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Archive for February 2009 – Page 3

How Blogging Can Help Rural and Small Town Business

By Des Walsh
Thursday, February 5th, 2009

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Can blogging work for local businesses in small town and rural communities?

I ask the question rhetorically, because I believe it can. And I ask it because the other day a man at a checkout told me he and his colleagues were about to lose their jobs and did not know what the future held.

In what may or may not be a sign of the times, one of our local fruit and vegetable stores, Farmer Charlies, the main business in a small drive-in shopping centre here in Tweed Heads, Australia, closed its doors last weekend. Judging by the shell-shocked demeanour of the guy at the checkout, who told me last week that this would be happening, it was not a planned move. In fact, it’s not long since the complex had a major overhaul and it appears Farmer Charlies had a lease till 2017.

I can’t help wondering whether Farmer Charlies would have had a better chance of surviving if the store had been more findable online. Using social media tools, including blogging, could have helped with that. Surely even a static website could have helped: the best I could do with a search on “Farmer Charlies Lismore” (the parent store) was a link to a local online business directory with a phone number and map (courtesy Google Maps) for that store. Alongside “Website” – “not supplied”; “Email” – “not supplied”.

As for any current reference to Farmer Charlies Tweed Heads, I couldn’t find one.

All those people out of jobs. Good, hard-working people, friendly, courteous, always helpful – what my parents’ generation called without a trace of irony the salt of the earth.

Why wasn’t someone setting up a website? Better still, why weren’t they using interactive, social media tools?

It seems not a lot has changed in these parts since a couple of years back when, in my enthusiasm, I did presentations to local businesses about how blogging could work for them and how economically that could be done. I used to get a very positive response from the participants, but no callbacks. I doubt that many have taken action.

These thoughts are prompted not only by the haunting memory of the look in the eyes of the fit, energetic young man at Farmer Charlies about to be retrenched, who when I asked “What will you do?” said simply “I don’t know”.

They are prompted also by the case study I have just posted today on my Des Walsh dot Com site, about small business expert and small town (Alva, Oklahoma) resident Becky McCray. She has used blogging to good business effect there and that’s got me wondering what lessons could be learnt and shared across the world by people in small, rural or semi-rural communities.

If you check out the post – and if you are at all interested in this topic I encourage you to do so, not because I wrote it but because of the story itself – you will notice that Becky and several colleagues produce a blog Small Biz Survival which looks precisely at this issue of small business survival in small town and rural communities.

I realize there are challenges in comparing what works in a small town in the USA with what might work in a small town in Australia. Also, there are ten times more people here in Tweed Heads than there are in Alva, OK. But we are still effectively a (relatively) small semi-rural community.

And I reckon the farmers I talk to at the local market on Sundays and the proprietors of the small shops in the main street here would not have much difficulty comparing notes with their counterparts in rural and small town USA.

So what if those of us who live in these small communities, not just in Australia or the USA, but anywhere in the world, were to start sharing information and ideas, comparing notes?

Then those of us who care about helping keep businesses alive and flourishing in our communities would have case studies, with comparative data and links to relevant sites, that could back up any efforts we might feel like making to share with our fellow citizens the potential benefits to them of using social media.

Wouldn’t it be good if a bunch of us could collaborate to help businesses in rural and small town communities not only survive but flourish?

I realise that a lot of the businesses I’m referring to are not home based. And I know perfectly well that some of our farmers are going to be competing with some of the farmers in other countries. But I believe the times call for some collaboration and mutual support, for mutual community benefit, so I don’t feel we should give up just because there are some challenges.

If you would like to contribute to this process, with ideas, suggestions, or even disagreement (I might be off with the pixies on this one, although I doubt it) I would love to hear from you, via the Comments section here or the Contact page.

You could also subscribe to Small Biz Survival RSS feed and/or the newsletter there – I have just subscribed to both.

Categories : Blogging, Business, Social Media, Social Networks
Tags : Alva OK, Becky McCray, Blogging, FArmer CHarlies, rural businesss, Small Biz Survival, small town business, Social Media, Tweed Heads

BlogWorld Expo 2009

By Des Walsh
Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

With the merger late last year of BlogWorld Expo and New Media Expo, BlogWorld Expo this coming October 15-17 in Las Vegas promises to be bigger and better than ever.

The BlogWorld conference proper is again being held over two days, 16-17, preceded as in the past two years by an Executive and Entrepreneur Day, October 15. The Expo runs over the two days of the main conference, October 16-17.

On his Mediasphere program today on BlogTalkRadio, host Jim Turner announced that a new program is being launched on BlogTalkRadio, this coming Friday as I understand, to focus on BlogWorld Expo 09.

BlogWorld Expo 2008 - standing room only
Twitter Session, standing room only: BlogWorld Expo 08. Picture by Dave Cynkin via Flickr
– Creative Commons.

Having participated for two years in a row now in BlogWorld and New Media Expo, I can attest that the event provides a singular opportunity for bloggers, podcasters and others in the industry to get together, compare notes, learn, catch up with new developments, network – and party. Yes, there are great parties!

Nor are the expo and conference just for practitioners and enthusiasts from the industry. One of the aspects I enjoyed last year and the year before was meeting people who were basically new to blogging and other forms of social media and had come to learn. I’m sure that will be repeated this year.

I’m hoping too that there will be a bigger international contingent than previously.

Some of the content on the web site still refers to 2008. For example, if you want to submit a proposal to present a session at the conference, be aware that the bulk of the information on the page, including deadlines, belongs to 2008: however, it is a good guide to what is expected. The page carries a promise that indicates it was intended to have been updated in January.

Although it is apparently too early to register for the event, there is provision to register to be kept informed – except that today that page would not work for me: hopefully it will be fixed soon. I hope when they fix it they will solve the problem of having only US States to list in the required field for State.

If you are thinking of exhibiting, a look at the expo hall layout suggests that several spots have already been reserved. However, it looks to me as if there are still some very good spots still available. There is also information on rates, what is provided and so on.

There is a Facebook page for the event with the usual “Attending”, “Maybe” and “Not Attending” options.

Having participated for the past two years, I have to say that if I could only go to one event this year, BlogWorld Expo would be it.

I’ll update this information as things take shape.

Categories : Blogging, Coaching, Social Media
Tags : blog expo, blogworld, blogworldexpo 09, Las Vegas, new media
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