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marketing your small business storyWhether you’re speaking to customers, your employees or the local Rotary Club, odds are you’ve got stories to tell. Not tall tales, untrue and uninteresting. But stories that can inspire, influence, motivate and even turn negative situations around.

Stories are often more memorable and more effective than just facts or directives. What are some of the things we remember most from our own childhood? STORIES. How or why you started your business is far more interesting to hear about when you tell it as a story, rather than simply reciting your resume. Visitors to a rural small business are often interested in the whole rural experience, and what it’s like to create and run a small business in rural America. Stories are the perfect way to share this information and entertain at the same time.

In her book ‘Whoever Tells the Best Story Wins’, Annette Simmons describes six different type stories that work in the workplace: stories that tell who you are, why your business exists, that reinforce a learning point, inspire hope, share values or state your understanding of another’s perspective (like your customer’s perspective).

In Business Story Telling - Using Stories To Inspire, the Mindtools website shares several tips from Ms. Simmons that a business owner should keep in mind when telling stories:

* Be authentic - The best storytellers talk from their hearts, so don’t try to fake an emotion that you don’t feel. Your listeners will probably see through this, and your story will crash and burn.

* Pay attention to your audience - Stories that are too long are generally boring. Tell the story well, but don’t go on forever.

* Practice - Try to practice before you tell the story. Even if you tell it to yourself just once in front of a mirror or video camera, this can help you when you’re in front of your real audience.

* Create an experience - Remember that when you tell a story, you’re creating an experience for your listeners. Don’t just use sound (words), but the other senses as well. Show your listeners the picture you’re painting, don’t just tell them.

What are some stories you can tell about your own business?

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handmade-toy-businessIn July 2008 Congress passed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act. This law was created in response to dangerous levels of lead and phthalate (a chemical in plastic materials) found in toys and other children’s products. This law is scheduled to go into effect February 10, 2009.

This new law poses a big problem for handcrafted toy makers and those who handmade clothing because it requires expensive testing by rural business owners to prove their handmade toys are safe for children. Artisans must have their products certified by third party businesses that often charge $100.00 to several hundred dollars per test. And each part of a toy or piece of clothing - paint, buttons, a zipper - must be separately tested.

Retailers are also required to make sure everything they sell in their store is certified safe as of the February 10,2009 date. Anyone who violates this new law can be fined tens of thousands of dollars.

Right now, there is no distinction made between handmade artisans and large manufacturing firms, or mom and pop stores and chain stores. A second vote needed to finalize changes to the law that should help handcrafted and rural businesses will not take place until AFTER the law goes into effect. Until then, you can read more here.

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rural-business-tourism-touristWelcome to Backroads Business where we explore the challenges of creating and growing rural businesses located on the backroads of small town America.  Our areas of discussion will include home business, small business, rural business, seasonal business, mom and pop businesses, arts and craft businesses, artists, farms (agritourism) and tourism.

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