
Baking it Down with Sugar Cookie Marketing πͺ
π Hey - Heather and Corrie here with the Baking it Down Podcast with Sugar Cookie Marketing (a group on Facebook full of sugar cookiers turned business owners).
πͺ We're here to help you rise with your reach, flood with new followers, bake up new ideas, and make that all-important dough (while makin' that dough - see the pun there?)
π€. Whatβs it about? Weβre a Facebook Group turned Podcast, Membership, Book Club, and Baking 101 thatβs dedicated to assisting bakers in effectively marketing online to generate more sales and better manage their businesses.
π§ With free Facebook Live classes, hundreds of resources, and thousands of like-minded bakers, thereβs a lot to learn in "SCM" (aka Sugar Cookie Marketing). οΈπ§ As an extension of our Facebook group, this podcast is here to let you learn by listening. π We'll cover group topics, marketing trends, and more (leaving this wide open in case Corrie wants to start singing).
πΈ We take the sweet art of selling online to the cottage bakery world with marketing methods that move products (and pastries).π So open up those glorious ear canals because we have a podcast! Just when youβve thought youβve βheardβ it all with those marketing "miracle" twins (that's our last name - not a proclamation), weβve got something just for you each week!
π₯£ As a baker, you don't always have the luxury of two hands needed to scroll in Sugar Cookie Marketing Group or crack open a book in Sugar Cookie Bookies, but what you can do is listen (unless you're my kid asking βwhatβs for dinnerβ for the millionth time).
π Hands full of flour? No problem! π 18 dozen iced cookies due tomorrow? Letβs do this. The Baking it Down Podcast by Sugar Cookie Marketing is a weekly podcast geared toward helping you grow your bakery business - dropping (almost) every Tuesday.
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We choose a topic each week that's either something new and emerging in the world of social media or something that we saw in "The Group" that was a hot topic and we bake it down... I mean, "break" it down for you. π―οΈ What you can expect in the podcast is about an hour of chit-chat with the meat and potatoes right at the beginning of the episode.
π₯ Thatβs when we dive into the marketing topic of the week! π Oh yeah, folks can call / text / email in with their questions too - a fun way to hear from other bakers out there.
Our promises to you:
1οΈβ£ We always make it clean = no cursing. We understand that you are busy and could be around little ones while also trying to get your weekly dose of business growth so we make sure that each episode would make our grandma proud and keep it clean so you can listen while also living your life.
2οΈβ£ We always make it fun. Thereβs a lot of negativity in the world so we try and make the podcast an upbeat and fun learning experience for you. I mean, we try to make the Instagram updates and changes as happy as we can, but come on Instagram! Give it a rest! No more changes!
3οΈβ£ Other than that, we take a positive approach to marketing We are also *not* professional podcasters. I feel like we need to say this because, hey, sometimes we get giggles! We do our best to extend our marketing knowledge to you all free of charge each week at the cost of listening to our higher-than-normal pitched voices and the occasional giggle spree.
4οΈβ£ You can find the podcast on all the major platforms and you can typically expect a new episode each Tuesday afternoon (unless life happens). We invite everyone to listen.
Either start from the beginning or work backward! The episodes donβt build off themselves so you wonβt be confused hearing one before the other. You just might miss new Lives we mention but you can always catch the replay in the Sugar Cookie Marketing Group on Facebook!
Baking it Down with Sugar Cookie Marketing πͺ
207. Baking it Down - Nobody Likes a Party Planner
π‘ No One Likes a - Party planner (ideas without execution).
π© A forced a play on words from "no one likes a party pooper" - but in this case, we're focusing on π§ "ideas guy" who love to plan and fail to launch. These folks talk up "the next great thing," and yet the idea never exits the ol' cranium to make it to market.
πΊοΈ Having a plan is good - but too much of a good thing, and you've got either a perfectionist or a serial starter, but you definitely π« don't have a viable product. βοΈ And that's why planning is a double-edged sword. You have to have a plan, but some bakers turn "making a plan" into a never ending excuse as to why they've not launched [that cookie class] or [that new bakery item] or [the vendor event that's now since come and gone] or [that cookie cart]. You get the point. π§ They turn planning into roadblocks.
π They spend their whole baking lives in the dream stage so that they never have to take the risk to launch and possibly fail. But our challenge is to accept failure and fail forward. Here's some ways to ensure you're not a party pooper... I mean, planner.
π‘ 1. Determine your mvp
MVP = minimum viable product. π€ That's the "least amount I need to do to be able to take this concept to market for a v1 release." In simpler terms, what's the simplest thing you can produce from your idea and use to test if your marketing would bite?
This "MVP" concept forces the forever-planner's hand by making them launch as soon as something is good enough. They can't wait until it's perfect because it's no longer the minimum viable product. Take Stupid Car Tray (podcast sponsor - use code SUGAR to save 15%). They're on their v3 tray. What if they'd only launched when they felt their product was super refined? π€ They would have missed years of sales. Same with you, ya party planner. Stop planning, start pushing out product. See if they bite. If they do, then improve. π Launch and learn.
π‘ 2. Two types of "party planners"
Okay, maybe "party planner" wasn't my best play on words, but there are two types of "ideas guys" - which camp do you tend to find yourself in?
- π’ The Perfectionist - The perfectionist builds the perfect skyscraper. It's got the best finishes, the best appliances, the most amenities, but they never list the condos for sale. They're in a perpetual state of trying to make everything good, better, best. They never fail because they never open.
- ποΈποΈποΈποΈ The Serial Starter - The type of person who lays the foundation for many ideas, but never builds a single house. This planner loves an idea, runs out to source materials, then panics at the thought that they weren't naturally talented at the thing and jumps on the next bandwagon, leaving a trail of partial starts (and budget buster) in their wake (and basement storage closet).
- π‘ We need to be the single home builder who lays the foundation, constructs a modest home (aka MVP), sells it, then gets hired to add on to the home later. At all stages, this planner is generating income while improving their craft.
π‘ 3. Plan = yes | Overplan = hard pass
Planning is a business necessity. πΊοΈ Venture out without a map and you're bound to get lost. π§ But business (and life) exist in the gray areas. Same with planning. β Spending no time planning is just as bad as spending all your time planning. π Plan enough, then take that first step out there. Remember - you can always tweak. β³ But you can't time travel, meaning we can't go back and launch when we "coulda - shoulda - woulda." Take the leap of faith, push out the MVP, see what happens, cap'n.