Home Wealth Project
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Nov 11th
Amy’s Ice Creams in Austin, Texas, is beloved for two things: the ice cream and the floor show. They are the ice cream equivalent of Seattle’s “flying fish.” Ice cream scoops are thrown from one worker to another and caught in cups balanced on their chins . . . while standing on one foot . . . hopping. You’ll see ice cream slingers sliding across the counters on their knees and bellies. It’s a carnival ride in there.
Finding people who are fearless and creative enough to come up with stunts like flinging ice cream balls across a room just can’t happen in the normal interview process. How exactly do you ask, “Are you a little bit nuts?” You can’t. So, at Amy’s, applicants receive a white paper bag. It must be brought back within a week turned into a creation that tells Amy’s about who they are. From this white paper bag, Amy’s finds the personalities to fill their shops.
Without the Right People, This Is Just Great Ice Cream
By using a plain white paper bag as its job application, Amy’s gets to know the creative soul lurking within the teenaged candidate standing before them. This idea began with an applicant who was given the bag instead of the boilerplate job application because Amy’s had run out of the forms. The applicant floated the bag back into the store with helium balloons; inside the bag were items about her life. She got the job. Now for all applicants, this is how Amy’s fills their shops with people who make getting ice cream like going to the circus.
Revel in “Being Real”
The Amy’s Ice Creams Web site says, “Amy’s looks at ‘going out for ice cream’ as a total sensory experience that can revitalize a less-than-stellar day.” Part of the joy of going to their ice cream shops is wondering what kind of floor show you’ll be greeted with. Getting the right people to work at Amy’s has spurred their growth from a single location in 1984 to over 14 stores today. In 1984, Amy’s sold 125,000 servings of ice cream. Now they sell well over 1 million a year, with gross annual sales exceeding $5 million.
Like many beloved companies, Amy’s Ice Creams doesn’t advertise. Word of mouth builds the business, and Amy’s redirects marketing money to community development, which fuels more word of mouth. Amy’s represents the power of the small business owner and how service and exceptional experiences can build a small business. Amy’s Ice Creams prospers because it revels in being real. Its employees revel in being their kooky, nutty selves–and people love it. This translates to Amy’s website, where the home page welcomes you with “Life is uncertain, eat dessert first!” Sound advice.
Go Try This
Get “real” in how you hire and bring people into your company
Next, examine your current hiring process:
Decide to be real:
Use Word of Mouth to Build Business By Staffing Your Store to Spread the Word
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Oct 10th
| … Creating Your Informational Website, The Basics of Payment Processing, Marketing your Internet Business, Research your Competition,… |
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Sep 10th
| FP Marketing is a admittedly a sucker for the most base of internet memes:… |
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Aug 28th
Pop-up stores are popping up everywhere. All the big brands are into them — Pop Tarts opened up a Pop Tarts World pop-up in New York City’s Times Square earlier this month. Gap hit SoHo with a pop-up store for its Piperlime brand that was slated to stay up just 25 days during Fashion Week. For its part, Pita Pit brashly camped its pop-up restaurant in front of Fox News’ New York headquarters for a month, landing more press and attracting record numbers of new-franchisee applications. Pop-Up stores are so hot that some retail advisors now specialize in designing and creating them.
These big retailers are onto something smaller retailers can take advantage of, too. Here’s why now is a great time to open a pop-up store:
Empty space. There is an unprecedented amount of open retail space right now. Make a landlord an offer and they’ll probably jump at it.
Low risk. With a pop-up, you can get a lease for a couple of months, or month-to-month. It’s not a big commitment. Why, a couple of Northeastern University undergrads recently opened a pop-up store in Boston, The Concrete Jungle, to sell a new clothing line, AnnieMulz, which they created in their dorm room.
Holidays loom. Those landlords want full shops for the prime holiday season. Many stuff empty slots with pop-ups even in good times. A small shop you might operate in just November and December could add to your holiday sales without creating an ongoing overhead expense.
A chance to experiment. Temporary stores are a great way to tinker with your offerings. You can order a small amount of stock and see if it sells without spending too much.
Build awareness. As the Pita Pit experiment showed, storefronts are a form of advertising. Find a shop space at a prominent intersection, near a busy transportation hub, or in a busy mall, and get your name in front of hundreds of potential new customers.
Benefit from flexibility. When you open a pop-up, there are no expectations. Open the doors on Friday only, or only for the first week of the month, or only on weekends. Be open four hours a day. You can make your own rules here, and experiment. If your ideas work, they could be used in your permanent stores, too.
Have you opened a pop-up store, or are you planning one? Leave us a note and tell us about it.
View full post on Entrepreneur.com – Daily Dose
Aug 26th
| The F.T.C. said Thursday that a marketing company had settled charges that it engaged in deceptive advertising by having its employees… |
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Aug 25th
Can just one employee do one single thing different and completely transform your company as a result? They can. The story of Johnny the Bagger, currently making the rounds of retail blogs, shows how it can be done.
The story begins with employee-motivation expert Barbara Glanz. The Contagious Enthusiasm author relates in her own video that she spoke several years back to an audience of 3,000 employees of a major grocery chain. She told the crowd, “Every one of you can make a difference and create memories for your customers that will motivate them to come back.”
One bagger with Down Syndrome, Johnny, contacted her later to say he had thought about her advice, and come up with a plan to create those memories. Each day when he got home from work, with help from his father, he typed and printed out a thought for the day on the family’s home computer. Then, the next day, as he bagged groceries, he’d put a slip with his thought into their bag.
The response was astonishing. Customers reported they had switched to shopping the store more often, as they didn’t want to miss any of Johnny’s thoughts! Soon his checkout line ran the length of the store, full of customers who refused to switch to shorter lines. Only Johnny’s line would give them the thought for the day.
The video above tells the story in greater detail. More than 90,000 people have watched it. Bring tissues.
Why is this store so inspiring, so uplifting? Because it’s a reminder that life is about more than dollars and cents. Remembering that can help businesses stand out from the crowd.
In the course of doing business, a company can do so much more than sell an item and collect customers’ money. Every day their stores are open, retailers have an opportunity to transform what they’re doing from a simple transaction into something that’s much more than commerce — they can lift spirits, make people smile, make employees proud of where they work, bring people together…and make their store a must-visit.
What are you doing to make your store experience memorable? Leave a comment and let us know.
View full post on Entrepreneur.com – Daily Dose
Jul 29th
| Founded in July 2005, Mashable is the world’s largest blog focused exclusively on Web 2.0 and Social Media news. With more than 15 million… |
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Jun 28th
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Marketers must look to the Web for new ways of finding customers and communicating with them, rather than at them. From Facebook and… |
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Jun 2nd
Apparently shoppers’ mouse-clicking fingers are recovering from the down economy faster than their legs: E-commerce is up sharply, while retail as a whole is just beginning to rise again.
E-commerce picked up sooner, too–research firm eMarketer reports ecommerce was up 15 percent in the last quarter of 2009, and up 14 percent in the first quarter this year. eMarketer is estimating ecommerce sales will be up nearly 13 percent for all of 2010. After two years of negative numbers, that’s a nice bump up.
For contrast, the International Council of Shopping Centers is forecasting brick-and-mortar retail will be up, oh, a big 3 percent or so. Which sector would you rather be in right now?
Online shopping is still just 4 percent of all retailing according to the U.S. Census Bureau, which I find sort of amazing since it seems to be all we hear about. But apparently, this little slice is the place to be right now. And it’s still substantial–nearly $39 billion in sales in the first quarter, Census reports. In the first quarter last year, online sales were closer to $34 billion.
This is particularly relevant news for small businesses because almost half of them still don’t even have a website, much less one that’s ecommerce enabled. If you’ve been thinking about exploring doing some online selling, now might be a great time to put that plan into action.
View full post on Entrepreneur.com – Daily Dose
May 24th
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On the Internet, no less! Could it possibly be a devious viral marketing scheme? We will contact 6pm.com, which is owned by famous Internet shoe… |
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