Monthly Archives: August 2008

A New Twist on Carbon Offsets: Oxygen Footprints

Steve Cissel of 10-20 Media, a publisher of several online directories of lawn, garden and green products, has proposed an interesting idea: an industry campaign focusing on our “oxygen footprint.” In other words, promote the beneficial effects of gardening as an antidote to the much-discussed carbon footprint. For more details, take a look at Cissel’s website and forum.

Last June, a few dozen industry leaders gathered to discuss the possibility of a national advertising campaign to promote the gardening industry as a whole. See the Branchsmith Open Register Blog for more details.

What are your thoughts on the best way to foster more interest in gardening among the general public?

Welcome, Tulips.com

We’re pleased to welcome Tulips.com as a new client. Tulips.com is a division of Roozengaarde and Washington Bulb Company, the largest tulip bulb grower in the country. Not only do they offer pre-cooled bulbs online and through their catalog, but they also offer their fresh-cut flowers year-round. Visitors to Washington state can enjoy their three-acre show garden each spring during the Annual Skagit Valley Tulip Festival.

We’ll be producing a regular enewsletter for Tulips.com. To read the inaugural issue, click here.

How the “Obvious” Doubled Sales

While waiting in the lobby for the IGC Show to open, I had an interesting chat with a gentleman from a Midwest garden center.

“How’s business been for you this year?” I inquired.

“Fantastic – it’s up 100% over last year,” he responded.

I asked him to what he attributed it. Turns out, my new friend used to work for a distributor and wearied of the traveling, so he went to work for a nearby garden center to whom he’d been selling for the last 25 years.

The garden center owner was known for buying closeouts of hard goods at steeply reduced prices. So far, so good. The weak link was what happened next.

The closeout merchandise would get piled up in the storage barn. Every season, he’d take out three or four of each product in the barn and put them on the retail shelves. He’d never restock mid-season because he was “too busy” to notice when supplies ran out. The next year, he’d do the same thing. At the rate he was going, it would take him 25 years to liquidate the merchandise he’d already accumulated.

Once the former distributor was on board, he made a concerted effort to sell. For starters, the most obvious change was noticing when the shelves were depleted and restocking them in the same season. But he also created large displays, added signage, and trained staff on the benefits of the products.

To some, the need for such changes was obvious. But that’s just the point – what’s obvious to one person, isn’t obvious to another. The “obvious” solutions can often take us the farthest. By creating a system and paying attention to details, this former distributor helped his boss double the business in a single year, in large part by capitalizing on assets he already had.

I don’t know about you, but that story made me revisit the list of things I’m “too busy” to do and look for the obvious opportunities under my nose!

Encouraging Gift Purchases

Ken Burke of MarketLive had an interesting article in the July 2008 issue of Catalog Success magazine about encouraging gift purchases. He recommends three approaches to significantly boost your gift business:

1) Gift Cards. Gift cards are growing in popularity. Last year, sales of gift cards grew by 25%. If you don’t already offer gift cards, consider doing so this holiday season.

2) Gift Guides. According to a MarketLive survey, companies who included a gift guide on their site averaged 68% more conversions and 70% more revenue per visit than those without a gift guide. See our recent renewsletter for some tips on developing effective gift guides.

3) Gift Sets. Preselected and prewrapped combinations of products are another way to boost sales. Gloves, hand tools, seeds, books and more can be packaged inside pots, trugs or watering cans for an attractive presentation.

With a little creativity and some preplanning, you may be pleasantly surprised at the gift sales you can generate.

What have you found most effective for soliciting gift business?

How to Encourage Customer Reviews

One of the most effective ways to get what you want is to ASK. It’s no different with customer reviews. If you’d like to encourage more reviews on your site, try sending an event-triggered email to buyers some time after they’ve received their product. For hard goods, this should be three to four weeks after […]

How to Handle a Snafu

As I was sitting here working on blog posts, I got an agitated email from a client who was in the process of launching a new enewsletter we had written for them. In their excitement to get the newsletter designed and out, they made the same mistake that all of us have occasionally made on individual emails …hit “Send” before the email was finished. What should we do now, they asked? My advice:

1) Send a correction immediately. In this case, the company had another emailing scheduled for the same day and wanted to know if they should change their plans, send a correction now and reschedule the second emailing for another day. “Yes!” I told them. The faster you correct the mistake, the more on top of things you appear, the fewer people will read the wrong newsletter, and the faster everyone will forget about the issue.

2) Make it personal. Have a real person send the email. Show some emotion and admit your embarrassment. Apologize.

3) Make it right. If no harm was caused by the snafu, a simple apology is sufficient. If the damage went beyond that, do whatever it takes to make it right.

We all make mistakes, and people are remarkably forgiving when we own up to them, provided they’re infrequent.

Our client ended up sending a correction with the subject line, “Ooops! We got a little excited.” I told them they may have increased responses with that one!

Have you had a similar snafu? How did you handle it and what happened as a result?

Heads Up On New Catalog Addressing Requirement

Effective March 29, 2009, new address placement requirements will affect most catalogers. Under the new requirements, the delivery address must appear on the top half of the catalog when the bound edge is to the right.

That’s currently not the convention for most catalogers, and I fear that many will be blindsided by the change. If you’re planning now for next year’s mailings, be sure to keep this switch in mind.

For details, read the USPS memo on the new requirements.

2008 Garden Industry Trends

Branchsmith’s Green Industry Blog recently reported on some interesting trends in the gardening world. Retailers and catalogers alike are finding that sales of vegetable seeds and plants have jumped this year, in some cases by 40% or more. Take that category out of the equation, and sales are flat or down.

We’ve certainly found that many, but not all, companies have been thriving this year. We haven’t, however, noticed a strong correlation to product categories. Instead, our unscientific research seems to indicate that companies relying solely on the traditional paper catalog are struggling against the tide, while those that are embracing new media are faring much better. (Unlike Branchsmith, who caters to garden centers, we deal primarily with catalogers and online marketers.)

How’s your year shaping up? Are you planning any strategic changes for 2009?

Effective Online Marketing in 50 Minutes

At the Summer Mailorder Gardening Association conference, I moderated a round table on Effective Online Marketing – a rather ambitious undertaking in 50 minutes, if I do say so myself. Attendees shared their experiences with everything from promotional emailings and enewsletters to customer forums and online videos.

I prepared a handout that lists examples of and where to find more about customer reviews, Google Website Optimizer, enewsletters, video demonstrations, online upsell suggestions, paid search (pay-per-click), blogs, podcasts and discussion boards. Let me know if you’d like a copy and I’d be happy to send you one.

I was surprised to hear several participants report that they’ve been getting great results with affiliate marketing. How about you?

See You at the Independent Garden Center Show?

Last year, Nursery Retailer and Garden Chic magazines launched the Independent Garden Center Show, devoted exclusively to garden center products and experts. It was a first-rate show with a large collection of unusual, high quality merchandise on display.

This year’s show runs from Tuesday, August 19 through Thursday, August 21 at the Chicago Navy Pier, and I’m looking forward to attending.

In addition to the exhibit hall, two full days of lectures are also offered. Many topics are specific to garden centers, but quite a few deal with trends, markets, organics, and other topics of equal interest to catalogers and online marketers.

Please let me know if you plan to attend the show. I’d love to meet!

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