Oct 06

It is impossible for any wedding industry business to not contemplate the challenges that may or may not present themselves in the next year or two.

There are no pat answers, and any blanket assumptions (good or bad) are probably a poor idea. The nation’s economy is unprecedented territory, within the last 8 decades. Predicting the future, realistically, is more crystal ball gazing than anything else.

That being said, I offer this news video clip from New York City, which includes wedding industry business, a diamond expert, and an economist. This is simply more grist for the wedding marketing mill.

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Andy Ebon

The Wedding Marketing Blog


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Oct 05

fortune-teller.jpgOK, everyone knows that times are uncertain. Speculating is for pundits, prognosticators, gamblers, and fortune tellers. It’s not for wedding marketers, like you.

Speculation shouldn’t become your main line of work. Frankly, anyone who tells you they know what’s going to happen in your line of business in the next year and half to two years is kidding themselves. Don’t let them delude you.

We’ve reorganized our blog topic categories, and added a new one: recession tactics. Expect information from elsewhere, within the wedding industry, and outside the wedding industry.

Filter the information, and choose strategies, tactics, and techniques that make sense to you.

Just do us one big favor. Be definitive and take massive action. Do not fall into ‘paralysis from analysis’ mode.

Share your questions, thoughts, comments, and concerns. Maybe your musing or suggestion will trigger a brilliant idea from someone else, and we can share the wisdom.


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Oct 04

black-bear-breakfast.jpgBlack Bear Diner is one of my favorite breakfast places. I had a morning meal there, last Friday, with Jodi Harris (The CEO of Fun, Sight’n'Sound Events). It’s a relatively small chain of restaurants (38 locations) that feels like a local establishment.

Everyone is courteous. They recognized you when you arrive. The waitresses know your ‘usual,’ and refill your coffee cup with need to be asked. The portions are generous and the prices are moderate. What’s not to like?

Now, as the headline says, “What’s wrong with this picture?.” Look closely. It’s the wimpy, wilted lettuce, underneath the orange slice. Friday, I ordered multi-grain pancakes with strawberries and sugar-free syrup (it’s a diabetic thing). The garnish is a fresh orange slice on a wimpy, slice of wilted lettuce.

I understand a leaf of lettuce with a burger and fries. What is leaf of lettuce doing on the underside of an orange slice, with pancakes? I mean really. It’s incongruous, it’s bizarre. It’s contrary.

And it’s not even a fresh, crisp lettuce leaf. It’s wimpy and wilted. I have now taken to asking the waitress-of-the-day (Friday it was Deane) to banish such wimpy, wilted lettuce from my plate.

The truly humorous thing is that when asked, “So tell me, what’s the history of putting a wimpy, wilted leaf of lettuce under every garnish?” the answer is something akin to “I don’t really know. We’ve always done it this way.”

In this case, the wimpy, wilted lettuce is not going to stop me from patronizing the Black Bear Diner, but it raised a bigger question.

What does the “wimpy-wilted-lettuce factor” have to do with Wedding Marketing in your business and mine?

What little thing are we doing that is annoying our customers and could be changed, simply, without a cost factor or any great effort? What are your doing ‘because you’ve always done it that way.’

  • Are you a photographer or videographer that drops your gear, just anywhere, at the reception, without regard to safety or aesthetics?
  • Are you a musician or DJ who is sloppy about taping down wires? Do you use grey duct tape, when black stage tape would make a better appearance?
  • Are you a baker or florist who delivers their creations dressed in a t-shirt and ragged jeans? How about a custom company polo short (with logo), and khakis?
  • Does your website have photos that take 3 minutes to load because they are processed 5 years ago? Are your testimonials from 1999?
  • Do you do a good job for the client, but never properly acknowledge a referral?
  • Do you only call clients and peers to ask for something or to vent? How about calling just to see how they’re doing, and not to ask for anything?

It’s no secret that there are some challenging times ahead. Distinguish yourself by doing little things well.

What’s your wimpy-wilted-lettuce factor? Identify and fix it. No fanfare.

And another thing… I never mix my soul food with caviar pie!

Andy Ebon
The Wedding Marketing Blog

PS: If you live in the Western United States, go visit a Black Bear Diner near you. And if you see wimpy, wilted lettuce, point it out. And tell them, Andy from Las Vegas said, “Take it off my plate!”

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