• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

  • About
  • Podcasts
  • Journal

Insights

State of Independence

Years ago I worked in retail on both sides. I started out working for an electrical goods chain store, then moved onto a smaller local one.

Both jobs were great (at least for me), because they satisfied the tech geek in me. Surrounded by home theater kits and massive TV?s? Sign me up!

But as much as I loved working at the big chain store, it never felt fulfilling.

We had to pretty much stick to a sales script and only if we were lucky could we occasionally offer our own take.

We weren?t encouraged to be ourselves.

Same went for special promotions. If a brand was paying to be highlighted that month, you had to sell toward that brand, even if another product was clearly the better one for the customer. It was snake oil salesmen tactics at their worst.

Jump to the little store, however, and the difference was palpable. You actually talked with your customers; asked what they wanted; offered your advice; agreed on essentials versus luxuries; and built an understanding.

Most of all, you were talking as if you?were?the customer.

No BS; no sales crap; no false advertising. Just simple customer-to-customer selling. And it worked. And continues to do so today.

Think about it. When you last went to a record store, or DVD store, or video games store that belonged to a chain, did you come away with just a purchase or a transaction? Because there?is?a difference.

Did you feel that you had bought your purchase yourself, or had bought it because it was sold to you? And I don?t mean because the salesperson picked it up and showed you what was on sale; I mean it was really?sold?to you.

The Indie Effect

From my experiences, independent retailers score every time over the chain stores. Sure, you get the occasional bright spark at a major retailer who lets their passion shine through. But generally, it?s just a job to them.

Indie retailers, on the other hand,?love?what they?re doing. They live the atmosphere that the small store brings. They know customers by name. They know the difference between Product A and Product B because they?use?it and?learn?about it, and not because they?ve read some manufacturer spiel. Then they pass that learning on.

Sure, the major stores might get the big deals from the manufacturers, but as the collapse of some of the big brands in business show, it?s not always about the best deals. At least, not price-wise.

Instead, a lot of the success is coming from the little independent guys jumping in and making people know about their service. By talking to them. By listening to what their customers want. By?being?the customer.

Sound familiar?

Be an Independent Retailer

Social media. Marketing. PR. Advertising. Customer service. Business deals. Business building. Branding. Unbranding.

Everything you do day in, day out ? are you being a major retailer or are you being the independent retailer? Are you saying and doing what all your competitors are doing or are you doing what?you?redoing?

There?s a big difference in approach and sales time is fast approaching. So. What are you?

Your Value

Electricity is free, but we pay energy companies to harness it.

Water is free, but we pay for the privilege of filtering.

Air is free, but we pay for the solution of conditioning it for summers in our homes.

Natural gas is free, but we pay for the importance of safety in its use.

Oil is free, but we pay for the welling and distribution.

When we get down to it, all the things we could have for free we’re willing to pay for, because where needs are met, value is gained.

If you meet the needs of your audience, why would the value you bring be free?

Join @GaryVee and @AmberMac in Toronto July 26 for Social Mix 2012 #SoMix2012

Social Mix 2012

If you’re in the Toronto, Ontario area on July 26, make sure you keep the day free for what promises to be one of the city’s leading social media and business events this year.

Top business and marketing folks Gary Vaynerchuk and Amber Mac will be keynoting at the inaugural Social Mix, presented by Jugnoo (hey, that’s where I work!). They’ll be sharing their insights and expertise on what it takes to succeed both online and offline, and how to build your business for long-term success.

Alongside Gary and Amber, we’ll also be bringing the highly respected Gini Dietrich and Geoff Livingston, co-authors of the new Marketing in the Round book, and two of the most influential voices on marketing in the social media world today.

As well as shaping up to be a kickass event, there’s a great cause we’ll be donating all proceeds to in the Remix Project, a Toronto organization that helps marginalized youth become the creative change makers of tomorrow.

It promises to be a great event, and one that will offer great insights to all attendees, from solo entrepreneurs to small-to-medium business owners and much, much more.

Check out the full Social Mix website for more details on the event, as well as the schedule and how you can buy your ticket(s) to join us on the day.

And as a special bonus, all JugnooMe users will be receiving a 20% discount on ticket prices – so if you haven’t signed up yet to try the JugnooMe beta, now’s the perfect time.

Cheers!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZizUQQNRq-4[/youtube]

 

Everything Is Dead

Everything is dead

The print industry is dead, yet we still use a version of ink for the ebooks that killed print.

The news release is dead, yet we still count print publication mentions as a measure of success.

Advertising is dead, yet we still spend almost $120 billion every three months.

Blogging is dead, even though the platforms reporting this are built on blogs.

PR is dead, despite it pervading every part of a business from customer service to branding to HR and more.

Seems everything is dead, even though we continue to use all of these corpses today.

Great to be alive, eh?

Social Media, Self-Proclamation and the Wanky Word

Wanky social media

Wanky social media

We all want to be famous, whether we admit it or not.

We all want the glory of recognition for our work; our media; our creations; our results. To say otherwise is to lie. Of course, the thing is, there are different levels of what we want and how we want it.

Thankfully for those that want it, whether it?s deserved or not, social media allows us to live out our narcissistic fantasies and be as famous as we believe we should be.

Fame, though, can come in many forms. There?s?the type of fame that Mike talks about; but that?s where we seek fame but don?t really say as much. Then there?s the well-deserved fame of?a job well done, despite not really being famous at all.

And then there?s the self-proclaimed fame. But is this fame, or infamy? Can it even be called fame, when it?s a self-imposed title? Perhaps the fame is there because of the irony around the self-proclamation?

Them?s Mighty Big Words You?re Using

Say, for example, you call yourselves ?the standard for influence?, like?our friends at Klout. That?s a pretty mighty title to give yourself. Can they live up to it?

After all, Klout does have at least 100 million users being profiled, so that?s a hefty number, and one that should stand for the standard of influence, right?

Eh, maybe not.

Considering there are approximately 900 million users just on Facebook, so 800 million short there. Or 200 million on Twitter, so only half the number there. Even LinkedIn, everyone?s favourite-but-not-really network,?has 131 million users, so Klout?s missing 31 million people there.

Even if Klout were to say they were just ?the standard for?ONLINE?influence?,?there are 2 billion people using the web.?TWO BILLION.

So, in the grand scheme of things, 100 million is like a wet kiss on the cheek compared to the back-seat virginity loss and post-coital cigarette it desperately wants to be.

Self-Proclamation and The Wanky Word

There?s nothing wrong with being confident in your abilities. There?s nothing wrong in being proud of your achievements, and sharing them with the world.

That should, actually, be a given, since the world is hard enough to succeed in at the best of times ? so?true success deserves to be highlighted.

But saying you?re something you?re clearly not isn?t a statement of success. Nor is it a statement of intent or a goal ? if it were that, the line would go something like ?aiming to be the standard for influence?.

At least that approach is being honest, and people will cut you slack.

But calling yourself the best or standard when there?s a clear difference between the claim and the actuality?

That?s just kinda wanky.

image:?natebeaty

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 49
  • Page 50
  • Page 51
  • Page 52
  • Page 53
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 174
  • Go to Next Page »
© 2026 Danny Brown - Made with ♥ on Genesis