Metzger Business

November 13, 2009

The Neighborhood – Barber Shop

 jake's 2

Jake’s where everybody who walks in is a ”Legend.” Jake’s is still a central point in the small town where I grew up in NEPA, that is North East Pennsylvania for those who are un-initiated and pronounced Nee-Pa. If you walk into Jake’s on a Saturday all the men in town will be there talking about sports, friends, politics and business. Everyone who walks in knows the conversation and Jake knows everyone. If you aren’t able there on a Saturday morning then you can go in the middle of the week and Jake will catch you up. The environment in that type of business creates friendships, contacts and generates additional business. If someone comes into the shop and says I’ve been having a problem with my water heater Jake or someone else will say oh, call Larry he’ll fix it right up. You need some advertising cha-cha’s Call Big Scotty Schoenberg down at Brucelli.

Now obviously not everybody goes into the barber every week and in most towns there just aren’t those kind of shops where everybody knows whats going on. It’s difficult to find that neighborhood spot because like I said in my post on Neighborhoods they just do not exist in most towns the way they use to. So whats the point and why are we talking about a barber shop?

In today’s world the neighborhood is created online, yes even for you small businesses. You not only need but should want be involved in the conversations. The question is how? How should the conversation be structured? How do I participate? How will it benefit me and my business?

The answer is formulate your conversation just as you would in the barber shop. Talk about sports, friends, politics, business. Make recommendations for your friends businesses. Help people find what they need and find someone in the community who enjoys helping to make those connections happen like my barber Jake.

If you want to learn more about this conversational tone and become a “Trust Agent” Then you should check out Chris Brogan at ChrisBrogan.com and Julien Smith at In Over Your Head and get their book Trust Agents
They do a better job defining how to take part in this conversation than anyone I know. Although the book does assume you know some things like how to start a blog.

If you want to participate in and connect with people in your own communities give me a call, send me an email, ping me on Facebook or Twitter, or LinkedIn and I’ll help you get on your way. Alternatively you can just leave a comment below.

October 20, 2009

Yesterday’s blog, #NMATL, and @chrisbrogan notes! And Yes Twitter!

Filed under: Big Business,Musings,Small Business,Social Media — Tags: , , — MetzgerBusiness @ 10:54 am

Yesterday I wrote a blog on using twitter for notes and used Chris Brogan’s speech at NMATL as an example of pulling twitter data for notes. I also decided to run some stats on the information I found and posted those stats. Quite frankly the stats are meaningless to anybody and everybody other than perhaps Chris and maybe Brad and Matt who organized the event. You can read the entire post here.

So why did I run the stats? Well imagine if instead of Chris Brogan’s speech we instead inserted Big Company Name X and looked at the same data. What useful information might we find? How could we use the information to better understand what our customers are thinking of us NOW! How many are tweeting about us? What words are they consistently using? I used a dump of twitter data and Excel pivot tables to come up with the stats I posted yesterday in merely 10 minutes for the fun of it (I’m strange I know) what could you learn about your company’s reputation in 10 minutes.

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