Minneapolis, MN, Sept. 21, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NewMediaWire --In a newly published KLAS® Research Spotlight Report, 100% of Carrot Health customers interviewed said they were satisfied or highly satisfied with the Carrot MarketView ® software and analytics platform, and would both recommend and purchase it again.
"We have been able to reduce our marketing budget by about 30%, and we can still hit our sales goal by using tactics that Carrot Health brought to the table. The system allows us to not spend wasted marketing efforts on people who are unlikely to select our product. We understand which markets are the hottest and which brokers are the best. We are able to send personalized information to people about the events that are close to them because we know those people will be more likely to convert.
Other things to check out:
Your Old Marketing Message is Keeping New Customers from Finding You - Commercial Integrator
If your website still has examples and words about what you used to do for your customers before the coronavirus pandemic, you're doing yourself some serious harm in attracting new clients who will help you stem the tide and come out of this recession stronger and more ready for the future.
"We don't know when what we were used to will be back," said business consultant Tom Stimson in his Intentional Success webinar "How to Make a Clean Start with Express Marketing." "That's getting in the way of your marketing message."
Thousands of Green Mountain Power customers have overdue bills
Green Mountain Power is reaching out to more than 23,000 customers with overdue utility bills to tell them federal help may be available if their delinquencies are tied to the coronavirus pandemic.
The state's largest utility, with about 266,000 residential customers, said nearly 10% of its customers have balances older than 60 days. Vermont legislators used $8 million in federal COVID relief funds to create the Vermont COVID-19 Arrearage Assistance program.
Supportive Customers Buoy Beloved Main Street Businesses | Inc.com
This past summer, the sidewalk was jumping outside The Silver Room , a jewelry, art, and accessories store in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood. One night, a short film by a local filmmaker danced across a screen in the window. A jazz guitarist and pianist performed. On warm evenings, 30 or 40 neighbors would wander by and pause for a socially distanced minute to watch.
The entertainment is small potatoes next to Sound System Block Party, The Silver Room's annual music and arts festival. In normal times--which these are not--that event packs in tens of thousands of celebrants from around the city. But founder Eric Williams views his mission as "providing human connection," and he won't give that up, even for a pandemic . The small performances "create moments of emotion and energy," says Williams. "People really enjoy it."
In case you are keeping track:
Are Nextdoor Ads the Best New Way to Gain Local Customers?
With Congress failing to reach a new pandemic relief package, things are looking tougher for many businesses. When Goldman Sachs surveyed their small-business clients in July, more than 84 percent were on track to run out of PPP money the first week of August—and about 2/3 were doing less than 75 percent of their pre-COVID revenue.
Enter easy-to-run, inexpensive local ads from Nextdoor. One of the best additions to small business advertising we’ve seen lately.
Hong Kong's first CBD cafe opens its doors to customers | West Hawaii Today
An employee adds drops of water-soluble CBD, or cannabidiol, an essential component of medical marijuana, into a coffee glass at the Found Cafe in Hong Kong on Sept. 13, 2020. Cannabis, also known as marijuana, in Hong Kong may be illegal, but the new Found Cafe is offering a range of food and drinks that contain parts of the cannabis plant without breaking any local laws. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
The cafe, named Found, is the city’s first to offer a range of coffees, biscuits, beer and fruit juices that contain cannabidiol, or CBD, a substance from the cannabis plant that is said to offer therapeutic effects without getting users intoxicated.
'I'm not TSA. I'm a bartender': Workers say they're defenseless when customers don't wear masks
At a Philadelphia Rite Aid, a worker in her 60s was instructed to alert her manager if a customer was refusing to put on a mask. But managers, she said, usually don't want to get involved.
And at a Rittenhouse Square Starbucks, a 24-year-old barista said that sometimes customers get belligerent when she asks them to put on a mask. They ask for her name and say they'll file a complaint with corporate, before storming out. Add that to the list of other inconsiderate things customers do, she said, like stick their heads around the acrylic glass barrier that's meant to protect both workers and customers.
Bird doubles down on selling electric scooters directly to customers - The Verge
Bird, the electric scooter startup that helped kick off the shared micromobility boom, is doubling down on personal ownership. Over the weekend, the company unveiled its new, foldable electric scooter, the Bird Air, which can be purchased for $599.
It isn't the most powerful scooter on the market, with a top speed of 16 mph (25 km/h) and a range of 16 miles (25 km). But at $599, the Bird Air is significantly cheaper than the company's first retail scooter, the Bird One , which retails for $1,299. That puts the Bird Air in the same category as other mid-priced electric scooters like the Razor E Prime III or Segway Ninebot's Max .
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