Politics, Religion and Social Media Trends

Social Media Trends with Hubze Founder Dave Foster. Orginal post can be found here.

David Foster is the CEO and Founder of the Fan Page Engine, which provides business owners an easy to use tool to help them in the custom creation of Facebook Fan Pages along with tracking social media trends.  The Fan Page Engine also specializes in fan page design and the build out of some highly customized fan pages.  So you can either do it yourself or higher them to build it for you.  Dave is also the co-founder of the Social Media Engine which teaches the small business owner how to use Social Media effectively.  Dave is also the Co-Founder of the Hubze which is an informative site for business owners on providing them with the most up to date social media and online marketing services.

Male:   Preparing Business for Business is on the air.  Join hosts Marcia Hawkins, President of the New York Shop Exchange and Kyle Clouse, Vice President for insightful and creative strategies to prepare your business for business.  Listen in for great guests and great offers from our guests and sponsors, as well as thought-provoking dialogue.  Preparing Business for Business offers usable content, insightful ideas and resources to jumpstart your business in an effective, economical manner and to prepare your business for growth and challenges. And now, your hosts for Preparing Business for Business, Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.

Marcia Hawkins:  Good evening, everybody. Welcome, welcome aboard to this Business Preparing For Business radio program on the Preparedness Radio Network. I’m Marcia Hawkins along with my cohost Kyle Clouse. Today is Wednesday, January 11, 2012. That just sounds like just crazy. Seeing like we were just on the Internet this Christmas. But here we are in — smack dab in the center of the week, second week of January. Wow, I just don’t understand where time goes. So we do welcome you to the Business Preparing For Business radio program. The theme of our show is to provide you with the tools, contacts, products and services to best prepare your business for more business. Or if we can assist you in what we all know how really challenging times right now.

Periodically, we have guests on our program that through experience, problem-solving, different methodologies that they’ve developed and implemented into their own business some ideas, strategies that have really worked for them and if you can take that information and use it and apply them either to your own business or business that you’re going to be starting, well, then our job has been completed. Many of the preparedness listeners tune in to hear helpful tips or information and find out resources for preparedness products. So we essentially do the exact same thing except we apply ours to business and today we will be covering Social Media Trends.

Now whether you’re going to be starting business in 2012 or you’re trying to expand your business, grow your business or again if you just need some resources to help you overcome some challenges that you may encounter, then again, that’s where we come in.

So Kyle and I welcome you to our program and we invite you to e-mail us at info@newyorkshopexchange.com. That’s what we do for our business. We do video marketing. If you have any questions, if there’s any – if you’re listening and you think you’ d make a great guest for us, by all means, please make sure to e-mail us at info@newyorkshopexchange.com. Any questions, comments or if you’d like to be in the show. Now let’s bring Kyle in. Kyle, how are you?

Kyle Clouse:  Hey, I’m doing very well, Marcia. I’m looking forward to to talking about social media trends.  How are you doing?

Marcia Hawkins:  I’m good. I’m really excited. Last time we had our guest on we had quite an entertaining show. I enjoyed David so I would like you to introduce our guest tonight for us.

Kyle Clouse:  Absolutely. Well, David Foster, he’s the CEO and founder of the Fan Page Engine and what the Fan Page Engine is is they provide business owners an easy-to-use tool that helps them in the custom creation of Facebook fan pages. And the Fan Page Engine also specializes themselves in fan page, Facebook fan page creation and the buildout of some highly customized customizable fan pages and so the site serves as dual purpose, you can either do it yourself or hire them to do it for you.

David also is the Co-Founder of the Social Media Engine, which teaches a small business owner how to effectively market their business using mediums like social media and tracking your companies social media trends.  David Foster is also the Co-Founder of The Hubs, which is an informative site for business owners that provides them with the most up-to-date social media and online marketing services, so David is a very busy guy. He’s just been recently brought on by the Ron Paul campaign to help them with their social media or whatever they got involved with them. He’s been recently brought with them so very sought-after expert with social media, Facebook fan pages and so on so on. So we’re really excited to have him on our show tonight talking about Facebook, Twitter and Social Media Trends.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah. Welcome, Dave.

David Foster:  Thank you for that awesome introduction. Wow.

Marcia Hawkins:  Some of those – when I was being introduced on another radio show, I think, do they have the right guest? Everything we said about you is the truth so you were …

David Foster:  Well, thank you. And yes, I remember the last time I was on, I was sitting in my car. I believe Thanksgiving,wasn’t it?

Kyle Clouse:  Yeah.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, welcome back, yeah, we really we have so much to go over. We clearly did not cover everything that we wanted to cover so we absolutely had to bring you back. And I’m just going to jump right in here. And we’ve got so much going on this year given the fact that it’s an election year. And you told us right before we went on the air how you had been tapped to help with the Ron Paul campaign. So how exciting is that?

David Foster:  Well, that is so exciting. I mean when we first got involved, I reached out to the campaign because I noticed some things they were not doing on Twitter and not doing on Facebook and just bugged them and bugged them until I actually got a meeting with one of the – Matt Collins, the social guy for the campaign. And then they contacted me and asked me about their pages, so I more or less first went in and worked on the coalition pages and then I had them contacting me personally and asking me to more or lock out and logging into all their personal profiles to lock them down so people couldn’t find them when doing searches when they’re doing press releases and stuff. So it was interesting being logged in to their personal Facebook accounts and making them private for them because they have no idea what they were doing there. So it’s been a very successful social campaign. I mean we had an article on all Facebook showing that Ron Paul’s social campaign is actually performing better than any of the others’ so that’s pretty cool.  It’s also cool tracking the Social Media Trends within Ron Pauls campaign.

Marcia Hawkins:  Good for you. I love that. You noticed that they were doing something wrong and you were like “I can fix this.” Got to love that. Got to love that.

David Foster:  Yup, exactly. Well, and I was relentless. I did not stop until somebody contacted me because I know how this is a crucial election year. I mean I think this is the most important election of our lifetime and so I just feel like I wanted to do my part and this is what I do so I want – and now I’m doing it.

Marcia Hawkins:  Good for you. I love that. I think the theme there is the persistence factor.

David Foster:  Yup, exactly.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yup, absolutely. It definitely is. This year, I mean the fact that we are really – we are kicking into high gear of the 2012 election. So with that said, do you see or what do you forecast is really going to dominate the political arena in terms of social media?

Social Media Trends

David Foster:  Well, I was – I just feel that it’s a completely different game from 2008 when the election happened last and – but if you look at Obama, how he more or less one because of social media and because of the younger voters he was actually able to bring out and Ron is closing out universities when you goes to speak because there’s people reaching out. I mean we have grown by about 400 and some thousand fans on his fan page since we really started engaging. And so I think that it’s going to play a part. But unfortunately, the most money wins it seems, so we’re giving it all we’ve got but unfortunately I just don’t – you know what I mean? That it’s like the person with the most money is who they look at the most. And that’s sad.

Marcia Hawkins:  Exactly. Yeah.

Kyle Clouse:  One of the things you mentioned, Dave, and the way I see it, social media, it doesn’t matter if you’re running a campaign or if you’re running a business. There’s a lot of universals involved and everything is basically –can be transferred from one niche or a company or your just to another and they can use the same processes and procedures. And one of the things that you mentioned was you noticed some things that the Ron Paul campaign was not doing on Facebook and Twitter and I don’t want to say what they’re not doing or what they were not doing, we don’t want to give any insider secrets out, but what should they have been doing that you stepped in and help them to do? And maybe we can apply that into someone’s business, what they could be doing as well?

David Foster:  Well, first of all, spending a little bit more money or spending money, period, on Facebook ads instead of that TV ads is much. I mean you’re looking at – most of the time, I mean people still think old school. They want to run – they want to rent billboards, they want to get magazine ads, they want to do radio and TV, which is effective but in social media right now, I got to say it’s a completely different animal than it was in 2008 because you’ve got many, many active users logging on every day and when they’re on that website you’ve got their attention. They’re not – I mean I know sometimes some people are doing other things but for the most part, they’re there, they’re engaged, they’re out looking for things so you got them on they’re really open to click stuff.

So running some ads on there and also just engaging the page a lot more, sharing photos when he was going to be on Jay Leno, sharing photos of Joe Rogan with a picture of him and a picture with Vince Vaughn and just different things to get people “Oh, this is cool!” and then commenting so just more or less showing – like I told you guys last time, to just be more personal. Yeah, you’re a politician but reach out and show personal pictures, show pictures – we have pictures of him with his iPad showing like how the fundraising was going and people just love that stuff because they feel so personally connected to him that way.

Marcia Hawkins:  That’s interesting because you’re right. I mean the radio, the TV, the print ads, they are effective, obviously. And they need that. But to drop the ball in social media would, in my opinion, cause them the election, and I’m sure you can agree with that.

David Foster:  Oh, I agree.

Marcia Hawkins:  Absolutely. And that’s true because it’s really funny when they get into like a town hall debate or they’re doing one of the debates with the other candidates or they’re in a – they’re stumping in a particular city right before a caucus or a primary, they really – everything is very, very scripted. And I really believe that seeing the personal side of the candidate is really I believe what sways the voter. And segueing that into a business owner, they really have to have the ability to kind of show their fun side as well. And I really — I completely understand, how can somebody, in addition to some of the social media – is there another angle that they can at onto social media pages that will allow them to kind of expand upon that?

Videos in Social Media Trends

David Foster:  Well, I mean one thing that we have always had a lot of success with is videos. I mean people just love videos. They like to take the time, sit down and do those. And another thing that we – we had no idea, we just started doing –we were doing the blog talk radio and we decided you know, we’re trying to get on a schedule and be in somewhere at 3 o’clock, every single day was just hard for me because I’m so – I mean I got so many things going on. So Scott ended up doing the shows by himself.

So I started doing a podcast. And we must’ve just landed on a niche of some kind because our subscriber rate has just skyrocketed. And so the podcast, something that you can actually – they can hear you, they can see you, like images, like pictures, something that they can see that there’s a personal side to your business. Because like I was saying the last time, if you’re just all stiff and just promoting and just talking in business language, people don’t talk like that. It’s like talking to a robot. And you don’t want to come across as a robot so video, I mean video is awesome. If you own a restaurant, put a video of your menu. You should go back and show your chef cooking your special for the night and say “Come and get this,” “Does it not look good?” or something like that. Just little things like that, the people are like “Oh, Wow! Look at this video of what they are making here. This looks really good. We should go try this place out.”

And so we actually just merged with another company that does social media management and tracks social media trends and is full service. And so we’ve been seeing different things that they’re doing for local businesses that’s really helping them with their fan page like the things that they’re engaging, like how they’re asking questions, how they’re promoting their specials, how they’re running little deals, and it makes all the difference. I mean weve got a local restaurant here, and we are in Tallahassee, it’s not a very big place, it is the state capital but when the college kids are here, I think I want to say 150,000 or something. So they got 5,000 fans on this restaurant page and they are engaged. I mean you got people sharing their deals, sharing images and it’s to see that much action going on just because they’re involved, just because they’re making videos, just because they’re sharing images of their menu, just because they’re giving to college kids because we all know college kids are broke and love to eat. So if you can tap into that, your home free.

Marcia Hawkins:  Exactly.

Kyle Clouse:  Right.

Marcia Hawkins:  And the fact that you mentioned video and using it in your social media trends, Dave, is it too premature to tell you that I love you?

David Foster:  Oh, no, that’s fine.

Marcia Hawkins:  Go ahead, go ahead, Kyle.

Kyle Clouse:  I was just going to say it’s interesting that Dave brought up video and also that you brought on a social media marketing company that manages campaigns, because as you know, we do video marketing and we do video promotion. We use video as a means of promotion. And we also do the management end of that as far as the video creation. We see that a lot of businesses, they want to be able to focus on what they do best, which is running the business and have someone else take over the marketing end of that, so very interesting. One of the thoughts that I had, Dave, was as we’re talking about that – social media and how social social media is becoming a means of communication, one thing that I thought about was even with television and with the news, breaking news will hit social media before it hits the TV, as you can really see where this trend is moving as far as engagement with social media and it really being able to stay in front of your customers and clients and being engaged with them and creating that relationship with them.

David Foster:  Well, you know why that is. That’s because most of these news people are getting their news from tweets and this is what we are seeing in social media trends. So the tweets are just ahead of the news because they’re like “OK, where’s the big stories? Well, let’s go to Twitter.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, you always hear people talking within the social media saying “Oh, I thought on Facebook,” or  “Someone tweeted me on that.” That’s very true.

David Foster:  Yup.

Kyle Clouse:  Yup, absolutely. One thing that I saw when we were talking about trends, where trends are moving, I’m – if I look back, as we’re talking about the elections, kind of get back in 2008, I see President Obama when he won the election, I think it was I mean largely due the fact that he was utilizing social media. And so as we see this trend coming now with 2012, we see that businesses, politicians, everyone are taking social media more seriously, they’re really looking at it and looking at ways in which they can engage their customers and their client and their client bases. As you guys have brought on this social media company that manages these different accounts, tell us a little bit about that service and what benefits that has for a business owner?

Social Media Trends in Politics

David Foster:  Well, one thing that has really helped, and I’ll just use the Ron Paul campaign for an example because we’ve been working closely with that, is we can target keywords, we can target Ron Paul or whatever, and find out anything good or bad that anybody’s saying and then actually if its bad, it  flags it and lets us know that it’s bad. And I don’t know if it picks up keywords, how it does it, but there‘s some kind of algorithm in the program that they use so we can go out and nab those faster and talk to people and try to figure out what issues they have and then always ends up being about foreign policy or whatever.

So it’s just what they can basically do is brand awareness and then going out and doing like brand repair, reputation management. Reputation management and social media is huge because if you start out and you do a couple of things wrong and you end up getting a bad reputation, sometimes it’s hard to repair because it can go so viral so fast. So you really want to be careful with your reputation and you want to know if people are out there talking about you, good or bad. So what they do is they put you in the system, they look at the keywords and put in your company name and all that and then they can see like alle these sites, Yelp, Citysearch, all these different places that people have done reviews on urban spoon of you, it all comes back and then they can go and they can reply to those comments and they guaranty to do it within 24 hours so that people, even if they have a bad experience, and they leave it all public if they had a bad experience, if you deal with the right way and people see that publicly that you dealt with that issue, They’re like “Oh, these people, I went and got ice cream and it was melted by the time I got it. Okay, well they reached out to me, they gave me a free ice cream and guaranteed that it wouldn’t happen again.” So the customer, even though they may have had one bad experience, ends up – the total experience ends up being good. So that to me is one of the most important things they do.

And then also as just knowing the industry enough to know what – if a restaurant needs to run kind of promotion, a hormone therapist needs to run this kind of promotion, a lawyer or attorney needs to run this kind of promotion so they’re really understand how to get the likes and fan engagement for your niche and not just any fan, because quality is so much better than quantity on social media as well. Everybody seems to think well, the more fans you have, the better, the more successful you’ll look to people. But if you go to a page that has 10,000 fans and nobody’s liking comments, nobody’s posting anything, nobody’s sharing anything, that really to me speaks bigger volumes because that tells me that that page is not engaging the correct way.

And so if you go to any page they manage, they’re engaging you the right way, they’re engaging at the right times like there are certain restaurants that close at 5 o’clock so they’re not posting a deal at 4 o’clock for that company. They’re doing it the day before when they close early and then they know that the people for this company are more – they have more conversations in the evening so somebody manages that page in the evening where one page might be people are going to eat breakfast at this place because that’s what they’re famous for, so there’s more people engaging in the morning so they are there in the morning.

So they really get to know the brand on a personal level, even the menu and all that so – because knowledge is power, if somebody’s asking a question about a crêpe or something, they need to know what’s in, which one or whatever for a restaurant. So it’s just about they understand how to engage, they understand how to get likes for that specific kind of niche and how to keep your reputation under control.

Kyle Clouse:  Right. One thing that you mentioned that I think is very personal, I’ve actually spoken to business owners who they get mad about it but they shy away from it, they don’t know how to overcome it or how to attack with that, and that is negative comments. A lot of business attacks just they get it a negative comment on Google places or Yelp for any of the other platforms, they’re almost – a,  they want to figure out first “How do I delete that?” which they can delete that but they’re afraid to reply to that or a combat that in anyway and they almost want to ignore it, which I think is a huge no no.

David Foster:  Yeah, no, that is huge. Because if you – the thing that I learned on social media is the bad news travels much faster than the good news. So if you really make it a point to handle those things, to go out there and just it could be very, very – it could be the worst review you’ve ever read, it could make you sick to your stomach, but if you at least deal with it and just do what you have to do to make that customer happy – I mean there’s a reason most of us get in business and that’s because we have a service that we want people to enjoy enough to not only tell other people but to just have a good overall experience. So if you really care about that overall experience, that carries through good or bad. Because you can always take something bad and make something good of it if you do it the right way.

So I never judge anybody by their mistakes. I judge them by a how they deal with that mistake. So most people in social media, if you reach out and you handle the mistake in a good way, then they’re still going to be spreading a positive message. “Yeah, I went to this place and their food was horrible but they reached out, they asked me exactly what was wrong, why I had that bad experience and this was my reason and so they took this thing off the menu and then they gave me a coupon to come in. I went back in and it was a great experience.” And so they just publicly turned that around. So that two-star review could be changed into – because the consumer can change the review. So they could say “I reviewed this two stars before but now it’s five because of the way they handled my problem.”

Kyle Clouse:  Interest, interesting. What are some – I know there’s a lot of talk with tracking social media or tracking the return on investment with social media. What are some things that business owners can do to track their efforts, see if what they’re doing is actually working for them?

David Foster:  Well, I’d like to call it return on relationships rather than return on investment because with – the deeper the relationship you get with your customers, the more you’re going to get out of it as far as return and as return sharing as turn them out a happy customer praising you out in public, that’s a bigger return to me than the investment anyway because I find that – I mean I have not advertised on Facebook or anywhere for six months. And I have no ad budget, period. And that’s because when you have so many happy customers and you’re putting out a good service, people are talking about it and they’re just coming based on that, that’s a return on a relationship for me for having such good relationships with our customers that they want to go out and talk about us obviously because that’s the only way we are making sales.

Marcia Hawkins:  You can’t put a price on that either.

David Foster:  No, you can’t. And it took us a year and a half to get there. I mean I ran – I was running $300, $400 a day in Facebook ads and I just started phasing them out. And for a couple weeks I’m like I’m just going to try not running them. And our sales stayed steady and I’m like oh my gosh, I was probably not even getting many sales from the ads anyway. So six months of no ads and sales still coming in, that’s obvious to me that it’s just our social media, just being on the blog, just engaging our fans, just helping people create their pages and going out of our way – I mean our support team, if somebody has an issue they can’t get through, our support team actually makes a custom video for them walking them through their back-office showing them exactly what they have to do to fix it. I mean we go out a way to make sure people are happy. That’s basically all you have to do.

Kyle Clouse:  Yeah, I can actually attest to that because I’ve used your fan page engine. I think I became a member of it a year and a half ago when it first began or has been longer than that? I know it’s been a while. But whenever I’ve had an issue, it’s been resolved.

Right now we have to take a quick break and run through our sponsors but we’ll come right back and again, we have David Foster, CEO and Co-Founder of the fan page engine.

Marcia Hawkins:  All right, everybody. Welcome back. This is Marcia Hawkins along with Kyle Clouse with NewYorkShopExchange.com on the Business Preparing For Business radio program. Our guest this evening is David Foster. He is the CEO and Founder of the Fan Page Engine and he’s just an awesome guess. I’m sure you guys have been enjoying the show. We went to break, had to pay a few bills and we were talking a little bit about – not a little bit, a lot about online management of your reputation.

And I’m curious if you have any insight. I just find this fascinating that in the line of work but Kyle and I do, we’re – I’m always direct line and I know when I leave an appointment, I call Kyle and say “Jeez, I can’t believe this guy said this.” Why do you think people are so reluctant to really recognize? I even sometimes when I go into an appointment, 99% of the time I’m very well-received but once in a while you just get this real ordinary businessperson and they’ll just “I’ve been doing my form of advertising the way I’ve been doing it,” and just really not wanting to just be receptive to possibly doing advertising or marketing or even conducting business in a different manner and trying to keep up with the trends. I mean I don’t know how old you are, David, but in my generation, growing up, things that used to take 30 days now literally take 30 seconds with the Internet. And so I’m really struck by the fact that there are so many people that are so reluctant to A, manage their online reputation, even utilize the Internet for what it is, and more importantly, they don’t see the importance of it. Do you have any insight as to why that is? Because I got to tell you, that’s something that really puzzles me.

David Foster:  Well, and it puzzles me too, and I’m actually – I’m 41 so I remember those days as well, and I think it’s – there’s some people whose business model has worked so well for them and they’re so – like me, myself, three, four years ago, I swore I would never be on Facebook. I swore I didn’t want to have anything to do with it. I was doing web design and stuff and I was getting enough clients for MySpace that I thought I’d never need it. And then as soon as MySpace just completely went into the pot with all the spam and everything, I mean I just got so sick to even go on that website, that I had some friends say, “Oh, you need to go and check out Facebook.” So I reluctantly started an account, then my high school buddies started finding me and then got into the business side of it.

And so I think people just have a fear of the unknown and the thing is it’s hard to show. It’s like me walking into their office and saying, “Hey, I have this pen. It’s a really nice pen and it writes yellow ink but believe it or not, you can see it on white paper,” and they’re like “Well, let me see.” “Well, I can’t show you, you’re just going to have to trust me because I don’t have it with me.” It’s like they’re so reluctant because they’ve never seen it work for them. They’ve never seen it happen but how they don’t see how it’s happening for other people, I don’t get. But I think it’s just they get so comfortable, just like anything else it’s like people become so complacent and so comfortable with where they’ve been and where they are, they’re almost scared to jump into something that they don’t understand because with social media, it’s really hard to show a return. I mean you have to at least be in the game for a few months before you start to see a considerable return in my opinion.

I mean there are some people who if you have something that’s specialized enough, like we have an ice cream shop here in town called Lofty Pursuits and they also sell like discs, crispy discs and tops and arcade – well, not arcade but the puzzle games and stuff and they have a really fifties-type atmosphere so you go in there and they’ve got the soda jerks and they dress with the old bowties and stuff so it’s very specialized. And they do very well on Facebook. But if you have an attorney, they’ve got all these regulations, they’re like “Well, we can’t say this,” they try to make every post about the legalities and you know and so it’s like it almost doesn’t fit for them.

But I still think that there’s a way where they could utilize it but in most cases, they’re just not open to it and that kind of baffles me too. But I think that what – if there’s enough people as you build your portfolio that you can say “Well, here I have another attorney that’s doing this and he’s had a lot of success,” and then maybe even have a video testimony or something of that attorney talking about that success, which is something we’re doing, we’re reaching out to the local restaurants that we’ve been working on and getting video tests, really nicely done video testimonial, so that we can show clients locally and say “Hey, this is what we’ve done, this is what they’re saying,” like when we run a deal, their place is just packed all day and it’s awesome. They love it. So other customers are like “Well, I want some of that, and you guys doing mobile marketing?” “Yeah.” “Oh, I want some of that.” So as soon as they start to see the success of their friends or their competitors, then they’ll listen little bit more. But if you don’t have that going in, you’d probably be on deaf ears. Plus I think it’s the older generation that have the biggest issue where you can get young guys who will just jump on it, they’ll drop whatever. I need to be on – yeah, I will do it.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, it is a little bit frustrating though I do, I find that when I’m talking with a client that – and like I said, Kyle will tell you we’ve really – have started to really make some headway with our message and people are really starting to resonate with people. But I’m still struck by the fact that people say you know – I mean you can sell them the numbers and you can sell them everything and they still – they just – I think it goes back to what you said. People become so comfortable being uncomfortable. That’s what they know. They know – “I’m so uncomfortable I’m spending so much money with no return but this is what I know and this is what I’m going to do and I don’t know, that it’s foreign to me. It really is. It’s just completely – I don’t get it.” When I’m uncomfortable, the only thing to get comfortable…

David Foster:  As I’m saying I find myself doing that with like my iPhone. Like I was thinking about getting a droid because I wanted to try the Google market and everything but then I started thinking about not having my iPhone and I seriously started getting sick to my stomach because I could run my entire business from this phone so it’s like it’s my business partner. So it would be like turning in my business partner. So I can understand where they’re coming from but…

Marcia Hawkins:  Yup. When I refer to phonedesk I always find it funny when you see people in bars and restaurants by themselves and their phone is like their date.

David Foster:  Yeah. Well, mine’s been my date many a night.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah, exactly, exactly. But I just – I really – it’s frustrating but – I – that eventually, they do come around. But it’s kind of funny, it’s like you said when you get people that are really, really excited about what you’re offering them and they jump on, you get the video testimonials, the written testimonials and then you’re able to show like returns for other clients and that’s where it really starts to go. And then of course people , and I guess this is going to segue into my next question – is don’t you find that mentality with social media that even if the resistance like you were like I was in the beginning with Facebook and whatnot, that the eventuality is they do it even like almost subconsciously, because they want to belong? Like you didn’t want to tell someone right now “What’s Facebook?” or “I don’t have – I’m not on Facebook.” “What do you mean you’re not on Facebook? Everyone’s on Facebook.” So do you see that that mentality is what ends up winning out?

David Foster:  Well, I think so. And just a comment on a strategy that you could use to contact or to maybe get them a little bit more interested is go in there with case studies from one of their biggest competitors if you haven’t, one of their biggest competitors or somebody that competes in the exact same market they view and say “This is what they’re doing. So if you want to have – see this kind of success, this is what you need to be doing.” Because – like if somebody came in to me and they’re saying, “Well, this 50s diner is doing this but I’m a guy in a college as well. I can’t – you know…” I mean that’s going to be completely different. So I’ve another guy in the colleges that I work with and this is what he did and this is his results, so you could show that, you know what I mean? Having kind of the same – which that’s a bad example because that’s kind of – that’s one of those you’re going to have a have a big name in an area pretty much to have a kind of a local fan base anyway to build something like that. But because uniqueness does – I mean that does pretty much matter.

But I do think that what you’re saying about eventually feeling like you’re not fitting in, it makes sense. I mean people, it’s almost as like getting on the Internet. I mean people fought it for a while, they’re still sending mail, still sending invoices by mail and still not online in their business. But it’s like they had to bite the bullet because they just started to fall farther and farther behind. And social media is that next medium where they’ll just start to fall farther and farther behind if they’re not on there because I mean I – there’s – I don’t buy anything off-line anymore. I mean I’ll go to Best Buy if I need something like right now or Home Depot or something but most of the time, I’m on Amazon. That is my store. If they sell groceries on there, I’d be buying my groceries.

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh, I hear you. I just found out a local groceries store now will let you just pull up – you put your order online and you just pull up and they’ll bring your groceries out to you, it doesn’t get any easier than that.

David Foster:  Well, when I lived in Portland, Oregon, we had an organic food – nature market or something, I can’t remember the exact name and I would just get online, fill my cart and then a truck would bring my food right into my home.

Marcia Hawkins:  Got to love that. I really do believe that what we’re talking about earlier and I think that the common denominator with all of this is the fact that people resist change at all cost even if it’s going to save them money, and I don’t understand it. I’m not like that. I would not consider myself in that category. I embrace it. I always find if there is an easier, cheaper, more fun, more dynamic way to do things, I’m all about that. But I just – I think business owners, I think – I don’t know, maybe it’s the fact that we’re dealing with the egos. Sometimes people really want to believe that the way that they mapped it out in their mind and I just find that if you can just accept the fact that what you’ve envisioned in your mind may not be the way it translates out but if you figure it out and it works, who cares?

David Foster:  Exactly.

Marcia Hawkins:  Who cares? What do you think about that, Kyle?

Kyle Clouse:  Oh, absolutely. I was thinking, as we’ve been talking about – and I’ll use your term, Dave, return on relationship, one of the things you mentioned earlier was taking three to four months to see a return on a relationship and I think there’s two – there can be two problems with that is A, the business owner isn’t seeing a return where we live in a microwave society and they’re not seeing a return within the first day of the first week and I think other social media stuff doesn’t work and then they quit. And secondly, why do you think it does take three to four months to see that return on a relationship? Is that because we’ve been so innovated with advertisements that we’re – as a people, we are more cautious before we purchase something? And we want to see kind of the relationship build before we make that step?

David Foster:  That’s almost like trying to figure out how I can walk a mile in one step. It’s like you can’t – like if I came up to you and you didn’t know me – I mean this is the way people need to think. People need to think of the old school face-to-face, meet and greet, I come up to Kyle Clouse, I shake your hand and I get to know you. I’m not going to say “Hey Kyle, come on over here and like my fan page because I have all these specials and everything.” I’m going to want to build – “Hi, how you doing? Nice to meet you. So what do you do, where are you from?” It’s kind of like you have to build that little relationship. Will some people move faster? Yes. Some people just – it’s like the difference between dragging a stubborn donkey to water or guiding it to water, letting it to go to water on its own. If you try to drag, you are going to drag and it’s going to fight you the whole way.

But if you just set your expectations to just get to know people and build relationships the way that we used to, then that’s a more realistic expectation. But if – we’re so spoiled with the fast-food mentality that everything has to happen so quick because we can go online and order something and have it delivered the next day. We can go to McDonald’s and have food ready in a minute and a half, not that I don’t eat there so that anybody that listen to this, please – anybody that I know, I don’t eat McDonald’s. But you know what I mean? We just had that mentality, and people need to understand that social media is about being social. And you just don’t go blast an ad in somebody’s face and expect to build a relationship off that because the relationship starts off on the wrong foot right from the beginning.

Kyle Clouse:  Right, right. Yeah, yeah. I don’t know, just a segue from what you said, I don’t know very many people from Oregon who order their groceries online through an organic store that eats in McDonald’s.

David Foster:  Yes. And biodiesel crops delivered by the way.

Kyle Clouse:  I would think that I want to get into, Dave, as well is kind of we’ve been talking for about 45 minutes about why a business needs social media and why the need to engage? Let’s talk a little bit about what the Fan Page Engine and the Social Media Engine, what can they do for a business in helping the business? Like if I’m the business owner, I’m listening and saying to myself, “OK, I’ve already got a fan page. I have a fan page on Facebook. So why do I need the Fan Page Engine? What would be your response to that?

David Foster:  Well, to me, it’s important to be taken seriously from the beginning. If you went to – like if I went to your page, to the New York Shop Exchange, and it went directly to your wall, OK, and there’s nothing there that shows me who you are, there’s no branding, I don’t see – even though you might have your logo over on the left-hand side but it looks like you just uploaded your logo and you didn’t take any time to use that real estate, you don’t have any images at the top – because branding, branding is important. It’s very important. And it’s not superficial because when you look at branding, that’s how people get to know you right. So that’s like their first impression and you get one chance to make a really good first impression. So branding at that moment for that very first visit is crucial to the whole rest of that relationship.

So if you impressed them from the beginning because you’ve got a custom-designed fan page that shows your brand, shows what you’re about, it’s easy to maneuver, easy for them to click through to get information, they can look over on the left-hand side and see like ours, we put no monthly fees on there so that people know right from the beginning no matter where they are that that’s our thing. And so they get to know us in that little bit of time where we’ve got that time to either have them stay and like it or walk away. And you’ll still get people to walk away but more people are going to walk away if it goes to my info page in my wall, which I’ve seen a lot of people do.

And then what we really focus on is OK, now we’ve got their attention, they like our branding, they’ve liked our page, now they decide that they’re going to use our builder to customize their page so they do that. Now what do I do? Well, answer’s Social Media Engine? Social Media Engine goes through and we’ll show them how to use that page after it’s branded because it’s important. And one thing that I did, this is how I learned and what was pretty much what created the Social Media Engine is I just went to the top social media marketers’ pages and look what they were doing and emulated it. Because if they’re having success, well then this is what they’re doing, so this is what I need to do.  This is also part of tracking social media trends and how people interact on Facebook and other social media platforms.

So if you want to know how to engage a page, come to our page. Look what we’re doing. Go to somebody like Mario Smith’s page who’s in social media, look what she’s doing and emulate it. Look at how she’s engaging. Look at what she’s posting to get shared. She’s doing training information. If you’re – and it varies by niche but it still is the same concept. I mean if you have a lot of local people and they like your restaurants and are putting pictures of your food and – or you’re sharing pictures of your customers and they know somebody, they’re going to share that because they want their family to see that they were at that restaurant or that their picture is actually on the Internet.

So that’s basically – we not only help you brand yourself very well and track your progress in social media trends, we help you know what to do with it afterwards because it’s very important that you understand that it takes a commitment. It’s not something you can do willy-nilly like “I’m going to post this every other day and I might get on Saturday and kind of look and see if anybody has commented and follow up with them.” “And here’s the picture that I took like six months ago. Let me see what that will do and upload that and just be like lackadaisical about it.” You can’t do that. You have to be consistent. You have to be there when people are commenting because it’s almost like they’re walking in your store. So you don’t want to be out walking around trying to get new customers in your store when you got somebody at the register. So…

Kyle Clouse:  I like how you put that, it’s as if someone is walking into your store when they visit your fan page. One thing, let me come across as someone that knows absolutely nothing. And one of the things that you mentioned was when someone got to your fan page, if they go in straight to your wall or straight to your info page. And if I’m someone that knows nothing, my – I guess response would be you mean I have a choice, where I can have them land. Explain what that choice is and how the Fan Page Engine helps the part – we’ve already talked about utilizing that but what is that choice? And also we can talk about a reveal and how someone uses a reveal and what those are because you hear a lot of buzz about that.

David Foster:  Yeah. Well, basically on Facebook, you can set your default landing tab so – in your admin section under edit page in your settings, you can set that when somebody comes to your page that has not liked it, this is the tab that they will see. So when you set that tab what you would do is you’d customize your page with the Fan Page Engine, and one thing I want to mention is you don’t need to know any code, you don’t need to know anything, you don’t have to be a web person, you just have to get some images, build your page the way you want to publish it. It goes right your Facebook page. You don’t have to do anything. Then you just go in, you rename the tab to “Welcome Home” or whatever you want and then you set that as your default page so that if somebody is coming from – they see a post on somebody’s newsfeed that they had posted on your wall and they click it and go to your page then they’re going to see your branded page that could be and what Kyle mentioned the reveal tab, people call it a light gate or you know, there’s other terminology but what that is it’s what somebody sees before they like your page. So I could say like this page and save 35% right now so then they like the page and then all of a sudden that image goes away and boom, there’s a coupon under there.

So it’s basically – a light gate means you now have something they see before they click Like and then something that they see after they click Like. And a lot of people use it for like click Like and watch this video and they have the video like there but it’s kind of blurred out and then they click Like and then the videos are there for them to watch. So there’s all kinds of uses you can to do that. But – and a lot of people use that and some people don’t. You don’t have to. But the point is you can set your default landing tab and just brand your business, more or less have your website inside Facebook.

Kyle Clouse:  Yeah, like there was a lot of talk about 1-800-FLOWERS. They really used that reveal tab with that reveal function to their benefit where  on this fan page they have their branded page and then there was the box that would blink built with a coupon code it was supposed to be  in and when you click like, it takes you to the second page and then that coupon code was revealed to use when ordering flowers. And so there was a lot of buzz that I remember seeing across the Internet about how they were using that to really grow their fan base.

David Foster:  Yeah and I’ll tell you, when we started to review the reveal tab, back when the reveal tab was really hot, our fan base just exploded. I mean it increased by – we weren’t using it before and then we started using it and tracking our social media trends, it increased by about 80%.

Kyle Clouse:   Right. And when you’re offering an incentive for someone to become a fan of your fan page and that’s all – I mean people want something in return. And so if I’m a business owner and I’d come to the Fan Page Engine, I’d create my custom fan page, I came to do it myself, hire you to do it for me, if my branding changes down the road or if I decide to change down the road, am I still able to – can I do that? Can I go back to the Fan Page Engine and do that? And is there an additional charge for doing that?

David Foster:  No, we have – we pride ourselves on being a one-time fee and the reason I do that is because I, too, am a small business. And I understand to try to come out with monthly fees, everybody charges monthly fees, and I looked at our server costs, I looked at our hosting site, like how much space we have and how many users we have and where we were percentagewise. And like get this, we don’t have to charge a monthly fee. So that – I think that’s why we’ve become one of the biggest ones out there is because we are the go to for the people who are just getting started and they can come get their fan page one-time fee and then you can go back and edit at any time. If you happen to get a new logo design then you want to change it, you just log in to your back office, you add your logo, you hit publish and you’re done.  From that point on you can track your social media trends and how your Facebook fans are interacting on your website.

And we do have extra training where we will charge a monthly fee but for the Fan Page Engine product, it is just a one-time fee, and that has been what helped us reach such a large fan base over some of our competition. If you look, they have smaller fan bases. And some people come just for that alone.

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh, I’m sure you heard that tone. We are unfortunately out of time, Dave, and I can’t thank you enough for coming back and joining us on our program. You are just an absolute fabulous guest. And everytime you answer a question, it segues into about five or six more questions, I haven’t asked but we’re out of time. So we’ll have to have you back again for sure. So Kyle…

David Foster:  Well, I have a question for you next time.

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh absolutely, absolutely. I look forward to it. So Kyle and I of course want to thank our guest, David Foster, of FanPageEngine.com and our sponsors of course and of course, our listeners. Please visit us at NewYorkShopExchange.com and grab your video business channel to advertise your product or service. We would love to host your business video but more importantly, we want to promote your product or service. We will see you next Wednesday evening here, 7:00 p.m. on the Preparedness Radio Network. But until then, you have a great evening.

Male:   You’ve been listening to Preparing Business for Business with your hosts Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.  Questions or comments?  Email the show at info@newyorkshopexchange.com.  Also, find them on the web at NewYorkShopExchange.com.  Until next time for the best tips on how to manage and grow your business, tune in again for Preparing Business for Business with your hosts Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.

Social Media - Video Local Search Marketing
10061 N Sage Rd W Cedar HillsUT84062 USA 
 • 480-200-4222

Video Marketing Explained by New York Shop Exchange

Original Post can be found at Preparing Business for Business.

Today on Your Preparation Station with Donna Miller (of Millers Grain House & Grain Storehouse) we welcome Marcia Hawkins, President and Kyle Clouse, Vice President of New York Shop Exchange a video business guide and video shopping mall. Marcia and Kyle help to explain what NYSE can do for new and small business owners. It is a vital tool to consider in the changing economy. Join us to learn more and see if NYSE is something your small business can use.

Male:   Your Preparation Station with Donna Miller is on the air.  This is your call to Preparation. Listen in for encouragement and insight, for living the preparedness lifestyle and how to handle those who give you a hard time about preparing. And now, please give a warm welcome to your hostess for the Preparation Station, Donna Miller.

Donna Miller:  Greetings and good evening. Welcome again to your Preparation Station. I am your host, Donna Miller. Very glad to have you with us this evening. This is October 15, 2011 and the show is airing at 8 p.m. Eastern. If you’re listening to this later and downloading, thank you so much. Glad to have you taking the time to download and listen to the shows that we offer here on Preparedness Radio Network.

I do want to kind of give you a little bit of housekeeping, I do this every single time and if you listen to my show every week, you’re probably getting sick of this but it’s something I kind of standby so I got to keep saying it. If you are new to the preparedness movement and/or you’re not new and you need a booster shot and that’s why you’re listening, that’s fine too. Gosh, it’s awesome.

Please be very careful about whose voice it is you’re listening to. Things are different now, things are changing, they’re always changing but there are people who like to kind of fear monger folks into doing things that maybe don’t fit their family, don’t fit their philosophy for their family. So do some background checking and kind of – I don’t mean like FBI fingerprinting but this is background checking on what voices you’re allowing to speak into your life. Those that encourage you, those that uplift you, those that let you make up your own mind and make your own choices because you get them the preparedness road, you don’t want to turn around and think you can blame someone else. This is completely all in our own hands.

So I’m going to give you some websites to do a little checking up on me. That’s kind of how it is. If you’ve never heard my voice before, you might wonder who on earth I am. Our business that we do that actually came out of the way we live and found out that it was much more suitable to do business based on what you love.

And so MillersGrainHouse.com is our primary business. We have all the kitchen tools and some tutorial videos and different things like that to share on cooking with the basics of food to have a long-term storage life that are healthy. And that’s like a number one priority for me. And then secondly, we have on the YouTube channel, which is out there called The Wheat Guy. Been out for a couple of year – well, about three years now and that’s out there as well. And you can kind of get a little bit more personal face and voice and you know, visual aids of some of the skills that I hope that you’ll pick up and it’s free of course. And then last but not least, very important and this is more heartfelt, you can go to grainstorehouse.com, that is our preparedness outreach to hopefully just give you encouragement, to give you kind of that take a deep breath, if this is your first exposure to people who live like this, relax, don’t worry, don’t listen to all the fear, just because you’re not going to react correctly out of fear, you need to be able to react out of peace and understanding and what works best for your family.

Preparedness is not a one-size-fits-all and that’s kind of what we preach, you know, you can’t prepare out of panic and you need to be able to prepare out of peace. So that’s where we do a lot of that outreach. So those are that the three main websites of course, we have a lot of others that were on and this kind of brings up my guests for this evening. Because they have agreed to work with Preparedness Radio Network and I know that I’m kind of – I’m really delighted in it because of what it is they do because of the kind of the more outreach aspects of what we do with our work and that is to kind of – and hopefully inspire people that if I can do some of these things, anybody can do them.

So without much further – I’m going go into a little bit about each of our guests and what they do with the New York Shop Exchange, which is – well, I will let them explain it to you but my guests are Kyle Clouse, he is the Vice President of New York Shop Exchange and he’s a video marketing specialist and authority on Social Internet Marketing and as a speaker and a mentor of these video marketing practices, Kyle demonstrates that beginning on the first page of Google really doesn’t have to be that difficult. What they do with New York shop exchange is help with increasing the client exposure and the traffic up to 600% and Kyle has taken his proficiency and his appetite for excellence to partner with them at New York Shop Exchange as their Vice President of everything online. He’s got a trademark, straightforward and retentive approach. Kyle offers weekly webinars and increases exposure and helps build a brand awareness for each client that works with them at the New York Shop Exchange.

And then also of course, we have Marcia Hawkins, she’s the President of New York Shop Exchange and she’s referred to as the brainchild of entrepreneur. She successfully built small business centers amassing a small fortune and in – sorry, I’ll get my date, 2007, Marcia founded Walk a Mile for a Soldier, which is featured on NBS, ABC, CBS and Marcia walked 500 miles from South Deerfield to nation’s capital in remembrance of the past and the current military and it is absolutely fantastic. She takes a no-BS-get-out-of-my-way approach here with launching the New York Shop Exchange, which is a video business guide and a video shopping mall. So as President, she has built a foundation that small business marketing should not have to be expensive in order to be effective.

So we are very glad to have both of these people here as my guests for the New York Shop Exchange and we’re going to kind of get into why they are here and how it connects to Preparedness Radio Network. So after all that of me talking by myself, Marcia do I have a good connection with you on the line?

Marcia Hawkins: You do.

Donna Miller:  Okay, fantastic. And Kyle, I’ve got you as well?

Kyle Clouse:  Yes, you do. Glad to be here.

Donna Miller:  Okay, great. Glad to have both of you with me in this evening. We’re just going to kind of get into and let you guys fill this in your area of expertise. Some of the questions because you guys have started to do some – in fact, work with the host here on Preparedness Radio Network so we want to get out the word because this may be a very effective tool for others to use as our economic climate changes. What is it that the New York Shop Exchange is exactly? And how did you guys get started?

Marcia Hawkins:  Thank you so much for having us. I guess I’ll take that question. New York Shop Exchange kind of evolved over several years. I mean, I’ve been in business for, oh gosh, about 20 years now and out of frustration with my own small business, you know, I felt that there was just three fundamental problems that most small business owners were challenged with on a daily basis. And of course out of frustration becomes the master of invention and really trying to identify exactly what it is and what I could do for my own business. Somewhere along the way I realized that it would be a useful tool for other small business owners and hence that’s how New York Shop Exchange got started.

The three fundamental problems that I have with my business was with the involvement of the Internet. I started out as a resale boutique. I had a 4,000-square-foot store and along came eBay and you know, recognizing that that was a wonderful tool to sell online,  I quickly found out that the profit margin for selling within an eBay type format simply was not there. The unfortunate thing with a manless site like eBay is once you decide to work in that type of venue, to pay the upload fees and to take the time to photograph the items and type all the text out and then upload it to the website and then of course, within a short amount of time, you end up on page 68 for that particular topic or category, I should say. So I was very frustrated by that.

Then of course, if the item did happen to sell, I’d have to fork over a good chunk of my profit to eBay. So that quite wasn’t working. The next problem I had was I decided that well, geez I definitely as a small-business owner need to have a web presence. So after spending tens of thousands of dollars on a website were I could sell my own stuff, I quickly also realized that well that’s great, I’ve got this beautiful website but by the time the website was completed, it was outdated.

So my third problem was – I’m not a web developer. And most small-business owners aren’t and this is where it gets really tricky. Because even if you can find someone to create a beautiful website for you, you essentially don’t have the keys to the car. So again that was my second problem. My third problem was even if I did know HTML coding and I knew how to keep my website current and relevant to my customer, I didn’t know how to market it. And you know, the thing is as a small-business owner, you know, you have to prepare every single day for your customers, your clients, whatever it happens to be that you call them. And the bottom line is most people go into business because they are very good at what they do. They love what they do. And they want to be able to conduct themselves in their business every day. Most business owners, especially small-business owners, have to wear many hats. And I have found time and time again that the marketing and the advertising aspect is one of the things that really hangs up small businesses. Small businesses struggle to just day-to-day do the day-to-day operations of the business. And then of course you’ve got to try to find a way to get in front of the masses.

So there was just those three fundamental problems. Being able to have a significant online presence, being able to keep a website current and relevant and being able to market it. So a couple years ago, recognizing that I could never quite figure out why I was spending all this time taking pictures and typing text, when people really, I mean, people really don’t read all that text. They don’t take the time to go through and read paragraph after paragraph so I kept thinking to myself why are we not using videos? So you can see where I’m going with this. So clearly I felt there was a much better way and hence, that is how New York Shop Exchange reinvented itself as a video marketing platform.

So we have two components to it. We have the video business guide, which is a way for small businesses to create a listing within our portal and be able to make a significant impact on the Internet. And the beauty of that is is that they can simply update their listing or their advertisement anytime they want by changing out their video or the small amount of text that they have that is associated with their listing. And then we have another portal developed right within the site which is our Video Shopping Mall. And that’s where a product-based business would be able to sell their goods. This is for all those eBay sellers that are looking to have an online presence, an online storefront, if you will, and instead of taking pictures and writing all the text, they simply shoot a video.

And the best part about it is we’ve decided that we wanted to create a cooperative-based community. So you know, you think of a lot of those cooperative markets that are popping up all over the country. Well, we’re the video version of that online. And by doing that we keep our costs really low and that allows small businesses to come on and advertise and sell their goods and services for basically $1.36 a day. So that’s a brief – brief, I haven’t quote, an overview of what newyorkshopexchange.com is all about and how it can benefit all be small businesses, online sellers that are out there.

Donna Miller:  Well,  that’s fantastic. You kind of answered what my next thought process is where it actually came from and it grew out of frustration and seeing – I also did start on eBay and I know what left every time there was a sale and a shipment and the time investment and so video is a fantastic venue to be able to kind of really connect with the customer and the product that you get behind. So I think that’s a fantastic idea.

So now you mentioned the two services but I kind of love to get a little bit more information on the differentiation between kind of a shopping mall aspect and maybe a little bit more compartmentalized on what services that the New York Shop Exchange offers.

Kyle Clouse:  Sure thing. Oh, sure. So the difference between the video shopping mall and the video business guide is that basically the nature of the business. So in the video shopping mall, that’s more for your eBay type sellers, people that are selling products. And the video business guide are for people who are selling services, lawyers, doctors, attorneys, landscapers who have a business service that they’re offering and so on. And that’s basically the difference between the two.

But what’s important is what New York Shop Exchange does with each of our individual listings and videos because we not only host a person’s – a customers video, we actually promote that via across a network of marketing platforms. So we take each individual listing and business and we syndicate it or push it out across a myriad of marketing platforms that all point back to the New York Shop Exchange listing and drive additional traffic to their listing. And so what I am so much concerned about a person’s business being found that directly on New York Shop Exchange, our main goal is just to make sure that they’re found on the Internet and that we get them blanketed across the Internet. And we do that through key terms and keywords and what their business or product or service is about for so that they’re found for their niche market. We want to make sure that our customers get in front of their customers and get their products or services sold.

Donna Miller:  That’s fantastic, that clears that real clearly as far as services do. They sell of course, new promotion and people who offer service of something that is not a tangible good. This is viable for a small business as someone who has a retail outlet of their goods so you’re actually catering to any and all businessed regardless of how they operate.

Kyle Clouse:  Absolutely and it comes back to a lot of people when they start a business or they have something they want to sell or they have a website, well they don’t have a website. They are not sure exactly how they get their name and their service out into the masses. And so we’ve taken the guesswork away where they just simply shoot a quick video or we have software links on our website, we’ll take them to a place that they can create a quick video that’s very compelling and powerful. They upload it to their listing and then we take the guesswork away from them. We actually get to work on our end and make sure that that video in our listing is syndicated out. And it comes down to – as well as our customers are able to get as aggressive as they want to with their own campaigns. Every time they upload a new video to New York Shop Exchange, we syndicate it out to the marketing platforms so they can be as aggressive as they want to and know that all they have to do is upload a new video. And everything else is taken care of.

Marcia Hawkins:  If I could just add something to that, what’s really unique about New York Shop Exchange is that typically, a website, a lot of people have asked when they decide to become a member of the site, well, how much traffic does newyorkshopexchange.com get? Even though we are a very heavily trafficked site, I don’t want people to lose sight about exactly what we offer by becoming a member of New York Shop Exchange.

What we do is sell unconventional. What we do is we market the listings within our website. We could care less whether or not people come to the first page of New York Shop Exchange. What we do is specifically and strategically market the listings, the members’ listings so that those listings are actually found not only within Google but off across multiple media platforms. And what this does is that when the potential customer of that member clicks through to their listing, there’s three direct links back to their website. We don’t hold your traffic hostage. We don’t care whether or not people stay within New York Shop Exchange. All we are are traffic directors on the search engine, say, this is exactly where you want to go.

So we’re really – we’re just an absolute groundswell of traffic for your website or your business. And this is so unconventional because most people decide to sell on eBay or something in that nature based on the traffic that goes to eBay. Well, that’s great. eBay gets a ton of traffic but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re going to find you. What we’ve decided to do is to make sure that your customers and your clients find you and your website or your business. That’s all we care about. So we’re actually marketing from the inside out, which is very – like I said, not the conventional way that most people think about business on the Internet.

Donna Miller:  Yeah, that’s fantastic. Now I have kind of a side note question because it’s talking about the two different types of a business. What do you do with a business that it actually kind of does both? They have goods plus they teach classes? Or what do you do if this person that kind of bridges the gap between the two?

Kyle Clouse:  Well, first we have two types of businesses. They can either purchase additional listings or the listings they can adjust their listings depending on if it’s – you know, let’s say for instance, a landscaper, does landscaping at summertime and does snow remover in the wintertime. So they can adjust their listings and upload the new video and then it will be syndicated out across according to the nature of the business and what they load up as far as their description, the business description, video description, the video title and any keywords that they add, it will be syndicated out for that. And so someone has multiple products, they can either have multiple storefronts or they can upload different videos and target each video according to the specific product that they have.

Donna Miller:  Okay.

Marcia Hawkins:  A good example of that Donna, would be like a car dealership where they may want to have a listing for the video business guide to highlight their dealership but they may be selling actual inventoried cars within the video shopping mall. So they could do it on both sides. I always like to reference the video shopping mall is kind of like if you can think of businesses that are actually in a mall and in then the video business guide would be more applicable to say an office or a service trade industry or an actual you know, a brick and mortar business. So that kind of gives you an analogy of the difference.

Donna Miller:  And there are companies which – I’m one of those that we tangibly have products but we also teach classes either with that product or no product, whatsoever. So we have kind of a both approach to serving our customers because you can hand somebody something but if you haven’t taught them how to use it at least in my line of work, you haven’t done them a full service. So I was just wondering how you handled because I know there are a few businesses – some, not a lot of us that kind of cross the gamut between service and goods. So that’s fantastic.

Well now, just for the sake of people listening and I know a lot of people might be going, well, how does this do with Preparedness? We are going to get into that in the last half of the show. Give us an example. As a business, if we sign up, give us kind of just by step-by-step example of what would happen when one of us uploaded a video to New York Shop Exchange?

Kyle Clouse:  Well first and foremost, if anyone has any questions on setting up a listing, I mean we are here to help, that we’re here to facilitate and help them do that effectively and then also to walk them through the process. So if anyone has any questions, they can send an e-mail to members@newyorkshopexchange.com. We also have a support ticket form on the website, it’s on the upper right-hand corner that they can submit the ticket to. When someone signs up on New York Shop Exchange, we have step-by-step videos where they will walk them through the process of filling up first and foremost, their e-mail address choose a username and password, their business information, their business contact information, their video information, uploading a logo, entering the website and then uploading the video.

And once that’s completed, once that video is uploaded, we get to work on our end and we immediately take that video and we syndicate it out across out marketing platforms to make sure that that business is being found for what their – for the audience that they’re looking target. So what’s really important that when someone fills out their business information that they’re really specific on – okay, what is it that my business offers? And they get really specific about that because that allows us to take that and get in front of their specific audiences so that they’re just not being found on the Internet, they’re being found in of these people that are looking for their products and services.

Donna Miller:  They’re targeted and they actually get the most attention for what their expertise is, so that does makes sense. Well, now things are changing in the economy. How do you guys see New York Shop Exchange sitting into the new economy type and the changes that are on economic comet right now?

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh, I love this question because our price point specifically caters to that. The one thing that I feel so frustrated maybe the fourth reason I started this, was the fact that you know, I don’t think the Internet needs to be expensive. It’s air. And being able to create a cooperative-based community where we kind of band together, it allows us to offer a price point that all small businesses can afford. I mean who could not afford $1.36 per day to advertise? And the best part about this is we do all the advertising for them. They can get back to what they do best, which is run their business.

And think about it. If small business owners and online sellers are creating more profits for themselves and they have one of those monkeys so to speak, taken off their backs, the marketing monkey and they’re able to devote more time and energy to running their business, it’s going to flourish. And what is that going to do? It’s going to allow them to hire more people. It’s going to allow them to grow their business because they know the marketing pieces has been taken care. So you know, it really – it dovetails very nicely with the fact that people are just really small business owners specifically are really struggling to make ends meet and this is just the perfect tool for them to really have an effective, relevant, current online presence that’s fully marketed for them and they can get back to doing what they do best.

Donna Miller:  That’s fantastic. I think another thing I see with this if I may, is how so many people’s lives have changed with either a layoff or a job change or something closing and now they might be spacing entrepreneurial ship for the first time to make a living and kind of scared by it. And I think that in a difficult economy I think there are a lot of people that really rise to the occasion to be independent and entrepreneurial because that might be their only avenue. And you guys now offer something that’s a tool that they may have never even thought of before or then maybe intimidated by it and kind of have it set up and ready to plug in and go. So I think that’s another way it fits because a lot of people’s jobs and livelihood has changed greatly in the last few years.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yes and what’s great about it is that a lot of our members use their listing at their website, knowing that they can just change the video out and they can simply update their information or their product or, you know for example, on a landscaper if they’re going to be transitioning season to season, they’re able to do that. So you know, just knowing for $1.36 a day, that whole piece of their business, the website, the marketing is taken care of. And what a great way to test the waters for an online seller or someone going in to the business for themselves. And I must say we have a lot of people that are getting laid off and thinking you know, I spoke to one the other day and she said I decided to I needed to think outside the box and I need to prepare for self-employment as opposed to trying to find a job and being able to rely on that. So it’s definitely, it’s a Great Avenue for people who are faced getting the old, dreaded pink slip.

Donna Miller:  Yeah. Well, your timing is actually perfect for that I think as far as what you guys offer. Speaking of timing, I do need to take a moment and to have this time set aside for a word from our sponsors, the Global Sun Oven and we’ll be right back with a little bit more pointed questions on how you guys fit with Preparedness Radio Network. So we’ll be back after this message.

Donna Miller:  Okay. We’re back here on your Preparation Station with Donna Miller. I am your host and I am very glad to have basically the President and Vice President of New York Shop Exchange and if anyone’s wondering what I’m saying, it’s newyorkshopexchange.com. It’s a fantastic website. In addition to it, it’s just a really great venue for the entrepreneur, small-business owner or the person who’s just really needing to get the word out online about what services they offer for the community and an area.

So I’m not sure, which one of you would like to answer this question but I can pretty much guarantee based on the listener base for Preparedness Radio Network, they are probably wondering how do you guys connect with what we’re doing here? What – I do know that you guys are kind of behind what we do here at PRN. Can you give us some information and the reasons behind your partnering with and promoting the host for PRN?

Kyle Clouse:  Sure, yeah. Absolutely. So when we think – the reason that we partnered with PRN and the preparedness arena is when you think of preparedness, one of the aspects that sometimes gets overlooked is the financial preparedness. And Marcia hinted on this, when she talks about someone looking outside of the box and having to – and say you’ll think outside the box and come up with my own way to generate income for myself versus going out and trying to find a job.

And we see that, more so in today’s economy than we ever have before is that people have to start thinking outside the box and generating additional income they can rely on, their 401Ks or the retirement funds like we used to be able to, that’s something that is less viable as it was in the past. And if you think about other countries, say for instance, you know,  let’s talk about sometimes at 30 in third world countries, you have a third world entrepreneur where everyone is an entrepreneur. In America, it used to be the same way. It used to be everyone was an entrepreneur. You had your own business and you sold your own services, brand, products. And we’ve kind of gotten away from that and I see a shift coming back were we are getting back into that where everyone has to become some type of an entrepreneur and business owner and se;; their own products and services or what – or what their gifts are, what they’re good at. And so what we’ve done is we provided an avenue for these entrepreneurs and business owners to get their products and services out into the marketplace and I mean at an absolute still but something that is also very, very effective and that will get their message out into the marketplace.

Donna Miller:  That’s actually very true when it comes to – because of the economic climate changing. We are reverting back to something that we kind of lost with you know, people who are falling into – very content to work a job, get a paycheck back and kind of just go week to week to week to week, which ever way the payment came in and now that a lot of that is really not as stable as it used to be years ago, this comfort always – my husband always says this, being uncomfortable makes you grow.

If you only seek out the comfort may be of the paycheck, you might not actually grow and become an entrepreneur and enjoy the – sometimes flexibility, sometimes 24/7 hours. But you know, that productivity of producing something and being able to contribute to society, all on your own versus a worker.

If someone’s kind of new in this realm and testing the waters you did allude to that before that this can kind of become their website if they’re not even putting up one. They can have their contact, be their e-mail and their phone number and not even need a website. What are the things specific to New York Shop Exchange would you say are a benefit to someone who is really just starting out in this new realm of self-employment as an entrepreneur or small business or service provider?

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, one of the things that I keep running into time and time again and I believe that there is a sleeping entrepreneur in all of us. When interviewing potential members, a lot of times they’ll say well, you know, I work a nine to five job and I always hear. But it’s really interesting because everybody has kind of a hobby or something that they love to do. And the irony in all of that is is that they would love to find a way to make money at doing what they love as opposed to working a nine to five job. It’s unfortunate sometimes though that a pink slip will then force them into doing that.

So what’s great about this is that whether you’re on the edge of the cliff there, you’re ready to throw yourself off into your own business and in the life of self-employment or if you’re forecasting that perhaps a pink slip maybe in your future or if you’ve said, you know what, I’m going to do it, I’m going to jump off that cliff and become my own boss and do what I love and turn my hobby into an income stream for myself. It’s usually – it exists in all of us I believe. I just think that some of us are more daring than others.

And I think that that’s you know, what is key about New York Shop Exchange is that it allows you to kind of test the waters with your business to see what kind of response you’re going to get. And then of course, the people that are already online or have established businesses, well that’s a slam dunk. But it is a great way for people to kind of wiggle her toes across the cliff and say do I want to do this? Because it allows you to put a very small amount of money to find out what type of web presence you’d have. And it also allows you that – you know, if you can think about it in the way print ad, once you’ve placed that ad about your business and it goes into print, you can’t change that. You can always change your video and that’s great and you are allowed to basically audition and have that infomercial in front of potential customers and clients and see what’s resonating with them. So you know, it takes care of being able to have your online presence and we take care of the marketing for you. So it allows you to really hone in on the product or service that you’re actually providing.

Donna Miller:  Yeah, I think that’s great. I think it takes a lot of the guesswork and getting out the info to the Internet to the customer and I think video is actually one of the best tools to do that because it is far more personal. It’s much more personal than the print or a blurb or something like that. So in the case of working with the Preparedness Radio Network, and the hosts that we have here, how is it that – if you can explain to the folks listening, because they don’t want to know our tie-in, how is it that you guys work with us?

Kyle Clouse:  So what we do with each of the host at PRN is and as we partnered with PRN, people can go to New York Shop Exchange and find – like you mentioned Donna, you have a couple of products and services that you offer and some of you can go to New York Shop Exchange and find you on at New York Shop Exchange with those products and services. And so how we’ve partnered with PRN is by having the host on our website and driving additional traffic to your websites making your products and services more viable and more seen in the marketplace so that customers are finding you and what your products are.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well I was just going to add to that, much like the Preparedness Radio Network is a community-based of different types of services and products that offer preparedness, that concept is kind of parallel with what we’re trying to do with a community-based coop of small businesses and online sellers in terms of marketing. So it dovetails where you’re trying to pull a community together, so are we and they just happen to parallel themselves.

Donna Miller:  They do. They parallel quite well and I think one of the things that you guys are able to offer us as host is the fact that we are – a lot of us are doing this just you know, because we feel called to help others, we may have a business that some of us, it goes with what we do and some of us, they don’t have that developed yet, or in the midst of developing it and a lot of it is an outreach of have learned the hard way and we want make it a little bit easier for the next person or speak like our – specifically speaks a piece into the midst of people who are panicked or chaotic, because they do look different than they would at this stage of the game. And you guys offer ability for us to connect in a more personal way and kind of in the calmative way for all on New York Shop Exchange, people who listen to the radio then can connect with the items where we stand behind as well as the faces, that you’re the voice they hear and there is a much more sense of community. So I think it’s a wonderful partnership and I think it works really, really well together.

So how long have you guys been really in business from the launch of day one? And what do you see for the future?

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh, sure. Go ahead, Kyle

Kyle Clouse:  I was going to say – I know Marcia will want to add to this as well but one of the things that we’re adding in the future is an interactive feature where business owners and customers are able to interact with one another through our website so that if someone’s on at their listing, they can receive a notification that they’re logged in, they can receive the notification that someone is on their listing and viewing their video so that they can immediately start interacting with that potential customer.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah, I would like to add to that is what’s really – say, you’re an insurance salesman and you have an office and you tend to be at your desk at a chunk of the day. You’re going to be allowed to be logged in your listing at any given time – we’re going to be integrating this very soon. And basically what that’s going to allow you to do – now if you can think of someone who goes to – because most people don’t use phone books anymore but if most people go to the Internet and a Google of business or service, so what that is going to allow that particular customer and business owner to do is rather than someone clicking through and getting the contact information and going over to the phone or going into the computer and either emailing or calling that business, what this is going to allow you to do is to immediately click through, it’s going to alert the business owner that there’s someone viewing their listing and you’ll have the ability to say, is there anything I can help you with? And then you can either video or audio chat with that particular customer so it kind of eliminates that step of having to go to the phone or e-mail and hoping that somebody gets back to you so it kind speeds that sales process up for a particular member and it also allows the person who’s soliciting the service or product to be able to do that in realtime. So we’re very, very excited about that.

Donna Miller:  That’s great. That’s awesome. So now I do know I’m just going to speak personal because I have a few videos up on New York Shop Exchange, and we do of course have products like the Global Sun Oven, which is the only sun oven. I mean they sponsor the show but I had the sun oven way before they decided to sponsor the show. It’s the only sun oven I will recommend so that’s one great venue that the New York Shop Exchange opens up is when you get behind the product and you really feel strongly that it’s the top-of-the-line, in my case it would be that the Global Sun Oven far outweighs the others, the Wondermill Junior Deluxe is a fantastic manual mill if you’re – people are looking to get into having a manual mill. We have some of these videos up and someone can come by and not only search for the product but search for someone who will teach them on it. It’s a little wider range than just say, hoping they put the right keywords in YouTube and you can find them. You have a real service offering through going through the New York shop change versus a hit and miss like you said on eBay or even YouTube. You know, if you’re new at that, you got to know exactly what to put in so that they find you. So it’s a little bit difficult.

And closing of what you guys have to offer, did I miss anything? Is there something – I want to make sure here’s – especially considering you may have a captive audience just wondering about what they’re going to do about if things change with their economic situation. Is there anything  in closing you guys would love to share with everybody?

Kyle Clouse:  Yeah, Donna. If I can kind of piggyback off of what you were just talking about and also something that you mentioned at the beginning of the show that I think is really relevant is you gave the warning of the beginning of the show that there is a lot of people out there trying to instill fear to people on – in purchasing their products and services and just kind of bring that into – as you are recommending the sun oven, on the Internet there’s a lot of noise and there’s a lot of people competing for attention. And so what New York Shop Exchange is able to do is help the small business owner break through all of that noise and get their products and services out in the marketplace. And so that’s – I mean in essence, that’s exactly what we do for businesses, we help them break through the noise and all the chatter that’s out on the Internet get in front of their target audience and their target market. And also, what sets us apart from YouTube as you mentioned, YouTube you upload a video to YouTube and you’re lost in millions upon millions of videos. New York Shop Exchange were a video business guide. We’re strictly for business. We are not for someone wanting to upload a video of them scaring their aunt or grandma at a Halloween party. It’s just directed for a video and for business.

Donna Miller:  Yep. That’s fantastic. All right, folks. This is – Marcia do you have anything in closing that you’d like to share?

Marcia Hawkins:  I think Kyle summed it all up. You know, we just want you to understand that we are here for the small business owner and the online sellers that are finally able to have a current and relevant and powerful impact on the Internet and that’s really what we’re trying to do is a community-based process for all of them. And we invite everyone to go to NewYorkShopExchange.com and we would love to see them on our website.

Donna Miller:  Fantastic. Well I do want to thank you on my behalf as kind of being a champion for small business. Like you said like just kind of piercing through and giving the word out there and really focusing the traffic, you know, I think i’ts fantastic. And as a preparedness minded individual, someone who likes to help others, kind of lean and learn and go in that direction, I think this is a viable tool as we face many things changing on the horizon. But it’s good to get to talk to the people behind it because that’s 9x out of 10, if I back up something, it’s because I agree with what the people are doing that kind of get things started. So I think you guys are doing a fantastic job, I’m here at – here, we are all very thankful for working with us and definitely for coming on the show this evening and getting the word out there. Thank you both very much.

Marcia Hawkins:  Thank you, Donna.

Kyle Clouse:  Thank you, Donna.

Donna Miller:  It’s been a pleasure to have Marcia Hawkins, President of New York Shop Exchange and Kyle Clouth, Vice President of New York Shop Exchange here with us this evening. If you are at all interested and even just curious because you may not have a business of your own but you’ve got family, you got friends, you got people you know that they’re struggling with it, I invite you to check out their website at newyorkshopexchange.com.

While you’re there, check out something from Millers Grain House, you can see us there on there, just go on the search and search I think, you probably search both and you’ll find us popping up Millers Grain House, you could stick in Wondermill and find us – lots of different things because of the videos that we use and send over for them to put up. And we have – it’s a great tool, you can see the traffic, you can see you know, kind of if you’re new at this, they give you a lot of tools to get started so it’s fantastic.

This has been the October 15, 2011, edition of your Preparation Station. Please stay tuned and come back next week. We hope to have the American Preppers Network founder, Tom Martin, to come and spend some time with us and talk about how it’s grown. So for now, this is Donna Miller saying goodbye and God bless and have a wonderful rest of your weekend. Bye-bye.

Male:  You’ve been listening to your Preparation Station Donna Miller.  Questions or comments?  Find Donna on the web at millersgrainhouse.com/store.  Tune in again for advice for living the preparedniess life. Thanks for listening to the Preparedness Radio Network. And remember, Preparedness saves lives.