Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Kelly + Olive: Ideas You Should Steal

Kelly + Olive: Ideas You Should StealTaken Directly from the amazing blog AphroChic, thanks for your wonderful insights! April 





I was so happy to participate in an effort by Lauren Paradise and Courtney Davis from one of my favorite design blogs, Kelly + Olive.  A couple of months ago I received an email from them about their latest project, an effort to raise funds for Dwell with Dignity.  The idea was to feature fun home projects from 17 home, craft and lifestyle bloggers, and place them all in one totally cool e-book that's available to all of you!  For just $1, you can get tips on how to make an end table out of a suitcase, create your own rug, and style the perfect pillowscape on your sofa (that one's from me).


Kelly + Olive: Ideas You Should Steal


To check out my tips on styling pillows in seven easy steps, and more fun activities from some of your favorite bloggers, including Kirsten from Simply Grove, Sherry and John from Young House Love, and Anne from The City Sage, download your copy at Kelly + Olive.  100% of the proceeds will go to Dwell with Dignity and will help to create beautiful homes for families in need.


As the weekend approaches I also wanted to let you know about some other places you can find me on the blogosphere:

  • Check out my skype chat with Torrey McGraw from Grind & Thrive.  It's all about my journey from attorney to blogger to designer.
  • I also had A SMALL CHAT with Rebecca Orlov from Loving.Living.Small this week.  It was all about small space design and bringing in lots of color and pattern.  Definitely check it out.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

The Importance of EXCEEDING Customer Expectations

Business Stripped Bare: Adventures of a Global Entrepreneur
Excerpt from,
Business Stripped Bare:
 "Adventures of a Global Entrepreneur"
Source: I discovered this article via twitter from @EntMagazine. You can also follow @RichardBranson for more great business insights.


This is a insightful, clearly written article about delivering expectations - actually - about EXCEEDING Expectations. And the simple ways a business can do that. And, the key role the founder and later 'leader' must stay involved in the process, in touch with customers and employees, and always, always true to the core values of the BRAND.

This is an edited excerpt from Richard Branson's book Business Stripped Bare: Adventures of a Global Entrepreneur (Virgin Books, 2010).

Business & Small Business Home

The celebrated entrepreneur's advice for delivering on your business promises.

By Richard Branson   |   April 20, 2011 from Entrepreneur Magazine


So you have an idea for a business -- one that you believe has the potential to alter the industry. You put together a straightforward proposition, raised the necessary capital, gathered a team and publicized your new venture by every means available. What happens next?
It's time to deliver on your promises. And the only difference between merely satisfactory delivery and great delivery is attention to detail.

Anyone who aspires to lead a company must develop a habit of taking notes. I carry a notebook everywhere I go. Most of my entries are like this one, from a Virgin Atlantic flight years ago: 

"Dirty carpets. Fluff. Areas around bow dirty. Equipment: stainless steel, grotty. Choice of menu disappointing -- back from Miami, prawns then lobster (as a main course) in Upper Class. Chicken curry very bland. Chicken should be cut in chunks. Rice pretty dry. No Stilton available on cheeseboard."
What's most revealing is this final note: 
"Staff desperate for someone to listen. Make sure flight staff reports are actioned IMMEDIATELY." 
.....I'm pleased to say they now are. 
This is the key to getting all the other items on the list done -- employees are better able to report problems and get them fixed before I come along with my notebook.
And as you decide how best to deliver your product or service, keep in mind the company's core business values, the medium-term strategic considerations and where the industry is headed in the long term
Make your decisions on the micro level in light of that bigger picture, and your business should be headed in the right direction.
This problem-solving process should not be limited to the launch. Owners and leaders of established companies should sample their business's products as often as possible. Many bosses regularly speak to staff at all levels, but often they do not follow up on problems they uncover. This means their employees never learn what importance the CEO places on getting the details right, or see just how necessary and possible it is to address the everyday problems that come up. If you foster a culture of waiting for someone else to solve problems, the company will suffer the consequences.
Great delivery also depends on great communication, which should start at the top. Be brave: hand out your e-mail address and phone number. Your employees will know not to misuse it or badger you, and by doing so, you will be giving them a psychological boost -- they will know they can contact you anytime a problem comes up that requires your attention. (twitter is also a great way to 'hand out' empower your customers or potential customers with the ability to communicate directly with you.)
Instilling attention to detail throughout your new company will prove especially important when the business begins to gain ground. Employees across the business should be focusing on getting it right all day, every day.
  • A few years ago, I saw warning signs that we were starting to stumble when I received a letter from a couple who had planned to travel on Virgin Trains in Britain. We had seen a rapid 50 percent increase in passenger numbers, and suddenly people were finding it difficult to get a seat on the busier routes. The letter writers had not realized that they now had to book seats in advance. When they arrived at the station, they found the staff unhelpful. Given that the husband was disabled and needed assistance, this was pretty terrible of us.
I personally helped them, and in the process became concerned about the bigger picture for this company. I asked Ashley Stockwell, the brand and customer service guardian (note that he strongly correlates customer service 'guardian' (not representative) with the term brand - the customer service agents are the first contact experience for many companies with their customers. they are your brand - for good or bad or, indifferent.) for Virgin Group, to take a look. Thanks to our renewed focus on delivering great service and attention to detail, we got better and soon received plaudits. 
Finally, if you do start to see success in the form of new and repeat business, remember to keep a cool head. You're delivering change, and if you are succeeding, other businesses are probably getting hurt. They will try to shut you down.
Be sportsmanlike, play to win, and then befriend your enemies. If you do fall out with a partner, colleague or competitor, call that person a year later and take him out to dinner. It is likely you have a great deal in common. After all, why did you both get into the business in the first place? To deliver change, serve customers, and reform an industry. Now, what can you create together?
This is an edited excerpt from Richard Branson's book Business Stripped Bare: Adventures of a Global Entrepreneur (Virgin Books, 2010).

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Quick Recap of Mod Mom Furniture ASFD Keynote Last Night

Here's a super quick recap of the keynote address by Kiersten Hathcock, founder of Mod Mom Furniture and recent contestant on ABC's Shark Tank.( Aired April 1, 2011 - See episode and results here)


Kiersten shared the social media INSIDER insights she gained over the past 3 years and how she learned that through 6 basic steps she could differentiate her product, build a globally recognized premium brand that had demand far exceeding her production capacity (which she has since expanded!) and with a marketing budget of $0 !








These are the 6 points:

  1. Know your brand before Reaching out
  2. Be Yourself. Be Open. Share.
  3. Keep it simple and relevant when contacting media
  4. Develop relationships with like-minded companies/designers
  5. Pick the social medial platforms that work for you (you don't have to do them all!!)
  6. Don't be afraid to reach out for help.
Kiersten emphasised to everyone in the audience that through networking using social media including Craig's List, Facebook and Linked-In she was able to connect with people who could help her accomplish the tasks she needed to do in order to grow her business. All without spending any money, and just through the generousity of the people she reached out to and barter and trade (she build 2 toy boxes in exchange for her web-site design). 

So with no money to put into any kind of marketing, the willingness to ask for and accept help, and the understand that only through Networking could she achieve the goals she has for her business she was able to receive not just the 1 shark tank offer of $90,000 but several offers for capital investment in order to grow her business

Anyone who was at the Monday ASFD Dinner at the High Point Country Club can attest that it was an very informative talk on how an individual, designer, retailer, wholesaler, or any business can differentiate their brand, attract media attention, and free promotion all through the power of free social media.

Due to overwhelming requests, we are working on posting a video of the presentation and powerpoint slides for all of you who could not attend due to other market commitments and for those of you who were in attendance and wanted to share the knowledge with your clients, friends, and customers.

We will let you know via @A_S_F_D on Twitter as well as via this blog when and where you can find that info. 

Stay Tuned.

  • Meanwhile, you can watch Kiersten's Shark Tank episode here.
  • Read her friendly, personable blog here.
  • Follow her on Twitter here
  • And find her on Facebook here

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Today's Blog Readings







27 March 2011 By Nidhi Dutt, Mumbai Correspondent, BBC News, Rajasthan
  




After the quake in Haiti, volunteers with
Ushahidi mapped the incidents
that needed rescuers’ attention
March 28, 2011, 9:15 PM By TINA ROSENBERG from New York Times Opinion Pages
"online crowdsourcing is a relatively recent phenomenon, and the efficiencies it brings to communicating within a large group make it useful in many new ways.   Many of us use crowdsourcing without thinking about it. If you’ve ever made a purchase on eBay, read customer reviews on Amazon.com to help you decide which rollerblades to buy or used comments on TripAdvisor.com to plan a vacation, you’ve taken advantage of crowd-sourcing.

Crowd-sourcing is being applied in many fields. At catwalkgenius.com it is bringing together fashion designers  and financial backers. At usertesting.com it provides feedback on why people leave your Web site.  It connects musicians and their fans to help organize private concerts at owngig.com.  Innocentive.com uses it to solve scientific and technological problems:  companies stuck on a problem put it up on the site and offer a cash prize for a solution.  About 30 percent of the time, an outsider solves the problem — often someone who isn’t even in the same field...." >> Continue Reading


Sunday, March 6, 2011

Today's Blog Readings and My Related Rants



Designers investigating a need, finding a market, developing a network.

Investors should recognize this opportunity for the next generation of banking. Call it Banking 2.0. We have seen how Web 2.0 has changed the way the world lives, communicates, and connects. Now is the time for the financial sector


The Inspiration Article: Notes from the Field: Mobile Money in Afghanistan

February 8, 2011 from DesignMind: Frogs on the Road Blog

"In the summer of 2010, frog's Executive Creative Director for Global Insights Jan Chipchase conducted field research in Afghanistan with generous support from the Institute for Money, Technology and Financial Inclusion. He worked ... to investigate how people use cell phones to do their banking—known in the industry as mobile money..."
"...Over half the world’s population lives without reliable banking institutions where DIY means of storing cash to guard and access one’s life savings is a real phenomenon.  In Afghanistan, money is transferred through informal couriers or hawala brokers who operate on an honor system that has been used for centuries. There is an opportunity and a need for a new way of sending money to others and a new way of banking...." >> Continue Reading
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My Rant: Online Retailers: Don't Just Survive, Thrive
The undeniable success of Zappos.com (now owned by Amazon) is proof that consumers respond to free next day delivery shipping (instant gratification is a key to consumer retail success, especially for impulse orders) and just as importantly their customer service friendly free return shipping with no restocking fees. 
One customer comment from the Zappos website summarizes all the important bullet points of their e-tail success, and what all businesses should use as a model for their own e-commerce divisions.
"I just wanted to tell you guys that you have hands down the most helpful and friendly customer service people working on the 1-800 line. Everytime I call (which is a lot) they are incredibly nice and always solve whatever I need addressed. Not only are they nice, but they always sound like they are in a good mood which makes it an even more pleasant experience. This is one of the reasons I love ordering from Zappos so much. I work as a waitress, and I am allowed to wear whatever shoes I want at work. All of my shoes come from Zappos practically, and customers are always asking me about them. I probably refer between 1 to 3 people a night to your website, writing down the www address and going on and on about the free shipping, selection, etc. I just wanted to tell you how much I love Zappos. That's all. Thanks!" Adriane R., Mar 18, 2006

The Inspiration Article:

Consumers Want Free Return Shipping
February 28th, 2011 by Jim Tierney in Multi Channel Merchant
Consumers love free shipping promotions, and many have come to expect such offers from merchants...And return shipping policies may be just as important as free shipping offers, according to a survey conducted last fall....
...  found that 88% of respondents rated free return shipping as important, or very important when making a purchasing decision....
...“It’s extremely important for customers to be able to replicate the offline experience of walking back into a store, with item in hand, and returning it,” ... >>Continue Reading

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My Rant: US Investors Need To Keep Their Eyes on the Ballooning Middle East Quagmire
Last week, I was listening off and on to CNBC during the day, and Aljazeera English online and it seemed clear to me that CNBC and other US news media outlets were under estimating the global business and economic upheaval (completely aside from the humanitarian atrocities)  in Lybia. In a crystal clear signal of the gravity of he ongoing civil war (and it is, make no mistake a Civil War) in Libya and more broadly the trending Revolution 2.0 in the Middle East Nations, U.S. Defense Secretary Gates feels it is necessary to rush 2 warships to the region  "...to give the president the broadest possible decision space". 

While CNBC commentators discuss the lastest quarterly earnings that have beat expectations, and the investing opportunities around the new iPad, they are completely missing the bigger global issues. One reporter even said something to the effect that she didn't want to have to "check in with what was going on with Libya every time she wanted to make a decision; what a foolishly isolationist view of the global economy. 


The Suez Canal (image: hybridcars.com)Another major issue that has been very under-reported is the new policy of the Egyptian government regarding the Suez Canal. Only a week after the successful overthrow of Hosni Mubarak Iranian Military vessels traveled through the Suez Canal for the first time. See related articles here and hereIn an 2009 Bloomberg article, it was reported that a terrorist plot to detonate explosives along the Suez Canal. An article published in Heat USA reported "...Any sort of attacks to the Suez Canal would have dire effects on the world economy; 4.7 percent of the world’s daily output of oil travels through the area. If the Suez were ever closed, ships trying to make it from the Middle East to Europe would have to travel around Africa to complete their journey. On top of delays in supply, the cost of shipping would also increase. As a result, the price of crude would surely skyrocket...." Who knows what the New Egypt will bring to the operations of the Suez canal, but it is definitely something to be concerned about, hedged against, and watched closely. (Related articles Suez Canal/SUMED Pipeline,  Suez Canal: Pipelines Were Terrorists' Targets,)




The Inspiration Article:Adding Up the Business Costs In Libya

March 3, 2011 from China Bystander
"...Beijing has now evacuated all Chinese nationals from the chaos of Libya, 35,860 people including Taiwanese, according to the foreign ministry. What is left behind is what looks like adding up to billions of yuan in business losses not just from the cost of evacuating staff but also from damaged property and disrupted contracts.
Most if not all of the 13 state-owned companies operating in the country have had facilities looted or destroyed. The commerce ministry has said 27 Chinese construction sites and work camps had been attacked in the first days of the unrest. Having evacuated all its employees, China Railway Construction Corp. has suspended its 28 billion yuan ($4.2 billion) of contracts, as has China State Construction Engineering Corp., which has 9 billion yuan of active construction contracts in Libya, and China Gezhouba Group which has 5.5 billion yuan of housing building contracts. China National Petroleum Corp., which has services and exploration but not extraction operations in Libya and whose facilities are among those that have come under attack, has also stopped all work there. >>Continue Reading

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