Marketing

February 08, 2008

Jewelry Designer Business e-course -- Tips from the Trenches

I've launched a free e-course (that's a class that comes via email!) to help you start the year off on the right foot.

Visit our website at www.jewelersresource.com and you should see a floating box where you can sign up to receive our free lessons.

If you don't see it just send a blank email to:  jrbtipscourse@aweber.com. That will hook you up, too.

You'll get all 10 lessons in your inbox -- one every other day.

Topics include:
Lesson 1 -- Marketing is a never-ending process
Lesson 2 -- Actions in line with goals
Lesson 3 -- Tell them what to think
Lesson 4 -- There's no such thing as buzz kill
Lesson 5 -- Don't make it hard to find you
Lesson 6 -- Sales trumps design every time
Lesson 7 -- Follow instructions
Lesson 8 -- Manners Matter
Lesson 9 -- Experimentation is good and staying true to your brand is better
Lesson 10 -- Prince Charming doesn't exist - and lastly, it's not personal

I've worked with hundreds of designers in my career and I've seen them come and unfortunately, I've seen them go. What helped make the difference? Sign up for my free e-course and find out.

January 12, 2008

You Gotta Tell Your Own Story - Repeatedly

Frank and I were just marveling at how easy it is for history to morph into urban legend.

We just completed work on our first coffee table book, due out this summer, and the galleys are being proofed. Frank did much of the early research interviewing members of the American Jewelry Design Council on the origins of the group. He found several different printed references for how many were at the first meeting, who was there, who organized it, etc.

It seems everyone's recollection is different. We laugh about it because it took him over a dozen interviews, some reinterviews, to nail down what we think (hope) are the facts. Slippery memories are to blame as is the fact that at the time they didn't know what a momentous thing they were creating and it must not have seemed too important to document it.

This reminds me of another organization I work with which also needed continual clarification of it's founding days. Not everyone got the right credit in each version of the story. I know it wasn't malice that left some people or places out of the story --- but rather the fact that everyone has a different vantage point and a sloppy memory.

Let's say a magazine writer interviews the current president (or marketing director or oldest member, I'm not picking on anybody here!) who retells the story as they recollect it. OR how they understood it to be since they weren't even there. And one miswritten story gets passed down to someone else who retells it in an article in a slightly different way. OR shortens it to make it snappier or whatever. You get my point.

And why did all this revisionist history take place? Because in both instances there wasn't good documentation to begin with. So things get mixed in the retelling.

And WHY bring this up in our blog?????

Because it screamed out at me as a big DO THIS for every designer business. 

I could also cite instances of:

  • Designers not being able to protect a copyright because they didn't keep the original sketches (maybe because they were on a cocktail napkin?)
  • Artist Statements that claim they won an award that never existed because they never saved any paperwork and they "think" it was called the "Women's Diamond Award" or some such!
  • Partners who came in after the first initial years of uphill climbing but getting carried away with themselves in the flush years started claiming that "they created the business"
  • A designer having a catch phrase for their business but it not catching on as a BRAND message because it's not written down anywhere or emphasized often in print

All of these examples underscore one of my Top Ten Tips to Success (of which there are 16!) :
YOU HAVE TO TELL THEM WHAT TO THINK

If you want your work described in a specific way, your technique explained accurately, your business philosophy conveyed to all ... then make sure it is written down and shared every way it can be. Most importantly on your website but in every press release (end each release with the same corporate statement of the business), on your brochures, press kits, etc.

Writers won't get it wrong if they have accurate source material. Customers are more likely to describe your work in the same way you do when you've given them the words often enough. And everyone will retell your story well if you give them one good one to start with. And never waiver.

Want to test the theory of propagating your own words? Google --- "Classically Distinctive" jewelry --- and see what designer has gotten it right.

April 07, 2007

Database Pet Peeve

This is the time of year when most designers are getting ready for the best sales opps for the whole year.

So it's no surprise that we're busy creating custom mailing lists for them. Our database has 3000 designer-centric retailers (pretty much the entire universe). We keep track of all sorts of data on them -- when we mailed them something, what they're JBT # is, web address, buyer, etc. It's amazing to me how few designers do the same!

If you don't have a good database program -- please put it on your To Get list.

It's one thing to have your customers in your accounting program (you can track their orders, their purchasing history and print labels) but it's another to track prospects. And prospects are invaluable.

And spending hours (or losing hours, actually) to hand address or wrestle with the wrong program (Word or Xcel are not the best for labels even if you know how!) is just silly.

My favorite database program (and the one I use to track 7000 retailers, 5035 designers and 1250 other business contacts) is FILEMAKER. It's relatively easy to learn, it does so much more than contacts (inventory and sales tracking and web publishing are the others) and it will make sure you're tracking your prospects to grow your business.

March 21, 2007

The Value of Good Photos

This past season I was privledged to judge three major industry design competitions.

I have a lot to say about the experience but the most important thing I must impart to you is ...

TAKE GOOD PHOTOS!

You would be surprised to know how many designers don't take professional photographs for their entries in design competitions. Presumably, they want to win those contests so why don't send the best representation possible? It's shocking.

You need to know:

  • judges judge the quality of your entry as well as the jewelry
  • your image is being shown for a very short time in between other images that might be of FANTASTIC quality
  • if judges can't see your work well they can't score it high no matter what great attributes it might have

Bottom line: if you're not a professional photographer -- HIRE ONE! Your marketing image is too important to cheap out.