Lucinda Bailey – Texas Ready

Lucinda Bailey
Lucinda Bailey

Texas Ready

Lucinda Bailey, (aka, The Seed Lady) is a Master Gardener and Certified Crop Advisor specializing in the cultivation of heirloom vegetables from seed.

Join us as we talk about how “old-time pioneer skills” are quickly becoming the hot new desire for many Patriots in our changing economy.

From the value of saving seeds to teaching Mittleider gardening, Lucinda was a joy to chat with and we know you’ll be blown away the wealth of information she has to share.

It’s easy to see she has a passion for the work she does.

Head over to Texas Ready & pickup a Liberty Seed Bank today! – https://texasready.net/

Texas Ready - Liberty Seed Banks
Texas Ready – Liberty Seed Banks

1:51 Beginning of Texas Ready: Taking Back The Reins of Food Production

3:05 Why This Business Gives Me A Personal Connection to My Customers and Community

3:44 Perfecting Our Message – By Going to Gun Shows

      • Building Relationships by Putting on Classes at our Local Community Center
      • Why Quail Is An Ideal Option to Raise for Practical Preparedness and Homesteading

7:21 Heirloom Seed Shortages

9:08 We’ve Seen a Huge Influx In People Wanting to Grow Gardens and Be Better Prepared

10:33 Ideal Customers: Family Oriented and Preparedness Minded

11:33 Top Selling Products: Liberty Seed Banks (Ammo Cans)

12:30 Lucinda’s 3-Skill Sets that Revolve Around Gardening

13:38 Knowledge Is Power: Giving Confidence to Patriots

18:55 The Inside Baseball of the Seed Industry

      • Just How Long Do Seeds Really Last?

22:12 Quality Food Production: The Mittleider Garden Course

24:49 10 Week Hands-On Class: Teaching Family Homesteading Skills

27:07 Follow Your Dreams: Work With a Standard of Excellence and Integrity

29:10 Where to Find out More About Texas Ready (https://texasready.net/)

Transcription

Lucinda: I think we’re moving in that direction. As a society, I think that we’re going to see the importance of networking, and connection, and of helping our neighbors. I’m seeing that happen.

And that breaks down all the barriers, whatever political party, whatever, religious institution, you come from whatever color you are, we are members of the human race.

That’s our first and only group that we need to be.

Intro to show: If you’re someone who refuses to go along to get along, if you question whether the status quo was good enough for you and your family, you want to leave this world better off and you found it and you consider independence, a sacred thing. You may be a prepper, a gardener a homesteader, a survivalist, a farmer or rancher, an environmentalist or a rugged outdoorsman. This show is for those who choose the road less traveled the road to self reliance, for those living a daring adventure, life off the grid.

Brian: Lucinda Bailey, aka “The Seed Lady” is a master gardener and certified crop advisor, specializing in the cultivation of heirloom vegetables from seed.

Her interest began as a teenager in Michigan, where she grew posts in her backyard to sell to neighbors. She now spends her time traveling the country attending shows and presenting seminars on the Mittleider gardening and food production.

In addition, Lucinda also enjoys playing the piano, tending to her livestock and working with Texas Ready test gardens.

Lucinda Bailey, welcome to The Off-the-Grid Biz Podcast.

Lucinda: Oh, this is such a privilege. It’s good to connect with other fellow patriots and people that are like-minded and concerned about where our country is.

Brian: Absolutely.

So why don’t you let us know a little bit about what it is that you do and how you ended up here?

Lucinda: Years ago, I was in financial services and I realized all of a sudden, there was no good news coming out of the United States or Europe or anywhere else.

I thought, well, you know, there may be something to the need of preparing my family, for whatever might come? That’s how I personally got involved, I thought I was the only one thinking like that. Of course, that wasn’t true and I finally did connect with many others.

My business partner and I realized that God has given us the responsibility of taking care of our own food needs. And when Kroger’s or any number of other big chains, don’t pull through like they should for us, or GMOs are suddenly in our food supply, well, then we may need to take the reins of food production back.

That’s really how we started this doing it for our own family.

But in short order, our neighbors, our church buddies, and relatives all said, Hey, would you pick me up some speed collections as you guys have because we can’t find what we need at the box stores.

And that’s how we began.

Brian: Fabulous.

So you started in 2012. Have you ever owned a business up until this point?

Lucinda: Both my partner and I are extremely entrepreneurial. And so this is about my sixth or seventh different situation from a restaurant to a mortgage company to you know, three real estate companies and so forth.

Secretarial service company, a print company, etc.

But this has actually been the most personally fulfilling because I really feel a direct connection with my customer families and the direct ability to help them get better food, better health, lower bills, and confidence about the future.

Brian: Oh, that’s awesome.

Besides your friends and family and people you already knew how were you able to find the rest of your first customers?

Where was it, just by word of mouth or do any form of advertising, how’d you find those first customers?

Lucinda: That was a great question.

I knew one thing you need to have a 32nd elevator pitch and we’re better to practice this than at a gun show. Boy, if you don’t have a good message and you don’t catch their attention, they’re down the hall and they will not give you the time of day.

So I figured this will be great. And yeah, the first several gun shows you’re making a mess of everything you want to say but you get that message down. Then that’s how we began was just doing gun show, after gun show, after gun show.

And garden shows, you know we’re a little step up and survival shows up with that. Now, all those things have virtually gone away since COVID. So we’ve had to do some additional internet marketing now and you know, some other platforms.

For example, once a month I lease out the community center and I go to feed stores and tractor supplies and farmers markets and drum up attendees, and then I tried to build community within those attendees over the course of the next year.

So they come to an initial gardening class, we teach them about heirloom seeds, if they don’t know anything about it, we let them come on to the ranch rent our space to grow out some chickens, many of them have never held a chicken.

We teach them how to do egg-laying and meet birds and then at the very end, we teach them butchering if they wanted to attend that, so it’s really kind of a neat process.

Then we go back to an orchard item. So we’re alternating agriculture and animal husbandry.

We can teach them anything from quail, turkey, ducks, pigs, goats, sheep, and cattle, in order that they might be able to prepare, we know that not everybody is going to do everything.

They may not have the acreage, but you can run quail on a square meter and produce between 10, 15, 100 pounds of meat, that’s more meat than you’re going to get off of what cow. So it does not require a lot of space, rabbits are also very good for small situations. Rabbits and quail are very, very quiet and a lot of subdivisions would consider those pets and no prohibition against doing them.

We do understand that roosters, you know, are not liked by all the HLS we get that. But we can show you how to have an egg-laying flock that doesn’t even have a rooster in it, that will be very beneficial for the family.

So these are the kinds of things that we’re now teaching. And it’s really true, homesteading, staying away from the pharmaceuticals, expensive eggs, and also the grocery stores if you so desire.

So we’re teaching people the old-time pioneer skills.

Brian: Wow, fabulous.

So that’s all one-on-one, you’re saying that’s just the local community center?

Lucinda: Well, it’s a local community center, we rent that out. So we were hopeful of getting 40, 50 people there. And then from there, we have Friday night classes on our ranch, then we just develop long-term relationships with people, and word of mouth and things like that, or how things are spreading now.

COVID did change our business plan, no doubt. But I think it’s worked out for the better.

Brian: Tell us more about how COVID has affected things for your business.

Lucinda: You’ve been mostly meeting people at shows and so forth.

You know, we were an essential business being that we were in agriculture. So we never did any shutdowns, we know that there were tremendous and still are tremendous seed shortages, especially in the heirloom field, I believe nine out of 10, heirloom seed companies are out of business now.

And that’s because they just could not access it now, some of it was blamed on crop failure. I’ve never seen so many crop failures. So I don’t know, really, you know, we’ll never know the truth is that one.

I’ve never bought seeds from China and never will but was really stunned at the amount of Chinese seed that is in our culture. I don’t feel too comfortable about that, because I don’t believe in nice soils, and lead and all the things that we might find from the Chinese products.

But we realized that things were like celebrated, we had felt like the things economically, politically, socially, were like celebrating and not in a good direction.

We really ramped up our concern and our teaching schedule. And so we have had 10 families that are crack, come through our programs on the weekends and so forth. It’s very hands-on.

So if you’re in Texas, we would love to have you, you know, be part of those kinds of workshops.

But if not try to find somebody that’s doing on studying in your local area. And there’s lots of resources now, very popular to be a homesteader now or get on the internet, and start listening to several of the podcasts you will learn a lot as I certainly have.

And I’m so thankful for the variety of people training on goats, or rabbits or sheep or whatever it is. I’m really trying to listen and I encourage others to do the same.

Brian: Sure.

And with all the growing global chaos and so forth, have you seen a huge desire from the public to learn more of this more so than in the past?

Lucinda: They said that 50% of America is now growing a garden. I don’t really believe it’s that high. But yes, we have seen a huge influx of interest in growing.

Our view is that buying a seed bank that the proper seed bank is step one, that is not where it needs to be. You don’t need to be putting that on your pants yourself and leaving it there.

You need to be practicing this skill. It’s not an easy set of skills.

But we believe I’ve read over 300 AG books, and I believe that we’ve narrowed it down to the five or six most pertinent, most usable, most productive, you know books, so we’re going to have the best canning book out there.

We’re going to have the best.

I didn’t really want to The Amish. But guess what I’m studying Amish books. That’s like an encyclopedia of Amish skills. It’s called the Backyard Homestead. And it’s hilarious.

If you have a short attention span, as I do, it’s just perfect two or three pages on a certain point. But they’re demonstrating what I thought to be impossible initially, that on one acre, you can grow everything that a family of four to six would need.

Brian: Wow, that’s fabulous!

How would you describe your ideal customer for the people that come to you and they’re just it’s just right up their alley?

Who is that person, what’s our mindset?

Lucinda: Well, that’s a person who has begun to get awake or is awake understands that we can’t always depend on Kroger’s, H-E-B, or some of the chains perhaps to supply food, that there perhaps will be trucking shortages and so forth.

A person that wants a better quality food for their family, and the more nutrition’s less pesticides more control over that, that would be a great customer, us and someone that knows that there’s going to be a little bit of elbow grease involved in the production of food.

Whereas in the past, they may not have done that.

I really love it when we have kids, because their eyes are so sparkly when they grow a vegetable that they did not think possible.

They never knew where carrots came from, for example, or how a chicken even lays an egg. These are things that really brighten their experience. And we’re happy to do that for the families. We really want to be family-oriented.

Brian: Well that’s great.

What would you say is your top-selling product?

What’s the main thing that people purchase from Texas Ready?

Lucinda: Yeah, they purchase an ammo can that is full of seeds that will work in their area, we give about 75 varieties of vegetables, herbs, and fruit. That will definitely grow in your geographical area.

And we teach them if you are going to let cousin Joe and the boyfriend from college and the neighbor down the street participate in your food needs, then you need to buy seeds to cover all those people.

Because if you’re, you know not going to long your four-person kit, but now there are 10 mouths to feed, we don’t want you to be in a position of all of you can starving equally.

So buy seed for the number of people that you anticipate being able to help out. And then maybe if you’re not experienced as a gardener by a little bit more, ultimately we say that gardening revolves around three skill sets.

The first is buying plants, I’m okay with us buying plants in a box store or whatever, and popping them in the ground feeling good, keep them alive for 90 days, give yourself an A-minus report card at the end of that experience.

The next year, we want you to learn the skill set of starting seeds in your seed trays, and bypassing the payment of those costs for seedlings, do it yourself grow your own food, that is an entirely different skill set.

Now, in the third year we want you to learn to save properly so that you can keep this circle of life going and never have to buy produce seeds or seedlings again, to a great return on investment from these ammo cans. boxes that come into a person, four-person, six-person 12, and oh my God the church 30 people, 30 person kit.

We size them according to the number of people that you intend to feed.

Brian: Wow, that’s incredible!

Who came up with the ammo can design?

Lucinda: That’s a classic. I was tasked with finding good packaging. Okay, so I spent a week going here there, whatever. And I came back with a couple of nice little Chinese plastic containers, a paint can that we could customize, or this or that and I presented them to my partner.

Oh, he did not like any of it, which really ticked me off after a whole week of work on this right?

And so I slam my fist down and I go, well, gosh, darn, you’re not going to be happy until they’re in ammo cans!

At which point we both fell off the chair laughing because we knew that ammo cans came in various sizes and it worked out. We went down immediately to The Army Navy Surplus Store and bought every size cam they had.

When we put together the kits we don’t just throw in Oh, well it looks nice, yeah, 35 of these seeds 100 of that. No, we did it all on a nutritional model.

So how many calories would your family can we maximize out of the backyard?

We did this nutritionally and agriculturally. We’re the only Seed Company that’s ever done that you back engineer, what will I need? What does my family eat? How much space will it take to grow the number of plants it’s going to require for me to have one cup of beans, once a week for the whole year?

That’s how we put our kits together. And coincidentally, based on the number of the two for the small kit, the four for the average kit, etc, the size of the ammo cans matched perfectly, which was crazy.

So we just said, this is God, we’re doing this and that’s how we got started.

Of course, now we’re buying by the tractor trailer load, you know, a huge amount of ammo cans at a time.

Brian: Great.

Overall, what do you like best about your business and industry?

Lucinda: I’ve really loved the fact that we can help a lot of people. And if they don’t see the immediate ability for us to help it, let’s just wait and see where this economy goes, I believe that they’re going to be saying, I feel a lot more comfortable.

I am sure that I can feed my family and I really like that because we should not be living in fear, fear debilitates us it stops our creativity.

God hasn’t given us a spirit of fear, but of wisdom, power, knowledge, love, and a sound mind.

If you’re in fear, that’s just simply not the right energy way that you should, you know, have your mindset.

So I believe Texas Ready is one of the things that takes a big serious problem off the table and gives confidence to the Patriots. I mean, after all, the pioneers do the thing of all this, they were given a handful of seeds from the groom’s family and a handful of seeds from the bride’s family, hence, heirloom seeds and they knew they had to make a go of it.

That was going to be the way they fed their family much of the time, except for hunting.

So they couldn’t afford to be making mistakes, and they didn’t make mistakes and they could do it as pioneers and settlers. I believe those of us can do it.

During World War Two women and children produce 50% of the agriculture of all America. So tough times bring out tough attitudes, and they bring the strength of character.

I believe that that’s the kind of time and season that we’re moving into.

Brian: Oh, yeah, the Victory Garden model. That’s very cool.

Lucinda: Exactly. Good job.

Commercial Break: Okay, let’s take a break from that conversation. I want to bring up a question for you, during these crazy times, do you feel like your business is indestructible?

Most people don’t and if not, the real question is why?

And what can you do to make it as indestructible as possible?

Well, that’s the basis of my new book, 9 Ways to Amazon-Proof Your Business. I’m going to talk about the second way, which is called being consistent.

I covered this all in chapter two. And I’m not talking about being consistent in a very generic way, I’m talking about specifically being consistent in your communications with your customers, not just customers you’re looking to have but customers you’ve already had, and getting them to know like, and trust you. Now, you could be doing this through paid advertising.

But you could also be doing it organically through social media, via videos, via blog posts via podcast like this, getting out there so that people can get to know like, and trust you so that when they do become customers, they don’t just become customers that enjoy and love your products or services they know like and trust you as a person that’s a value they can’t get from big companies.

I also have eight other ways to Amazon proof your business. Basically the idea of making it competition proof to even someone as big as Amazon.com. So if you’d like to get your hands on a free copy of my book, go to AmazonProofBook.com sign up and you will get a free copy and get the chance to purchase a physical copy of it for a special price. And now let’s get back to our show.

Brian: On the other hand, if you will fit your business or your industry as a whole, if there’s one thing you can change about it, what would it be?

Lucinda: I would like people to be honest, they always say stand over those well diggers and watch how many rows of pipe they put in because that’s what they’re charging you by.

Don’t trust the well diggers, you know, is the model and I know the inside baseball of the seed industry, and I am alarmed at the stupidity and gullibility.

I’m just hoping that these were not dishonest people but misguided promoters, saying the seeds can last 10 years 15, 30 I’ve even heard 50!

No, that is absolutely bogus.

First of all, that is possible in a nitrogen-based refrigeration system, something that you and I will never own to their $1 million starters. They’re expensive and the US government only has 30 day supply of nitrogen to run them.

So I do not believe that that is a good expectation to take something that works in one venue and say that will reasonably apply to my backyard when it absolutely will not. If you have no refrigeration, you will have a shortened life expectancy of foods.

Oh, well, I’ve heard that they have these giant warehouses.

Yes, they have seven giant warehouses in the world. But if your name isn’t Oprah Winfrey or Bill Gates, you are not getting speed out of there.

So the average person needs to have their own personal feed bags. I would like it if the nongardening Seed Company owners would be honest about how long seeds last at 40 degrees.

The US Department of Agriculture says that they will last four to six years. That’s what we have, and always will tell our customers, we’re going to tell them the truth. We give a five-year guarantee on our seedbanks on our seeds, and we will sell people all my peppers didn’t work, I bought your kit. If it’s within that five-year deal, will send you fresh pepper seeds.

We’re a little different than the average company. We want integrity to be something that’s stamped everywhere. Excellence.

And this is something that we are feeding our own families with. We’re growing, I’m in the garden today, pulling weeds. We’re living the dream.

This isn’t corporate America saying you know, I think we can make a buck here. No, we’re homesteading, we’re patriots, we’re sacrificing just like you are.

We’ve had the fear function debilitate us for several months. But we’re on the top side of that and now we want to share and testify to you how you can get your confidence level back.

I’m reminded that in Genesis six, God says I gave you the seed, you know, he gave it to us. If he said that he gave it to us, he gave us absolutely the means of production.

It also says in Scripture, my people perish for lack of knowledge.

And we would agree that you do something foolhardy or stupid, or you skip a step or you don’t know what we don’t know, that can really hurt us. That’s why we have the training program.

The Mittleider Garden Course is the most productive, survival-oriented growing system that’s in the earth.

Today I taught 40 methodologies of gardening at the college level. This is by far the only one that I can recommend with no integrity. It’s been around for over 50 years. It’s a proven, quantifiable system.

And if you’re concerned, you know, hey, thanks might be disrupted for five years, you can get right now, all the trace elements and minerals that you would need to keep your plants healthy for whatever period of time you’re anticipating there to be unrest.

You cannot do that in an organic system because a family of four would need a literal shipping container full of compost to refresh his beds. And he’s always going to be playing catch up. He is not getting a dump load of manure from past farmer Jones, who’s not coming to your house because there’s no diesel to drive his wagon.

So there’s no way that you can compost enough to refresh your beds. On a annual basis. We require shipping containers not logically not going to happen.

Yet all the minerals and all of the nutrition for your plants that are needed per year will fit under one card table. It is we can stockpile security items.

We all know what that is and we recommend we stockpile the nutrition that your garden will meet. And nobody’s jumping the fence to steal your minerals and your rocks, they’re just not going to do that that would not be considered value valuable to them.

So we believe that a prepper, someone that’s concerned about the economy wants to have better tasting foods, more nutrient, nutritive dense food, once a great family activity wants to save money.

Any of these or all of these reasons would be great causes for you to go and get your own seed bag and begin using it and grow it now.

I’m out here today and I’ve harvested three times three weeks on my cucumber row 20 feet. I have harvested today. 158 pounds of cucumbers. I think garden method works a lot better than anything I’ve ever tried.

So we can really with a clear conscience, recommend it wholeheartedly.

Brain: Wow, that’s great.

That’s really good stuff.

Lucinda: I hope you like pickles. Pickles and sweet butter chips are going to be Christmas gifts this year.

Brian: If you and I were talking a year from now and if we were to look back over what had happened over the past 12 months, what would you say happened that leave you feeling happy with your progress, both professionally and personally?

Lucinda: It’s a great question. And at the beginning of the year, I wanted to take our training a step higher, I realized that sitting in a classroom for three to five hours on any of our topics. While we think that’s good, it’s interesting, it’s really the hands-on experience that people need.

So at that time, I said, Hey, it will be a successful year, if I’m able to take a 10-week class and take 10 families, and train them in animal husbandry, all topics chicken.

And then I wanted to rinse and repeat, give myself three weeks of reprieve, and then beef up the class or whatever I have learned as an instructor, and then, you know, do that again.

So I want to do four classes, I will have trained 40 families in my immediate area, in how to have an egg length block or a meat flock, and then how to butcher if necessary.

So for me if that if I can get that done, I’m on track to do it.

If I can get that done, I will consider this a marvelous year.

Brian: Oh, that’s great.

So what are the obstacles that stand in your way of getting there?

Lucinda: Always finding the right people and making sure that well, I can’t make sure of anything, but that their schedule would allow them to come to all 10 classes, that would be good because we have a lot of people making commitments.

And skipping out on half the classes, you get what you invest, and we realize that but I think with the kind of class size because we can families, that would mean an average of two kids per family.

So you got a lot of variables swimming around there.

If a family actually gets to the point where they’re competent, can go into Tractor Supply, or get online and order the right breed and, you know, do it order for chicks and let’s just see how this works, I will consider that a success.

But I am finding a lot of acceptability to the hands on approach as opposed to the lecture approach.

Brian: That’s great.

This is The Off-the-Grid Biz Podcast, so we have a lot of people that have an interest in business, and enjoy kind of the self-reliance into that.

What advice would you have to older business owners listening there, if you have any blanket advice that you could pass along?

Lucinda: Yeah, whatever you’re passionate about, you are going to be good at you are going to be able to help others in that. So don’t do something that you don’t like Gods designed it a certain way.

You built certain interests and desires within you for a reason, that’s a wonderful thing.

Follow your dream, follow your heart, and work with a high standard of excellence and integrity. And you will be surprised my customers from all around Texas, they look if you are driving into this little Podunk 500 person town, will you stay in our guest room when you come by?

This is craziness. I sold them a seed bank at one gun show. But we develop long-term relationships because we have compassion and love for that family.

We want to be givers but we can not out-give God. So that’s what I would say to a person that, you know, wanting to start a business it’s a very wonderful aspiration. And it’s really a little bit more in alignment with how God organized society back in the day, right?

Somebody was a carpenter, their son generally was considered a future carpenter himself, a carpenter in training or there was an apprenticeship with the neighbor across the way, but there was a lot more community.

I think we’re moving in that direction. As a society, I think that we’re gonna see the importance of networking, and connection, and of helping our neighbors. I’m seeing that happen.

And that breaks down all the barriers, whatever political party, whatever, you know, religious institution, you come from whatever color you are, we are members of the human race.

That’s our first and only group that we need to be thinking of.

Brian: That’s a great message I appreciate you saying all that.

What could the listeners do who’d be interested in finding out more about Texas Ready and your products?

Lucinda: Oh, we’d love them to go to our website, www dot TexasReady, that’s one-word spell Texas out dot net (www.TexasReady.Net).

And that’ll give you a lot of places to go.

It’ll give you some book reviews, some things that you’re going to want in your library. If this thing goes down or goes away, you’re going to need some reference material, because gardening is not intuitive. So we’d love for you to hit the site.

The other thing we offer that no other Seed Company does is you pick up the phone, you have a garden question, I will direct you to the proper book that’ll answer that, or I’ll solve the problem.

If I don’t solve the problem, you get yourself a free book.

But there’ll be a very good question because, in 10 years, I’ve only sent out two books but I think I can help you in three to five minutes. If I’m not cheating, then I’m going to work with you.

Even if I’m out in the field, I’ll stop what I’m doing and we’ll try to fit that in. That’s for customers or noncustomers, I don’t care. Any patriots that wants to be growing, we want to be of assistance to.

Brian: Awesome, that was a fabulous conversation within the thanks so much for being on the podcast.

Lucinda: It was my privilege, I look forward to hearing from some of your constituents.

Brian’s Closing Thoughts: That was a really great talk with Lucinda, she made a lot of great points that I’d like to try to tie things back to and point out, and hopefully, you could see how you can use something similar in your business.

One, it’s the ability to not make it too much about the end product itself.

Yes, she has a lot of knowledge about the seeds that they’re selling. But it’s more about the reason why someone would want the seeds and then she has the education, or information tied along with it, that people can take and run with.

So the classes that she puts on the information that they make available through their website, and so on and so forth. And they don’t just tie it to seeds, they tie it back to the reason why someone would want seeds, if you’re concerned about basically the structure that’s in place, being able to stay in place through all the craziness that can happen.

Like so much of what we saw through the COVID-19 Pandemic, these types of things lead a person to want to do homesteading, to want to do all these other items. And so she plays into that she gives the audience what they’re looking for if they’re able to sell seeds off of it fabulous, but it’s all toward the same end, which is really cool.

She really goes into psychology without getting too deep. She goes into the psychology of what they’re trying to promote.

They’re trying to push people away from the fear mindset from the fear energy, and more towards being confident being self-reliant, knowing what you’re doing, having the knowledge, and having the skills built around the knowledge to actually be able to do what you know that you can do. That’s really cool.

I also like the way that she discussed how they were able to build the business, just from one person to one person just from one event to the next. Building up that 32nd elevator speech.

If you’re able to do these simple ideas in marketing, you can apply it anywhere it you don’t have to go to gun shows, you don’t have to go to live events, you can do the same thing. Online principles are the same.

People are the same whether you’re communicating with them in person or via the internet.

Really great stuff across the board from Lucinda, I’d love to see what Texas Ready does in the future. This conversation is definitely worth re-listening to.

Outro: Join us again on the next Off The Grid Biz Podcast brought to you by the team at BrianJPombo.com, helping successful but overworked entrepreneurs, transform their companies into dream assets.

That’s BrianJPombo.com.

If you or someone you know would like to be a guest on The Off The Grid Biz Podcast, offthegridbiz.com/contact.

Those who appear on the show do not necessarily endorse my beliefs, suggestions, or advice or any of the services provided by our sponsor.

Our theme music is Cold Sun by Dell. Our executive producer and head researcher is Sean E Douglas.

I’m Brian Pombo and until next time, I wish you peace, freedom, and success.

Dyan Twining – Roost & Root

Dyan Twining - Roost & Root
Dyan Twining – Roost & Root
RoostandRoot.com
RoostandRoot.com

Dyan and her husband Montie co-founded Roost & Root to help you, “Find your inner farmer.”

Join us for a fun conversation as Dyan talks about the companies journey from building their first 20 chicken coops to the amazing ride they’ve had serving and building relationships with customers from coast to coast.

Be sure to checkout their quality Cedar Chicken Coops and Gardening products as well!

➡️ Call Today – (877) 741-2667

➡️ https://roostandroot.com/

Transcription

Dyan: Hearing from customers because I do talk to a lot of them after the sale. Like there’s always like a driver who’s like, “I’m gonna get chickens,” and then there’s other spouse a lot of times he’s kind of like, “okay, not super excited about this, but whatever.”

And I hear from the other spouse that’s not super excited and like, had no idea I would love having chickens.

Podcast Intro: If you’re someone who refuses to go along to get along, if you question whether the status quo was good enough for you and your family.

If you want to leave this world better off than you found it and you consider independence a sacred thing.

You may be a prepper, a gardener, a homesteader, a survivalist, or a farmer or rancher, an environmentalist or a rugged outdoorsman.

We are here to celebrate you whether you’re looking to improve your maverick business or to find out more about the latest products and services available to the weekend rebel.

From selling chicken eggs online, to building up your food storage or collecting handmade soap.This show is for those who choose the road less traveled the road to self-reliance for those that are living a daring adventure, life off the grid.

Brian: Dyan Twining co-founded Roost and Root in 2013, with her husband Montie, their passion and slogan is, “find your inner farmer.”

At Roost and Root, they manufacture high quality backyard farm and garden lifestyle products that help fulfill that slogan.

She enjoys keeping chickens and gardening as well as deep sea fishing and running.

Dyan, welcome to the Off The Grid Biz Podcast.

Dyan: Hi, thank you for having me.

Brian: Yeah, it’s great having you here.

So why don’t you tell us a little bit more about what it is that you do?

Dyan: So together with my husband, we run Roost and Root, like you said, we are manufacturing company based out of Dripping Springs, Texas.

So we’re a little bit west of downtown Austin, and we have a manufacturing facility where we we started in 2013 manufacturing and selling chicken coops primarily chicken coops.

In 2020, we actually changed our name to Roost and Root. We used to be Urban Coop Company. But we sold our coops through the years and we kept getting a lot of customers saying, you know, “what else you guys going to build?”

They liked our products. They liked the quality, and what goes hand in hand with backyard coops, and its gardening products.

So we changed our name to Roost and Root, to kind of reflect both of our interests.

Brian: Fabulous.

So what led you into the business to begin with?

Dyan: So my husband is a builder and an entrepreneur and we moved to a piece of property in Texas, and I got some chickens, and I could never find a chicken coop that functioned like I wanted it to.

I wanted it to be easy to clean, I wanted it to be easy to take care of the chickens, give them food, give them water.

So Montie being a builder, I said, “you need to build some chicken coops.”

Well, a little bit more to that.

Montie was a builder, had a commercial construction company at the time, and did a big project for a company and we are leaving to go to town for Thanksgiving.

We drive through the drive thru of this Starbucks that he had helped to build. And we were still waiting to get paid for the work that had been done.

And we’re thinking this whole working for someone else is not so much fun.

So as we’re driving, we’re talking and I say, “you really need to build cute chicken coops, I think if you build cute chicken coops people buy them.”

He’s like, “no, that’s kind of a dumb idea.”

But I had chickens, I had friends who would come here and they say, you know, oh, I want to keep chickens.”

I’m like, “well, you should do it.”

And they’re like, “but I don’t even know how to get started, jow do I get a chicken coop?”

And I said, “well, you should have your husband build you one because that’s what I did.”

And they’re like, “my husband can’t build me a chicken coop.”

And so it just kind of sparked the idea that maybe there was something because we are close to Austin, we’re probably a suburb more than our own little town anymore.

More and more neighborhoods are popping up.

We don’t live in a neighborhood, we live on a piece of property.

So you know, when you live on a pretty big piece of property, you can kind of have whatever in your yard, it doesn’t have to look pretty, it can just be functional.

But if you live in a normal suburban or urban setting, and you only have so much space in your yard, and you decide you want to take up some of that space with a chicken coop that you’re going to have to stare at all the time you want it to look nice.

You want it to add to the beauty of your yard not necessarily, you know, take away.

That’s when I said, “you know, you need to build chicken coops and they need to be cute.”

He’s like, well, “that’s kind of a dumb idea.”

But he humored me and I came up with a bunch of drawings, and the first 10 or so were ugly. And I didn’t like them. And I said, “no, keep trying keep trying.”

Finally he hit on what is our backyard coop.

And I said, “okay, people, I think will buy that, we should build some.”

And I said, “well build me one, and I’ll try it.”

And he said, “well, if I’m going to build one, I’m going to build 20.”

I said, “okay,” and so he built 20.

And we just tried it to see what would happen.

We put them on Craigslist, and they sold out within about a week, kind of realize that we had something, we knew that if we wanted to make it a business that supported our family, that it needed to be something beyond Craigslist, it couldn’t be just a local thing or a regional thing.

We needed to be able to build something that we could ship and sell nationally.

So we worked with the shipping companies to come up with box sizes, and, I mean there’s so much to it that we really didn’t know at first what all was involved in it.

But the initial design was something that is within about a quarter of an inch of the max size that you can ship in a box through like a ground shipment company UPS, FedEx.

So that’s kind of how it started.

At first, it was very small. It was Montie and I, are kids, and we had an employee and kind of grown from there.

Brian: Fabulous.

So from the business perspective, you found your first customers on Craigslist. Where did you go from there?

Dyan: When we decided that it was probably going to work and that it needed to be national. You know, really our main source of advertising is Google AdWords pay per click advertising.

It’s a double edged sword, let me tell ya.

We are finding though, as we’ve been in business now eight years, that one thing that we had that was a very gratifying, but very surprising is we have a lot of repeat customers, upwards of 20, 30%.

Like who knew people needed multiple chicken coops, but they do and we’re certainly grateful.

And it was really gratifying to us to the folks that work in the shop, when somebody that we’ve sent something to comes back and, you know, parts with their treasure and get another one.

But our source of advertising initially was Google AdWords, some social media advertising, we’re working really hard to morph it into something that will less corporate, less Google, right?

Brian: Oh, I understand. So that’s great.

Where are you finding most of your newest customers from nowadays?

Dyan: We’ve sold into all 50 states, believe it or not, it’s a really interesting kind of phenomenon to us anyways, that the major group of customers is that upper north east part of the United States.

Think that, from what we could figure out, is that they like cedarwood.

All of our products are made out of cedar, that’s all we build with, which is a really high quality material, it lasts a long time.

It does well and cold climates, warm climates, wet climates, dry climates, that’s kind of our big customer base.

But we also sell a lot to the west coast, pretty good idea who our customers are, but we sell to all kinds of people, but typically suburban urban folks who are interested in turning off the TV and getting out of the house.

You know, we’d like to talk about it in the office and our meetings that we’re trying to sell like an experience and not just a chicken coop or a greenhouse or garden product.

But somebody that gets people outside and gets people starting to think about where you know, the typical person can’t have a cow or whatever it might be, you know, you might not be able to source all of the food on your table.

But you could put a dozen eggs in your refrigerator and some tomatoes and it’s a really gratifying thing that people have responded really well to, you know, put down your phone and go take care of something outside and do double duty, you get some exercise, you get off the TVs get off the couch and you get something for it.

Brian: Absolutely, that’s great stuff.

With all those new customers or they mainly find you through your standard places, your PPC and your social medias or anywhere else that they’re that they’re coming in contact with you for the first time?

Dyan: Certainly a lot of word of mouth.

As our customer base builds, there’s a lot more word of mouth.

If we do a little bit of print advertising First, I think print advertising is going away. But probably a combination of those PPC, and this last year, we really dove deep into trying to create content that’s helpful. Social media content, YouTube content.

I mean, that’s really a focus for us going forward is, you know, obviously, we’re here to support the people that work for us and earn a living.

But we also want people to, you know, it does us no good to sell something to somebody. If they don’t like what they purchased from us. It does us no good. They don’t tell people they worse, say something bad.

And so we really want to have a focus on making sure that before the sale, people know what they’re getting into.

Then after the sale, making sure that they feel supported, that their questions are answered that they feel confident in what it is that they’ve purchased, whether it’s a chicken coop, or greenhouse or garden beds, whatever it might be.

Brian: Tell me more about that. What is your after sale?

What’s the process is you offer some type of, you know, ongoing customer service, right?

Have you guys run that?

Dyan: Okay, so, that’s a really interesting.

When you’re really small, you do like every job that there is, I mean, I’ve packaged coops, I’ve built coops, and there’s this kind of a small group of us.

We’ve done every job as an owner, one of the privileges that you get in addition to some of the headaches that you get from owning your own business, that one of the privileges as you bring people on, you get to choose what jobs you keep, and what jobs you give to other people.

I love talking to customers on the telephone. So my main job is answering the telephone customer support and and we find that it’s really helpful because I get that feedback loop.

I’m sitting really close to my husband who does the majority of the design work and I can tell him I’ve talked to 20 people in the last week that are like I don’t really like whatever it is or I really would like that’s usually how it is I get enough people saying you guys should sell whatever and I mean I could turn and tell him, “hey, we should consider creating this,” or whatever it might be, whatever product it is.

So we try and plaster our phone number everywhere we want people to reach out to us and if it’s not me the answers the phone it’s actually my oldest daughter who answers the telephone part time so she can stay home with her twins.

But it’s just such an important role or job and the company curse I think it’s probably the most important but I’m sure some of the other folks in the company would think differently.

But it’s all works together right but customer support it’s critical before and it’s critical after because again, it doesn’t stop once you sell it to somebody because you want somebody to like what it is that they purchase.

You want them to love it you want it to love it so much that they tell their friends learn to love it so much that they buy another one and when I was training my daughter to answer the telephone, I’m like, “we are not about get the sale at all costs.”

If you are talking to somebody and they’re like, “I just don’t know if this is gonna work for me whatever it might be,” you know talk to them and you might at the end of the conversation be like, “you know what, this is probably not going to work for you.”

I think people appreciate that and I think people value that and so they may not purchase from you but somebody else that they might tell that it is the right product for them might purchase from you as far as after the sale.

So our chicken coop number one, that the very first one that the family came and picked it up from us that purchased it off Craigslist, they still have the chicken coop, I still keep in touch with them.

And they have moved three times with their chicken coop and chicken coop number 20.

So the last of the original batch we actually sold to a military family that they’ve moved with their coop 11 times and every time they set it up!

They send me a picture and they keep in touch.

I have lots of customers that reach out to me after the sale.

You know my chicken looks funny, or ongoing questions because I think that’s part of them enjoying their coop is getting their questions answered.

There’s so much chicken information out there that sometimes it can be overwhelming and a little daunting. I think that there’s a certain segment of the chicken world that don’t try and make it complicated but chickens don’t have to be complicated and they don’t have to be scary.

But you get on Google and you start reading and you’re like, “Oh my gosh, what do they get into?”

And so they call me and I’m like, “okay, let’s talk about your concerns, whatever they might be.”

And they usually end up once we get off the telephone, “oh, thank you. I really appreciate it.” Because I’m not an alarmist, when it comes to chickens, chickens are easy to keep. They really are.

Lots of after sales support lots of after customer support.

Brian: It’s really funny you talk about that. I’ve mentioned it on the show before my wife is in the process.

Actually, it’s been well over a year that she’s been in the process of working her way up to getting chickens, and I completely understand all the confusion over complications of the process.

Dyan: Yeah, you know, I actually had a customer, tell me one time, she says, sort of like, when you are getting ready to have your very first baby, you’re like, “oh, my gosh, I need to get this and I have to get this, and what happens if this happens?”

And she says, and then you realize, by the time you’ve had four kids that really you need like a car seat and some diapers.

That’s a little bit like what chickens are, you know, they need a safe place to sleep, food and water. And beyond that, you can make it extra if you want. But you don’t have to.

Absolutely have her a call me. lol.

Brian: Yeah, I will! lol

So who would you say is the ideal client for Roost and Root?

If you had to describe that person, who would that be?

Dyan: I think there’s a couple of groups that we sell to but like, in our head when we’re designing something, or we’re marketing something, our target customer is 30 to 50 it’s 50/50 males, females it is you know, we used to think oh, chickens are a girl thing and or, oh, chickens are a boy thing.

50/50, that’s kind of proven out over the years, they just probably due to rules and regulations, what have you they live in a single family home, although we do have some chicken coops and some really interesting places.

But you know, so those middle years, usually they have kids, they have pets and other pets. They have nice yards that they want to keep looking nice, but they want to do something different they want to have some chickens get some eggs, use your chickens is sort of natural pest control.

So that I would say that’s kind of the majority.

Now there’s another group that kind of recently retired group that that is a little bit older age demographic, that they’ve got a little bit of time on their hands, you know, they’re kind of interested in puttering around and want to get a few chickens and have good memories of feeding chickens when they were a little kid at their grandma’s farm or what have you.

And so I guess those are kind of our two like target groups.

Brian: Oh, that’s great, perfect way to describe it.

That’s, yeah, really cool that thought pattern that people are going through that’s very interesting.

What are your top selling products right now?

Dyan: Our top selling chicken coop is our Round-Top Stand-Up.

It’s just a great easy to keep clean. The coop it holds six chickens, which is a really good number for people when they’re just starting out, not too few that you’re like, “what am I doing this for, I’m not getting enough eggs.”

But not so many that you’re overwhelmed by the prospect.

So definitely the Stand Up.

And then we recently introduced a greenhouse or Slant Roof Greenhouse. And we suspected that it would be popular, I don’t think we knew that it was going to be as popular as it is.

But people are really responding.

It’s been for sale for like two weeks, but people are buying it and really like it.

Brian: That’s great.

Overall, what do you like best about your business and your industry?

Dyan: This was kind of surprising to us at first when we started it without we don’t want to have employees there just a headache. And let’s see what we could do without having so many employees.

But kind of as we’ve been in business, and as we’ve grown and added employees, I would say that that’s one of the aspects that I really enjoy is having employees and I guess working with them to create a good product that people like.

My husband describes it as chicken coops and gardening products, you know, it’s adding to the world like you’re doing no harm to the world.

With these products like you’re doing, not necessarily good, I mean we’re all here to earn a living for our families but your way out into the world in a positive way.

So I think that that was one of the aspects that was kind of surprising to us is just that it was that it’s enjoyable to have employees and we have incredible employees that really want to put out a quality product.

We have a really generous return policy.

And we do it on purpose, partly because, you know, it’s a little bit weird to buy something that’s pretty expensive, sight unseen.

We do we have this really generous return policy in the eight years we’ve been in business. I bet you we’ve had 10 chicken coops returned.

Brian: Wow.

Dyan: Total, you could probably name the people that have returned chicken coops.

And when those chicken coops come back, it hurts everybody’s feelings.

They’re like, “what in the world, how could they not like it?”

You know, poured our heart and soul in getting this shipped out to them. And so that’s just a gratifying aspect.

And then just hearing from customers, because I do talk to a lot of them after the sale.

A lot of times one spouse is gung ho, there’s always like a driver who’s like, “I’m gonna get chickens!” And then there’s other spouse, a lot of times, he’s kind of like, “okay, not super excited about this, but whatever.”

And I hear from the other spouse that’s not super excited.

And then like, had no idea I would love having chickens, or I enjoy them so much more than I ever thought.

That’s really gratifying to, again, you’re kind of doing something that adds positivity, not negativity.

Brian: Awesome. That’s so cool. So cool to hear.

Commercial Break: Okay, let’s take a break from that conversation. I want to bring up a question for you, during these crazy times, do you feel like your business is indestructible?

Most people don’t and if not, the real question is why?

And what can you do to make it as indestructible as possible?

Well, that’s the basis of my new book, 9 Ways to Amazon-Proof Your Business. I’m going to talk about the second way, which is called being consistent.

I covered this all in chapter two. And I’m not talking about being consistent in a very generic way, I’m talking about specifically being consistent in your communications with your customers, not just customers you’re looking to have but customers you’ve already had, and getting them to know like, and trust you. Now, you could be doing this through paid advertising.

But you could also be doing it organically through social media, via videos, via blog posts via podcast like this, getting out there so that people can get to know like, and trust you so that when they do become customers, they don’t just become customers that enjoy and love your products or services they know like and trust you as a person that’s a value they can’t get from big companies.

I also have eight other ways to Amazon proof your business. Basically the idea of making it competition proof to even someone as big as Amazon.com. So if you’d like to get your hands on a free copy of my book, go to AmazonProofBook.com sign up and you will get a free copy and get the chance to purchase a physical copy of it for a special price. And now let’s get back to our show.

Brian: On the flip side of that, if there was one thing that you could change about either your business specifically or your industry as a whole, what would it be?

Dyan: Wow, the world sort of lives and dies by the internet, gosh, you could have an unhappy customer that, you know, for whatever reason, is unhappy.

And they could do a lot of damage to you.

They could just go multiple places and write bad things about you. That lives forever.

You know, when it’s pre-internet, somebody had a bad experience. You know, they tell their neighbor and a couple of people and it kind of died there.

But somebody has a bad experience with you for whatever reason. It is there forever and you really have to work hard to overcome that.

Certainly, that’s the toughest thing.

And you know, we live and die by reviews and a bad review.

Again, just like I returned chicken coop. They hurt all of our feelings.

Our shop managers like, “I didn’t sleep last night thinking about that guy who left us a four star review.”

Brian: That is it for sure.

Well, it sounds like you’re doing a lot of great preventative measures, having the return policy and everything else to to try and keep that from occurring.

That sounds good in that direction.

If we were to talk again and say like a year from now, and we were to look back over the past 12 months and everything that had happened, what would have had to have happened for you to feel happy with your progress both professionally and in business or personally and in business?

Dyan: That’s a really good question.

Um, 2020 was a crazy year for us.

So we’re in 2021, we launched the greenhouse, and that’s like our major product launch for this year, from kind of conception to getting it to market is about 1,500 hours of design, prototyping, testing, all of that kind of stuff.

So we’re kind of coming off of that in 2021.

And we’ve kind of committed to sort of doubling down on the products that we are currently selling our current product offering.

We’d like to spend the next year really refining our assembly instructions, refining our website, increasing content, the things that we’re proposing for the next year probably aren’t super exciting.

But for us, they add to the whole experience of it all and to customer satisfaction.

So really, the next 12 months for us is just really doing what we do, well, even better.

That is our focus for 2021.

So in 12 months, if we look back, we’re like, you know, we had lots of customers who are happy with us. Obviously, we have to sell things for all of us to put our kids through college and several people have in babies, that kind of thing, you know, that work here, we got to do all of that.

But that’s a given right, every business has to sell stuff to be able to stay in business.

But we really just want to focus on what we’ve been doing, and just get even better take it up a notch.

Again, we were so small for some many years that Montie designed the products wrote the instructions, that kind of thing that now that we’ve got some other heads in it, that we could feel like we could do a better job at giving people a better experience.

Brian: In building on that customer experience over the next year, besides just the everyday things that come along with life and having a good size work family there.

What other obstacles are standing in your way of getting there, would you say?

Dyan: I would say one of the obstacles…and this is not my area really is, How do we tell people, How do we get the word out about our company, that is not pay per click?

It is like, it’s tough for us.

It’s a little bit like crack cocaine is how my husband describes it, got to do it, but then you do it, you got to do more and more and more.

And that is an obstacle because those pay per click costs. We’ve put people in business, and we’ve driven prices up through our success. So that’s definitely one obstacle.

You know, another big obstacle that we’re facing is material availability.

We’re committed to using high quality materials and the costs have gone up like crazy.

We’re hoping they come down, but whoever really lowers their prices, right?

I mean, that’s not really a common thing that you see happen.

And another obstacle is labor availability.

It’s a tight labor market out there. We’re having a tough time hiring.

We have a very competitive wage. We have a good work environment.

We feed everybody on Thursdays, lunch.

I mean, why wouldn’t they want to come work here, but we’re having a tough time finding people.

Yeah, it’s tough. I mean, when we have very little turnover, so we’re trying to add to our staff, and it’s just kind of the economic situation out there is making it tough to find people.

Brian: Absolutely.

And besides the things you already mentioned, how else has the whole COVID-19 thing that’s been happening for the past year?

We’re recording this in March of 2021, so how has that affected your business?

Dyan: So very positively in that we had an incredible 2020.

I think that couple things kind of came together. At the very beginning of the COVID scare people. There were some worry about just food supply chains, kind of in combination with people who were like, wait a minute, I am so dependent on my grocery store for every aspect of my food.

What can I do to maybe be a little less dependent on them, combined with the fact that people aren’t traveling and so they are home and wanting to get outside.

I mean, it just was this really interesting set of circumstances that led us to have a really good year as far as sales, that it was a good year for us.

That now then there’s on the flip side been some of the challenges that I think probably everybody’s experience.

Shipping is a mess.

Sometimes, you know, just the shipping companies are fairly overwhelmed.

We’re all ordering stuff that gets sent to us that, you know, you probably used to be more sort of locally distributed kind of things.

Materials availability has been tough, probably, in part because some shipping issues and other issues going into it.

And like I said that the labor issue, I think that there’s jobs out there, there’s just some disincentives for people to work, unfortunately.

Brian: Yeah, absolutely.

So you’ve been in business for over eight years now. What advice would you have to other business owners that would like to start a business similar to yours?

Dyan: Be prepared to do every job.

I really do think, though, that that has been part of our success is that I am not asking anybody that works out in the shop to do something that I haven’t done.

You know, I’ll tell you one of the toughest parts of our business is putting the parts in either the crate or box the sounds so simple, people look at me, they’re like, “I don’t get why you’re telling me this is hard.”

But making sure that the correct parts are in the box in a way that they’re going to show up, not damaged, so that they’re all the correct parts.

And if you’ve ever bought anything that you had to put together, you got halfway through the project and realize you didn’t have all of the parts, you know that frustration.

But that is a really tough job.

There’s a lot going on, there’s a lot of parts to it.

And so that was my job for a long time. So now I know I have a lot of grace for the person who the people who are out in the shop doing that job.

So I’m having a familiarity with all of the different aspects that go into what it is you’re trying to do, I think really helps that as you grow.

If we had started out with outsourcing, let’s say answering the telephones.

Not that that was even a possibility when we started right like I need, you do what you got to do. But I need, let’s just say, you know, you outsource some part of it, we certainly wouldn’t have had the ideas that we have, some of the products that we’ve come out with that have ended up being really good sellers.

We wouldn’t have an idea of who to market to and who to sell to.

So definitely just being hands on is critical and just valuing a customer.

I know, I put myself in customers position, if I paid this amount of money for something, how would I want it to function?

How would I want it to arrive to me?

How would I want the communication to be?

That kind of thing, so just think it goes beyond sort of the customer’s always right, because I think it’s more that the customer is it?

I mean, without him, you wouldn’t be here.

And then on the flip side, you know, Montie, always, he teases me because, you know I’m talking to customers, and they’re asking me different things.

And I’m like, “sure, we can do that, sure, we could do that.”

And he’s like, “you write the checks that then the production shop has to cash.”

And I’m like, “Yes.”

That’s the other thing to realize, too, when you’re sort of starting a business, that everybody’s integral to getting your product out there.

Without customers, you have nobody to sell stuff to, without our production shop. Or maybe even worse, a production shop that doesn’t care, or doesn’t do a good job.

We would have unhappy customers, without you know, the design team, we’d have nothing to sell them.

No one particular aspect is more important than the other.

Brian: That’s a really important idea to convey.

So yeah, that’s really great.

What could a listener do, who’s interested in finding out more about Roost and Root?

Dyan: Certainly started our website, RoostandRoute.com.

Take a look through there.

We have a extensive blog section that we try and put informative information out there.

And certainly that’s a good place to start but then on every page on the website is our phone number. And call, we encourage people to call and have a human conversation person to person about what it is you’re trying to do what what you kind of want to accomplish, what your budget is, what your worries are.

I would encourage people to call.

Brian: Alright, well, Dyan, I could tell why you’re in charge of customer service there.

Dyan: Lol, because I can talk alot.

Brian: No, it’s great. It’s you’re very clear and you get straight to the point.

It’s a lot of great information.

I know, I’m going to be relisting to this and I encourage all of our listeners to go back over this because there’s a lot of great meat on the bone there.

Dyan Twining of Roost and Root, thanks so much for being on the Off The Grid Biz Podcast.

Brian’s Closing Thoughts: It was really great sitting and talking with Dyan.

Roost and Root, is certainly an interesting concept, because not only…we didn’t even gets to talk that much about the combination between gardening and chickens, which is actually very common.

If you’ve heard some of our earlier episodes where we discussed it, it is a growing trend for people not to just get into chickens that have never had them before.

Same people to also have gardens.

I know that’s the case in my family, there’s a lot of great stuff that Dyan brought up a few of them that I wanted to point out.

One is her discussing without using this actual term, but there’s a term out there by a marketing expert named Dean Jackson and he calls it the before, during and after unit.

What that is, is the customer experience.

And anybody that has a business can break up their business into before, meaning that everything that happens before they’ve done any business with you, it’s a certain aspect of marketing that most of us focus on is is how do you get them to get here.

That’s the before unit.

And then during, is all the people who are current customers or recent customers.

And that’s, what are you doing in communication with them during that period of time?

And then you’ve got the after unit, which are people that were customers previously?

How are you remarketing to them?

How are you communicating with them?

What other options do they have after they’ve been a customer and her discussing that customer experience really brought forth that idea in my mind, and you can hear her talk about each of those pieces, and how they’re looking to enhance each piece, which is really cool.

I love how she talked about real briefly about not making a sale at all cost.

Getting to the point to where you’re confident enough in your products that you can say, “this isn’t necessarily for you.”

That’s really a powerful statement.

And it’s brings up that idea from Miracle on 34th Street.

I don’t know if you’ve ever seen that when Macy’s was directing people to go to Kimball’s and then vice versa. And people started offering their competitors, their so called competitors as a different option for the customer.

And without being corny about it, it actually is a very useful tool.

For one thing, it shows that you’re confident about what you’re selling, and you’re not trying to shove it down their throats.

And that’s a really cool thing that your customer service can provide, or your sales staff can provide. That’s really important.

All in all, Roost and Root is a really cool company, I look forward to seeing more of the content that they put out there.

She talked about their growing content marketing, and in looking for more ways to tell people about their business versus just using PPC, you know, pay per click over and over and over again.

It’s an easy way of doing it but it does tie you in and make you dependent so that was a great point.

And it was really great meeting Dyan, and I can’t wait to see what they’re doing in the future.

Outro: Join us again on the next Off The Grid Biz Podcast brought to you by the team at BrianJPombo.com, helping successful but overworked entrepreneurs, transform their companies into dream assets.

That’s BrianJPombo.com.

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Our theme music is Cold Sun by Dell. Our executive producer and head researcher is Sean E Douglas. I’m Brian Pombo and until next time, I wish you peace, freedom, and success.