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BRX Pro Tip: Avoid Zero Sum Thinking

June 28, 2021 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tips
BRX Pro Tip: Avoid Zero Sum Thinking
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BRX Pro Tip: Avoid Zero Sum Thinking

Stone Payton: [00:00:00] Welcome back to BRX Pro Tips. Lee Kantor and Stone Payton here with you. Lee, it’s important, I think, for any of us who have made a commitment to suit up, show up, continue to serve first, genuinely provide value. We’ve also got to stay on top of ourselves and try to avoid zero sum thinking.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:24] Yeah. I think, again, this is one of these traps that people fall into that when you think that someone else’s win is your loss, that’s just not healthy. And if you kind of have this more abundance thinking mentality where the pie is big enough for all of us and we just have to figure out a way to kind of separate ourselves and provide value, then you don’t have to worry about someone else’s wins, because that’s really not healthy, I don’t think, in the long term.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:53] And remember, the community isn’t built around having one winner with lots of losers. That’s just not how it works. So, I would recommend creating business relationships where as many people can win as possible. Help more and more people get the outcomes they desire, and you’ll see that you’re going to get the outcome that you desire. So, focus on helping and serving. Don’t worry about when somebody wins. And if you didn’t win that time, if you just keep serving, bet on the long term and bet that you’ll win by doing good work over time.

BRX Pro Tip: Using the Super Premium Option

June 25, 2021 by angishields

Eric Dahan with Open Influence

June 24, 2021 by angishields

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Eric-Dahan-Open-InfluencerEric Dahan is the CEO and co-founder of Open Influence, a premiere influencer marketing company with clients that include Disney, Google, Amazon, Facebook, Intuit, SoFi, Unilever, P&G, Coca-Cola, Pepsi, L’Oreal and Under Armour, among others.

The company is also a leader in Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence within the ad industry thanks to its predictive analytics tools and entire influencer taxonomy, which contains over 10B data points.

Eric is a Forbes 30 Under 30 recipient and Inc. 30 Under 30 honoree.

Connect with Eric on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • How Open Influence got started
  • The Boom in Live Audio- Clubhouse, Spotify’s Greenroom, Facebook Live Audio Rooms
  • Live Audio Apps Offering Creators More Revenue Streams
  • How Brands Can Target Creators on Greenroom and Clubhouse
  • How the Pandemic Fueled New Content Consumption Habits
  • The Rise in Social Commerce

Tagged With: Open Influence

Rome Floyd Chamber Small Business Spotlight – LaDonna Collins with the Rome Floyd County Commission on Children and Youth, Peggy Decker with Vargo Orthodontics, and Samantha Roland with The UPS Store

June 23, 2021 by angishields

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Rome Business Radio
Rome Floyd Chamber Small Business Spotlight - LaDonna Collins with the Rome Floyd County Commission on Children and Youth, Peggy Decker with Vargo Orthodontics, and Samantha Roland with The UPS Store
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2021-06-22 Rome Floyd Chamber pic

Tagged With: Central Plaza, Hardy Realty, Hardy Realty Studio, LaDonna Collins, Peggy Decker, Rome Floyd Chamber, Rome Floyd Chamber of Commerce, Rome Floyd County Business, Rome Floyd County Commission on Children and Youth, Rome Floyd Small Business Spotlight, Rome News Tribune, Samantha Roland, The UPS Store, The UPS Store of Rome, Thomas Kislat, Vargo Orthodontics

BRX Pro Tip: Asking the Marketing Question

June 23, 2021 by angishields

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BRX Pro Tip: Asking the Marketing Question
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BRX Pro Tip: Asking the Marketing Question

Stone Payton: [00:00:00] Welcome back to Business RadioX Pro Tips. Stone Payton and Lee Kantor here with you. Lee, it’s a staple of just about everything we do here at Business RadioX probably applies to a lot of work even outside of our system. But let’s talk a little bit about the importance, the value of asking the marketing question.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:22] Yeah. In our business, we have a lot of latitude to ask people questions because that’s what we’re doing in pretty much every interaction, is, interviewing someone and asking them questions. And their sales guard is lower because it just makes sense that we would be asking them questions because we’re interviewing them on a show. And the way we leverage that is by injecting in some sort of a marketing question, during the course of the interview, to see if there is a spot for an elegant follow up later on. And it’s important to do that strategically. And over time, that marketing question may change.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:58] A while ago, our marketing question usually was around the importance of relationship in their business and if that’s important or not to them. And if they said yes, then we would follow up and say, “Hey, you mentioned during the show that relationships are important. We have a tool that can help you, you know, accelerate and nurture and create more relationship.”

Lee Kantor: [00:01:17] The new marketing question that I’ve been using lately is more about what do you need more of and how can we help you. And so, the way that I’ve been leveraging that is once they say, “Hey, I need more of this or that,” then I can then use that same answer and say, “Hey, you said you needed more of this.” If it’s a fit, I can say, “That’s something that we can help you with and we can help you achieve that goal.”

Lee Kantor: [00:01:47] So, the thinking then regarding the marketing question is to create some lever during the conversation that you can use later on to follow back up and use their own kind of language in their own words to say, “Hey, you mentioned during the show this was a challenge. We have a solution that can help you solve that challenge.” And if you do that right, you now have an elegant follow up and then you can accelerate and build on that to further nurture that relationship.

Stone Payton: [00:02:15] Well, and it’s more overt in the latter version that you described that the purpose is genuinely to find a way to help. And it turns out, helping people is an incredibly solid business model. It’s a very lucrative way to go about building your business is just reach out and try to figure out how to help folks.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:39] Right. Instead of worrying about selling them something, just try to help them get the outcome they desire. And if you can help them, great. If you can point them to someone who can help them, that’s great, too. I mean, it doesn’t have to be kind of a quid pro quo where I’ll do something for you and you do something for me. You’re just trying to help them achieve their goals. And then, if you can do that, then maybe you both can win.

Stone Payton: [00:03:05] Amen.

Chicago Business Radio® Studio

June 22, 2021 by angishields

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Karen Dennis with KSD Public & Media Relations

June 22, 2021 by angishields

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Karen Dennis with KSD Public & Media Relations
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Karen-Dennis-KSD-Public-and-Media-RelationsKaren S. Dennis, President of KSD Public & Media Relations, is a freelance public and media relations specialist who focuses on promoting her clients through social and traditional media.

Married to a doctor and as part of an extended medical family, Karen has honed her expertise in the healthcare vertical and focuses primarily on drafting content to increase the practitioner’s digital footprint and media presence.

Karen is passionate about writing web and brochure copy as well as blogs and email campaigns. But mostly she loves her clients which include physicians, personal trainers, telehealth professionals, EMR companies, and home health agencies.

Connect with Karen on LinkedIn Facebook and Twitter.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • What is a publicist?
  • How small businesses can choose which social media platforms are the most time and cost effective
  • Why doctors and healthcare practioners need a publicist

Tagged With: KSD Public & Media Relations

BRX Pro Tip: Flip the Funnel

June 22, 2021 by angishields

Alexander Popper with Hellometer

June 21, 2021 by angishields

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Franchise Marketing Radio
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Brought To You By SeoSamba . . . Comprehensive, High Performing Marketing Solutions For Mature And Emerging Franchise Brands . . . To Supercharge Your Franchise Marketing, Go To seosamba.com.

Alexander-Popper-HellowmeterAlex Popper is a Y Combinator Founder and the CEO of Hellometer; a computer-vision company that uses AI to improve service speed and help restaurant owners grow revenue.

Prior to Hellometer, Alex was at Google where he helped lead privacy and security engineering.

He holds an MBA from Yale and is a member of Forbes’ technology council.

Connect with Alex on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • What is Hellometer
  • What industry Hellometer works in
  • How it differs from a security company
  • How AI technology fits into the franchise world
  • Why it’s important to stay ahead of the technological curve

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:07] Welcome to Franchise Marketing Radio, brought to you by SEOSamba, comprehensive, high performing marketing solutions for mature and emerging franchise brands. To supercharge your franchise marketing, go to SEOSamba Dot com. That’s SEOSamba dot com.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:31] Lee Kantor here. Another episode of Franchise Marketing Radio, and this is going to be a fun one today, we have with us Alex Popper with Hellometer. Welcome, Alex. Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to tell us about hello, Medair. How are you serving, folks?

Alex Popper: [00:00:47] Sure. So Hellometer is an artificial intelligence tool that helps restaurant owners grow revenue using cameras to monitor and improve customer service times. So in plain English, its regular look and security cameras that monitor both drive through and dining rooms and show you where and when your team is losing you revenue because your service speed is slow.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:10] So now how is this kind of leveraging artificial intelligence?

Alex Popper: [00:01:15] So it’s entirely an artificial intelligence solution, we actually deploy a fully, fully fledged neural network inside each restaurant that processes the video to understand what’s happening, in particular what what your customers are experiencing.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:29] So what exactly am I seeing when you’re recording?

Alex Popper: [00:01:36] Yeah, so it’s a great question. There’s there’s two things that are happening. The first is the camera is seeing a world that is really similar to what, like a self-driving car. So it’s understanding people coming into the restaurant and what they’re doing. And you can see that on the user’s end through a video feed where it’s literally identifying individual customers and and where they are in their in their process throughout your restaurant, whether they’re going through the line or ordering or getting a food or sitting down. And then the other thing that you see is our service speed response. So you can imagine it a lot like a typical drive through timer. But for your dining rooms as well as your drive through where we’re showing you what your speed of service looks like for each day part as well as outliers, hey, it looks like there was a 15 minute long service interaction here, as well as highlights about where and when there may be opportunities to to boost revenue and improve that that service.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:41] So when I’m looking at the am I ever looking at the video feed or I’m getting some data from the feed is kind of now taking what it’s seeing and saying where there’s room for improvement.

Alex Popper: [00:02:54] Yes. So it’s all the above. There’s video feed which you can view and then we report in three areas. So we have an app that looks at the live, live speed of service and you can see that on your smartphone or tablet. And again, the output is is sort of similar to what a drive through time would give you. We also have a Web app where you can go and drill down and look at a little bit more of kind of root cause analysis. You understand where there’s bottlenecks and what’s causing them. And and we get pretty granular with the data that we deliver. So it’s a tool to to really kind of diagnose. And then we also send daily emails to owners or their management staff or even line employees, showing them like across an enterprise, how their speed of service looked like for the previous day, as well as their performance relative to other other other other locations in the brand.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:50] So can you share what something that would be actionable that I would get from this as opposed to those other solutions?

Alex Popper: [00:03:58] Yeah. So it’s really interesting when you. Begin to have speed of service as a core component of your operations, all of a sudden there is there is a lot of things that come to the forefront when you have that as kind of a spotlight. So, for example, we just wrapped up a major case study with a large sandwich chain, and there they’re able to improve typical speed of service for for each franchisee by just shy of a minute. So. Forty seven seconds. And that’s coming from things like understanding, hey, we’re understaffed during during certain periods the day or we need to put up placards that are missing for the the actual recipes or there’s training opportunities or we need to help guests navigate the menu so that they go through the order step a lot, a lot more quickly. And so really being able to pinpoint and identify where those parts of the business that you can you can start to to actually pick up speed.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:03] So now when you’re kind of rolling this out, so first I would imagine you’re selling it to the franchise or in a lot of cases, is that correct?

Alex Popper: [00:05:14] Actually, we sell primarily to the franchisees. And that’s because what we do what our goal is, is to actually boost revenue. We we there’s a very direct relationship between speed of service and revenue. The science on this is for about every seven seconds, you can decrease speed of service. You’ll pick up at about a one percent increase in revenue. And that that comes from from winning market share away from nearby competitors. It comes from decreased customer churn. And so that tends to be really, really attractive to to the individual franchisees.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:49] So so then that the individual franchisees like the systems that were given to me, they’re great. But I think we can tweak some stuff here. And I’m really curious to see how how a meter can help me kind of improve what?

Alex Popper: [00:06:06] Yeah, that’s that’s right. I think it’s useful to sort of point out what Haslemere does. That’s that’s really different and unique. So QSR is all about speed of service. It is quite literally in the name and the core value proposition. But historically, there have not been really good ways to to measure that. I mean, for some brands, they have a posse and you can look at the time between an order gets placed in a time that the order gets completed. But that’s it. It doesn’t give you a lot of granularity. And there’s all kinds of problems with that. Right. It doesn’t it doesn’t actually track the customer experience, which is as soon as they walk in the door. And so all of a sudden we’re able to give a reliable tool that can’t be treated. You can’t bump orders off early and really, really gives a very clear picture of each each customer interaction. And that’s that’s just not something that’s been available to folks before. So especially for multiunit owners who are not in their restaurant each and every day, we’re able to paint them a very clear picture of of what’s happening. And that’s really exciting, especially when you can do that for effectively an update to their security system.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:13] And so the purpose of this and to be clear, the purpose of this isn’t to go Bob’s not doing his job. It’s to kind of get a holistic picture of ways to improve the speed of service and the and the customer experience.

Alex Popper: [00:07:29] That’s exactly right for us. We we build ourselves as an operations management platform, not a people management platform. It’s less it’s less about Bob and what he’s doing and really understanding across your business where and when you’re you’re simply losing revenue because because service speed is slow. We think that that is a lot more interesting in terms of being able to increase your bottom line, then have a closer management of of like Bob directly

Lee Kantor: [00:07:58] Because you’re working you’re trying to improve a system. You’re not trying to solve a problem.

Alex Popper: [00:08:05] Yeah. And, you know, people are part of part of the system and it’s it’s not part of part of the solution then may go and and be having having conversations with Bob or, you know, conversations with Bob’s manager. But the first step is really being able to identify where where there are opportunities. And and and Bob as Bob as a part of a complicated system. But it’s also it’s also larger, larger than just just Bob himself.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:32] Right. But I would imagine if they’re rolling this out or thinking about it, they’re they’ve got to be mindful about how Bob is viewing this in terms of his privacy and what you’re looking for and looking at.

Alex Popper: [00:08:44] Yeah, that’s exactly right. And so so precisely to your point, we don’t we don’t what what they call it on Aiyaz is collecting PII personally identifiable information. We don’t we don’t uniquely identify Bob. Everything that we surface is is. Aggregated, and so we’re we we work very, very hard to make sure that a, there’s a system in place where folks can feel rewarded when there’s good, good, good service outcomes, but B, e, that they’re not feeling penalized or uniquely called out or identified and and work really, really hard to to kind of uphold the highest expectations when it comes to employee digital privacy.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:28] So now how has the rollout been for you? Are the franchisees or is this something that’s going like gangbusters, that they’re all kind of, hey, where is this been on my life? Or is this something that needs a lot of explaining and education to see the value?

Alex Popper: [00:09:43] No, you know, it’s not something that needs a ton of explanation. It’s always been a good idea. You take something like Drive Through is right, drive through. Timers have been around since the 70s in various forms. And you would never in a million years think of opening a drive through without a drive through. Timewell dining rooms really aren’t any different. The only difference is that the technology just hasn’t hasn’t been there before. And so it’s really exciting being able to deliver the first a timer for dining rooms and also be able to apply that technology to the drive through as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:23] So now how quickly can they start seeing actionable results from when they say, OK, we’re flipping the switch and all the cameras are on to OK, now I got information. Now I can tweak the system a little bit.

Alex Popper: [00:10:36] So it takes about a month to start to see really tangible results. And there’s there’s a couple of sort of sort of classic things that we’ll see. One is just before and after difference and speed of service. Another thing that we’ll see is typically for multiunit owners, they’ll have kind of a range of performance. Right. They’ll have some locations that are performing really well, some that are really performing, performing pretty poorly. And once once you start kind of managing based on speed of service, you what we’ll see is that that like like bottom tier really beginning to disappear and and locations kind of converging. So that stuff can can can happen as quickly is as 30 days post some of the things that you do to start addressing speed of service issues. Do take a little bit of time, things like employee training and so on. And so so some of the biggest results we’ll see are about 60 days of that.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:32] Was there any type of placebo effect of just putting cameras in that improves the speed?

Alex Popper: [00:11:38] Oh, I think it’s a huge effect and I don’t think it’s a placebo. What you’re doing is there’s all kinds of parts of your business where you have a lot of information, you have a lot of information about inventory and a lot of information about revenue and so on. And despite being a really important part of the QSR business, this is just not an area that that that there has been a lot of tools to really understand deeply. And so once, you know, once you start reporting on this stuff, it’s really a strong signal to your your staff that, hey, guess what? This is something that is important. We care about it and we’re tracking and reporting on it now. And that that has a huge effect on the way that an organization runs. Now, is

Lee Kantor: [00:12:19] There a gamification element to this where I can be kind of seeing which is the best performing store and then everybody knows and they can be working towards improving, you know, a number or a metric?

Alex Popper: [00:12:32] Absolutely. That that also is a very, very large and it’s passive. It’s not not part of the active management, but it is a very, very large component to success here, is being able to show stores relative to themselves how they’re they’re performing and if they’re improving or if they’re backtracking, how they’re doing relative to other other locations in the brand. And we we very much build gamification into the design. So those emails that I sent you daily, we also have a weekly email that will show a roundup of, hey, this is this is the best performing location. And this is this is the most improved in terms of the rankings or in terms of overall speed. And what we really love is, is the kind of engagement that that drives between managers and their staff now.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:22] So those emails go out to the individual employees as well.

Alex Popper: [00:13:27] Yeah, I mean, we each brand runs a little bit differently. There’s no one size fits all here. And different brands care about different different parts of their service. But it can it can be a signal that just goes to management and it can be a signal that goes down to everybody, everybody working, working the shift.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:45] So now what do you need more of at this point? You need just more brands to try this. Do you know, is the technology? I’m sure the technology is always evolving and you’re always working on that. But what do you need? More more funding to just keep working on this?

Alex Popper: [00:14:00] No, we’re pretty well funded. So we came out of Y Combinator last summer, which is really kind of the premier seed stage incubator for for technology startups. Yeah, I mean, at this point, what what what what we always love to do is to start with new brands. So there’s there’s a bunch of brands that we’ve started started having franchisees adopting. But but we are we’re always game to take on new franchisees or franchisors that are really interested in diving headfirst into the world of EHI in the QSR space.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:37] And then so does it matter if they’re an emerging brand with, you know, 20 locations, or do you prefer to work with those or do you want the multi thousand? You know,

Alex Popper: [00:14:50] The A.I. is agnostic and it doesn’t care if you have one location or forty thousand locations. I do think that there is a real opportunity here for emerging brands to begin to get a technological edge over competitors in their space that are maybe more established or larger by by being a little bit a little bit quicker and early into adopting a technology. It’s really a very different type of technology. The nature of A.I. is that it gets better the more that it’s use, because you’re right, it is continually being trained. So it learns from the data that it’s exposed to. And what that means is that it will become more valuable more quickly to early adopters as opposed to competitors who wait on the sidelines. So that’s that’s a really unique property of A.I. and it’s fundamentally different than other technologies. And so there’s a real, real opportunity there for four emerging brands that that are kind of a little bit more nimble and able to adopt this in a way that that that established brands may take a little bit longer. Some brands are doing doing pretty McDonald’s has been pretty bullish on adopting I but but there has been a lot of kind of a conservative type of approach that I think I think that emerging brands can distinguish themselves by by by staying away from now.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:12] Have you learned anything that, like low hanging fruit ways to speed up the organization kind of in a generic way so that anybody could benefit, like have you learn anything, just best practices from seeing this being deployed in multiple locations and multiple brands, multiple foods?

Alex Popper: [00:16:32] Yeah. You know, I think I think the biggest one is the one that you mentioned. You call it a placebo effect, call it a spotlight. But, you know, just having a signal that is true. That is it can’t be diluted. It’s really, really hard to to defeat a camera system that that report speed of service and that then makes that a part of your management process and practice. And so now when you’re having your team meetings, you’re talking about speed and how how how long customers are waiting in line before they even get to the order. You’re you’re beginning to reward based on that. That is a really easy thing that you can do again for the price of a security system that then can can start to impact the bottom line pretty pretty substantially. I mean, that that that average forty seven second improvement that that we’re seeing, I mean, that’s really huge. The implications that that has on everything from revenue to queue length to customer satisfaction. And it really doesn’t take that much to start to do that for your brand.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:44] Good stuff. Well congratulations on all the success. If somebody wants to learn more about Hellometer, have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on the team, what’s the website?

Alex Popper: [00:17:53] The best place to reach us is hello, Meeta. Oh, so it’s. Oh, and etr. Oh, well, I should say we also have a newsletter as well. So if you’re interested in EHI and the QSR space we publish pretty regularly, you can sign up for that. And it’s it’s a pretty great place to start.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:11] Well, Alex, thank you so much for sharing your story today.

Alex Popper: [00:18:14] Thank you. Really appreciate it.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:16] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you next time on Franchise Marketing Radio.

 

Tagged With: Hellometer

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