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[W22]Wallpaper For New Year
by R Birch, R B
Keep A Garden Journal

Keeping a garden journal will allow me to record what works and what doess't work, so come spring I can look back and avoid making the same mistake twice. Recording my thoughts will also help when I'm trying to come up with new ideas for the garden. As I think of potential projects I'll be able to record them and refer back to the journal as needed. It will also help keep track of the progress I am making in the garden.

Remember To Plant Spring Bulbs In The Fall

After a long cold winter, spring bulbs are an incredibly welcome sight. Even before they bloom, bulbs evoke warm feelings of sunshine and longer days. Seeing bulbs as they fist sprout out of the ground means that spring is only days away. The color they provide, right through the spring and into early summer, is one of the most joyous sights in the garden.

Reduce The Size Of My Lawn

I want to spend more time enjoying my garden and less time working in it. Though gardening is on of my favorite and soothing pastimes, mowing a vast lawn each week is a chore. Replacing the lawn with a wildflower meadow or a woodland garden, I think will be much more satisfying.

Be Ready In March

Every year, spring sneaks up on me and before I know it my plants are ready to be pruned and the gardens need to be weeded. This year, I plan on being ready to work in garden and enjoy my yard as soon as the snow melts. I'll tune up the equipment and sharpen the tools even before the snow melts so when I need them, they'll be ready to use.

Buy At least One Quality Tool

There's nothing more frustrating than tools which seem to fall apart shortly after you begin using them. Inexpensive, poorly made pruners seem to fall apart after just a few cuts. This season I want at least one tool which will last the entire season and possible into next season. I'll be paying more for it but it will make my time working in the garden more enjoyable.

Plant Annuals

An essential part of a colorful garden in the summer is the annual flower. Annuals are those flowers which live for only one growing season. Again, this requires being prepared. Usually, by the time I get around to buying annuals for the garden they've been picked over. This year, I'm heading to the greenhouse to pick out the cream of the crop during the first warm weekend in May.

Plant A Fruit Tree

What could be better than eating fresh fruit that you've grown on your own property? Apple trees and pear trees not only produce delicious fruit they are great ornamental flowering tress as well.

The backdrop for your marketing in 2009 is what happened in 2008. I have an interesting perspective as a marketing consultant who works with small businesses. My clients compete in a diverse group of industries, from software and law to construction and technology. Some are feeling the full force of the economy, others had their best year ever in 2008. I've competed in just about every conceivable market condition.

Boiled down to the simplest terms I can manage, here is what I learned-

Sell to people for the reasons they are buying. Your customers are likely buying what you sell for different reasons today than they were 18 months ago. Understand how your customers' reasons for buying have changed and adapt your message accordingly. What's important to your customers NOW? Talk about that!

Sell to the people who are buying. We work with a swimming pool remodeling contractor. We focused all our marketing on the residential market. Yet, every year, one or two commercial customers (resort, college, city) would call and ask if they remodeled commercial pools. About a year ago we started going after the commercial market and thank goodness we did. Their residential business has slowed as people are slower to remodel their pools during down times. But commercial customers can't afford to put off their projects, and that business has been critical to the client.

Said another way, quit beating your head against a wall. Stop trying to sell to people who aren't buying. What type of customer do you have that maybe you haven't focused on, but who is buying right now? You may need to change your brochures and website to speak directly to this different type of customer, but that's a small price to pay to go after customers who are buying.

Sell the way people are buying. I'm advising a solid company in the heart of the rust belt. They reached out because things are drastically changing around them. Their average sale has gone from $60,000 to $10,000, current customers aren't buying and they've identified they must take their business national after being built from the ground up to be a local, face-to-face type company. They blame the internet. I said embrace it, sell the way people are buying. When at one time selling to someone you'd never sat across the desk from seemed impossible, now, the net---phone contact---a sample in the mail---closing the sale on the phone is their customers' preferred way of buying what the client sells.

Let go of your sacred cows. This relates to everything I'm saying here. When things change open yourself up to changing: who you sell to, how you sell, your message, what you sell, etc. We work with a landscape contractor who built a solid business selling to people retiring into upscale gated communities. In other words, new construction. Well, that business has vanished. Really. It hasn't dropped 40% or 50%; it has freaking vanished! We have been scrambling to focus on the remodel market and replace a super-premium quality message with a more value-oriented message. His salespeople, however, has resisted the change. They still want to design and sell a $60,000 masterpiece front yard -- their sacred cow -- instead of the $15,000 remodel people are wanting now. Do so at your own peril.

Simplify. Every time we simplify a website or a brochure or a mailing, sales go up. My site is a perfect example. We built a site four years ago to be a portal. From watching visitor behavior via Google Analytics I trimmed everything back except the most popular pages. Literally within 24 hours of posting the new site inquiries went up. All the content I assumed added value to the site also added complexity; and suppressed response.

Article Source : Pg. 45

About Author
Both R Birch & Hamilton Wallace are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

R Birch has sinced written about articles on various topics from Gardening, Container Gardening and Gardening. Tim Birch is the publisher of , a
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