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Cross Promotion: Why Your Small Business Should Consider it & A Few Ideas to Get You Going

I recently popped into one of my favorite boutiques in Brooklyn and noticed a stack of beautifully designed postcards on counter that they were handing out with every purchase.  Upon closer examination I saw that it was an offer for 25% off purchases at two neighboring shops (a gift shop and shoe store) along with a free baked good with purchase of a drink at the coffee shop around the corner.  With deals like those I couldn't resist at least checking out the participating stores (I mean, it couldn't hurt to peek into them I told myself...) and before I knew it I had snagged a new pair of summer sandals (25% off!) and discovered somewhere to enjoy "latte and laptop time" in the future. 

This retail experience was pleasant for me as a customer (I discovered new businesses, I scored great deals), as well as for all three of the participating businesses!  In fact, even though I didn't purchase anything at the gift shop featured on the postcard, I have now been in the store and can visit it when I need something in the future (as well as refer it to friends).  Beyond the experience, it was a fantastic, real-life example of small businesses acting on cross-promotional ideas, and the positive results that can be achieved from such an undertaking.

Cross-promoting with companies that may not be the exact same type of business, but most likely share similar customers, messaging or even are part of the same "world" (we'll talk about this more later) can be one of the most cost-effective and powerful strategies you can employ to increase your visibility and customer base.  I personally love it when small businesses and entrepreneurs find organic and well-matched partner companies to cross-promote with.  Why?

  • Low to no cost: Cross-promoting can be free in some instances (social media) and most other times it allows you to use the tools and systems you already have in place or are already paying for (newsletters, your website, sales), thus not requiring you to increase your costs significantly.  Cross-promotional opportunities like the one I outlined above with postcards are also effective and again, are fairly low cost.  They also allow you to...
  • Split the cost and the work:  You're no longer alone when you cross-promote, which means you have another business (or two or three) to sharing cost and the workload.  You know what we always say here at Tin Shingle: why do it yourself when you can do it with others? Half the work and cost along with double the visibility and sales opportunities is an equation I can definitely get behind!
  • They're fun:  Yes, I said it!  Sometimes it's just fun and re-energizing to do something new and fresh with your business and brand, and to have some outside energy present.  When you're a small business owner you tend to love what you do (after all, you created it), but it still doesn't hurt to have new ways of sharing it and getting the word out about it!
  • The possibilities are endless: Cross-promoting opportunities are endless because there are countless ways you can combine yourself with other companies and countless companies you can match up with!  You just have to think get your brain in the right place! You have to start thinking of obvious (and not so obvious) companies you can partner with and ideas that work for both of you!  The goal is that both of you enjoy it, benefit from it and the workload is fairly weighted, if not identical.

To kick your cross-promotional brain into high gear we've come up with a few concepts for you below! 

Before you begin, remember that when choosing a business to partner with, you don't have to choose the exact same kind (in fact you probably don't want to do that).  Instead, think of companies that are "playing in the same world" as you.  For example: the athletic/fitness world, new moms and babies world, items for road trips world, fashion lovers world, food lovers world, small business products world, tips and products to make your home prettier world, and so forth!

Now bring on the ideas!

  • Shared newsletters: While I don't recommend swapping contact lists and emailing each other's followers blindly (they'll quickly wonder who gave up their contacts) you can create a co-branded newsletter tying yourselves together (in an organic and strategic way) and offering mutual discounts.  Perhaps you introduce another company as a favorite of yours, or in an overview of products perfect for road trips/mini-home makeovers, etc.
  • Create paper or virtual frequent buyer cards:  These can offer discounts and other goodies at all the participating shops, which can be brick-and-mortar or virtual.
  • Social Media Promotions: There are countless ways you can bring  a cross-promotional partner into your company's blog, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and more! Best of all, they're all free! Even a simple mutually shared discount code for your online followers can reap big benefits!
  • Hold a Contest: Contests can be in person or virtual, can include applicants sharing business cards or email addresses with you and can include prizes based on the goods or services all participating businesses sell.  A great way to spread your brand and get in front of new eyeballs!
  • Use Those Sales Receipts & Deliveries to Spread the Word: Every time a customer receives a product or receipt from you (real or virutal) or attends a class or event hosted by you, they should walk out with a promotion code for future shopping/working with you.  You can expand this sales and marketing tactic exponentially by partnering with other companies and including each other in these opportunities.  This especially works when you're partnering with brands "in your world" as you know their customers will most likely enjoy what you sell as well!

Want more? Here are a few more ideas:

  • Co-host a seminar or class together
  • Throw a summer party together
  • Share pop-up retail space!
  • Share a referral program

Get creative, get strategic! As you can see the opportunities are there, and I'm sure your partners are as well!  If you're a member of Tin Shingle just pop into the business directory and find a fellow small business owner there that feels like a good match.  Sales are often slower in the summer, and cross-promotional marketing is a fantastic and low cost cure to the "summer slump".  Happy planning!

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#SmallBizSpotlight Featured Member: Nutty Steph's

The road to success has been an incredible adventure for the team at Nutty Steph’s, from (delicious) accidents in the kitchen to buying a chocolate factory! Fate must have a sweet tooth for the amazing granola sweetened with Vermont maple syrup and chocolate deliciousness created by founder Jaquelyn Rieke, an entrepreneur since the age of seven. Inspired to launch Nutty Steph’s in the heart of Vermont’s green mountains by fresh, sweet maple syrup there, her customers soon grew from local Vermonters to fans around the country, making her more popular than many national brands, and it’s been “full-tilt boogie” busy for her and her team ever since. There’s no story sweeter than one with twists and turns, not to mention Magic Chunks (granola/chocolate delights), a Pink Easter bunny, Candied Dark Chocolate Ginger, and a Pretzel Piece Milk Chocolate Bar along the way!

What inspired you to get started?
When I moved to Vermont in 2003 and had such ready access to fresh maple syrup, I was inspired to build a business around this delicious granola recipe I knew of, which featured maple syrup as the only sweetener.  The maple syrup seemed to offer the granola a certain perfect crunch with a superior taste that was at once not too sweet.  I was new to Vermont - I took to the road with my product very quickly and relished the process of driving in and out of every gorgeous billboard-less road of the green mountains, scouring every town and person for who wanted to eat my granola, and this was a wonderful platform in my early 20's for building community, and beginning to carve out my own road in the world.   

What was your background? Was it in what you are doing now?
I’ve been an entrepreneur since about the age of seven, devising and delivering businesses to my community ever since. I of course ran Nutty Steph's Gluten Free Granolalemonade stands, and then created goods for church craft shows, (alongside only octogenarian woman vendors!) Later I got involved in a wholesale jewelry endeavor in middle school with local stores, wreath making and chocolate chip cookie delivery, summer childcare services leading into two-week summer camps by mid-high school, and then a fresh bread business to pay my rent in college, and…so on!  My educational background is in mathematics, and as I round off my tenth year of operating Nutty Steph's, I see that math is perhaps the unifying factor between my enterprising seven year-old self, and the nine-year-old business. As a child entrepreneur I started learning to track income and expenses on early computer spreadsheet programs. Now as I develop into my womanhood and the increasingly community-minded person that I am becoming, the mathematics of what the business is comprised of and what becomes of it, including who uses their time in what ways, are the problems I work on to figure out how it all adds up and contributes to a sacred earth and humanity.

What challenge have you had to face that led to a big growth for your company?
For our first four years in business, I sold only one product in one flavor, the original Vermont Granola with almonds, walnuts, hazelnuts and sweetened with maple syrup.  One day, an accident of kitchen conditions led me to finally invite a new product into our line, which was the chocolate covered granola Magic Chunks.  We developed a marketing plan in summer of 2007 for the holiday season, including a website overhaul, a large national mailing and new product packaging---all for the effort of sharing this fantastic new taste of the Magic Chunks.  We were marketing and selling the chunks, but a man named Allan Sirotkin was making them to our specifications, using our granola, in his chocolate factory, Green River Chocolates.  In November of that year, chemotherapy treatments had debilitated Allan to the extent that he could not produce our Magic Chunks, and it was suddenly, at the critical moment, all at a Magic Chunks standstill.  I faced the challenge of gathering, begging, pleading and creating with the people in my inner circle, and our collective resources, to make it possible for us to very quickly support Allan's healing---and our newfound Magic Chunk craze---by purchasing his chocolate factory.  We launched very quickly in business No. 2, so to speak, just as the original granola business was about to near financial security, and essentially began the process of growth all over again...my second child, I would say.   

What do you have going on in your business right now that you're excited about?
Nutty Steph's Love BarWe’ve made the commitment to be entirely GMO-free by the end of this year, as well as convert from using our single source Ecuadorian chocolate in just some of our bars, to *all* of our chocolate bars. We are researching all of our ingredient sources to be sure they are in fact free of GMOs, and replacing anything that may be questionable.   

Where would you love to see your business in 5 years?
Our continuing mission is to nurture our customers so emphatically that their life is significantly improved by their relationship with our food and company.  We would like to primarily sell directly to consumers in our shop and website, limiting middle-man distribution and stores from our growth planning, so as to never compromise our deliciously high cost of ingredients. We'd like to build our sales to 1 million/year and cap it there, allowing us to generate surplus resources for the continuation of our community involvement and the personal quality of the lives on our team.
 

Yahoo!!! Tumblr Acquired Under Design + Community Focused Marissa Mayer

Guess who made this panic graphic...not the Tumblr/Yahoo haters, but Yahoo's CEO, Marissa Mayer. For her Tumblr blog. Which she named marissamayr.tumblr.com - misspelling her last name by dropping the "e" in keeping with Tumblr and Yahoo owned Flickr.

 

Marissa Mayer gif to announce Yahho Tumblr acquisition

 

Despite the acquisition haters out there, I'm actually a little giddy about the prospects!

Early Thursday morning, a day after the acquisition, Sabina sent me a PR Lead from a reporter doing a story on the Yahoo/Tumblr merger who was seeking comments on why Tumblr users were apparently flocking to WordPress after the acquisition was announced. I didn't know, so did a little Googling to get acclimated with the drama, and found that generally, it was the usual brouhaha that happens after change, with people freaking out, thinking Yahoo would be uncool for uber-cool Tumblr, force ads on them, or even shut Tumblr down.

Which wasn't helped by WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg in a Sunday evening blog post, where he claimed that many Tumblr users are jumping ship to his blogging platform to avoid dealing with Yahoo (note, I think Matt has changed his blog post because those words are gone from his post that PC Mag links to, and I do remember reading the original post...hmm....):

"'[Tumblr] imports have actually spiked on the rumors even though it's Sunday: normally we import 400-600 posts an hour from Tumblr, last hour it was over 72,000," Mullenweg wrote.'"

Silliness! Did they not read Marissa Mayer's announcement on her new Tumblr page, that had glowing reviews for the Tumblr community, and its creator? She says:

"I’ve long held the view that in all things art and design, you can feel the spirit and demeanor of those who create them.  That’s why it was no surprise to me that David Karp is one of the nicest, most empathetic people I’ve ever met.  He’s also one of the most perceptive, capable entrepreneurs I’ve worked with.  His respect for Tumblr’s community of creators is awesome, and I’m absolutely delighted to have him and his entire team join Yahoo!."

I've been a blogger since 2005, authoring numerous blogs housed on Blogger, rival blogging platform to Tumblr and WordPress. I'm  considering moving Tin Shingle's blog from Drupal's CMS to Blogger for a variety of reasons, namely SEO and ease of use, which are areas that Tumblr blogs lag in. Until possibly now.

Thanks to the merger, Tumblr bloggers stand a chance at looking at real improvement at the under the hood coding structure of their blogs, so that they "speak Yahoo search" better, and stand a better chance of ranking highly in search results. If a search engine is behind a blogging platform, then you know that the search engine really wants that content to be found. Not that a search engine would build anything sneaky for the blog platform to rank extra high and cut in line, but you know that they'd build a basic blog template that "speaks search" *really well*. Complaints about Tumblr used to be that good SEO was fundamentally hard to tweak with Tumblr templates. Improvements have since been made, and perhaps many more are possible. But it still has oddities, like how blog titles sometimes aren't available (like at Marissa's blog), or if they are in the blog, they aren't linked to anything, but the date is linked to the post. Just odd things that aren't intuitive to the user experience.

Another point: Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer has an eye for design, as does Tumblr. Design is half the reason why Tumblr blogs took off, especially in the fashion industry. It's actually cool to have a Tumblr blog, despite its technical setbacks and SEO challenges. If that code under the hood gets greased up a bit, Tumblr could really take off with content heavy-weights who *do* want more page clicks for their Google or Yahoo ads, and other sponsorships.

Another reason Tumblr bloggers should be shouting "Yahoo!!" is that Tumblr is community based, and so is Marissa Mayer. Building a community following on Tumblr is quite easy with built in features, so that's a step ahead of the curve with Blogger blogs that Google is trying to build into their templates right now by introducing tagging features for Google+.

Note: Marissa has since dropped Google+ from her Twitter bio. This really turns up the heat! ;)   (thanks Charles Arthur at The Guardian for pointing this out!)

Despite Yahoo's habit of shutting down its acquisitions, like Del.icio.us, Geocities and Broadcast.com, its move to buy a popular blogging platform is taken from the same page as when Google bought the blogging platform Blogger a decade ago in 2003, which proved to be lucrative when Google made it even easier for blog publishers to place Google Ads in their blog in a way that mirrored the blog's voice. And where was Marissa at that time...? At Google. :)

Marissa states her intentions in her blog post announcement:

"In terms of working together, Tumblr can deploy Yahoo!’s personalization technology and search infrastructure to help its users discover creators, bloggers, and content they’ll love.  In turn, Tumblr brings 50 billion blog posts (and 75 million more arriving each day) to Yahoo!’s media network and search experiences.  The two companies will also work together to create advertising opportunities that are seamless and enhance user experience."

I'm looking forward to the changes, as they stand a chance of being very beneficial to bloggers and brands using the Tumblr platform. Personally, I'd never considered using Tumblr, but now am giving it second thoughts, purely for the prospective benefits of search and community reach.

Do/did you blog on Tumblr? Comment below on your experience with using  it, and if you were happy with it for your brand.
 

Why Should My Business Have a Blog: 8 Simple Reasons from Sabina

If I had a dollar for every small business I encouraged to create a blog, I'd be getting myself a little "high five" in the form of this sassy little puppy.  But alas, I personally feel like all too often I see companies that aren't taking advantage of this powerful, free and brand-directed business tool.  Don't get me wrong, I, like many of you, feel that if you're not going to do a good job at something you best not do it, and I know that lack of time often makes you think you won't be able to create a blog for your company and run it well.  That said, I believe in business we make time for what is important, a priority and what could bring our company great ROI.  I think for many of you, a blog is one of those things.  As part of my campaign to get you to begin thinking strategically and creatively about a possible blog (or more stratetgic use of your blog if you already have one) I've laid out a few -  well eight reasons (plus bonus one 'cause I love ya) - blogs are one of my favorite buzz building business tools.

What’s the point of having a blog as a business?

  1. You can create quality and shareable content that can be passed along to social media, customers and more.
  2. You have the power to drive traffic to different parts of your company’s website that you want to give attention to.
  3. Having a company or personal blog lets you control and maintain your image.
  4. A blog lets companies "pull back the curtain" and show people about who they are.  People love seeing the face or team behind the brand - that can keep them passionate about your business and mission like you won't believe!
  5. Helps you improve brand awareness and engagement with current and future customers and clients.
  6. Helps new customers & clients find you through key word searches. BAM! That means you're getting buzz while you sleep! Literally!
  7. Experts can prove they are valuable source of information. 
  8. Newsworthy interviews or content on your blog can lead to pick up in other blogs and media outlets, further growing your brand's visibility, traffic and name recognition!

Bonus idea? You can make content work double time and turn the tips you created for your blog into a service/expert based pitch!  Both ways of sharing your knowledge show you are an industry leader!

I hope I've planted the seed - blogs can be your sercret weapon for public relations, SEO, sales and more! I'm so geeked out about them I'll be back to share more reasons soon along with some of my favorite examples of small business owners like you putting their blog ideas into action.
 

Tin Shingle Members Hang Their Shingle on Open Sky!

Open SkyBy now you’ve heard the big news: the shopping social network, Open Sky (launched in 2011; currently 3 million members strong & growing) has started an open social marketplace for small businesses---and, ever-true to their enterprising spirit, Tin Shingle members have already hung out their shingle on Open Sky’s virtual storefront! Thanks to the Tin Shingle community, the application process, which requires at least 20 followers to open a store, has been a piece of cake for members: with a simple email to the Tin Shingle group, members reached out to other members for their first 20 followers and got the support they needed in a snap! Already, Emily Elizabeth Jewelry, Tilth Beauty, and Peggy Li are up and running on Open Sky!!
 

Emily Elizabeth
Emily Elizabeth Jewelry
Tilth Beauty
Tilth Beauty
Peggy Li
Peggy Li Creations

Culver Cutie Boutique on Open Sky

Culver Cutie Boutique

   

Tin Shingle and Open Sky are a match made in heaven: with Open Sky’s new move to include small businesses in its platform, Open Sky is becoming all about showcasing the work of entrepreneurs—which is, of course, the heart & soul of Tin Shingle! Open Sky’s new initiative is a sign of the times and a response to a big push from consumers looking to buy from small retailers who offer one-of-a-kind product. John Caplan, Founder and CEO of OpenSky, says: “There is a growing appetite to discover products that are unique and different, not mass produced…The OpenSky marketplace is the social platform that connects people with extraordinary things and the small businesses who make them.”

Open Sky presents an exciting opportunity for Tin Shingle members to bring their product to an even bigger audience through Open Sky’s “ripple effect” social network. Open Sky makes it easy for consumers to connect with their friends to share, compare, and purchase must-haves, creating a “ripple” of communication that occurs when people talk about their purchases online. Emily Kolins, of Emily Elizabeth Jewelry, says: "I joined OpenSky because I love the shop interface because it's simple and clean. The heavy social media aspect is also appealing because it makes it easy for people to spread the word about your products."Long story short, Open Sky takes word-of-mouth among friends and translates it into sales for merchants.

Peggy Li of Peggy Li Creations, told us: "OpenSky was a great opportunity to get brand exposure with a large and socially-connected audience of people interested in shopping! Plus, OpenSky provides merchant tools where I may manage my OpenSky store myself, which the control freak in me prefers. This also allows for better margins on OpenSky than you would have with a traditional retailer."

We’re so excited that Open Sky has opened its doors to small businesses, and we’re sure that Tin Shingle members are about to wow the millions of Open Sky fans!
 

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#SmallBizSpotlight Featured Member: Liz Emery

A life-changing experience and an enduring love of family led Liz Emery to start her clothing line, Liz & Ett.  While caring for her grandmothers and watching their dignity wither away with physical challenges, Liz decided to bring style to women with limited mobility. She learned the ropes of the clothing design business, with the good fortune of being in the heart of New York City's Garment District as her playground. Today, Liz & Ett brings stylish clothing choices to mothers and grandmothers and anyone with limited mobility, with her smartly designed SmockFrock™ , a chic version of an adult bib for those who are prone to messes at mealtime, the hair salon, and even during painting class in a retirement home. With a new line of designs on the horizon, a SmockFrock™ for men, Liz is busier than ever. But with a business that comes from the heart, there is no end to this labor of love!

We chatted with Liz about how she started her business:

What inspired you to get started?
Liz and Ett SmockFrockAfter being a caregiver for my grandmothers, I saw so many ways in which we could have improved the caregiving experience.  It was life-changing for me, and the indignities that I witnessed while doing hands-on care stuck with me long after my grandmothers passed away.  I was inspired to start designing and the rest is history!   

What was your background? Was it in what you are doing now?
I was on a completely different path before starting my business!  I studied microbiology in undergrad, did my master’s in public health, and then went on to med school.  My plan was to specialize in Infectious Disease and then work for the CDC investigating disease outbreaks.  I had always wanted to be part of the Epidemic Intelligence Service!  But life had a different plan for me.  Being a caregiver was a life-changing experience and set me on a different trajectory.     

What challenge have you had to face that led to a big growth for your company?
One of the biggest challenges for me has been learning how to take a design from idea to reality.  The services available in the NY Garment Center have been instrumental in allowing me to get my business off the ground.  I utilized the Garment Industry Development Corporation (GIDC) consulting services and local sourcing showcases through FIT and the Save the Garment Center (STGC) movement to find the right manufacturers, and source my materials.  This is a steep learning curve for me, but being able to be here in NYC and manage operations hands-on, make adjustments to my designs with the pattern makers in person, etc. has made it all possible.    

What do you have going on in your business right now that you're excited about?
We’re about to launch a new design – our first design for men!  It’s a masculine version of the SmockFrock, made of techy material, and it is designed to look like a vest. 

The SmockFrock™ is fashionable and functional, it’s perfect for the woman who has everything, who has downsized, or who is facing a health challenge.  It’s something she can use daily and be reminded of how much she is loved.

Where would you love to see your business in 5 years?
I’d love to see my designs in large high end retail stores so that caregivers have access to quality, dignified products.  This niche market is so neglected – once you reach a certain age or need help with certain activities of daily living, you fall off into the land of the bland and generic.  Right now, there are more sophisticated options out there for babies and pets than there are for those with limited mobility!  My ultimate goal is for Liz & Ett to be a lifestyle brand that makes caregiving more palatable for all involved – for aging loved ones, patients in the hospital, on hospice, etc. and their families/caregivers – so that this ‘labor of love’ can be a much more dignified experience.  I want to transform the industry!

Haute House PR DJ's the Monday Motivation Mix Comeback Session

Welcome back to your work week AND welcome back to our regular Monday Motivation Mixes!  This much-loved series sharing the tunes that get some of our favorite entrepreneurs pumping and moving at the start of a work week was on a brief hiatus but it's back, it's baaaaaad (in a good way) and it's being kicked off by virtual DJ's Jordan Landes Brennan and Kelly Kepner of Haute House PR

 

These ladies are the kind of gals that you watch making beautiful business and public relations magic and you ask yourself "how do they do all of it and still seem so energized, happy, and pumped?"  Well instead of wondering we asked them to share the music that motivates them to do all they do during the week (and it's a lot).

 

Monday Motivation Mix by Haute House PR

 

Kelly's Picks:

 

Jordan's Picks:

Anything Could Happen > Ellie Goulding


 

What is this mix currently helping them do?  Haute House PR is getting ready to host a Back to School event with their clients Foreign Exchange at the end of summer.  They've partnered with KIIS FM and the American Red Cross and will have a celebrity host there to greet fans as well as tons of huge deals for shoppers! Check www.feclothing.com for more info this summer!

Follow the Haute House gals on Twitter & Facebook and visit them online to find out more about all things PR, Haute & Hollywood! 

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Great Gatsby Glamour Takes Over Small Biz Style

Great Gatsby fever gripped the nation long before Baz Luhrmann's movie hit theaters this month, giving us all an excuse to turn up the dial on our spring style choices and get all "Gatsby Glamourous".  This era is one of my favorites in terms of style and aesthetic because really, what's not to love?  The romance-glamour-vintage-fabulous vibe makes me giddy!  Know what else gets me giddy?  Small Biz Style of course!

In the spirit of F. Scott Fitzgerald's masterpiece, we're going to help you with your hunt for Gatsby-worthy style pieces you can wear, carry and accessorize your home with all spring and summer long!  As always, they remind us that small businesses are big on style!

 

 

Accessorize in true twenties style with pieces including (clockwise):
Manic Trout's Forever, For Now bracelet, Peggy Li Creations Knots & Pearls Necklace, SolEscapes Raffia Convertible Cap/Visor (hello two hats in one!),  Bella Dawn Gold Mosaic Bracelet, Bella Dawn Filigree Earrings, Christine Mighion Gold & Aquamarine Ring.

 

Wear it as a necklace, wrap bracelet or a headband, it's Gatsby all the way with this convertible sunflower piece by Emily Elizabeth Jewelry.  Add on Layla Joy's Kris Champagne earrings, Jacqueline Kimberly Jewelry's Gardenia Ring one one hand and Christine Mighion's Wrap Around Rainbow Moonstone Ring on the other.  Keep your feet happy with these deco-inspired rollable flats by Footzyfolds and you're good to go!

 

 

Rainy spring days are no excuse not to be fabulous.  Thanks to SolEscapes purple ombre umbrella we've literally got you covered.  Keep hair Gatsby gorgeous with these bow headbands from Bella Dawn. Nikki Baker's earrings were so perfect (I can completely picture them adoring Carey Mulligan) we couldn't pick just one between her Pink Topaz and Pave Diamond Bean earrings so we're sharing them both with you!  Finally, don't leave out your home when thinking Gatsby-style.  Pillows are easy ways to amp up style.  Just snag a throw pillow cover like this Rhodes gold filigree style from Nine Space and you're on your way!

1920's and 1930's sartotial savvy can be easy achieve thanks to these  ideas from small business owners and entrepreneurs!  Best of all, as always, buying small business gives you "rewards points" in your heart!

Read more Small Biz Style posts here!

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How to Get Your Product on Celebrities: Expert PR Pros Break it Down

Celebrities: whether they be from the big or small screen, the world of sports, musicians, dancers, models, big name bloggers or (yikes) reality stars, they aren't just pretty faces.  No, these days celebrities can be brandmakers, propelling businesses big and small into the national spotlight with the mere mention of their name (or being spotted with their product).

Like it or not, we all know that highly visible influencers can lead to press, increased sales, retail opportunities, and social media buzz, but not everyone knows how to turn those potential opportunities into a reality.  Until now!

At Tin Shingle one of our main missions and passions is helping entrepreneurs and small business owners of all kinds get the word out about their businesses and helping them get to celebrities is part of the deal!  That's why we called on the founders of  Haute House PR, Jordan Landes-Brenman and Kelly Kepner (PR celebrities in their own right) to compile a list packed with the Do's and Don'ts of working with celebrities.  Well, the ladies did more than deliver, they made two lists filled with inside scoop on creating and growing relationships with celebrities that is so big we've broken it into two articles that every business owner should read, print out and hang over their desk!

Don't waste another second wondering why some companies have celebrities singing their praises and yours doesn't, head right on over to Jordan and Kelly's tips and find out what you should (and shouldn't) be doing to make it happen for you!

 

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#SmallBizStyle: My Obsession with the "Makeup Mad Scientists" at Three Custom Color

Have you ever held onto a lipstick that is so empty you're literally scraping the bottom and sides of the tube to get your hands (or lips) onto its final pieces, because it's been discontinued and it was your go-to shade?  Have you ever spent time mixing together colors trying to create a shade that you cannot find anywhere but just must have?  What about going from make-up counter to make-up counter hunting for the perfect shade of blush or eyeshadow that exists only in your mind?

Me too.  That's why when I found out about Tin Shingle members Three Custom Color years ago all I kept thinking was "where have you been all my make-up wearing life?!"  The team, which I now refer to lovingly as the Mad Scientists of Make-Up, are known for fabulous make-up in general, but my favorite thing about this small business is that they can create (or re-create) any shade you dream up!  Want a customized blush for your wedding? Done!  Does your mom yearn for a lipstick that was discontinued the year you were born?  No problem!  Their team will actually custom blend any color eye, lip or cheek color you want in their cosmetics laboratory in New York City and have it to you in a few weeks!  They also keep the "recipe" on file for you so if you want to re-order they're ready to go.

Beyond this awesome make-up customization service the team also offers beautiful shades in general, so if you're looking for a new go-to beauty brand to check out add them to your list.  Beyond lip, cheek, brows and eye products sold individually they also have great collections including some for mom and some for the bride-to-be, all of which you can find in their online shop.

Though they're now headquartered off 5th Avenue in New York, they, like many small businesses, began in the apartment of co-founders Scott and Chad.  What was once a company that sold about 25 mail-order lip shades has grown to a brick and mortar store selling over 250 products and their Custom Blending archives now contain over 9,000 discontinued shades of color cosmetics dating back to the 1930’s! BAM! If that's not a Small Biz Style success story I don't know what is!

You can find out more about all that Three Custom Color Specialists offers (and custom blend your own make-up shade while you're at it) via their website.  Then hop on over to Twitter and Facebook and connect with them there as well!

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