Small Biz Brand in Transition

Today I met with a business owner whose company is solidly positioned – in the past. She knows it and wants to do something about it. That puts her a step ahead of most business leaders. And, a step ahead is a good place to start.

Her challenge is to transform the business from a surviving “Mom and Pop shop” to a thriving professional services company. She is in business transition. An OBGYN friend of mine once said, “Transition (the time the baby spends in the birth canal) is the hardest part of childbirth for infant and mother.” From what I’ve seen as a witness in the delivery room, he’s probably right but he’s there to help.

The challenge of transitioning a company is found in knowing where you’re headed and having a plan that connects you to the target. Mom and the baby instinctively know which direction things are going. But Mom has thoughts about the future long before delivery. She dreams of what the child might become. She names the baby and sets her mind and heart on loving and caring for it. Soon Mom and child, begin to live the plan.

Likewise, the business owner casts a vision for the business she has created; the brand that she has developed. Her transition challenge is found in knowing where today’s version of the brand ends and where the brand of the future begins. Her instincts are good. Change is inevitable so she sets out to take charge of the change.

Perhaps our business owner can think a little like Mom. Consider the business brand, imagine what it might be in the future and make plans to realize the goal. She can start with communicating that message to all affected parties. Today, while there are more venues than ever to convey a message – to connect people to the vision you have for your business – it still requires a strategy.

Mom and baby get a little support from men and women like the OBGYN friend of mine. The business owner we met today will get a little support from Bigfish. Call us the brand doctors.

Instant Search. Instant Irrelevance.

Google, guess what? I’m really less interested in how fast you can find a match for my search than I am in finding the most relevant match. So, I’m going to turn to the people I’ve always trusted for answers to the important questions – my friends. And apparently, I’m not alone in doing so.

One of the variables in the Google search algorithm revolves around a concept called “relevance”. But who knows relevance better than your network of friends? Any one of them is more likely to know an appropriate response to your search than even the all knowing Google. Granted the list of results from an inquiry like, “best moving company in Memphis” will be shorter when asked of friends via Twitter but I’ve long been a subscriber to the boutique model of shopping versus the department store.


But if googling is still your preference for search then how much more effective would it be if the results could be narrowed down by indicating which results include Facebook “likes” from your friends? Oh, don’t think Google isn’t trying to figure this out. It is the new definition of “relevant”.
Until then Google will be part of the marketing equation as-is. However, the high-end goods, personal services, niche medical, leisure time, lifestyle, and social or entertainment searches are bound to skew to “asking my Facebook friends". To ignore this would be to deny that you shop somewhere because your friends liked it, that you've liked a brand because a friend suggested it, or that your current hairstylist came through a friend referral, or that you hired a realtor because a family member also used him or her. Heck, now with location apps you can even know the last time your friend ate at the BBQ spot he likes. He may even be there now!

Tip for your business:

  1. When thinking search think social.
  2. When thinking search think local.
  3. Add social plugins to your website, immediately.
  4. Make user generated content part of your plan.
  5. Ask a few friends who can help get it done.

Care to discuss it? I’m at www.twitter.com/timbigfish or www.facebook.com/timcnicholson.