While I was there four people came in with varied requests, and Don met them all. That's how you survive in a small town.

Since he's owned the store for less than a decade, he's still something of a newcomer in town, or so he says.

Don, the hardware store owner
Don is the owner,
and knows where everything is.
Being in the Cascade Range, fishing and hunting and camping are big around here. Don supplies them all, including the firearms. After a rare break-in, they've had to move the guns into a safe. They did keep the rock the thief used to smash the window, though. And they still sell ammo, too.

I found about four things I'd been looking for, but didn't have room in my carry-on to take any of them home. Next time, I'll have Don ship it for me. He said he would.


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Rural entrepreneur tips from Dave Shideler

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Dave Shideler is a fellow rural entrepreneurship-aholic from the Oklahoma State University Agricultural Economics Extension service. After he spoke at the recent Oklahoma Governor's Conference on Small Business, I sat him down for a couple of quick interviews.

Rural small business tips
Dave shares some things any small business could do to improve their chances of success: write your business idea down on paper, do your homework with market research, and make yourself known. He also stressed that you are not alone. Every rural small business has access to some excellent resources, including their public library.




Resources for anyone: 

Resources specific to Oklahoma: 


Rural economic development and entrepreneurship

I also asked Dave about how rural economic development and entrepreneurship work together. He thinks economic development is kind of coming full circle, back to small business. He also talks about the importance of succession planning to rural economic development.


I'm a big fan of Dave's work on rural small business, and was glad we finally got the chance to meet in person. See more at Dave Shideler's Rural Development Page at OSU

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Finding the clients inside your niche

3 comments
The narrower your niche, the wider your opportunity. After I wrote that story, Darrell Hyatt asked a great question:

Sheila Scarborough and Darrell Hyatt
Sheila Scarborough and Darrell Hyatt
share a laugh at dinner
at BlogWorld Expo 2010
When you narrow your niche, how do you find the clients inside it? 

Let me walk you through an example, from my own business Tourism Currents. My co-founder Sheila Scarborough actually drew this out on a big sheet of paper, and it really helped clarify our thinking.

1. Build your business at a knowledge intersection
We focused on tourism and social media marketing.

2. Draw the center 10 ring. Fill it with your target market.
The primary people who market in the tourism business are Convention and Visitor’s Bureaus, also called Destination Marketing Organizations.

3. Then draw the concentric circles of the bullseye. Who else has responsibility for this? Who else does this along with their other things? 
There were many other groups who do some marketing of tourism, as some part of their jobs.
  • Chambers of Commerce, Main Street and Downtown Development Associations
  • State and city governments that do marketing and outreach related to tourism
  • Conference and convention centers, festival and event planners

4. Who needs to know this to help their clients? 
This helps reach out to professionals who might be potential customers and might help you connect to large groups of potential clients.
  • Marketing and Public Relations professionals who do tourism work
  • Associations for tourism and destination professionals 
  • Tourism and hospitality professors and students at colleges and universities

5. What is the fundamental goal of what we do or teach? Who else is using this same skill set? 
The fundamental goal of what we teach is to draw people to a destination by social connections. Lots of other groups are using this same skill set.
  • Historic preservation, heritage trails, historic highways and scenic byways
  • Attractions, museums, parks, agritourism, gardens and nature preserves
  • Niches like culinary, arts, culture, sports, adventure and educational travel
  • Bed and breakfasts, inns, lodges, hotels and motels
As you start brainstorming like this, you'll think of plenty of other people to put in your circles.

Sheila and Nancy
Sheila Scarborough with her local CVB
Director Nancy Yawn, at the Texas
Association of CVBs conference in 2010
Now that you have a detailed list of the organizations, groups, or types of people, you can start attracting them. Rather than go buy an email list and send a blast email to every convention and visitor's bureau in the USA, we searched our networks for people already working in these places, and connected to them. We went to tons of local events in person, and followed distant events via hashtag. We started creating the exact content that they told us they needed. In short, we immersed ourselves in the niche, and we made ourselves the go-to people in tourism and social media.

"Find the niche, fill the niche, and kill the niche." -Mike Klemme

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How to boost holiday sales

1 comments
Holiday season is rolling up on us. How will you make the most of it? Barry Moltz asked me if I could share some tips local business could use, and of course I said yes.

I started with being human, forming a real connection to your customers. And you might recognize a few other points we discuss here, too.

Here's what we came up with: Local Rules: How To Boost Holiday Sales, at Open Forum.

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Come share in the Brag Basket

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The Brag Basket is our tradition of sharing. The basket is always free and open all weekend, this one October 14-16, 2011.

Even though I call this the Brag Basket, it's not really about bragging. It's about sharing.

Cherokee Hope
An Oklahoma Cherokee basket
What can you do in the Brag Basket?

  • introduce yourself
  • share some great news from this week
  • congratulate a friend
  • laugh about something wonderful that you tried that failed
  • applaud for each other

Don't hold back because of that word, "brag." When you hold back, you hide your good news and accomplishments that might inspire others.

Speak up and add yourself or another deserving soul in the comments. We all cheer, and everyone feels great. It lets you meet each other a bit. Reading each others' stories brings us a bit closer to being a community.

How does it work? You write a comment on this post, email me, or catch me on any social network and share your thought.

This is not an ad. (I delete the ads.) It's a conversation with friends. So jump in. And remember to cheer for each other.


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Banding together

2 comments

By Jon Swanson

Leon was the high school band director in a small town in Iowa. He started working on his Master's degree. He figured out some research topic that sounded good, that was like all the rest of the Master's research projects around.

His adviser said, "Forget that. Everyone is doing those kinds of projects. You are in a municipal band. No one studies those. Write about municipal bands."

So Leon did. He wrote about the funding for bands, their roots in communities, the way that high school band directors often ended up being municipal band directors. He was the guy for municipal bands in Iowa.

He's retired from teaching now, but if you ask him about the Hampton Municipal Band, he will tell you all about it, with passion and detail that draws you in. His love for that band and his ability to tell stories means that even I can tell you about the band in Hampton.

    leon and the bandshell
  • The way Thursday night became an event in town, with stores staying open late and farm families coming to town, and the odd practice of everyone sitting in their cars around the block instead of coming into the park. And then beeping their horns instead of applauding.  
  • I can tell you about the delight of sitting on the stage in the early evening, looking through the trees at the courthouse, seeing the sky turn from deep blue to black as the band plays. 
  • And I can tell you about the marathon that Leon and a friend did, spending all day playing all the instruments in a band. Just the two of them. Taking pledges from town and from online. Enough pledges to rebuild the band shell. Tens of thousands of dollars. 
I better be clear. The first two stories I learned from Leon. The third I learned from a lawyer in town, sitting outside at a picnic, talking about what Leon had done for the town. 

It's funny. The whole weekend in Iowa, I thought about Harold Hill, the guy who came to a small town in Iowa to scam the residents. And then I thought of Leon, who came to a small town in Iowa to give life to the residents. With a band. 

It's also funny, or challenging, to realize that other people might be interested in your story about small town bands, if you are. 

Jon was a guest of Franklin County, Iowa, and his lodging and meals were provided as part of the Harvest Tour 2011.  

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Webinar on disaster preparation Thursday

1 comments
Being Prepared: Is Your Business Ready for a Disaster?

Thursday, October 13, 2011
2:00pm (ET); 1:00pm (CT); 12:00pm (MT); 11:00am (PT).

Storm 065
All small businesses are vulnerable
to some type of disaster.
Join George Haynes as he explores how businesses can and have responded to a disaster that affected their business in Being Prepared: Is Your Business Ready for a Disaster. George will help business owners think about the parameters of disasters and what the owner/s can do to protect themselves. He will use his time as a small business owner, data from his research, and experience working with small businesses in Montana and across the country to outline what owners should consider in terms of disaster preparedness. Resources available to help small business owners prepare for a disaster will be provided including EDEN’s ReadyBusiness.

Currently, Dr. Haynes is a professor and extension specialist in the Department of Agricultural Economics and Economics at Montana State University. Dr. Haynes’ primary line of research has been in family business finance, where he has examined the intermingling of family and business resources, explored changes in the financial structure of family business, examined the lending behavior of depository institutions and assessed the response of family businesses to disasters and disaster assistance. He is the past present of the American Council on Consumer Interests and is an associate editor of the Journal of Family and Economic Issues.

Future Topics
Coming up on November 10 webinar will explore The 1099 Economy with Erik Pages, Entreworks Consulting. This presentation will include a conversation regarding the increasing number of Americans who don't have a "regular job" but instead work on individual contracts with employers or customers.

December will feature Beth Adamson, Executive Director of the Prairie Family Business Association discussing business transfer issues in Preparing to Transfer Your Family Enterprise: How, why, when and to WHOM? Business transitions are always difficult and when the business is a “family business”, the task is even harder. This webinar will examine what you need to think about and how and when to communicate transitions plans to family and employees.

How to Join the Webinar
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 https://connect.extension.iastate.edu/etc-cop. You will be presented with a login screen that has an "Enter as Guest" option. Enter your full name then click "Enter Room" to join the conference. You will be able to hear the audio directly from your computer’s speakers.

Newcomers to online learning are welcome!
Contact: Mary Peabody, Email: Mary.Peabody@uvm.edu

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Small town retail ideas Part 2

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At the Revitalize WA conference I sat in on a session by Scott Day with Urban Development Services, on Fifty Ideas for Retailers That Cost Less than $50. This is part two of the best of his tips. Go back and catch part one: Small Town Retail Ideas.


Floor Plans

Oklahoma 018
Boehs Hardware in Helena, Oklahoma,
has an open floor plan,
baskets for shoppers, and
great interior signs.
Floor plans matter. You need to expose the customer to as much merchandise as possible in a clear and concise manner. The area just inside the door and around to the right are the superior selling areas. The back corners are non-performers.

One smart move: make your back wall a wall of WOW! Let it draw customers in. Where their eyes go, their feet will follow, Scott said. Clear the sight lines to hard-to-see sections.

Keep merchandise everywhere customers look. No matter which direction they look, let them see items for sale. For example, 4-way racks for clothing are great for keeping merchandise facing customers.

Keep your store looking full. Use striking display items to fill empty spaces. One cosmetics store used colorful printed shopping bags from their national brand to fill the top shelf area. It gave great graphic appeal, but cost very little. A hardware store bought empty paint cans (with labels) from their national brand to fill in a huge open wall area over their paint display. Paint sales actually went up, because customers perceived they had more in stock.

Get your personal junk out of the front room. And get business junk out of the front room. Use or even rent storage as needed.

Interior Signs 

Hand made signs are OK for handmade merchandise only. Restaurants can use hand-made signs for daily fresh items, but not for staples or other items on sale. Even partially printed signs that allow the retailer to fill in details by hand are better than ones entirely written by hand.

Florescent signs and price stickers convey cheap. And putting too many bright-colored sales "burst" signs is not believable.

Interior Displays
Cuervo Cantina
A favorite interior display
from my retail liquor store.

Light merchandise with halogen spots for a more premium look. For a cheap look, use broad fluorescents.

All elements in the display should tell a complete story and create a sense of urgency.

Make Them Comfortable

Offer chairs and seating areas. You can go as far as making it into a hangout. One women's clothing store put in a waiting area with drinks, recliners and great cable tv. Guys don't seem to mind shopping there now.

Give shoppers baskets. Customers will tend to self-limit their purchases to what they can carry, rather than make trips to the counter.

Avoid deadly silence. It makes customers feel like they are intruding or being watched.

Inventory Control

If you aren't using a computerized Point of Sale (POS) system, make a simple binder and develop your own inventory worksheets. There is no need to close down to count items. You can keep a current count monthly by counting just 1/4 of each department each week.

You need good inventory control for two reasons, Scott said. You need to know your best selling and highest profit items. And you need to be able to diagnose the reasons for poor performers. 


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A peach of a Brag Basket

2 comments
The Brag Basket is our tradition of sharing. The basket is always free and open all weekend, this one October 7-9, 2011.

Even though I call this the Brag Basket, it's not really about bragging. It's about sharing.

Nashville Farmers Market
Photo by Rex Hammock. Rex's company
Hammock, Inc., just celebrated
20 years in business. Congrats!
What can you do in the Brag Basket?
  • introduce yourself
  • share some great news from this week
  • congratulate a friend
  • laugh about something wonderful that you tried that failed
  • applaud for each other
Don't hold back because of that word, "brag." When you hold back, you hide your good news and accomplishments that might inspire others.

Speak up and add yourself or another deserving soul in the comments. We all cheer, and everyone feels great. It lets you meet each other a bit. Reading each others' stories brings us a bit closer to being a community.

How does it work? You write a comment on this post, email me, or catch me on any social network and share your thought.

This is not an ad. (I delete the ads.) It's a conversation with friends. So jump in. And remember to cheer for each other.

New here? Take the Guided Tour. Like what you see? Subscribe.

Set your business apart

2 comments
Anita Campbell shares her new book
Anita Campbell shares her new book.
Photo by Grant Wickes
VP Businss Development
Attention to detail is what sets my business apart. It’s easy to do things carelessly. Detail takes time, but pays off.

Anita Campbell
Small Business Trends
Said on Twitter

Anita is also the author of the new book, Visual Marketing.

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How to get more volunteer participation

1 comments
It's the million dollar question in small towns: how do we get more participation? Participation might mean volunteers, contributions, or even audience members.

Kicking off Picture My Weekend photo workshop in Alva with group instructions. #PMW2011
Volunteers kick off the Picture My Weekend
Photography event in Alva, Oklahoma.
I get asked this every time I speak. It seems every town and organization, every festival and fair is dealing with a smaller number of volunteers. It seems everyone is looking for ways to get more people involved.

While I don't have a magical solution, I do offer one key insight.

You are not your target market. 

No matter who you are looking to get more participation from, they are different from you. Most likely, you are the driven, goal oriented type. At the least, you're involved. The people you are looking for are not.

Small town retail ideas Part 1

6 comments
At the Revitalize WA conference I sat in on a session by Scott Day with Urban Development Services, on Fifty Ideas for Retailers That Cost Less than $50.

People are not buying the same way they did three years ago. People are thinking and buying "inexpensive" far more often. Scott recommended a few tactics to take advantage of it:
  • Emphasize repairs
  • Provide add-on value such as personalization
  • Sell or include service plans
Scott divides retail into nine segments: three categories, each with three price points. There are traditional, contemporary, and hi-tech/funky retailers, and they can be cheap, moderate or expensive. Key point: make sure the appearance of your retail business gives the same impression that you intended and that matches your prices.

External selling space


This is your outside: your sidewalk, facade, sign and windows.
Shop Inside
Draw customers inside
If you park in the back of your business, make sure you walk out front every single morning and check your sidewalk and foyer. Clean up and sweep as necessary every day.

Improve your signage. Good signs can measurably boost sales. And you should measure before and after, when you invest in a sign.

Awnings can be great, or can easily look dirty. If you are installing awnings, Scott recommended avoiding barrel or vaulted awnings. Also, stripes hide streaks (from drips, runoff, etc.) better than solid colors. Awnings are washable, too, something many retailers never do.

Show the love

0 comments
By Jon Swanson

Nancy and I are on a blogger tour in Hampton, Iowa. A bunch of bloggers are in town to learn more about agriculture and the local community. It's a great idea for the town and for us.

On Friday night, there is a wine and cheese, star-gazing, coffee-drinking, meet and greet. With live music. A bunch of people from the community, a handful of bloggers. It's a great evening.

And Nancy and I sit in the dark outside the building, listening to the music. Alone. While the people from the community sit or stand in twos and threes, talking, laughing. Shared jokes, delighted greetings. Stories.

At first you might think, isn't that terrible? I mean, here are these bloggers, these media people. Shouldn't you want to impress them with how great your town is? But if the thing you want to show is how great your community is as a community, this relaxed conversation is exactly the thing to do. Especially if I'm choosing to sit in the dark, on the edges.
community

I'm way more likely to celebrate a community if people are comfortable with each other rather than if they make me the center of attention. I'll come and go. But these friends and neighbor create the web of relationships that keeps the town, keeps this town, going.

Someone did come and talk, by the way. We were made welcome. And in the course of that conversation we discovered that this event came from several community groups combining forces and events. People cooperated. The number of people in town went up.

And I better understood the smiles. They were people getting together, getting along.

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