Phil Adikes 

Phil Adikes and I spoke at Retail X in Cleveland the first week of September 2007.

A nicely run event from Ball Publishing.

Phils Blog, called Garden Center Blog, (along with Eric Wilder) bring blog commentary to us that makes a lot of sense to business owners, but even more so to garden center owners and managers.

Here is an entry from Garden Center Blog that needs to go in the Smart Marketing file:

 

Notes from Ball Publishing’s Retail Experience 

Posted September 8th, 2007 by Phil Adikes (click here for actual blog entry)

I had a great day today at the Retail Experience show in Cleveland. I told attendees that I would post notes on this page for them to refer to.

Keys to getting new customers:

Search Engine Optimization:

Page names that reflect search terms.

  • Places
  • Problems
  • Varieties
  • Vendor
  • Seasonal

Inbound Links:

  • Vendors
  • Charities
  • Newspaper Articles
  • Website Comments

 

Considerations for Maximum Lifetime Value from customers

For the full blog entry, click here.
 

GCA's Fashion In Bloom 2007

 Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Wednesday September 19, 2007

The fall plants showcase called GCA's "Fashion In Bloom" starts today.

It is a showcase of the new plant introductions from some of the largest growers in the world hosted at Conard-Pyle Nursery in Pennsylvania and Homestead Growers in Maryland.

The weather is cooperating for this event - blue skies - upper seventies.

I'm heading there today. I'll use this thread to report on what I see.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

My visit to Conard-Pyle was worth the trip. The colors and textures were outstanding. I would think that garden center managers and owners would come away with many display ideas.

I shot a little video footage while I was there.

Click here to see video of Conard-Pyle location.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Friday September 21st - Homestead Gardens 2 locations

A lot of energy and thought went into the displays at the Homestead locations.

At the Homestead Growers facility, the pathway that wound through the greenhouse was very inviting.

Had a long chat with Sharon Gravit-Warschauer and Doug Parkinson from Euro American Propigators. Their Retro Succulents line on display was really cool. I particularly liked the rooster (on the video).

Here is the video from the 2 Homestead locations.

 

 

Steve

Is your web site url up to speed ?

 Tuesday, September 18, 2007

In today's marketplace, a web site is a MUST. No question about it, people are doing research on the web, and then going to the location to buy.

Now, it doesn't always start with a search engine. It might just start out on the highway.

Example:

So you are driving down the road (at the posted speed limit of course), and you drive past this garden center/nursery half a dozen times a week....and there is the sign out front with the company name. Bet if you closed your eyes you can picture it.

Does it have a web site address on it? Probably not, but it should.

People will remember the url (web site address) more than any one thing you can publish about your business. It should be legible from the road at the posted speed (or faster).

Here is Bill Calkins talking about his perspective on just this topic. Bill knows what he is talking about !

Take this idea and run with it.

 

Steve

In the world of search, it is important to know the difference between (existence of?) horizontal and vertical directories, and how to utilize both in an effort to drive users (who don't know about you) to your web site.

Horizontal Directories:

Let's start with horizontal directories. These are the directories you're most familiar with. Traditional yellow pages (print and online) are in the horizontal format. They cover topics like: pizza, mufflers, doctors, lawyers, automotive, restaurants, plumbers etc. The horizontal directory covers a lot if different subjects, all arranged on a horizontal line so you can find them.

Here are some examples of horizontal directories:

YellowPages.com

SuperPages

Switchboard

CitySearch

DexKnows

 

Vertical Directories:

Vertical directories are not as widely known, but are increasingly popular and relevant. Vertical directories take a subject matter that lands on the horzontal directory line and drills deep into the knowledge base of the subject. It is within these vertical directory spaces that you may find your ideal customer. The horizontal diretories have traditionally been used when a service is needed. For example, if I have broken pipe, I need a plumber now, and would use a horizontal directory (or a vertical about plumbing) right away.

However, if I were researching an arthritic knee solution, finding an appropriate restaurant for a party, researching what kind of lawyer handles my need or planning a garden, a vertical directory woud be the place to start. You will find MUCH more information about the topic in the vertical space. The vertical will cover in depth information that the horizontal can't touch.

Here are some examples of vertical directories:

Health: WebMD.com

Dining: Restaurants.com

Lawyers: FindLaw.com

Lawn and Garden: Lawn and Garden Search

 

A Search Engine Marketing strategy should be inclusive of horizontal and relevant vertical directories in order to expose your business to the broadest audience. You will be pleasantly suprised by the traffic you get from a both areas.

 

Steve

 

Search is for products too, not just services

 Monday, September 17, 2007

One of my favorite resources is the Search Engine Land blog. Greg Sterling's recent contribution titled "Local Search Is About Products Too, Not Just Restaurants And Plumbers" has eye opening impications for our green industry.

We have a fragmented industry. We have breeders that don't know where their plants are being sold. We have brands that utilize a growers network, but each grower in the nextwork won't share information with the brand as to where the plants are being sold.

Ultimately, the consumer loses, as does the green industry as a whole. We are fighting for the attention of the consumer and their descretionary dollars. When they can't find us for the information they need, they take their dollars elsewhere to a place where they understand what they are getting and where they can get it.

So Greg has this to say about product related searches:

"ShopLocal found that "65 percent made an in-store purchase within a week after visiting a site and another 23 percent within three weeks." As more data like this is compiled tactical implications for online marketers will become apparent."

He - llo ! He just said 88% make a purchase in less than a month after doing online research.

Bottom line? You need to have your web site in places that people are searching. When found, they will meet you at your cash register.

 

Steve

There is all sorts of content being published these days about "Local Search". There are huge amounts of money being thrown at local search platforms as well from the likes of Google, Yahoo, MSN, YellowPages.com, Local.com and many many more.

A recent Piper Jaffray survey showed that local search is now the second most common activity online. They created a recent document called the "User Revolution". It discusses the new advertising ecosystem and the rise of the Internet as a mass medium, and makes some pretty incredible forecasts.

Did you know that people are using the Internet now to make locally focused decisions more than anything other medium with the exception of email? I'm not sure that your local business really understands the size and frequency of the audience that is looking for you. Truthfully, most green industry businesses are missing the boat.

Has "Build it and they will come" been the thinking of your green industry business web site so far? You need a layer of Search Engine Marketing (SEM) on top of your web site if your site is going to be found by those who do not know about you.

Sure, put your URL on your letterhead, invoices, shirts, signs, vehicles etc. But reaching out to those who don't know about you is the strength of SEM. And it works.

I will take some time here in the near future to write about SEM.

 

Steve

 

 

Some time to catch up on some reading

 Saturday, September 15, 2007

Saturday morning. 6:30 am. Hot bagel and a cup of coffee.

Thumbing through the Sept/Oct issue of Green Profit Magazine. There's a lot of information about the OFA Short Course and Trade Show in this issue, and rightfully so. It was a great show and learning experience.

My friend Bill Calkins gives his farewell salute to us as he is moving up the chain of command at Ball Horticulture. Bill is taking on the position of Manager of Independent Garden Centers. If you are an independent garden center, keep an eye on Bill. He gets around and is very observant of things that can really work for garden centers. . . and he doesn't necessarily get his ideas from garden centers.

The Consumer Buzz Live event is covered pretty well. Kerry Herndon, a grower of Bromeliads and Orchids in Florida, wrote a column about the event and how the Internet was the underlying theme of the CBL event (p. 42). The panelists of 40 year olds said they wanted the garden centers to help them, get to know them, and maintain a relationship. They want to hear from the garden center every month about what they should be doing, whether it is with new things for gardening, or whether is has to do with the things they bought there.

These panelists also reenforced the data that says consumers go to the web to do research first, then go to the store to buy.

My friend Pete Bottomley wrote an article about how garden centers can succeed with customer seminars.

Bottom line take away this morning: We (consumer focused green industry businesses) need to do a better job of developing relationships with our customers, and find ways to establish the relationship that find them where they are.

Sun's up. Time to get moving.

 

Steve

Speaking Gigs

 Friday, September 14, 2007

I have had the pleasure recently of speaking to green industry folk about Search Engine Marketing, better known as SEO.

One lady sent me a note later, "I wish I could have picked your brain for another couple hours."  I was really glad to hear that.

I struggle with the reality that our green industry is not getting the information necessary to keep up with the SEO opportunity. There is so much going on with the web, but we are still taking a "wait and see" attitude. So to hear someone say they want more, more, more information, I say "finally", people are starting to get it.

And get it they should:

~ The majority of homes in the US are connected to the Internet with a broadband connection. Yep, the Internet is always on in their house, and possibly at mutliple locations. Just belly-up to the 'puter and start surfing.

~ US households now watch more hours of Internet than they do of television.

~ 2 out of 3 consumers do reasearch on the web before making a purchase.

 

If you are in business,  you need to be on the web. Period.

 

Steve C

Kick Off

 Friday, September 14, 2007

I've had the pleasure of reading a number of blogs in the blogshere, and now look. I've got one with my mug on it.

I'm going to try to use this space as a place for thoughts about the green industry,technology, marketing, rants and raves, and oddities that are on my mind. 

We, as an industry, can certainly benefit by the integration of technological efficiencies, so I hope to spend most of my time there.

No need to ramble any longer.

Let's kick it off.

 

Steve C