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Content about Long Beach

August 1, 2012

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Make sure your message is where the people are

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Brian Wallace, president/CEO of the Coin Laundry Association, was given a daunting task: to capture the audience’s attention during the final hour of a regional dry cleaning and laundry trade show in sunny Southern California.

But his task was no more challenging than one faced by every self-service laundry operator: to successfully market his or her store(s) in an environment where potential customers have access to information almost instantaneously and from a variety of sources.

On top of all the other “hats” that a laundry owner “wears”—customer service, maintenance, production, human resources, accounting—he or she can add one more hat to that mix: director of marketing, Wallace told attendees of Fabricare 2012.

“You work incredibly hard for your business, but the fact of the matter is things have changed. … We’re all trying to reinvent ourselves on the fly, trying to deal with the new marketplace. I think that trying to come to grips with some of the new marketing techniques is really an important part of that overall process.”

You may worry about not having the time and money to boost your laundry’s marketing profile, says Wallace, but you shouldn’t.

“What I’ve found exciting about social media, digital media, web, all these different things that have come along the last couple of years, these are almost all low-cost or no-cost opportunities.”

Thus, Wallace ran down a list of ways in which a laundry operator could promote his or her business today. Here are No. 6 through 10:

6. SEND AN E-MAIL NEWSLETTER

Use the e-mail addresses that you gathered from your contests [see Part 1] to update those customers with a newsletter about your business. It’s cheaper to distribute such newsletters via e-mail instead of printing and mailing them.

What should your newsletter include? Share print-to-click coupons, store news, and announcements of upcoming special events. Position yourself as a garment care expert by sharing laundry tips. Write a blog.

“What do people do today when they get a great coupon via e-mail?” Wallace asks. “Forward it to their friends and family. You used to mail a coupon. They had one coupon and one person redeemed it. What happens now? Maybe that coupon goes out to everybody on my e-mail list, all my friends on Facebook, anyone who follows me on Twitter. All of a sudden, this coupon that you sent to one regular customer just went out to maybe another couple hundred people.”

Wallace recommends keeping an e-newsletter short and easy to scan, designing it for the “preview pane,” creating a strong subject line, and selecting a reputable e-mail marketing service (Constant Contact, MailChimp, AWeber, etc.) to maintain and deliver your newsletter.

7. ADVERTISE WITH GOOGLE ADWORDS

Use “search advertising” to find customers when they’re in need of laundry services, says Wallace, and a high-profile method is advertising using Google AdWords. “We want to do everything we can to let people find us organically, but this is where we cover our bet. This is where we pay for placement.”

You create ads and choose keywords, which are words or phrases related to your laundry. When people search on Google using one of your keywords, your ad may appear next to the search results. Plus, you can set local parameters such as ZIP code and a radius search.

Google AdWords can be cost-effective, Wallace says, because you establish a budget for the campaign and control your ad spending. “The impressions are free; they can see that your results are there. You’re only paying if they click. There’s a process here, that you can view on your own, whereby you bid on certain search terms, and you’re paying per click.”

The amount you spend is entirely up to you, and there’s no minimum. Wallace used $25 per month as an example. When your ad has drawn the number of clicks that exhausts that budget, you have the option to end the campaign then for the month or to add funds to keep it going.

“What’s a regular customer going to spend with you in a year?” Wallace asks. “The average Laundromat customer is going to spend 500 bucks a year, probably closer to a thousand. … You can go the extra mile. There’s a cost associated with it, but it’s a low cost.”

8. INCENTIVES WITH FOURSQUARE AND GROUPON

The service called foursquare allows users to “check in” via a smart phone app or SMS. Users share their location with the public while collecting points and virtual badges

A business benefits from foursquare because the activity attracts new customers, rewards loyal customers, and provides another outlet for offering specials, mobile coupons, and prizes or discounts.

“It’s works well where people are going on a regular basis. … It’s the frequent flyer model. It’s the punch card from the sandwich shop. As the business owner, you give them different perks, different discounts, different things to attract, mobile coupons, and you’re rewarding them for being a regular customer. It’s the oldest idea in retail.”

Groupon is a “deal of the day” website that features discounted gift certificates offered for a limited time that a customer purchases online and then presents at the business. Groupon offers small businesses big exposure and measurable marketing, Wallace says; 91% of businesses report seeing new customers from their promotions.

But critics say the new business generated by a Groupon campaign is short-lived and doesn’t result in repeat customers.

“Among a lot of the small-business people I talk to, the jury is still out,” Wallace says. “It definitely generates leads. You get people that use the service. You’re basically asked to give about a 50% discount, splitting the other 50% with Groupon. But you’re getting people in the door.”

For example, a Laundromat sells $15 worth of laundry service for $7, or does 25 pounds of wash, dry and fold service for $20.

9. GET SOCIAL ON TWITTER

Twitter is the fastest-growing social network, with 300,000 people joining every day. Its users number 200 million, Wallace says.

The microblogging site enables users to send and read posts of up to 140 characters called “tweets.” Unregistered users can read tweets, while registered users can post tweets through the website, SMS, or a range of apps for mobile devices.

From a business perspective, Twitter is used for customer service, sharing immediate information, gathering real-time market feedback, generating leads, building customer relationships, marketing, and sharing coupons and discounts.

“It’s a great way to stay in communication, but it’s the same principle. It’s word of mouth. It’s peppering out information about your business and asking people to follow through on it.”

Wallace described a Laundromat owner based in Ohio who tweets that his machines are open or offers a free soda or box of soap to the first 10 customers to show up. “He said that every time he tweets during slow times, he gets customers.”

10. GETTING FOUND BY GPS

Increasingly, people are using the search functions of GPS units commonly found in today’s vehicles and smart phones to find local businesses. There are two main information providers—Navteq and Teleatlas—and businesses can register their sites for free with those companies, Wallace says.

“I’ve had members tell me that this is great, it’s like the best tip they got when we first shared this a year or so ago,” he says. “Is it going to revolutionize your business? No, but it may find you a few new customers.”

Whether you try out only one or two of these tips or all of them, it’s absolutely vital that you become more proactive in promoting your business, Wallace advises.

“A lot of this talk is about ‘grabbing the wheel,’” he says. “A lot of this is happening either with you or without you. As a small-business owner, I’m saying, ‘Grab the wheel.’ Have an impact on what’s happening with the way your business is being viewed online and through social media.”

Click here for Part 1!

July 31, 2012

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Make sure your message is where the people are

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Brian Wallace, president/CEO of the Coin Laundry Association, was given a daunting task: to capture the audience’s attention during the final hour of a regional dry cleaning and laundry trade show in sunny Southern California.

But his task was no more challenging than one faced by every self-service laundry operator: to successfully market his or her store(s) in an environment where potential customers have access to information almost instantaneously and from a variety of sources.

On top of all the other “hats” that a laundry owner “wears”—customer service, maintenance, production, human resources, accounting—he or she can add one more hat to that mix: director of marketing, Wallace told attendees of Fabricare 2012.

“You work incredibly hard for your business, but the fact of the matter is things have changed. … We’re all trying to reinvent ourselves on the fly, trying to deal with the new marketplace. I think that trying to come to grips with some of the new marketing techniques is really an important part of that overall process.”

You may worry about not having the time and money to boost your laundry’s marketing profile, says Wallace, but you shouldn’t.

“What I’ve found exciting about social media, digital media, web, all these different things that have come along the last couple of years, these are almost all low-cost or no-cost opportunities.”

Where is the first place that consumers look, according to Wallace, for local business information? They look to search engines (33%), printed Yellow Pages (23%), online Yellow Pages (22%), local search sites (13%), and mobile apps/social media outreach (9%).

And 77% of all users will research online before they’ll walk through a laundry’s door, he says.

“If we want our businesses to be successful, we need to make sure that our message is where the people are.”

Thus, Wallace ran down a list of ways in which a laundry operator could promote his or her business today. Here are 1 through 5:

1. CLAIM YOUR BUSINESS LISTING AT GOOGLE PLACES AND SIMILAR SERVICES

Google Places is a free business directory offered by Google, the largest search engine in the world and the second busiest website overall. Nearly three-quarters of all web searches happen through Google, Wallace says.

Google Places allows a business to create an informative page about its location, services, hours of operation, and more, using text, images and even video.

“By claiming your business, you’re essentially saying, ‘Google, that is my (laundry). I am the owner,’” Wallace says. “And once they confirm that with you, it’s a pretty easy process.”

Once a listing is established, the business has the ability to edit the presentation so that it is always accurate and up to date.

“The search engine’s job is to deliver the best possible results for the customer,” he says. “So, they’re going to put a lot more weight on a listing that’s been claimed by the business owner, that’s been fleshed out with all the pertinent information. It’s going to deliver better results.”

Once you’re created a profile for Google Places, it’s simple to “copy and paste” the data into other services such as Yahoo! Local, Bing Local, Yelp and Merchant Circle.

“Do your prospective customers a favor—the ones that want to spend money with you—help them find you.”

2. GET A WEBSITE

If your laundry maintains a business website, great. If your laundry is among the 46% of small businesses that still don’t have a website, get one.

If you don’t think it’s something that you or someone affiliated with your business can do, there are any number of companies that offer website design services with small businesses in mind.

Wallace’s association builds websites for its members for free. “We believe the best way to grow the coin laundry business is to make sure that every single laundry owner is available on the web to be found by consumers.”

3. CREATE A FACEBOOK PAGE

Facebook boasts more than 600 million active users, 50% of whom use the site on a daily basis. But, you ask, why should I market my laundry on Facebook?

  • Your customers are here
  • Competitors might be here already
  • It’s easy to create and update your page
  • You can share all types of information in almost any format
  • Being here aids in search engine placement

“Even if you think it’s garbage, even if you don’t care about your friend or your college roommate, what they’re up to, if you cut through the clutter, this is where people are finding businesses,” Wallace says. “This is where they’re getting referrals, this is where they’re finding out where their friends and family are doing their dry cleaning, and who they like and who they don’t.”

So how do you get started? Create a Facebook page, but do notcreate a personal profile (one with an e-mail address). And before you create a page, search the site for an existing “Facebook Places” page for your business and claim that instead.

4. MONITOR BUSINESS REVIEW SITES AND REPLY WHEN APPROPRIATE

In the past, when someone had a certain experience—good or bad—at your business, they told their friends and family. Today’s web-savvy customers are also likely to post a review of your laundry on sites such as Yelp, Merchant Circle and others that millions can read 24/7.

Wallace often hears from laundry owners who avoid sites like this because of negative reviews. But he says that sticking your head in the sand is not the answer.

“The genie is out of the bottle. The toothpaste is out of the tube. It’s out there. It’s happened. You don’t have a choice in the matter. Your business is already being discussed in this manner. You may lament it. You may like the old days, but they’re gone.”

He sees a negative online review as an opportunity for you to respond to a customer’s complaint, just as you would have had you received it at your business, and to promote your laundry’s benefits.

“Part of this is not only responding … but encouraging people to review you, because you run a great shop. That bad review is one rotten apple in the barrel. Most of your customers love you. They see you every week. You need to get that volume going too.”

5. CONTESTS AND A CUSTOMER DATABASE

Contests can increase community awareness of your business, plus enable you to network with customers (more personal equals more loyal). You can create repeat customers while also building a customer database for use in direct or e-mail marketing.

Every laundry should develop a customer mailing list, preferably one that includes e-mail addresses, Wallace says. Stay in touch with your customers through offers and information in order to retain their business; plot their locations on a map to help plan for future advertising.

And don’t be above “bribing” customers for information through raffles, giveaways and surveys.

Tomorrow in Part 2: E-mail newsletter, Google AdWords, foursquare, Groupon and more

June 26, 2012

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Coin-op owners may attend annual convention and trade show free

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Organizers of Fabricare 2012, the 86th annual California Cleaners Association (CCA) Educational Convention and Trade Show, are making final preparations for the July 13-15 event.

The Long Beach (Calif.) Convention Center will play host to the event targeting coin-op, laundry and dry cleaning owners/operators.

James Peuster, “The Route Pro,” will present a seminar on July 13 before the exhibit hall opens on July 14-15.

Fabricare attendees (cleaners only) can visit the exhibit hall at no cost this year. Previously, there was a $15 fee to view the exhibits. The CCA website quotes CCA President Bobby Patel as calling the decision “an economic stimulus to the Fabricare attendees.”

In addition to the trade show, Fabricare offers educational seminars covering a variety of topics of interest to coin laundry owners and dry cleaners. Past seminars have included state and national legislative updates, management courses, human resources, print marketing, routes, leases, contamination, customer service, e-marketing, technology, security, and an industry outlook.

For more information, or to register, visit fabricareshow.com or call the CCA at 916-239-4070.