Jul
26

Mom-and-Pop Operators Turn to Social Media

By Claire Cain Miller

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

Welcome guest writer CLAIRE CAIN MILLER

Claire Miller

Here is an article that she published on July 22, 2009. I think that it will enlighten you on how social media and Twitter is not just for fun anymore. See how small business are driving customers to their stores.

Enjoy, Jackie

SAN FRANCISCO — Three weeks after Curtis Kimball opened his crème brûlée cart in San Francisco, he noticed a stranger among the friends in line for his desserts. How had the man discovered the cart? He had read about it on Twitter.For Mr. Kimball, who conceded that he “hadn’t really understood the purpose of Twitter,” the beauty of digital word-of-mouth marketing was immediately clear. He signed up for an account and has more than 5,400 followers who wait for him to post the current location of his itinerant cart and list the flavors of the day, like lavender and orange creamsicle.Curtis Kimball

“I would love to say that I just had a really good idea and strategy, but Twitter has been pretty essential to my success,” he said. He has quit his day job as a carpenter to keep up with the demand.

Much has been made of how big companies like Dell, Starbucks and Comcast use Twitter to promote their products and answer customers’ questions. But today, small businesses outnumber the big ones on the free microblogging service, and in many ways, Twitter is an even more useful tool for them.

For many mom-and-pop shops with no ad budget, Twitter has become their sole means of marketing. It is far easier to set up and update a Twitter account than to maintain a Web page. And because small-business owners tend to work at the cash register, not in a cubicle in the marketing department, Twitter’s intimacy suits them well.

“We think of these social media tools as being in the realm of the sophisticated, multiplatform marketers like Coca-Cola and McDonald’s, but a lot of these supersmall businesses are gravitating toward them because they are accessible, free and very simple,” said Greg Sterling, an analyst who studies the Internet’s influence on shopping and local businesses.

Small businesses typically get more than half of their customers through word of mouth, he said, and Twitter is the digital manifestation of that. Twitter users broadcast messages of up to 140 characters in length, and the culture of the service encourages people to spread news to friends in their own network.

Umi, a sushi restaurant in San Francisco, sometimes gets five new customers a night who learned about it on Twitter, said Shamus Booth, a co-owner.

He twitters about the fresh fish of the night — “The O-Toro (bluefin tuna belly) tonight is some of the most rich and buttery tuna I’ve had,” he recently wrote — and offers free seaweed salads to people who mention Twitter.

Twitter is not just for businesses that want to lure customers with mouth-watering descriptions of food. For Cynthia Sutton-Stolle, the co-owner of Silver Barn Antiques in tiny Columbus, Tex., Twitter has been a way to find both suppliers and customers nationwide.

Since she joined Twitter in February, she has connected with people making lamps and candles that she subsequently ordered for her shop and has sold a few thousand dollars of merchandise to people outside Columbus, including to a woman in New Jersey shopping for graduation gifts.

“We don’t even have our Web site done, and we weren’t even trying to start an e-commerce business,” Ms. Sutton-Stolle said. “Twitter has been a real valuable tool because it’s made us national instead of a little-bitty store in a little-bitty town.”

Scott Seaman of Blowing Rock, N.C., also uses Twitter to expand his customer base beyond his town of about 1,500 residents. Mr. Seaman is a partner at Christopher’s Wine and Cheese shop and owns a bed and breakfast in town. He sets up searches on TweetDeck, a Web application that helps people manage their Twitter messages, to start conversations with people talking about his town or the mountain nearby. One person he met on Twitter booked a room at his inn, and a woman in Dallas ordered sake from his shop.

The extra traffic has come despite his rarely pitching his own businesses on Twitter. “To me, that’s a turn-off,” he said. Instead of marketing to customers, small-business owners should use the same persona they have offline, he advised. “Be the small shopkeeper down the street that everyone knows by name.”

Chris Mann, the owner of Woodhouse Day Spa in Cincinnati, twitters about discounts for massages and manicures every Tuesday. Twitter beats e-mail promotions because he can send tweets from his phone in a meeting and “every single business sends out an e-mail,” he said.

Even if a shop’s customers are not on Twitter, the service can be useful for entrepreneurs, said Becky McCray, who runs a liquor store and cattle ranch in Oklahoma and publishes a blog called Small Biz Survival.

In towns like hers, with only 5,000 people, small-business owners can feel isolated, she said. But on Twitter, she has learned business tax tips from an accountant, marketing tips from a consultant in Tennessee and start-up tips from the founder of several tech companies.

Anamitra Banerji, who manages commercial products at Twitter, said that when he joined the company from Yahoo in March, “I thought this was a place where large businesses were. What I’m finding more and more, to my surprise every single day, is business of all kinds.”

Twitter, which does not yet make money, is now concentrating on teaching businesses how they can join and use it, Mr. Banerji said, and the company plans to publish case studies. He is also developing products that Twitter can sell to businesses of all sizes this year, including features to verify businesses’ accounts and analyze traffic to their Twitter profiles.

According to Mr. Banerji, small-business owners like Twitter because they can talk directly to customers in a way that they were able to do only in person before. “We’re finding the emotional distance between businesses and their customers is shortening quite a bit,” he said.

  • Share/Bookmark
  • Great post! I am just starting out in community management/marketing media and trying to learn how to do it well - resources like this article are incredibly helpful. As our company is based in the US, it?s all a bit new to us. The example above is something that I worry about as well, how to show your own genuine enthusiasm and share the fact that your product is useful in that case.
  • I agree with you. This type of projects should be encouraged and I think that these type of projects are the projects for the future. . . . .
  • Thanks for taking the time to share this, I feel strongly about it and love reading more on this topic. If possible, as you gain knowledge, would you mind updating your blog with more information? It is extremely helpful for me.
  • I feel a lot more people need to read this, very good info! . . . . . .
  • I have been following this blog for today and I should say I am beginning to like your post.
  • Bookmarked, i will add your homepage to my toolbar
  • Thank you for another excellent article. Where else could anyone get that kind of info in like a perfect way of presentation.
  • Good post. I don't suppose you would mind if I was to add your blog to my linkexchange directory?
  • Wow! Thank you! I always wanted to write in my site something like that. Can I take part of your post to my blog?
  • As a Newbie, I am always searching online for articles that can help me. Thank youWow!
  • cool great blog yea nice work our review blog will soon be adding reviews on websites and add them to our blogs as the top best 10 blogs to visit we also do reviews on Product Reviews all types of reviews
  • special post , really good view on the subject and very well written, this certainly has put a spin on my day, numerous thanks from the USA and keep up the good work
  • I've always enjoyed watching cinemas with Michael Cain. I was searching for tid bits of information on Michael and somehow ended up on your site. I've found this post grabbed my attention. I'll go and take a look around the rest of your website. Thanks!
  • This is my first visit here, but I will be back soon, because I really like the way you are writing, it is so simple and honest
  • I really like when people are expressing their opinion and thought. So I like the way you are writing
  • This is really helpful and informative. Amazing work..Way of explanation and pictures presentation is attractive .
  • I could not have said it better myself. Plumet to the top
  • Right on. It's more informative and easy to understand. Thanks a lot such a nice guideline.
  • This is really helpful and informative. Amazing work ..Way of explanation and pictures presentation is attractive .
  • Thanks for a awesome post and interesting comments. I found this post while looking for some music updates.
  • I really like your blog and i respect your work. I'll be a frequent visitor.
  • Thank you! You often write very interesting articles. You improved my mood.
  • Interesting and informative. But will you write about this one more?
  • Are you a professional journalist? You write very well.
  • I liked it. So much useful material. I read with great interest.
blog comments powered by Disqus

RSS Feed:

Subscribe to JackieTulos.com

Get the latest updates delivered via email