Advertise here

Enter your email address:

TheGreenGirls - All posts tagged 'green business'
Sustainably Powered By Girls!

TRU Chocolate - Organic Cocoa Goodness

Monday, 23 August 2010 07:30 by GreenGirls

Health has always been priority for me and my family. We try to eat organic as much as we can and now that includes our chocolate



TRŪ Chocolate ® ™ is an organic dark chocolate that's sugar free, loaded with antioxidants and has no preservatives.


 


TRŪ Chocolate ® ™ Ingredients:


  • Organic Cocoa Liquer
  • Organic Cocoa Butter
  • Xylitol
  • Proprietary Herbal Formula
  • Naural Vanilla Extract
  • Organic Lecithin


Green Business Idea:


TRŪ Chocolate ® ™ is looking for distributors! If you are looking to start an Eco Business, here's a delicious idea!

Learn more at CocoaProsperity.com

 

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

12 Steps to set the Right Price for your Product or Service

Wednesday, 9 June 2010 15:48 by MonicaF

Price your particular product or service at a level that provides value for others at a price they're willing to pay -- and that allows you and your company to make a profit.

There are two parts of a price tag: one is the actual sale price of the item.

The other is the value that the purchaser finds in buying that item.

The actual sales price is just a number. However, the item is essentially priceless --- it could be worth $5 or $5000, depending on how valuable that item is to its owner. Any visit to Christie's or Sotheby's will convince you of the varying price that someone is willing to pay for a particular item.

Your product or service might be worth $7.99, $79, or $790 to your particular client -- you must price it at a level that you find profitable and that the customer finds reasonable for the value that item delivers. Find the "sweet spot" that fits your company's ability to make a targeted profit as well as your company's ability to fulfill the job, deliver the product, or get the goods out the door.

What we've found in our own work and in consulting with other women entrepreneurs is that many of us take time finding the right price for an item. Here are some assessments for you to consider when you create your menu of available options.


1) How about making it free?
The price of delivering a turn-key product, especially one that's digitally delivered, is essentially going to reach $0. Many people download documents online. Read-only and PDF formats work for many customers who simply need an electronic version of software, or an e-book, or an online product download (like a podcast or a Powerpoint presentation). We're seeing more and more ways that people file share. How is your item going to fit into a marketplace where people expect knowledge for free?


2) Can you make your product free as part of an exchange?
Do you have something that you can make available to your customer, but as a fair trade: for example, if you offer an e-download in exchange for someone signing up to your e-mail list.

Is it possible based on your numbers to offer a "buy three, get one for free" or some other such discount?
Can you give away a freebie? Is there a way for you to engage with your client more by sharing something of value with them now?


3) Is it priced at a rate that convers your expenses and allow you to make a profit?
By far, this is the most difficult item for people in time-based or service-based industries. If your work is somewhat fluid and does not have clearly constrained guidelines, deliverables, or outputs, you run the very real risk of underbidding and over-working on a particular project. In this case, scope out the actual cost of doing a project and bid realistically.


4) Can you sell more to your existing customers?
It is easier and more effective for you to provide add-ons to your existing accounts than it is to find a new customer or client. Consider ways to upgrade service, provide premium services, or increase the value proposition you offer your clients.


5) In service industries, figure out what it will cost, then add a little bit more to your quoted estimate.
I learned this from Suze Orman. In general, as women in business, we tend to undercalculate the actual cost of a product. I see this in my own web development business: while we know how long a particular site will take time-wise, there is always additional customization, or a way to make a particular page render better, or some additional SEO or analytics work, or a new form, or some more complex functionality that is needed.

When estimating the time it takes to do a project, plot out what you think it will cost, and then either add a small bit of padding to cover the inevitable delays, or lock down the scope of activities or your deliverables list in very granular detail.


6) Can you offer a package deal?
Can you bundle some of your products together into a package that provides even more value? Do you find yourself selling the same items together, over and over again? Find a way to package items into one attractive, all-inclusive package. Think airline, flight, and hotel.

7) What will make your customer happy?
In general, as business owners, we exist to provide solutions to our customers. Alternatively, we provide entertainment, something useful, or something necessary. What is the pressure point your customer needs to fulfill? Can you use the information you collect during your preliminary sales discussions to come up with a new product that you can offer through your company?

For example, for my web design and development clients, not everyone can afford a full-fledged website, but many people want the knowledge and procedural-type checklists we have, so now we provide books (print and e-version) to help with the planning process.


8) Learn from the music industry.
Seth Godin is an excellent thought leader about new ways for companies to engage with their customers. For example, the music industry, in the face of massive digital file-sharing and outright theft of music, has re-imagined their outreach, with some artists (Madonna, The Rolling Stones) taking more control of their share of profits from live concerts, other artists (Radiohead) offering pay-as-you-like versions of their music, and most performers setting up Fan clubs, members-only websites, ticket promotions through Facebook and Twitter, and other benefits only available to fans.


9) Be a producer.
If you don't currently create for your company, find good staff or teammates who will create for your company. It does you no good to moan, complain, criticize, get angry, or worse-- get frightened!-- about your company's future. There are literally millions of opportunities for us in the world. We simply need to find the item that works for us in our business, and then do that one thing well: then find ways to replicate that, provide a variation, or expand the available options on that one thing.

Will you make a kids version?
Will you do it in green or red?
Will you bundle it for a particular industry?
Will you offer a group discount?


10) Learn from the newspaper industry.
Newspaper ad revenue has declined (almost 40% from 2005 to 2009) -- the world is changing. Many people now get their news online. What is the traditional newspaper going to do to increase its revenue? There are many ways that these publishing companies can find new customers and provide new revenue streams. These include partnerships, social networking outreach, subscriptions, annual events, video and audio media creation, and conferences.


11) Connect and empower others.
Can you offer affiliate marketing through offering a commission to others who sell your product? Will you offer a giveaway to increase your available pool of bloggers, Tweeters, and Facebook fans who will rave about your company? What is your bonus item for long-term customers? What community outreach and support will your company offer locally or for a cause? Increase your ability to serve your best customers and fans -- they will help you find even more customers and fans.


12) Think 21st century.
The days of marketing your company solely through television, radio, and/or newspaper ads are on the wane. The companies that make it to 2012 will develop and execute a plan for social media, social networking, embedded applications, and referral marketing.

What is the price for your product or service? By focusing on choosing the right price, your business will succeed and thrive, your customers will find great value in doing business with you, and you'll be rewarded every time a new client buys from you.

 

 

Your purchase of my books allows me to continue bringing you information, resources, and support for green business women.

Social Networking for Women in Business

Social Networking for Women in Business, 136 pages of tips on managing your social media.

 

Available as an e-download or as a trade paperback from Amazon.

 

Click to purchase the e-version for $7.99 (use code: greengirls1).

Thirty Steps to Starting up your Green Business

Thirty Steps to Starting up Your Green Business, an easy-to-follow guide with 110 pages of details to launching and growing your green business.

 

Available as an e-download or as a trade paperback.

 

Click to purchase the e-version for $8.99 and download instantly.

Thank you for your support.

Monica S. Flores of 10kWebdesign is committed to educating, empowering, and connecting women in business -- she believes in the triple bottom line of people, planet, and profits.

 

 

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

How do I Make a Difference?

Wednesday, 7 April 2010 18:30 by MonicaF

I believe that many of us are starting up, and supporting, green businesses, because when it boils down to the basics we have a great deal of respect for doing the right thing.

 

There is so much poverty in the world. Many people do not have access to clean water, or to medicine, or to a safe place to sleep. The status of women and girl children is very low in many cultures. Beyond basic necessities, millions of people also suffer from a lack of hope -- this is spirit-crushing and manifests itself as depression, suicide, and substance abuse. We must dream. We must believe in hope for ourselves and the future. With hope, we have passion, enthusiasm, and the will to survive and thrive.

 

As we are re-making the world, let us remember that almost everything in our material world -- from the smallest pencil or pen on our desk to the largest building in our neighborhood --- everything from works of art, from the food we eat and the clothes we wear, from our toothbrush to our latest electronic device --- everything originally began as a concept. Where we are today was something we envisioned years ago, or even generations ago.

 

Through our imagination and our proactivity, we create a bigger, shared dream to help the world of tomorrow. We make a difference by envisioning, in as exact detail as possible, what a healthy planet looks like. In our minds, we think about our individual life and the role we will play, and we imagine how our interactions with others impact the people we touch, the people in our city and community, and the people in our global society.

What one thing can you do today to make a difference in the life of someone who needs it?

 

  • Will you sponsor a child through a program like Camfed.org?
  • Will you invest in a business through a micro-finance loan like Kiva.org? (consider supporting a female entrepreneur on this list with $25)
  • Will you make your next purchase to support someone whose values match your own?
  • Will you pledge to be a locavore and circulate funds in your local economy
  • Will you plant a tree or start a vegetable garden?

 

 

We all have a choice, every single day of our lives, to do the right thing.

Who's with me in envisioning the world to be healthy, safe, clean, secure, prosperous, and supportive of all people? Who's with me in having abundant water, home-grown food, clean air, and free energy?

Let's work together to create the world of the future. 

 

 

Monica S. Flores of 10kWebdesign is committed to educating, empowering, and connecting women in business -- she believes in the triple bottom line of people, planet, and profits. She is available for consulting on web development, green business practices, and women in business.

 

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

State of Green Business

Tuesday, 12 January 2010 08:20 by Nancy
The evolution of the environmental movement has oscillated from the media and the congress floor to the back of agendas for the past four decades.   In recent years the movement has been taken on a new surge, wrapped in scientific data, images and graphs offering proof to naysayers that, in fact, we have a global problem and humanity is at the crux.

State of Green Business Forum 2010


Through the past several decades a new form of doing business has taken root.  This new way of operation has taken apart what had been known as business as usual and has created a new dogma - one that stands for far greater objectives than the bottom line.  This new form of Capitalism which views life as an inherent part of business creates economic, social and environmental value through social responsibility.


Today, green business is responsible for having created a new source of eco-nomics.  Eleven years ago the Dow Jones introduced the Sustainability Index, considered to be the first global platform in which indexes were tracked and measured for companies that held the model of the triple bottom line - people, planet, profit.  


With green business having started on a grassroots plane, it has continued to gain momentum using the strategy of integration from the top down and the bottom up while harnessing the power of the individual.  Through these years, there have been visionaries and their companies serving as pillars, nurturing their ideas and exploring the vast territories encompassing green business.  


For the past ten years, GreenBiz.com has been a beacon of information, resources and education for individuals and business.  Aside from being the flagship site for Greener World Media, they offer market specific websites for technology, building, design and of course business.  Boasting a strong portfolio, GreenBiz provides businesses with indispensable tools through the form of conferences, annual reports, education, and networking. 


This is the time of year for one of GreenBiz's annual forum's, the State of Green Business, hosted by Joel Makower - dubbed by the Associated Press as "The guru of green business practices."  The forum is slated to cover innovative technology, marketing, green business, carbon management, and information technology. All the issues and business trends relative to each topic will be discussed amongst a dozen industry thought leaders through panels and lectures. 


The all day program will be led by a dynamic list of speakers aimed at creating a thought provoking experience to pique interest, attention and action.  The forum will wrap up with a networking opportunity to further expand and cross pollinate disciplines while expanding  our understanding of this evolving industry.


This event will be taken to Chicago and will be followed up by the release of GreenBiz's highly acclaimed annual report the State of Green Business


This event is geared at those on the cusp of green business and industry, intrigued in viewing eco-nomics from the cutting edge.


Event Information


Registration
 


Date:  February 4, 2010


Location:


PG&E's Auditorium


77 Beale Street (between Market and Mission) 
San Francisco, Ca 94105 
 


For more on Nancy, visit Astrid Design Studio


 

Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Managing your Green Focus into the New Year

Wednesday, 30 December 2009 16:19 by MonicaF

The close of the year is an excellent time for planning. I like to take some time starting in November and early December to assess where I currently am and where I am headed.

The topics I usually organize around include: Health, Family, Relationships, Spirituality, Household, Travel, Work and Career, Finances, Possessions/Purchases, Community Involvement, Philanthropy, and Technology.

You may choose some other topics that make sense to you and your current stage of development as a person, as a green girl, and in your relationship to others.

When it comes to "resolutions", I invite you to take a page for child-rearing manuals: instead of saying "Don't!" come up with options for you to say "Do!"

So, for example, "Don't eat chocolate" is a really difficult new year's resolution. A better one is "Choose healthy options for snacks, like nuts, fruits, crudites, and whole grain crackers."

  • The first one puts the image of chocolate in your mind, then tells you not to have it (impossible!). 

  • The second one gives you alternatives to reach for and gives you positive feedback on behavior you want to incorporate into your life.


We want to increase the number of positive, supportive, and accepting "scripts" that play in your head whenever you have an option to choose the next item on your list.

For example:


  • "Go for a walk every day -- stretch and enjoy the fresh air." (instead of "lose 10 pounds")

  • "Increase my understanding of my children's needs and respond to them with compassion and guidance." (instead of "stop yelling at my daughter")

  • "Believe in the abundance of the universe and practice abundant, mindful, connected relationships as much as possible." (instead of "get out of debt" or "find a new boyfriend")


If you are a woman in business and are interested in "greening" your business, we're excited to invite you to some very special gatherings this year.


Please send me an e-mail if you're interested in getting involved (monica (at) green business women (dot) com)


If you are looking for a green job, I'm also including some links to assist you in your ongoing job search.


Happy 2010 everyone! Let's make this a terrific year together: for us, for our families, for our customers and coworkers, and for our planet.


Green Job Search

GreenJobs.net
GreenCareerCentral.com
GetRenewableEnergyJobs.com


Recruiters

ECOrecruiters
Bright Green Talent
Ellen Weinreb Sustainability Recruiter


Starting and Running a Green Business - with the Green Girls

Your Green Business - Thinking BIG

How to Make Connections with Green Businesswomen

Thinking like a Green Entrepreneur

Identifying your Best Customers

Cultivating Relationships

Recordkeeping - What Green Businesswomen Need to Know

Show me the Green: Managing your Money

Making SMART goals and Reaching them

Dreams do Come True

Your Business Makes a Difference in the World

Green Certification programs

Giving back while going green: Philanthropy and your Green Business


Monica S. Flores is committed to educating, empowering, and connecting women in business. She is available for consulting on web development through 10kWebdesign. She also offers a directory of woman-owned, green businesses and a member community for success-oriented women.


Follow her on Twitter as @monicadear


Be the first to rate this post

  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Tags:   , , ,
Categories:   Business | Tips
Actions:   E-mail | Permalink | Comments (2) | Comment RSSRSS comment feed
 


The opinions expressed by the Green Girl Guru Bloggers and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not reflect the opinions of ADS Management, LLC or any employee thereof. ADS Management, LLC is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by the Green Girl Guru Bloggers.