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What Is Experiential Marketing?

3/15/2019

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03/15/2019
By Kiely Kuligowski, 

Traditional marketing is dead, at least, in the most traditional sense. A billboard with a picture of your product next to smiling faces just doesn't cut it anymore. Consumers now fast-forward through commercials, have ad blockers on their computers, and are more likely than ever to opt for commercial-free streaming services over live TV. 

So what's an advertiser to do? 

It may be time for your business to change directions and look to experiential marketing, which focuses on connecting consumers with a positive experience associated with a brand, rather than directly with a product. 

What is experiential marketing?
Experiential marketing, also called engagement marketing, is a marketing strategy that directly engages consumers and encourages them to participate in a brand experience. 

"Experiential marketing is, in its simplest definition, a type of marketing based on creating memorable and innovative customer experiences to create deep emotional connections between the customers and the brand," said Esther Sauri, a marketing professional at LinkiLaw.

In traditional marketing, consumers are regarded as passive receivers of a company's message. In experiential marketing, a brand involves the consumer directly and often offers a window into the evolution of an advertising campaign. This allows a business to forge a relationship with the consumer by allowing them to both be a part of and see the process of a campaign from beginning to end. 

Why is it so effective? 
"[Experiential marketing] is so effective because we are emotional beings," said Sauri. "When a brand connects with us in an emotional way, we not only buy it, [but we become] loyal customers." 

By involving your customers with the story, they feel connected rather than sold to, and this is a significant difference in how they see your brand. 

Take, for example, LeanCuisine's #WeighThis campaign. Women were invited to "weigh in" about something important about themselves, other than their weight. The responses were then collected and painted onto individual scales, which were displayed on a gallery wall in Grand Central Terminal. Responses ranged from "I care for 200 homeless children each day" to "I am back at college at 55 years old." 

The brand then created a promo video that spoke to women about what they wrote and why.

The important aspect of Lean Cuisine's campaign was that at no time was anyone offered a Lean Cuisine product. The display was clearly branded with the company's Twitter handle and the #WeighThis hashtag, but that was it – Lean Cuisine depended on the gallery wall itself to draw people in and created an interactive experience around the message that women are more than a number on the scale. It worked, too – the campaign reached more than 204 million impressions. 

What to avoid
Experiential marketing can be a goldmine if leveraged correctly and a landmine if not. Many companies will attempt experiential marketing for the sake of it, knowing that it's a trendy and high-engagement practice, but without proper research and preparation, a campaign can very easily blow up in your face. 

"The biggest pitfall in experiential marketing is to make the experience too salesy," said David Jacobson, founder and CEO of TrivWorks. "Attendees don't want to feel like they're at a sales pitch. Make it too salesy, and you'll turn them off, or worse, they'll share that they had a negative experience."

Companies should try to create an experience that embodies their values, or, as Ashley Pontius, print campaign manager at News and Experts put it, "While experiential marketing is [mostly] brand building, focus [on making it] more brand being."

While the advertising world is most certainly moving toward a focus on experiential marketing, companies should think deeply before launching an engagement campaign. Is this right for your business? Can you devote the time, effort and money to doing it right? Do you have a clear goal in mind? If so, an experiential marketing campaign can launch your business with positive interactions and a loyal fanbase. 
Experiential marketing can be a goldmine if leveraged correctly and a landmine if not. Many companies will attempt experiential marketing for the sake of it, knowing that it's a trendy and high-engagement practice, but without proper research and preparation, a campaign can very easily blow up in your face. 

"The biggest pitfall in experiential marketing is to make the experience too salesy," said David Jacobson, founder and CEO of TrivWorks. "Attendees don't want to feel like they're at a sales pitch. Make it too salesy, and you'll turn them off, or worse, they'll share that they had a negative experience."

Companies should try to create an experience that embodies their values, or, as Ashley Pontius, print campaign manager at News and Experts put it, "While experiential marketing is [mostly] brand building, focus [on making it] more brand being."

While the advertising world is most certainly moving toward a focus on experiential marketing, companies should think deeply before launching an engagement campaign. Is this right for your business? Can you devote the time, effort and money to doing it right? Do you have a clear goal in mind? If so, an experiential marketing campaign can launch your business with positive interactions and a loyal fanbase. 
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5 Marketing techniques that will work better for your business than others

3/14/2019

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Mar 14, 2019
​by Pushpendra Shukla


In today’s digital world, a lot of things seems to happen on the internet, and this includes shopping whereby consumers visit the internet first to look for commodities or services they need. This means that businesses that will ignore the importance of active online presence will lose a great chance of acquiring and retaining potential clients. As a business owner, you need to know that there are different online marketing techniques and there are those that will work for your business better than others.

Some of the eCommerce marketing techniques include social media marketing, email marketing, search engine optimization, pay-per-click or content marketing among others. If you are not sure of the best techniques to apply in the business or how to apply them, you can work with a reliable digital marketing company to achieve the best results. However, while nothing comes easy, you should consider the following digital marketing tips to boost your online sales in the year 2019.

1. SEO Is All About Quality Than Quantity, And It’s Still Relevant
Search engine optimization (SEO) is the online marketing strategy that will improve your visibility when people come searching for products, services, and businesses related to you. How great is that? It is awesomely great because you will attract more traffic to your website and other online platforms where your brand exists. However many people tend to under-utilize this strategy, and it means that they are not getting the best from it. Some of the things that you need to focus on when using SEO is content optimization because the content you make will determine how Google will rank it. It is one of the factors of consideration. Secondly, make sure your website is fast because you are not going to get away with a slow website when it comes to Google rankings. Also, consider your keyword generation process by focusing on the quality rather than the quantity of keyword.

Quality Than QuantityWith SEO, you need to consider using backlinking for improvement of your SEO process, and search bots will keep on crawling to your site and eventually improve your ranking. Consider using other SEO tools that would help place your website in a more visible position on search engines. Such tools include chatbots, Google analytics, ahrefs, Moz Link Explorer, keyword planner, SERP simulator, and Google Search Console or Bing Webmaster Tools among others. Finally, if you think that SEO doesn’t work anymore, you are mistaken. It is working for your competitors because they are using it in the right way.

2. Social Media Is No Longer An Exclusive Social Place
This doesn’t mean that people do not socialize anymore through social media, but as a business person, you need to think of social media as a marketplace as long as you use it in the right way. Why do you think almost every company including most successful giant companies have accounts in all social media platforms? It is because they are making a fortune out of it. However, if you want to embrace social media and generate more sales into your business, you need to do it in the right way. First of all focus on building an incredible fan-base, identify the thing they love about your brand, the posts they like most and purpose to engage them.

Pay attention trust building because, with time, clients will not only trust you as their social media partner but a business partner as well. You see, while the comments and likes you get on the posts you publish might be exciting, you need to be able to convert those interactions into sales. Make sure you connect your social media platforms with your website and other channels that tackle social matters or business ideas. You need to remain relevant and not boring because again if you over-advertise yourself, people will get bored with your posts. You can also use sales-boosting tools provided by some social media platforms such as Facebook.

3. Build A Positive Online Reputation
Reputation is very important for every business whether selling online or have a physical store. Do not only focus on delivering quality products or services but also focus on building a positive relationship with customers and other business partners. In this case, you need to build a good online reputation and keep it positive because that’s the only way you will win people’s trust. When people visit your website during their shopping spree, they not only check for product description and prices but also want to know what your previous clients think about you. If all you have negative reviews, unanswered queries or rude feedback, no one will want to be your next victim.

Online ReputationIn this case, the first thing you need to do is having an online business card for awareness creation. People usually hand physical cards to real customers, but for virtual customers, you will need to provide similar information through one of the tabs on your web page. Secondly, make sure you are aware of what people are saying about your brand by being actively involved in different online conversations. Be actively available and responsive when clients or business partner want to communicate with you online. Providing feedback is very important for online marketing. Finally, provide truthful information to the clients and express it in simple and understandable terms. These tips will make current and potential clients trust you and therefore help you built a good online reputation by leaving positive reviews and comments.

4. It Is Time You Go Back To Email Marketing
Email marketing has been here for a long time and while many may have given up on its efficiency, be prepared for amazing news because the tactic is working for many who use it in the right way. Email is one of the marketing mediums you can use on the internet if at all you do not allow your own shortcomings to hinder you from gaining valuable results.

Email MarketingThe first thing you need to do is wearing a positive altitude, identify all your target audience and categorize them based on age, gender, location, and favorite products among other segmentation. This will help you send relevant email to each client and therefore eliminate chances of being ignored or being marked as spam. Also, be consistent with your emails, and as long as you are not sending irrelevant, long or repeated emails, clients will continue reading your emails and most probably buy something you advertised through your mail. Try as much as you can to personalize the emails by addressing recipients by their name. This will make customers feel special and exclusive. Your emails should also end with a call to action message and a link redirecting readers to your website. Finally, your subject line should be catchy because your ultimate aim is to make the recipient open the mail.

5. Invest In The Right Online Marketing Tools
Online marketing is not easy for anyone, and there are those people who need help from experts and others will only need to buy the right tools to support different strategies. The good thing is that some tools are free. Other tools may be quite expensive and complex to use without the help of a digital marketing expert. However, the fact is that creating and sustaining an effective digital marketing campaign; you will need to have the right information and tools. Just to mention a few, you will need tools such as:

Online Marketing Tools

- BuzzSumo to help you make right and compelling contents
- Google analytics to help you track online activities of your online visitors
- Campaign Monitor or MailChimp to help in capturing data and preparing a list of mailings for easy email marketing
- Convertkit for email editing automation among other uses, andHotjar to help you understand the behaviors and characters of your online visitors
- Other tools include HubSpot, Trello, Hootsuite, Followerwonk, and CrazyEgg among many others.

Digital marketing has become the main thing in the business world, and you cannot afford to ignore it as a business person. Follow these tips, and you will always be ahead of your competitors, and of course, generate more sales to your business as you impress more online clients.

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Follow These Rules to Improve Your Email Marketing Campaigns

3/14/2019

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March 14, 2019
BY ROLANDO HERRERA

Emails are a quick and effective way for businesses to keep in touch with their customers for continuing sales. But customers are wary of email campaigns, especially lousy ones.

You know what a poor email campaign looks like: dozens of emails sent at odd hours, no personal touch, overly long with poor writing, etc.

If a business wants to use emails to grow a connection with its customers, where is the balance?

As is true with other content streams, if businesses follow a few foolproof steps in crafting their email campaigns, they can create high-quality emails that convert sales. More importantly, following the rules can help you prevent your emails from ending up in the spam folder. Here are eight tips and tricks you can use to optimize your email marketing campaign.

Editor's note: Need an email marketing service for your business? Fill out the below questionnaire to have our vendor partners contact you with free information.

Do you have a list of email addresses for your email marketing campaigns?
Please note: Email marketing companies do not provide email address lists. You must possess a list prior to enlisting the services of a marketing company.
Yes - We already have a list of addresses
No - We will need to obtain a list of addresses

1. Understand the CAN-SPAM Act.
In 2003, the U.S. Congress passed a series of sweeping regulations on email commerce known as the CAN-SPAM Act. Those regulations still inform a foundation for what is legal or illegal in email marketing, and businesses must understand these rules.

The law revolves around seven regulations that can result in more than $40,000 in penalties if not followed:

Do not use misleading or false information in your headers.
Do not be deceptive in your subject lines.
Always identify an ad.
Provide your location to recipients.
Tell recipients clearly how to opt out.
Honor those opt-outs in a timely fashion.
Monitor whether your hired marketers are following these regulations.
The CAN-SPAM Act should inform the foundation of your email campaign to make sure you are operating legally.

2. Keep your clients in mind.
When you are testing content for your email campaign, it's essential to keep your recipients' tastes, values and needs in mind. So many lousy email campaigns treat their customers as interchangeable pieces. Because of that, emails can come across as dry, robotic or even insulting if the audience isn't considered.

If in doubt, you can A/B test your email content by sending one half of a test group one version of your email and sending the other half a different version. Tested material tends to perform better for your campaign.

3. Keep it short, keep it simple.
"Too long; didn't read" is not just a slang term but a good indication that your emails are far too long and tedious to read. Focus on creating content that hits a fairly standard 200- to 300-word range and gets to the call to action with as little scrolling as possible. You want your email recipients to easily digest your pitch, authority and call to action in as little time as possible.

4. Time it right.
Sending an email at the right time on the right day of the week can help you catch a recipient's eye without getting lost in a pile of emails. Studies show that the best days of the week to send your emails are Tuesday, Thursday and Wednesday, in that order. These are the best times of day to send emails, ranked by performance data:

10 a.m.
8 p.m.
2 p.m.
6 a.m.
Like content, the timing of your emails will benefit from frequent testing. You can even mix and match your A/B testing with different days and times to maximize conversion.

5. Limit the links.
Backlinking emails to your website is a fast way to get more traffic to your page and funnel customers to a possible sale. However, an email loaded with links can easily district recipients from the flow of the content and even undercut your call to action.

To adequately deploy links in your email, use a content management approach that keeps your link structure intact on your emails and website. If an email link goes to your landing page, make sure your landing page includes logical internal links to a product or service. Also, make sure your links indicate what they are leading to and that they are eye-catching enough to encourage clicks.

6. Don't be a robot; address the recipient.
A great email campaign treats customers with respect and values their purchases. As a marketer, you should do the little things to make them feel like you are speaking directly to them.

One easy and obvious step is to title your emails to the person you send them to. With so many emails flooding inboxes, small personal flourishes can keep your customers coming back in droves.

7. Develop 'next steps' for clients.
The benefit of email campaigns is that they provide a continuing channel of communication between a business and its customers. But maintaining that channel requires feedback from the customers.

Your emails should focus on calling customers to actions with "next step" features. Traditional calls to action in emails include linking to exclusive offers and encouraging them to enter emails for a newsletter. To drive more interaction with your emails, you should provide a sense of urgency within reason. Some ideas are "sale ends today" and "offer ends soon" clickbait.

8. Always offer an unsubscribe feature.
Not only are opt-out provisions required by federal law, but an option to unsubscribe helps you cull a list of recipients down to those who engage with your emails. 

Offering an unsubscribe feature and honoring it also prevents your emails from ending up in the dreaded spam folder. If you don't allow customers to unsubscribe, you could hamper your email campaign from the start. 

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53% of ALL Consumers do This Before Buying

3/14/2019

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3 Simple Things for your website

3/13/2019

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15 Non-Traditional Marketing Methods To Help Build Your Business

3/13/2019

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March 13, 2019
CommunityVoice
POST WRITTEN BY Expert Panel, Forbes Communications Council, Communications, PR, public affairs & media relations executives from Forbes Communications Council share firsthand insights.

With the rise of technology, better and faster applications, and a global marketplace, there have never before been more avenues open for marketing. However, with all that message proliferation can come market saturation and overwhelmed consumers. It can be difficult to cut through the competition and make your company’s voice heard.

Fortunately, there are unique platforms and evergreen skills that can help cut through the noise. Nontraditional media channels can help businesses build their brand and influence even in today’s market. Below, 15 members of Forbes Communications Council weigh in on effective, if nontraditional, marketing methods and platforms.


Members of Forbes Communications Council offer ideas on non-traditional media channels businesses can use to build their brands.PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS.

1. Over-The-Top (OTT) Channels

Today’s consumers are now turning to streaming devices to view content on their own terms and schedules. OTT allows brands to fulfill that demand and create a direct relationship with consumers through live and on-demand video that works everywhere. - Sara Larsen, Brightcove


2. Microcopy Creation

We all know content is king, but we can’t forget where the idea of content marketing originated from—copywriting. It’s an art form that we as marketers can’t forget about but need to revive in today’s “short attention span” digital landscape. Microcopy is hugely important in capturing an audience at varying parts of their journey, from top of funnel to conversion to, finally, engagement. - Maria Juan, Peerfit

Forbes Communications Council is an invitation-only community for executives in successful public relations, media strategy, creative and advertising agencies. Do I qualify?

3. Podcasting

Podcasting is a powerful medium that continues to grow. Podcasts are becoming increasingly influential to consumers and are an effective way to showcase your organization as a subject-matter expert—a thought leader—in your industry as well as promote who you are, what you do and how you do it. Society likes things to be easy and convenient. For many, listening to a podcast is a great way to consume content. - Rachel Verslues, Primaris

4. Reddit

Millions flock to Reddit to discover new resources and content specifically related to their own interests. The plethora of subreddits provides unparalleled insight into niche communities and topics. From conducting market research to identifying the context behind keywords, Reddit is a powerful platform for engagement and a marketing goldmine. - Courtney Love Gavin, Studio71

5. Instagram Stories And Facebook Live

In the age of social media, marketing for social platforms has been at the forefront of most strategies, yet Instagram Stories and Facebook Live tend to be overshadowed by traditional posting methods. You can use Instagram Stories and Facebook Live to run contests, stay up-to-date with your followers and add that next level of connection, which is essential to building a brand. - Jeff Grover, Best Company

6. Medium

Medium is an excellent platform for highly personal storytelling from brand ambassadors or members of a brand’s team. Venture capitalists use Medium to explain investment strategies; executives wax poetic about internal systems that allow their companies to thrive. It’s like a heightened press release, told from the perspective of an insider whose exclusive knowledge creates a richer story about the brand. - Melissa Kandel, little word studio

7. Voice Marketing

We have entered the era of voice. We are now talking to our devices to look for and buy things, and they are talking back. And here’s the exciting part: Consumers are there, but as marketers, we haven’t all figured that out yet—and that’s the opportunity for you. What Alexa skill could your company create? Know something that would make a great podcast? Define your literal brand voice. - Alina Morkin, Voices.com

8. Digital Video

I think we’ve just scratched the surface with how we tell stories through digital video, mostly because it is such a broad category. Video allows for brands to “humanize” their messages by including their employees, clients, leadership, etc. Even now, we’re having to learn how to deliver effective messages without sound. I think there’s no more important place to focus your attention than video. - Ryan George, 1st Global

9. Bites, Not Bytes

With delivery services on the rise and the growing popularity of going local, getting your marketing message through food—yup, bites, not bytes—may be a way to go. Vendors offer white labeling or customized messages, and you can get your audience’s full attention with a curated and branded office snack. Just an idea to chew on. - Caroline Tien-Spalding, SymphonyAI

10. ‘Unboxing’ Experiences

Invest a bit in branded packaging and create a memorable “unboxing” experience for your shoppers. Not only will it add a luxe touch and make your customers excited to receive your product, but it may inspire them to share their shipment and “shopping haul” via social, sparking a digital word-of-mouth buzz for your brand. - Janice Chou, TrueFacet

11. Educational Courses

There are two sides to building educational content. You need to build content that is both valuable and engaging. You cannot have one without the other. Courses are the perfect marriage between video and the way that people want to consume content. Materials can be packaged into short sections that allow your audience to learn at their own pace. - Gyles Uhlenhopp, Black Hills IP

12. Influencer Marketing

Influencer marketing is a highly effective marketing approach, as it plays the role of media (influencer following) and creative while borrowing credibility from the endorsement of the influencer. When you choose influencers who fit your brand ethos and the creative stands, you will have great results in building brand equity, helping to drive sales. - Sherry Jhawar, Blended Strategy Group

13. Presentations And Speeches

Take part in a target audience conference, showing your knowledge and using it for brand positioning and exposure. This traditional promotion method is very effective in today’s world; you can utilize the results to increase online presence, press exposure and social proof. When your potential customers can watch relevant content regarding your expertise, they are more likely to choose you. - Kobi Ben-Meir, Yalber

14. Creative And Branded Direct Mail

Account-based marketing (ABM) is a buzzword that all marketers are aware of today. Though a successful ABM strategy relies heavily on digital assessment and strategies, well-thought-out direct mails still make a lasting impact on potential customers. First, identify the targeted customers or accounts list. Then, invest in getting direct mail gifts that are on-brand and accompany them with personalized messages. - Anna Lee, CultureIQ

15. SMS Marketing

Short message service (SMS) marketing is gaining momentum in 2019. It requires careful planning and execution, but when done correctly can deliver outstanding results. What other channel can deliver a near 100% open rate within the first 90 seconds after a user receives a marketing message? Using the channel also requires compliance with various regulations, so marketers need to know and follow the rules. - Tom Wozniak, OPTIZMO Technologies, LLC

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The $75K Social Media Mistake, Even Made By Agencies

3/12/2019

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How Restaurant Managers Can Get Customers To Stop Sucking in 2019

3/12/2019

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March 12, 2019
By Total Food Service
Article contributed by Ryan Gallagher, 20 Lemons LLC

​Customers suck—it’s how they’ve behaved for decades. However, across the nation, restaurant owners and legislators are putting a stop to this behavior. No one can keep customers from asking for extra napkins or sending back food that they “didn’t order,” but restaurant patrons’ use of plastic straws can be restricted. 
Up until about two years ago, the average American sucked down beverages through plastic cylinders without any idea that what they’d use for 30 minutes would take more than 450 years to naturally decompose. Nor did the average American understand the amount of energy it would take to recycle their single-use plastic product. But now, there is no doubt that the topic of single-use plastic pollution has permeated boundaries between passionate “greenies” and everybody else—making the conversation part of daily American dialogue. As a result, states, cities, and businesses all around the U.S. have begun to restrict or ban single-use plastic—many starting with plastic straws. 

“Straws seem to be the first step for businesses to denounce single-use plastics,” said Zack Karvelas, a Fellow for Outreach at Clean Ocean Action (COA) and a working member of their campaign against single-use plastic. “COA gives businesses the framework for eliminating, reducing, and switching out their single-use plastic products for viable alternatives starting from straws, to takeout containers, and many more.”

A necessary service, considering that Americans use more than 500 million straws per day, according to the National Park Service. Hawaii and California have pending legislation that would outlaw plastic straws; cities like Malibu, CA, Seattle, WA, Monmouth Beach, NJ, and Miami Beach, FL have successfully passed bans on straws.

While legislation can take years to pass in some cases, businesses of all types have begun this process on their own. Large companies like Starbucks and Royal Caribbean Cruises, all the way down to local NJ businesses like Americana Kitchen & Bar and Langosta Lounge have decided to eliminate the use of plastic straws.


“We stopped using plastic straws on February 6th, 2017,” said Constantine Katsifis, President at Americana Hospitality Group and owner of Americana Kitchen & Bar. “It was an uphill learning curve with our customers because people didn’t really get it. But, now it’s in the news and people appreciate it.”

After learning about the idea at Animal Kingdom in Orlando, FL, Katsifis and company made the switch. Without any real marketing campaign to warn or educate customers, the restaurant group made the leap to a biodegradable, paper straw substitute.

“Marketing isn’t my thing. But we did a Facebook post when we first eliminated all straws, which meant 900,000 less straws per year,” said Katsifis. “The first time a person runs into this, it can cause some minor challenges. But we ignored it. If the customer didn’t want the paper straw, then we didn’t have a straw for them. Now, no one’s asking me why we don’t have plastic straws, I think they’ve heard enough about it to expect it.”
For Katsifis and the Americana Kitchen & Bar in East Windsor, NJ, it was easier to make the switch and put out the fires it caused on a customer by customer basis. For Langosta Lounge in Asbury Park, NJ, the straw issue took a few attempts to perfect.

“Since Sandy we’ve used biodegradable straws,” said Marilyn Schlossbach, the Executive Chef and Owner of the Marilyn Schlossbach Group. “They were made out of sugarcane. Then, we switched to a paper alternative about a year and a half ago.”

However, Schlossbach could not help but notice that despite these efforts, her campaign was being fought each step of the way. Her restaurants adorned posters on the wall and notecards on each table explaining why straws were only available upon customer request. Even so, patrons at Langosta Lounge, AP Yacht Club, and Pop’s Garage saw some customers getting straws and some not at all—causing confusion, complaints, and a headache for managers and servers alike.

“A little over a year ago we just took [single-use straws] out of the pavilion and didn’t order any more. So, if someone was mad, they were mad because we didn’t have them—not mad because a table next to them got one,” said Schlossbach. “We got very minimal backlash in the last year. But still, a few people went online and said ‘F*** the seals,’ or ‘Who gives a crap about the turtles and dolphins.’ But, for us we say, ‘I guess you’re not our customer anyway.’”

Both Katsifis and Schlossbach agree that a more thorough marketing campaign could have alleviated the straw chagrin for customers.  While, “people don’t want to be preached to,” as Katsifis explained, both owners’ motivation was not to get favorable press or social media likes—they made the switch because they knew it was a step in the right direction.

It may be easy to identify single-use pollution as an issue, however it’s never quite as easy to decide what to do about it. The market for environmentally friendly straws and other hospitality products is saturating quickly. From products made of bamboo or paper, to reusable steel straws—it’s a long process to decide what products will minimalize environmental impact and also fit a business’s budget.

“COA helps restaurants conduct an audit of their single-use plastics, and then helps find the best alternatives. The ideal product is one that doesn’t go to waste at all and is reusable—like steel straws, but not all restaurants want to buy them. Compostable products have the potential to be a great alternative, however NJ does not currently have industrial-grade composting facilities to manage all of the waste properly,” said COA’s Karvelas. “So, until we create an industry around that, some of the better alternatives like bamboo, steel, or paper straws are a great place to start.”

The hope for non-profit, environmental organizations, is to use straws as an example that will wean businesses off all single-use plastics. 

“I question why we even need [straws] in the first place. Why can’t we just drink out of a glass or cup? I never drink out of a straw at my house,” reasoned Katsifis. “Right now, everything else we use is paper and as a general rule try to avoid plastic. Even our takeout packaging is bamboo or palm.”
Businesses like these are standardizing the elimination process of single-use plastic. 

“We’ve never used plastic or Styrofoam to-go containers. We use paper bags, not plastic. We don’t allow people to bring balloons for events in our restaurants,” said Schlossbach. “I think it’s a lot easier to live out of the world of single-use than people think. Eventually, the awareness will be like recycling was when that first started.”

While there are many different ways to get away from single-use plastics, the destination is the same. Getting rid of straws may seem like a trivial issue at first, however it’s simply the first step to a future where children can play on the beach without finding a seagull or turtle that was choked by a straw or plastic bag. 

What’s more, the elimination of these plastic products will ensure that the land, oceans, and air are free from harmful plastics for humans and animals alike. So, after decades of straw-use, getting customers to stop sucking isn’t something that’ll happen overnight. However, trying to stray away from plastics today will at least ensure a future for customers to continue complaining about the waitstaff rather than the plastic accumulation in their backyard.

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What Are The Most Important Things to Know in the Restaurant Business

3/9/2019

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www.MarcusGuiliano.com
Disclaimer
This site is not a part of the Facebook website or Facebook Inc. Additionally, This site is  
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DISCLAIMER: The sales figures stated above are my personal sales figures. Please understand my results are not typical, I’m not implying you’ll duplicate them (or do anything for that matter). I have the benefit of practicing direct response marketing and advertising since 2009, and have an established following as a result. The average person who buys any "how to" information gets little to no results. I’m using these references for example purposes only. Your results will vary and depend on many factors …including but not limited to your background, experience, and work ethic. All business entails risk as well as massive and consistent effort and action. If you're not willing to accept that, please DO NOT GET OUR INFORMATION. ​
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