Author: megglasgow

As an artist and European trained framer, I founded Finer Frames in 1999 on the principles of offering conservation framing with one-of-a-kind style. With over 20 years experience, earning many national awards I bring a sensible approach to frame design.

New Classes for WCAF

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The new year is starting off to a roaring start! After the busy holiday season, I had thought that things might slow down a bit, but not this year. 2016 marks my 13th year of attending the international West Coast Art and Frame Expo in Las Vegas. The show is the largest in the world at bringing the best and brightest of industry designers, manufactures and framers together. Its four days of inspiration, innovation and education. It’s a great time to recharge my creative juices.

This year I have been asked to teach eight seminars to framers from the US, Europe, Asia and Australia. Someone pinch me.  Sharing ideas about frame design, sales, marketing and merchandising with fellow framers is always a treat. Here’s what’s on deck for 2016:

P3029 Hope is Not a Strategy  (P3029)

Learn to craft a step-by-step marketing plan that will produce results. Whether you manage a small business seeking to formalize the planning process or an established frame shop looking to increase business, this seminar will help you make informed decisions and avoid costly missteps. Armed with specific ideas for designing a strategic plan to suit your business goals, you’ll leave this class with a clear competitive advantage.

​​Sponsored by Larson-Juhl

 

S5015 Design, Merchandise, and Sell  (S5015)

Join Meg and learn new design skills to create exceptional premium displays for your store and how to use them to “wow” buyers and win more business. Learn how to merchandise your space to attract better buyers and start a conversation around high-end products that will increase your bottom line. With this class, you’ll not only be inspired by Meg’s award-winning frame designs, but you’ll also leave with the knowledge to create displays for a profit-generating, design-focused strategy in your shop. Get tips on how to attract high-end buyers, inspire customers’ creativity, overcome price objections, and upsell premium products to increase customer satisfaction and your average ticket.

​​Compliments of Tru Vue

 

P3030 Retail Makeover Workshop  (P3030)

Join Meg and Ken as they share make-over advice given to Tru Vue Complete Store Makeover contest winner, Fourth Corner Frames in Bellingham, WA, and beyond. This workshop digs deeper than the “Total Business Makeover” course given in 2015. They have identified six fundamentals essential to every business and, more importantly, the tools that ensure they are used properly. Get critical business tips for improving operations, increasing profitability, training salespeople, developing a coordinated brand, merchandising to increase sales, and event marketing, so you can match your passion with profit. Investigate these essential tools for success and learn how to apply them for your own business makeover. This is premier retail training for framers!

​​Compliments of Tru Vue

 

A7178 Plan, Promote, & Profit: Tips, Tricks, & Strategies to Writing a Marketing Plan  (A7178)
This seminar outlines a comprehensive, step-by-step approach to crafting a concise, logical, and effective marketing plan that produces results. Whether you manage a small business seeking to formalize the planning process, or an established frame shop looking to grow your business, gain a competitive advantage by translating the marketing planning process outlined in this seminar into a streamlined strategic document that informs your decisions and helps avoid costly missteps.

For the first time, I’ll be teaching two Quick Courses in the Wizard International booth on the show floor. “Selling Creativity” is full of sales tips for pricing and selling innovative mat and frame design. The second session, “Be So Good They Can’t Ignore You” showcases upscale frame designs for all kinds of framing projects, like this project also featured in the Wizard booth.

Wedding Shadowbox
Wedding Shadowbox

5 Minute Marketing Makeover

FrameFest 2015 is just days away. I’m looking forward to meeting framers in the southeast in sunny Orlando Florida. It’s my first time there. Can you believe it? Marketing-Makeover-Magic-Cover

One of the highlights is Saturday’s Luncheon Roundtable discussion. I love the quick-paced format and the opportunity to talk to fellow framers one-on-one. I’m leading a discussion titled 5 Minute Marketing Makeover. This is where you can invest in face-time with me for a quick fix strategy session to get guidance on a specific marketing challenge.

5 MINUte marketing makeover luncheon session is designed to:
  • Brainstorm business solutions, provide new resources and connections to help you generate more income
  • Provide clarity and new perspective on the marketing challenges of your choice
  • Ask questions about these important topics
    • MARKETING
      • How do we attract the right customer?
      • How do we communicate with prospects?
    • MESSAGE
      • How do we motivate customers to buy?
      • What customer problems do you solve?
    • MERCHANDISING
      • What do customers experience in your store?
      • What types of products do you feature?
    • MOMENT
      • How do you make buying eventful?
      • How do you reward customers?

I want to hear from you!  Send me your questions to meg@megglasgow.com

Together we’ll develop simple, savvy solutions to grow your business and meet your individual goals!

For more information on my additional sessions at click here FrameFest 2015. For a pdf schedule of events click here

Here’s Your Chance to Show Off

Every frame shop needs a Brag Book. I have two; one is a photo album I keep under the counter filled with years of my favorite projects, unusual shadowboxes and hand-painted mats. The second is a digital slide show that runs continuously on a computer screen in the gallery for customers to see. We use it often to show customers and help them visualize the framing techniques we’re proposing for their projects. The Brag Book becomes a very valuable selling tool.

Why not create another great project for your Brag Book? Tru-Vue’s framing competition is the prefect opportunity to show off, and in Las Vegas no less.

The 4th Annual Framing Competition by Tru Vue

I am pleased thCookieShadowbox_HiRes-(1)at over the past three years, the Tru Vue®Framing Competition has become a highly anticipated event among framers — and we’re excited to announce the details of our 4th Annual Framing Competition. Our theme for this year is…

Ordinary to Extraordinary!

Our 2016 framing competition celebrates how custom framing can transform everyday objects into artistic treasures.

We invite you to draw upon your own creative abilities and craft a wall display for your store using ordinary objects. Whether you choose to frame autumn leaves, bottle caps or office supplies, it’s up to you. Create a display that turns the ordinary into extraordinary while demonstrating your skills, inventive use of materials, tools and techniques, while highlighting the features of Museum Glass®.

Most of all, the display will showcase your abilities to your peers at the WCAF Expo, and inspire your customers towards more ambitious framing projects. Projects that utilize add-ons like stacked frames and special matboard treatments that add drama to their valued items — while enabling you to highlight materials and techniques that not only inspire great custom framing but add to your average sales ticket.

So share your concept — and your ideas for transforming the ordinary to extraordinary. You could be chosen as one of the 6 semifinalists

Apply now!  The deadline is June 30.

For more information check out: http://www.tru-vue.com/framingcompetition

7 Steps to Making This Your Best Year

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Did you make big plans for 2015? A few months have passed since our annual turning of the calendar and it’s probably past time for some of us check in with the goals we casually sketch out on notebook paper. If you’re like me, you’ve got big hopes for your business, but if you want those hopes to become reality, you’ve got to have a plan. It’s time to click the “refresh” button and map out specific details on how to make this year your best year ever.

The economic situation may have changed over the past few years, but it’s hardly as bad as the “sky is falling” reports you hear on the daily news. Downturns in the business cycle are a normal part of the glamorous and ever exciting world of self-employment. I’ll admit though, flat sales numbers are much less exciting than the double-digit growth of years past.  This is reality of the job we chose, accept it as normal part of the business cycle and make solid plans on how to weather the storm. To thrive in the upcoming year, we must develop an annual business plan.  Here’s how:

1. Look at the past

Before going in a new direction, reconsider what worked and what didn’t. Specifically identify which activities have been your most successful in terms of profit, not just income. Evaluate the services and products you offer. Did photo frame sales meet expectations? Did installation charges cover costs? Is there an employee that needs retraining, or perhaps replaced? How much money did you make selling Museum glass versus Premium Clear? Identify what made you money in the previous year and what didn’t.

2. List your goals

Write down everything you want to do in next twelve months. Begin with how much money you want to make, services you want to add, or products you want to take away. Be sure to include changes in work patterns and store operations. If it’s your goal to be home at three o’clock to meet the kids coming home from school, set a goal to hire afternoon help.  If you want to expand to internet sales, make a goal to hire a reputable web-development company.

 3. Be specific

Now is when you add details to each goal. Instead of simply saying you want to increase sales, be specific. List each product and service you offer and set a specific number for sales and number of customers you’ll need for each. For instance, if you want to double your sales of fillets; look at last years figures, set a number and project how many additional customers are needed to reach that goal. Repeat the same exercise with Museum glass, fine art and prints, installations and accessories.

 4. Develop steps

After every goal, and the specific numbers of each, write down the steps needed to reach that goal. In other words, identify the specific actions you plan to take to insure your success. For example, if you want to increase your customer base you are going to need to attract more customers through marketing. List the ways you plan to do this; advertising, networking, e-mail campaign, etc.

5. Estimate resources needed

Each step will require time and money to achieve. Estimate the costs associated with each specific step so you can come up with a reasonable cost per goal. This will be a tremendous help when you’re building your budget for the upcoming year. Don’t forget to estimate the time needed to achieve each goal.

6. Assign people

Next to your goals, figure out who will be responsible for each and if any additional people will be needed. To reach sales goals, every sales person should be included, but if it is to “be green” you may want to assign the task of recycling cardboard to a specific person.

7. Prioritize your goals

If done right, this list would take more time and money than you probably have right now. So rearrange your list of goals and actions starting with the things you must do to survive followed by the activities with the highest chance of success. Be sure to give your plan a reality check, because if it is too far beyond what you and your employees usually do, you may need to re-prioritize.

Putting your plan into action will become more manageable when you assign a month, week or day for each task. Take it one step at a time and you will be on a steady path to success, strong enough to weather any storm.