Tag Archive: Small Business

Social media for small businesses – Pizzaria

This is part of an ongoing series about social media and small businesses. Living in Salt Lake City, Utah I’ll be using examples from the beehive state but obviously the ideas I’ll be presenting in these
article will work anywhere.  Small businesses are the backbone of our economy so if you know any SB owners that might benefit from this article please send them a link to this information.

Happy Happy Pizza (cooked) by David de Groot

Happy Happy Pizza (cooked) by David de Groot

I love pizza, I go to a great little pizzaria called Este Pizzaria at least 2x a month if not more. Last time I was in I started talking to the owner about his business and how he markets himself and one thing he brought up was how hard it was for small businesses to market themselves online. So Este Pizzaria I dedicate these 5 ideas to you.

  • Set up a page on your website where people can submit pizza recipies and everyone can vote on them, UserVoice is a great vote based system that could be used like this. Then after a month the most voted pizza could be on the menu for a while. Or even eaten in a private party with the recipe creator and their friends. The even could be recorded and put on YouTube and MySpace video.
  • After a while of doing the pizza competitions you could release a free eBook of pizza recipes from the winners and even offer a print version in your store.
  • Start a blog about pizza. Talk about making dough, making sauce, put up videos of how to toss a pizza, etc. Several restaurant owners have already done this in their respective areas like Justin Levy at the Prime Cuts Blog.
  • Have an art competition where artists paint pizza boxes. Collect both online and offline votes. Then take the winner(s) design and use them as your pizza box design for a while. When the winner(s) are announced you could hold a pizza party for them and put it online.
  • With any of these you can create a widget through sites like WidgetBox, KickApps and others to promote the contests and get your fans to spread the word for you.

What do you think? Have any ideas of your own to share? I’d love to hear them in comments section.

Thank you for reading,
Josh “Shua” Peters TwitterFriendfeedLinkedinFacebookMySpaceMyBlogLogTechnoratidel.icio.us

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Use iPhone app CoffeeBuzz to energize your business

CoffeeBuzz

A few weeks ago I started off my Social Media for Small Businesses series with Coffee Shops, I’d like to update that with an addition of a new iPhone app named CoffeeBuzz.

This app appeared a few days ago, but since I don’t have an iPhone I don’t keep too close an eye on the iPhone happenings, but this one brought up some great ideas the second I heard about it on Mashable (about 10 minutes ago). If you don’t want to read the article I’ll give you the quick rundown that Pete did in his article.

1. Coffee locator: find coffee shops near you using the iPhone’s GPS

2. Get updates from people drinking coffee near you (similar to the Twitter location app “Twinkle”)

3. Share your favorite places to drink coffee

4. Post Tweets whenever you have a coffee

5. Automatically update your Twitter location

If you are a coffee shop owner and you have an iPhone this little $4 app is well worth the price, and here’s another list to tell you why.

  • By seeing what other people are saying both about you and the competition you get a very candid insight on your demographic.
  • If your shop is on Twitter and you know any of your fellow tweeple post when they get coffee from you to up the engagement a notch.
  • Offer other users of this app coffee specials via an update. Make it something awesome like a $2 latte and you just might have a new customer or twelve.
  • If you have someone preforming at your shop send an update and/or a coffee special out via the app for everyone else to see and entice customers.

I’m excited to see more apps like this show up for both the iPhone and the G1. These types of specialty apps provide unique ways for people and businesses to interact, but what do you think? How would you use this app if you were a coffee shop? Are there other apps like it that would work as well? Leave your thoughts below.

Thank you for reading,
Josh “Shua” Peters

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Social media for small businesses – Coffee Shops

This is part of an ongoing series about social media and small businesses. Living in Salt Lake City, Utah I’ll be using examples from the beehive state but obviously the ideas I’ll be presenting in these
article will work anywhere.  Small businesses are the backbone of our economy so if you know any SB owners that might benefit from this article please send them a link to this information.

 

For the most part I like where I live. It definitely has it’s problems and has quite the controversy surrounding it currently but there is a lot of charm in this salty city. We have plenty of underground culture and a lot of it seems to revolve around the local coffee shops, so I thought it was only right that I start my new ongoing series about social media for small businesses using these bastions of caffeination.

I don’t know what it’s like in other locations around the globe but here in Salt Lake City, Utah coffee shops seem to have a theme to their clientele. Nostalgia seems to invite more of the business professional book club and student types.

Nobrow coffee attracts a bit more of the artsy / hipster crowd, and Salt Lake Coffee Break is probably the trendiest place to get your coffee. The place is usually packed on the nights and weekends with kids and students of all kinds. Most have a steady flow of customers but when I talk to the business owners (something I always try to do at some point with any local business I frequent) they all seem to have the same
concern. How to drive more business and how to market effectively online.

Most of the coffee shops have a MySpace profile or website (which I’ve listed below for reference), and that’s awesome and all but most of them don’t really leverage it very well. So outside of what we’re developing with RoyalAnts I wanted to help with a few ideas for these local shops of java love.

  • Create a Twitter account and advertise it on your MySpace account. Then get something like TweetDeck so you can see separate your DM’s, replies, etc and start taking To-Go orders from your followers. I can’t tell you how many times I wish Nostalgia or NoBrow had this kind of a setup so I could just walk in, pick up my latte, pay and go. This would be a boon to your more tech savvy, in a hurry business types.
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  • If you have a social network presence, like MySpace, why not start leveraging it with some coupons? On notoriously slow days send out a “coupon” using a bulletin to your friends. Send out a message saying that from 2-5 on Tuesday anyone who comes in and says “I saw this bulletin thing on MySpace” gets $1 off a latte. Pretty soon your dull Tuesday afternoons will be booming.
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  • Use your hobbies to leverage your business. Are you book addict, a philosophy nut, or a knitting superstar? Find where these groups hang out online and engage them. Then next time they want to have a meet up somewhere offer up your coffee shop. Maybe give a discount to members
    of the group during the meeting. This will expose your shop to new people and gain some new clientele based on mutual interests.
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  • Are you already a social person by nature? Do you have some form of communication skills (you better if you own a business)? Know any of the other coffee shop owners around Utah? Start a group online! Make a MySpace group for the owners of local coffee shops and then invite them
    all to join and talk shop. Once you get your group going start having weekly or bi-weekly meetings at your shop, or even rotate with the other owners of local coffee shops. This is a great way to meet other local business people and trade war stories and strategies used in your specific business.
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  • Utilize the social networking platform of your choice to track down local talent to perform at your shop. I’ve seen plenty of great acts like Calico at local coffee shops. Finding them on a social network has 2 main
    advantages in that you will be able to tell all your friends about the performer and when they’ll be there and so will the performer. Doing this you have just leveraged 2 groups to help bring in the dough, your friends and theirs.
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These are just 5 quick ideas I came up with for these purveyors of delicious trimethylxanthine. What ideas do you have? How would you use social media to help a coffee shop market itself online? Leave a comment below with your ideas.

Thank you for reading,
Josh “Shua” Peters
p.s.
If you know a coffee shop owner please send this article their way,
thanks. If you are a coffee shop owner please feel free to contact me
with any questions you might have and if you need some help with any of
these ideas I’m usually willing work in trade ;)

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