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5 Ways Your Business Can Thrive During the Coronavirus Pandemic

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5 Ways Your Business Can Thrive During the Coronavirus Pandemic

It's crazy how quickly the world was turned on its head when the Coronavirus Pandemic hit the United States earlier this year.

Many companies, especially those in hospitality and foodservice, have been put out of commission, and those still surviving, are having to come up with new plans to stay afloat almost every week.

Can your business adapt to the changing environment?

Can your business adapt to the changing environment?

Whether you run a mom-and-pop style business, a large corporation, a franchise, or a nonprofit, the business world has forever shifted because of the Coronavirus pandemic, and now is the time to adapt if you want to survive and thrive in the new business landscape. 

Owning a content strategy consultancy during this time has taught me five valuable lessons about the brands that are weathering the COVID-19 storm and potentially coming out of the pandemic more successful than they were before. Here are five things your company should be doing right now:

Get your products and services online.

If your website is out of date or is not correctly displaying what it is that you're selling, now is the time to make sure that your customers or clients can quickly and easily find your brand and discover what you can do for them -- without having to connect with you in person. 

Make sure your content is well written and easy to understand on your website and in your social media posts. And if you can, create a unique banner or landing page to explain to your target audience how they can engage with you in light of the current business climate. 

Fine-tune your brand messaging.

There is no time like the present to make sure that your overarching brand messaging is on point. Maybe you launched your business ten years ago and never got around to creating a tagline, or a concise boilerplate. Or perhaps you're just starting a biz, and are realizing that your messaging needs more clear direction. Wherever your company is in the business cycle, the significant shift that is happening in the business market place is causing all companies to rethink their position. What's your differentiator? If you can't answer that question in 30 seconds, then your brand likely needs a messaging overhaul.

Reformat your products or services.

Before the Coronavirus hit, the business world was already evolving at top speed, and then everything was at a stand-still.

Most leaders have wrapped their heads around the fact that reaching consumers may look different for a longer time than expected (see this, and this article). With this knowledge in mind, many business owners also realize that their products or services could use a refresh to be more valuable in a marketplace that is increasingly remote and online. 

If you haven't already, it's time to start thinking outside of what you know about your customers and your offerings. A few companies that are already jumping on the opportunity to adapt and evolve include, Trader Joe's (implementing new hours and capacity limits), 3M (adapting to making medical masks), and many others!

Go fully remote.

If you have employees, and your business is one that allows your staff to work at a computer, this is the moment to go fully remote. This solution may be a short term fix, but perhaps your team will find that working remotely (or partially remotely) works for the long term too! If you are looking to get your team into a remote environment that still keeps things connected, check out these two platforms (Basecamp or ProofHub).

Reconsider your business goals.

Not here to tell you what to do or when to do it, but if you feel that the new business scene is just not going to work with your current business, maybe it's time to reconsider your plan. If there's a means for you to pivot, or re-establish yourself and your offerings, excellent, but if not, can you change the course completely? Two great articles on the topic are below:

Advice for New Entrepreneurs Entering the COVID-19 Era

'Staying Nimble': How Small Businesses Can, and Do, Shift Gears

Regardless of how you are approaching your business practices and plans amid the COVID-19 pandemic, know that you are not alone. Many other leaders and business owners are looking for solutions, just like you, and you will find the right path forward—best of luck to you during this time.

Need a fresh look at your brand's marketing? Let's chat

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Create Your Social Media Content Strategy

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Create Your Social Media Content Strategy

Create Your Social Media Content Strategy


Content without strategy is like pie without ice cream--just not right! Building a social content strategy for your business all starts with a social media roadmap. It’s short, it can be as simple as you make it, and it gives you something to follow to keep you on track to meet your business goals and maintain consistent with your marketing efforts.

Our CEO and founder, Elisabeth (Lis) Thomas lays out all the steps to create your own social content strategy in her book, ‘Social Media Strategy For Businesses’. Cutting through the online clutter and finding tangible tools to market your business on social media can be a chore -but it doesn’t need to be so difficult! We make it easy, and we’re willing to share with you how to get started today.

Get a sneak peak from chapter four of the newly published book, ‘Social Media Strategy for Businesses’ below and tune in each month for highlights of more chapters. And if you can’t wait that long in between each chapter highlights, you might want to go ahead and just buy the book now!

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Excerpt from Chapter 4

“My company tries to keep our social media content strategies short and to the point. The document produced from the massive amount of data points in step one can then, in most cases, be dialed down to two or three pages.

What’s the benefit of this exercise? When a brand develops a logo and/or a website, a set of standards that results from that process is then used to maintain consistency for the company’s future marketing efforts. These elements are usually put into what’s called a brand standards guide. This way, any employee, vendor or partner working on marketing materials and communications for the brand knows what to use and how to use it.”


Let’s face it - All businesses could utilize social media in some way. To finish this chapter and read about more strategies, tactics and ways to market in our technological era,  click here.


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