Design*Sponge Biz Ladies


I'm thrilled to share with you that Grace at Design*Sponge has scheduled a featured post by yours truly on Biz Ladies today! Grace and I connected recently about her Biz Ladies events and features, and that discussion resulted in my writing for her. I am honored to be participating in such a great resource for women in business, and look forward to being a contributor from time to time.

The subject of my post is Maximize The Visual Impact of Your Business, and in it I share a few simple ways you can express your brand image & values visually - no matter what your business is. What is a brand image and how can you create one? What do you need it for? How can you use it effectively in your visual communications? (Check out the post to find out!)

I am so pleased to have this opportunity to reach a new audience. So many small businesses and independent merchants are searching for anything they can do to be noticed and thrive in this difficult economic situation we all face. The information in this post gives them a new opportunity to rise to the top and be seen the way they WANT to be seen by media, the competition, clients, and potential customers alike.
Plus, it enables me to pursue my business values of 'design.inspire.inform.educate.empower.' as I assist others in their pursuit of visual excellence. Love that! Thank you for this outstanding opportunity, Grace....

(Image Credit: Design*Sponge Biz Ladies page)

'Perspective'

A comment I read on a retail blog a few months ago came back into my mind on Sunday. It was written by a retailer, whom I admire and respect, and she made a statement about the actual 'legitimacy' of those who call themselves retailers. She was coming from the perspective of protecting herself and her ideas by not sharing them with those who weren't within her sphere of reference, and in that context I do understand it. But in all honesty, the way it read could very well be taken as a slam against e-tailers or any business that transacts sales of product in any method other than a brick & mortar store. That was the way it rang through my head this weekend.


In a related conversation with some antique show dealers this past weekend, it came up that many people think that this way of selling (at shows) is not a viable business, but a hobby instead. Hmmmmn. Those people are sometimes owners of retail stores, yes? And they buy their products from vendors in showrooms and at gift SHOWS. Shows where temporary booths are set up to show off product, usually direct from the creator/artisan/manufacturer. So, a showroom is OK. A rented space in an antique mall or at a show is not. Curious, isn't it, how perspective changes things?


Kind of like how the media has jumped on a 'new trend in retailing' - PopUp Stores. Major brands build out a store, stock it, advertise it, blitz it, and tear it out again after a week or two or a season. This was happening all over the place during the holidays. Media experts praise it for creating a demand for immediate action by the customer by creating a limited offer and sense of urgency (the basis of every sale tactic ever taught). Stores love it for helping them control staff & overhead costs, while also pushing the brand image to the top of media radar. So, major brands set up a temporary sales space and it's media worthy. Meanwhile, people who sell all kinds of products & merchandise have been selling at wholesale, trade, and industry shows for decades, but the perception is that they aren't in business. ???


Please let me assure you that the people who sell antiques and art and craft (and anything else at any kind of show) are working just as hard as the average retailer in a brick & mortar store is. Every single time they sell, they have to build the whole 'store', so to speak, not just unlock a door and turn the sign around. They have to set up the booth, the lights, the fixtures, and then stock the product - usually in one day. Every day before and after a show they are bustin' it to handle every facet of their busines - the planning, buying, paying, recordkeeping, inventory, etc. - just like 'regular' retailers are during 'off hours' (is that a misnomer or what?!). E-tailers burn the midnight oil buying or creating, staging & photographing products, loading photos & info onto their web store templates, and also handling all of the mundane tasks of running a business. There is so much behind the scenes of retail that the customer never sees... but it's also true that there is so much that one industry or segment does not see in another.

Whether you have a store on main street, a store on Etsy, a space in an antique or craft mall, or sell at shows, you know that retail is hard work. Anyone who attempts it deserves respect - especially now, in a difficult economy and a negative world. It's not less legitimate, valuable, or 'real' just because there is no brick & mortar building involved. We can all learn so much from each other - ways to improve our business operations, appearance, costs, marketing, etc. that we really shouldn't be creating divisive terms and attitudes. I hope this article causes you to reassess how you value others in business - because whatever form their business may take, there may be a lot you can learn from them. And vice versa!

This weekend my husband and I were selling vintage furniture & home decor at an antique show here in Seattle. Since I didn't decide until late on Wednesday to participate, we had exactly two days to prepare product and load our trailer, then one day to set up our booth at the show. Following the eight-hour show, we had several hours of breakdown and re-loading the trailer. That translates into four 12+ hour days of solid physical work in a row. We did it because we need to make a living, and we choose to do that by doing something we love. And that, my friends, is work, not a hobby. Today, though I am resting my sore muscles, I am hard at work on my computer, writing blog posts, articles, seminar outlines, and plans for upcoming shows. It's not in any way a 'day off' for me, even though to someone looking in from outside, it may seem that way.

Perspective is interesting...what's yours?

With Thanks...

Following my post about the Salvage Studio, I received a very nice email from Beth Evans-Ramos, one of the owners:

"Hi Deb,

It was fun to see you and Bob on Saturday. Thanks for dropping by and visiting.

Your blog posting about our transition is absolutely fab! You totally get us and what we are doing. Your writing was eloquent. And being in the same paragraph with Rachel A. is an honor unto itself. I hurt for her. But I’m with you – I believe in her vision, beauty and grace. Starting and maintaining a business is very hard work. Growing a business is trickier yet.

We really appreciate your support in spreading the word about the Salvage Studio, why we closed our traditional retail venue, and that our business is healthier than ever. It has been exhausting to explain to customer after customer that we are not closing the door on everything. We are just warming up!

I respect your business savvy, and admire how much you support so many women in business.

We’ll see you in June! (at Farm Chicks)

Beth Evans-Ramos

The Salvage Studios"

Beth, my dear, your writing is quite eloquent, as well... I can only imagine just how many times you girls have tried to explain your motives and methods for this decision. So many people will never 'get it' - but you can quote my post and send it out to all of your customers if you'd like! I thank you for your kind words... it is my pleasure to promote others who work so hard to succeed.

Spring Display Inspiration


Over the weekend we took another trip up to the Skagit Valley, this time to view the daffodil fields in bloom. Mother Nature wasn't very cooperative on that front, so we ducked into a bunch of my fave shops for spring inspiration instead.

These gorgeous photos all show the fresh florals included in display setups at Christiansons' Nursery . The 'Antique Shop' on the property is a mecca for excellence in product presentation, and by adding fresh flowers, plants, and mosses to it, they elevate it to a stunning example of brand image coming to life.




Simple ideas, grandiose effects. The very best kind of visual merchandising.

We also stopped by Skagit Valley Gardens again - the place with the rusty trucks, remember?! We had lunch in their darling cafe (highly recommended) and then browsed through the Garden Store and the Root Cellar Gift Shop again... I snapped these photos of more display ideas for you:
Another large-scale display prop lifts small boxes of smaller product (flower bulbs) into prominence...

An old fridge fits the theme and creatively (and safely) displays painted martini glasses.

These are old windows, hung horizontally from chains with brackets bracing them to the pillar. A great idea that is easy to execute. (The only caveat here would be that no heavy items are placed in this kind of shelving). Great ideas are everywhere!

Note: My original post this morning has been removed, as my post for Design*Sponge has been delayed. I'll link to it when it appears!

Retail is Change...



I stopped by on Saturday to say a fond farewell to the girls at Salvage Studio, and wish them all the best on the next part of their adventure. Saturday was the closing day at their store, which has always been jam-packed with fabulous junk (and I mean that in the most positive way!), and Beth told me they've enjoyed a steady stream of visitors, customers, and shoppers. The place was all but empty of merchandise by the time we made it there.... which is exactly what one wants when closing up shop, right?

Don't be misled into thinking that this closure has anything to do with a depressed economy. Oh, no.... it's been planned for a few months, as a result to some really amazing opportunities that have opened up for the girls. Their book, 'The Salvage Studio', has propelled them into another stratosphere! (You can buy it here) I am so excited to hear about and see the new things they will be doing...they aren't spilling too many beans yet, but they have many irons in the fire.

I was chatting recently with friends about this development for Salvage Studio and also the bankruptcy and closure of Shabby Chic, and it is amazing to hear the varying perspectives that people have. Most in retail wince and just say 'ouch' or 'It's the times, I tell ya....'. Finance people mention that this is a lousy time for a lot of people, and ask 'If they are closing the store, what will they do to sustain an income?'. Those in other industries ask why it happened, what's next, and offer something like 'I hope they have better luck in their next venture'. Most think it's all happening because of the economy. More than a few looked shocked when I explained that the Salvage Studio girls made the choice willingly, even though their store was doing quite well. This is what's best for them and for the sustained growth of their business right now - and being a business owner often means making choices that no one else understands!

In the case of Rachel Ashwell and her Shabby Chic Empire, many women have expressed sorrow and hearfelt concern for the founder - who, on her blog, reveals the rawness of the pain of losing a company that she has spent all of her life building, just months after losing her mum. I, too, read her words and hope she can make it through this dark time because that is a lot of burden for any one person to bear - especially publicly. But really, I know she can and will. And I for one am excited to see what she does next - this woman created a decorating style that has been the number one choice worldwide for over twenty years. She will certainly emerge from this drought with a flood of new inspiration and beauty that will inspire us all.

That's the thing about closing a business or morphing it to head in a new direction: it's a chance for creativity to shine. Sometimes the choices are forced upon us, sometimes we make them ourselves, but the end result can always be our choice to create something NEW. We often take a course of maintenance rather than growth with our businesses or art, and it takes a shake-up to open our eyes to new possibilities. In the case of my friends at the Salvage Studio, they saw the doors opening and walked through them. Rachel has seemingly been shoved through the door and it has slammed behind her. But all of these women are in a position to recreate, redesign, and redefine themselves and their businesses, and to move forward to ever better things & opportunities.

It's a situation we can all learn from... what choices do you need to make about your business right now? What can you do to grow, rather than shrink, in today's marketplace? Are you heading in the direction you want to - or is it time for a detour? Where does that door in front of you lead - and are you willing to walk through it to find out?

On With the Show...


This is JoMarie, of Rose Marie Gallery, sewing goddess and maker of bed & table linens, and the cutest skirts for big & little girls that you've ever seen! Pompoms, fringe, ruffles, banding and more adorn the edges of her twirly skirts, and then there are the ones made with a handkerchief hem from vintage linens. She told me that at the recent flower & garden show, she had a run on them like nothing she's ever experienced. LOL. She ain't seen Farm Chicks - yet!!! Yes, JoMarie will be a vendor this year at Farm Chicks Antique Show, so make sure you look for her.

This is one PACKED booth! We've been chatting and JoMarie is planning 'a really awesome' booth setup for Farm Chicks - she finally told me about it when I saw her at the Lynden Antique Show yesterday. (Which in itself is funny, because JoMarie has a space across from us in Faded Elegance - but I never see her there. I see her everywhere else!) After hearing the details, I am waiting with baited breath for her booth reveal in June. It's going to be an incredible expression of her brand, I tell ya!

This is Deborah (Debi), of Ormolulu, who also has a space across from us at Faded Elegance, and who was also at the Lynden Antique Show! We have been buying stuff from Debi for years at several 'flea market' -type shows, and I am always impressed with her booth setups at shows. Take a peek:



(There was so much more in her booth, but it was always too full of people to photograph!) Debi really knows how to combine large items and then work in the details to catch the eyes of shoppers in her show spaces. From Scale to Lighting to Composition, all telling a fabulous story in every vignette, she works it to within an inch of its life! Love it. Debi will be at the Farm Chicks Antique Show, too, and I have every reason to expect that her booth will be gorgeous! (Though it will inevitably be so full of people, I won't get to photograph it then, either...)

Retreat has been invited to participate in the local Funky Junk Sisters Antique & Flea Market Show in June, just a week after we return from Farm Chicks. They are currently featuring us on their blog in their vendor spotlight. I have been asked to present a seminar to the participating vendors before the show starts, and am excited to be able to share information & inspiration with this dynamic group of independent merchants. It will be all about maximizing visual impact of their products in their booths.

Perfect timing for this subject, because I'll be able to get some fantastic shots of the traffic-stopping booth setups at Farm Chicks, and then share the secrets of good design with the gals in Puyallup. And perfect for me, because my heart is really with these women (and men!) who are in this segment of the retail industry. We connect on so many levels, and I am thrilled to be moving into speaking engagements at Antique shows.

We'll be videotaping that seminar, as well, so I'll be offering it as a resource to all of you eventually! More info on this as it gets closer - do check out the Funky Junk Sisters web site for more on the show.

BTW, watch my blog for another announcement on Tuesday! Something great to share with you!

We've Got a Theme Going On Here...


This is the official poster for the 2009 Skagit Valley Tulip Festival, a world-famous month-long event located just 20 minutes North of our farm. Notice the old rusty truck in the background, holding wooden crates to be used in the harvest of tulip bulbs in the valley?

Did you also notice over there >>>>>> (in the right sidebar Amazon carousel) the book on visual merchandising with the rusty old truck in a display on the cover?

Not sure if it's providence or coincidence that my last post had photos of not one but TWO rusty old trucks in displays! Creativity seems to work that way, though. Once you've focused on something, you start seeing it everywhere....

Lessons Learned

Lessons come at us in the strangest forms sometimes...

I know three women who have recently shared with me situations they’ve experienced and lessons they have learned in regard to being vendors at the Farm Chicks Show. This is great information for anyone who is interested in selling at shows – any kind of shows – and so I am discreetly sharing their stories here.

T learned that when applying as a vendor to a show, it is REALLY important to take time to prepare your presentation. She decided she wanted to sell at Farm Chicks, though she has never been to the show. She grabbed a few great existing photos she had, quickly filled out the app, and sent it off. She was devastated when the response was a “no, thank you.” – but rallied, and grabbed a partner, built a mock booth, staged a photo shoot, put together a professional presentation, and re-submitted the entry. The answer that time? A solid ‘YES!’

R learned that when your business is multi-faceted, you need to selectively focus on various facets for different purposes. She produces her beautiful artwork herself, and sells it at trade shows. When she wanted to grow and begin selling ‘direct to public’, she chose shows like Farm Chicks to start. Her application was met with a reaction quite different than what she had anticipated, and a ‘No, thank you’.

After getting feedback and looking at her marketing, she saw that while her approach for gift & trade shows was great, she was projecting the wrong image for other kinds of sales opportunities. For a recent application to another antique & flea market show, R is re-staging her booth for a photo shoot and grouping small quantities of her products into vignettes on vintage props to give it a more ‘one of a kind’ feel. She is also playing up the wording in the application to focus on her use of vintage materials, the select one-of-a-kind artwork that she does not sell at trade shows, and on the fact that she is an artistic entrepreneurial woman. She says she is actually glad that this happened, because it helped her to see her business in a clear light, and as others see it.

J will be a first-time vendor at the Farm Chicks show this June, and she’s never attended the show as a shopper. She took a gander at my video series filmed at last year’s show, and let me know that it really helped her to see the kinds of booth presentations that vendors create there. (It is clearly not your regular ‘Antique Show’ at a convention center!) This led her to brainstorm and think bigger, broader, and grander than she previously was. She is planning the merchandising of her products to show off her own unique personality with a big visual impact, which she’ll need to grab shoppers’ attention in the midst of hundreds of stellar visual effects. Her products are incredible and sales are soaring – but she has to be sure to raise the bar for this show in order to stand out from the crowd.

In a related situation that has nothing to do with the Farm Chicks, D learned recently that you may think you are projecting one thing, but find that you are actually perceived in a completely different way. Consistency, clarity, and confidence go a long way in presenting a brand successfully.

In all of these cases, the women who owned the businesses suffered a blow to their confidence and sense of accomplishment when they realized that they had NOT put their best foot forward. They had to be brave, step back, take an objective position, ask for feedback, and make adjustments to the way they thought about, expressed, and CREATED their own image. Happily, they all did. And every last one of them is reaping the very positive results! THAT, dear readers, is how to run and grow a successful business...

By the way, this is not in any way meant to reflect poorly on the Farm Chicks' Jury process for vendors. Quite the contrary - I applaud their process. Their requirements are clear, their standards are high, and that is one reason their show is such a stellar experience for everyone. As Teri said when I interviewed her last summer, they pay attention to how every vendor helps build the Farm Chicks brand. Smart cookies, those girls.... keepin' us all on our toes!

Gratitude Giveaway Winners!


Ladies & Gentlemen, the envelope please...
Winners of the drawing for the two books are:

Congratulations, Ladies!

Please email me at Debi.WardKennedy@Gmail.com with your shipping addresses, and I will get those books off to you first thing next week. Thank you so much for entering!

"Dear Helen Reddy,


Will you please re-record your hit song and rework the lyrics a bit, so it can become the theme song for the 21st century woman? How about 'I am woman, READ MY BLOG!' ???? Thanks ever so much, Deb"

Call it social networking, call it a great way to waste time, call it whatever you want - but online connecting is personal and 'relationship marketing' is how businesses are advertising now. And business women aren't just ON the bandwagon, we are propelling it! It's the new way to stand up and be heard, and be recognized. There are endless resources online for women in business - ANY business - and I'd like to share two more I recently learned of:

Check out 101 women bloggers to watch for 2009 by Women Entrepreneurs Magazine. (My friend Bari J Ackerman is on that list - way to go, Bari!) And for a comprehensive directory of blogs about business topics BY women in business, head over to women on business.com's businesswomen bloggers directory. Hundreds of 'em, writing and sharing info on every business topic under the sun.

I'm adding these links to my sidebar, so they'll be here permanently... Reddy, willing, and able to serve. ;0)

Gratitude Giveaway


I stopped in at Half Price Books last evening and headed for the sale rack. Yeah, I am CHEAP. And sitting there on the lower shelf, as if waiting for me to arrive, were two copies of the best book ever written for retailers: 'Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping' by Paco Underhill, self-avowed Retail Anthropologist.

The Retail Bible, it's been called. The de rigeur textbook for countless students in business and visual courses at colleges across the country for years now. And one of my number-one resources. Paco studies stores and talks about what works and what doesn't, sure, but Paco also studies PEOPLE and how they shop. The resulting information is enough to make a business owner's head spin - and to help them get back on track, with helpful suggestions for changes that will result in increased visibility, accessibility, conversion, and sales of merchandise. Just what we all need right now, yes?

I know that this book will help you, no matter what you sell or where your store is or how long you've been in business - or what your situation is right now. All you have to do is make time to read it, and let yourself be open to the advice given within its pages.

So, of course, I grabbed those two copies and instead of the publisher's price of $25 per, I got them for two bucks each, and now I'm going to give them away - to you. Free! Just my way of expressing my gratitude and saying thank you to you all for visiting, reading, commenting, and letting me know when the resources I share here have been helpful to you. These are Hardback books, probably publisher overruns or leftover stock from some poor soul who went out of business because they didn't READ this book. (The paperback shown above is mine and I'm keeping it, sorry!)

How do you win?
Leave a comment on this post, with your name, the kind of business you are in (gift, fashion, home decor retail, event design, etc.) and make sure your name is linked to your profile, blog, website, or leave me your business or personal email. If I draw your name, I'll contact you for a shipping address - and send Paco's wisdom winging it's way to you.

Want another chance to win?
Post about this giveaway on your own blog, with a direct link to this post, and then comment here with a link to YOUR post. I'll enter your name again!

I'll be picking two names on the evening of Thursday, March 12. On Friday morning, I'll announce the winner's names here, and send them an email. Good luck!

New & Improved!

I asked, you commented, I got busy.
(Actually, I was already busy with the redesign of my blog graphics, I just wanted to know what features you'd like to see here, and on my website if I decide to keep it.) I thank you for your many thoughts, ideas, and shall we say 'opinions' offered in the comments. Yes, all of them. I appreciate the feedback.

So here it is - my newly-designed blog. A few points of interest about the changes:

1. No 'theme music' caption - the music is still here though, because I get a LOT of positive feedback on it.
2. No 'DivaDeb', 'DecoDivaDebi' or 'Decorating & Display Diva' references at all. I changed the blog name to 'Debi Ward Kennedy, Retail Designer'. (If I could change my blog address, I would.) This is to prevent any confusion that these terms have been causing for anyone.
3. My Diva Chick avatar has been simplified and updated. I will continue to use her. I like her!
4. As I post this, I'm adding Photo links here that will take you to my Portfolio. Before & Afters, as requested.
4. I've consolidated my other web resources ('other' than this blog) into one sidebar category to make it easier to find all of them: blogs, videos, columns, articles, photos, resume', and FB Page.
5. Updated profile photo, bio, and email. Please note the email change.
6. The video player for my GHC video series is still at the bottom of the page, and the video segments will continue to rotate there.

BTW, I AM going to have a website, under the url 'DebiWardKennedy'. I'll link it here once it's live. I will not be using 'TheDecoDiva' url anymore, hence the email change.

The top two-thirds of the sidebar is one big Deb infomercial, actually. Consider it my sales pitch. The lower third is filled with resources, links, and other content to promote and help other businesses & people - that's the networking part.

Coming attractions will include a consolidation of post Topics, making it easier to find subjects you are looking for. I also have additions for the 'Recommended Reading' list, and a few new widgets to install. Exciting things and exciting times as I embrace change. (Yes, there is an underlying message there!) I'm striving for a balance here - professionalism without sacrificing my personality.

If you watch the GHC video at the bottom of my screen, you see ME, as I am in my life, onstage, on camera, on the phone.... it's just ME. I really am that energetic and peppy and excited! I am passionate about what I can do to help other people & businesses succeed visually. I get results for people, I break attendance records for seminars at venues, I get standing O's when I speak. People tell me they like my approach to teaching and this subject.

And most importantly, I receive hearfelt gratitude from people I have worked for, from corporations to mom & pop retailers - whether I have charged them for my time or not. So, I won't dial all of that back to the point where I look like just one of a few hundred Power-Point-using deadpan-joke-telling droning-on-and-on speakers on a platform who are out there. That's not me, and anyone who is looking for that kind of designer or speaker isn't my customer anyway.

Creating Business Success

“I have never been interested in being ‘in business’.
I have been interested in creating things.

Business is creative.

What really matters is what you create.

Does it work? Does it make you proud?"

These statements are but a few of some phenomenal insights from one of the world's most successful and interesting businessmen. I am continually inspired by this man and his very un-corporate attitude.

I'm not going to tell you who he is...instead, I'm going to say go
here and read more from this visionary human being. Then go here and buy his new book, wherein he literally rewrites the rules for doing business. Anything this guy writes is at the top of my list of resources!