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2008/11/27

Helping Small Business help themselves - SolutionsArePower™ - 2 new articles

 

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"Helping Small Business help themselves - SolutionsArePower™" - 2 new articles

  1. From a blogger’s desk: microsharing, mobile media, and an intro
  2. Can Promoting Your Competitors Help Your Business?
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  4. Search Helping Small Business help themselves - SolutionsArePower™

From a blogger’s desk: microsharing, mobile media, and an intro

It’s been a great first week with the blogger team here at Solutions Are Power. And it occurred to me that after five days, a better new-to-the-neighborhood greeting is due your way.

Greetings!
I come from a sales background long ago (seems like in the Mesozoic Era…). After a career re-think, it became clear social media, community building, and the communications ‘highway’ in between were where I wanted to be. I now teach communications tools from social media to public speech training to different organizations (and enjoy peer-learning meetups on digital tech as DC Media Makers’ co-founder).

From a blogger’s desk: what content do you crave?
What’s most exciting to me is sharing (and learning) what are creative, simple, and effective ways in building social media community. This plus how small business executes social media campaigns, innovations in mobile media, and more are what I look forward to talking about at Solutions Are Power. What interests you most in these topics? other topics?

This week, a trouble maker speaks
This week, Founder & CEO/Chief Trouble Maker Joanna Pineda with Matrix Group Int’l talks about a range of social media curiosities and leadership decisions. And if you don’t have time to read the multi-part interview, I invite you to listen-while-you-work to the six minute audio cast.

Next week’s conversations
During Thanksgiving week, producer of MobileDiner.com and Tin Can Communications Founder Chris Parandian tells Network Solutions about the wireless industry, its impact on business social media, and how mobile apps could increase digital access.

And one RAD conversation
Also to come in the next few days: you’ll hear from RAD Campaign partner and WomenWhoTech founder Allyson Kapin. She and her team help nonprofits help themselves - and local citizenry too - through online campaigning and advocacy. She shares cool tech in the works, what she admires most in recent business leadership, and then some.

Remember the audio
For all these conversations above, quick audio casts are included as bonus conversations which capture different subjects than the written interview segments. So if you’re under deadline, just hit play and listen-as-you-work!

Fertilizing relationships & going mobile
Three factors struck me about these recent interviews:

  • -these folks relayed effective, accessible social media execution; and they clearly related their experience to internal and external community;
  • -they talked about microsharing (or microblogging like on Twitter) and how that type of online participation fertilized - or warmed up - relationships for offline impact;
  • -and in parts of our discussions, using mobile media to launch conversations and outreach wherever you are came up i.e. your online participation can be as mobile as your business.

A lot emerged while talking shop this week, teaching me plenty. And I anticipate diving deeper into these topics, along with you, as 2009 arrives.



Can Promoting Your Competitors Help Your Business?

I’m always thinking about ways that businesses can make themselves useful, especially when they’re not trying to sell you stuff. And because we’re getting into the thick of the holiday season, that means I’m thinking about the Miracle on 34th Street.

In case you forgot, in the movie (the 1947 original, I haven’t seen the remake), the competing Macy’s and Gimbels department stores follow the lead of Kris Kringle, and start falling over themselves trying to help their customers… to the point of sending people across town to their competitors to get a better deal.

Now, promoting competitors to help your business is counter-intuitive, but probably only slightly more than a big box electronic retailer offering a price matching guarantee (then again, looking at the shape of big box electronic retailers nowadays…). Why do it?

With a price match guarantee, you’re offering the customer peace of mind (that they won’t get screwed if they buy from you). Similarly, by promoting a competitor, Macy’s and Gimbels are trying to be honest brokers, giving up short-term sales for goodwill and longer-term relationships.

Well, it’s just a movie, right? Not many small businesses (or any businesses, really) have pockets deep enough to make constantly sending people away a viable strategy. (It still happens on a smaller scale, where there’s professional courtesy, no direct competition, or other special circumstances. For example, a plumber who was recommended to me didn’t have the equipment for a specialized kind of work, but he referred me to someone who did. Same thing for a tax preparer who was booked up for the season.)

Still, the Miracle on 34th Street example is about being helpful, honest, and useful. So how can you do this — in a way that won’t take money out of your pocket?

Help Others, Help Yourself

Say you’re an independent bookshop or hardware store (there are still some around, right)? If your corporate behemoth rival has book signings or other events, or the big box home improvement store has do-it-yourself clinics, how about doing an online events listing that covers what those guys, as well as other people, are doing?

Sure, you want to promote your own events. But by including what’s going on outside of your place, you’re showing that you know what’s going on outside your walls (and you should know what your competitors are doing, right, particularly so you don’t schedule against it?), and you’re being useful to people by providing a comprehensive list of resources. And as a bonus, you’re using your competitors for content.

(In some ways, that last bit is similar to a strategy that some independent coffee shops are using — deliberately opening next to big chain coffee shops, to take advantage of the foot traffic and name recognition. It can work.)

Dumb Idea? Be Honest…

This particular strategy, of course, depends on what you’ve got going on, and the state of events listings in your locale.

Do you have ideas for other ways that you can leverage your competitors’ content, promote them, and become a useful content resource for customers, in a way that builds your long-term relationship with customers (and doesn’t sacrifice too much in the short-term)? Or is this just a stupid idea? Let me know in the comments…



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