Seven florists reveal how they steer Gen Y to their
Transcription
Seven florists reveal how they steer Gen Y to their
why shop Seven florists reveal how they steer Gen Y to their front doors. By Amanda Long Try telling Stephanie Foster she’s a lot like the 70 million or so other members of Generation Y, and the San Francisco artist will bristle at being pigeon-holed, labeled and reduced to a marketing stereotype. Yes, like so many in her generation, Foster has an iPhone. And sure, her friends can contact her “14 different ways,” including Facebook and old-fashioned e-mail. She shuns plastic bags and steers clear of Hummers. She seeks out organic produce and cage-free poultry. She believes the more blurred the racial lines, the better. She shops at vintage stores — and would hate to think of her own generation as a mass production. Foster has what many market researchers describe as Gen Y’s wariness of the inauthentic, disdain for homogeneity and distrust of rules for rules’ sake. She also has the split personality of a generation that was coddled and rewarded through childhood yet still demands to do things its own way. They may mistrust corporate America, but they haven’t stopped standing in line for the next iPod or Harry Potter movie. “Indulge is my middle name,” Foster said. “I eat a lot. I drink a lot. I party a lot. I buy a lot. I work a lot. It’s good for the economy. It’s good for my social life. It keeps my life exciting. I’d rather not deprive myself.” church street flowers Co-owners Rachel Shinfeld, Stephanie Foster, Brianna Foehr and designer Sarah Allison pose for Church Street Flowers’ ad in The Onion, a satire alternative weekly. here But that unapologetic description of self-indulgence came in an e-mail in which she emphasized that “doing good” and volunteering are part of her socially responsible life, not just things she “has to do.” Despite all she has in common with her peers, there is one characteristic that puts Foster at odds with some new research on Gen Y: She is surrounded by flowers everyday, fills her home with them, sends them as ultra-personal gifts and wouldn’t think of buying them from a supermarket. Foster is one of the three owners — all under-30 and all friends — running Church Street Flowers in San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood. According to SAF’s Generations of Flowers study, Generation Y is the one that presents the biggest challenges to florists. They’re less likely to have a high appreciation of flowers, to differentiate between a flower shop and other outlets and to associate flowers with their emotional benefits. Those are just some of conclusions researchers reached after two focus groups of 57 flower buyers and online interviews with 1,557 men and women in the Baby Boom, X and Y generations. The researchers also conducted in-depth interviews with gifting and generational experts at GfK Roper and Iconoculture. As under-30-year-olds who value flowers and florists, Foster and coowners Brianna Foehr, 26, and Rachel Shinfeld, 27, are unlike many in their generation. And as florists who connect with that age group and count Gen Y as their most loyal customers, they’re also unlike many in their profession. We Get Y Does Church Street Flowers’ young owners make it more likely to connect? It doesn’t hurt, but Cat Thomson, a self-described “38-year-old stuck in the mind of a 20-year-old,” swears a Gen X-er can resonate with the Gen Ys just as well. Her shop, Petal & Leaf in Jamaica Plain, Mass., is filled with the under-30 crowd. “It’s funny (the research says) that Generation Y presents the greatest challenge, because these are the very customers we’re having the most success with,” she said. At Willow & Bloom in Seattle, owner Miya Ferguson sells to plenty of young employees of tech companies such as Adobe and Google, which have offices near the shop. “That age group has been a huge part of our success,” Ferguson said. She had about $300,000 in sales in 2008, the first year she moved out of a studio and into a storefront. News articles have heralded the shop’s perfect fit in the funky Fremont neighborhood (Nirvana recorded there), and Willow & Bloom continues to hew to the hipster aesthetic. Gen Y customers also demand a shop that’s as environmentally responsible as they are. Boulder Blooms in Boulder, Colo., fits that bill. The shop was recently awarded a regional EcoCycle business award, and co-owner Who, What, When, Where and Y? Just who is Generation Y? Among its diverse ranks are Miley Cyrus, the founder of Facebook, the president’s chief speechwriter and even one of the Jonas Brothers. But as different as one Gen Y-er may be from the next, trend trackers agree on key characteristics: n Y-ers are the offspring of Boomer parents. They were born between the late 1970s and early 1990s and make up about a quarter of all Americans. n They have a penchant for instant gratification and customizable products and demand socially responsible corporate policies, according to a report by Packaged Facts. n They feel personally obligated to make a difference in the world, and a full 78 percent believe that companies have a responsibility to join them in this effort, according to a 2006 Cone Millennial Cause Study. n Using the Internet is second nature, and they have a tendency to trust friends and celebrity endorsements in their purchasing choices. They want a say in their purchases and experiences and tend to blur the boundaries between “retail” and “real life.” n Oh, and their buying power is estimated at a cool $1 trillion, according to the Census Bureau. Still wondering why you should you care about Gen Y? The magazine of the Society of American Florists (SAF) 23 > WHY SHOP HERE Simmonds is inviting them to step up to The Flower Bar. The former Wall Street marketing manager opened the shop last November after a major renovation designed to make it look like a sleek, airy Soho restaurant. “With younger customers, you definitely have to make them want to be in your space,” she said. petal & leaf Whatever you do, don’t be smarmy or “The stuffiness talk down to Gen Y, said Cat Thomson, who practices that has to go.” at her funky shop in Jamaica Plain, Mass. There’s no trace of stuffy at Main Street Floral in Jerrica Park said its philosophy appeals Anoka, Minn., where the under-30 emto its young customers. “We eat, sleep, ployees work in lime and hot pink design and breathe green! It’s an extension of rooms, blog about designs that make personal beliefs first, community outtheir customers say “OMG,” describe reach second, and a great marketing the “Malibu Barbie” hues of arrangetactic third,” the 23-year-old said. “We ments, and generally just have a good aren’t just a Gen Y shop, but I know that time with “mom,” a.k.a. shop manager our green efforts make the difference Dawn O’Bannon. “You just can’t afford with that age group.” Members of Gen Y came of age doing to be boring with this generation, there’s their homework in Starbucks and hanging too much competition,” O’Bannon said. These shops have connected with out on comfy seats at Barnes & Noble. Gen Y in ways that capitalize on the They want their retail experience to feel findings and recommendations of SAF’s natural, and in Larchmont N.Y., so Ainslie 24 FLORAL MANAGEMENT | JULY 2009 | WWW.SAFNOW.ORG Generations of Flowers study. They get Y — and want you to know the promises they make to keep them. We’ll Never Bore You Florists must fight to keep this overstimulated generation’s attention with envelope-pushing acts. “Flowers are sold everywhere, they can get them everywhere and they are savvy enough to know that,” said Mandy Majerik, AIFD, PFCI. The 29-year-old owner of HotHouse Design Studio in Birmingham, Ala., is a third-generation florist, and has seen the industry lose ground and fail to make the case for why anyone should buy flowers from a florist instead of from Costco. SAF’s Generations of Flowers research shows that only one-third of Gen Y indicated they are very knowledgeable about the best places to buy flowers, significantly lower than other generations. (About 43 percent and 45 percent of Gen Xers and Boomers, respectively, say they’re keen to the best sources for flowers.) “Personalization is key, and you have to make sure Gen Y knows you can customize,” said Majerik, who deviates from the simple and the familiar with as much gusto as fellow Gen Y-ers. “The big thing is they want to look different.” That echoes the marching orders of the gift experts from Roper and Iconoculture, who prescribed personalization as a way to reach Gen Y. Majerik always has unusual flowers, such as zinnia and celosia, on hand to surprise her not-so-easily impressed customers and drive home what a supermarket can’t do. “Don’t back away from a challenge,” Majerik said. “I want to be known as the florist who didn’t balk at their desire to be different.” She recently did an “Anthropologie wedding” on the grounds of a historical furnace plant. The bridal party wore dresses from the popular, vintage-inspired boutique chain and Majerik relied on earthy collections of found objects — sea glass, paper, buttons, etc. — to complement the whimsical, antique (but not dusty!) look. “I could immediately interpret her Anthropologie vision, not only because I shop there, but because I pay attention to how my generation is creating its own version of traditions,” she said. It helps to watch the same movies as your customers, too. The “Twilight” obsession that’s turned hordes of hipsters into vampire-romance film fans has made its way to Main Street Floral in Minnesota. The shop’s “Twilight Garden” arrangement was promoted on its blog with the headline: “Got a Girl Who Loves Twilight?” But, even the trendiest color or design might not work for everyone. In fact, it may backfire for those who resist anything “too popular.” Church Street’s Gen Y owners make sure their product variety is as eclectic as their customers. “Looking around the shop, I see callas, seed pods, scabiosa, giant kangaroo paws, anything that grabs attention and lets them express themselves,” Foster said. Park, of Boulder Blooms, said that even the most conversation-starting blooms need a spokesperson to get through to Gen Y. “They really want to know the story behind the flower (and) connect with it,” she said. She makes a habit of describing the best characteristics of the bloom — the scent, the longevity, the vibrant color — as she wraps them up. At Petal & Leaf, Thomson looks for product that gets the “What the hell is that?” reaction: protea, giant alliums, all boulder blooms Outstanding in their field for many reasons, the staff at Boulder Blooms earns the respect of Gen Y with their earthfriendly zeal and community outreach, said co-owner and Gen Y-er Jerrica Park, far right. Boxes! Jetwrap Budvase Item# 606 Size: 3 3/4 x 4 x 5” 100 per case Sleeve #605 Jetwrap Rosevase Item# 610 Size: 6 x 6 x 7” 100 per case Sleeve #609 Our patented Jetwrap delivery boxes are made of heavy duty corrugated, with a water resistant coating to help ensure safe transportation. Jetwrap Large Rosevase Item# 611 Size: 8 x 5 3/4 x 6 1/2” 100 per case Sleeve #611 Jetwrap Mini Item# 600 Size: 3 3/4 x 4 x 5” 100 per case Sleeve #605 Jetwrap I Item# 605 605C 601 601C 603 603C 609 609C 611C 607 Sleeves!! 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Size = bottom width x top width x height ® 1-800-551-2626 www.jetraminc.com Item# 602 Size: 6 x 6 x 4 1/2” 100 per case Sleeve #601 Jetwrap II Item# 604 Size: 7 1/2 x 7 1/2 x 4” 100 per case Sleeve #603 Jetwrap Centerpiece Item# 612 Size: 11 x 6 x 2 1/2” 100 per case Jetwrap IIA Item# 608 Size: 12 x 10 x 4” 100 per case Sleeve #607 The magazine of the Society of American Florists (SAF) 25 > WHY SHOP HERE willow & bloom Designers Erika Bush, (from left) Yumi Han, owner Miya Ferguson and Rani Ban create striking work that complements the aesthetic of their artsy, eclectic Seattle neighborhood. 26 FLORAL MANAGEMENT | JULY 2009 | WWW.SAFNOW.ORG kinds of orchids and traditional flowers in bright, powerful colors. You don’t have to fill entire arrangements with expensive product, just use it as bait. “They’ll spend that extra money so they can say to their friends, ‘Check this out, I want you to have it because it’s cool and no one else has seen it,’” she said. Thomson applies the same “keep ‘em guessing” strategy to giftware, greenery and greeting cards. She continually mixes up her gift lines and potted plants. Though square containers have been a hit with younger customers, Thomson swaps out colors and suppliers of them regularly. “I feel like everything has an expiration date, and especially with this generation,“ she said. “You have to get stuff rotated out before it starts to sour.” We Share Your Fear of the Fussy Since customization reigns supreme, it’s difficult to generalize the kinds of designs and flowers most popular with Gen Y, but a common non-fussy theme emerges. “Big and showy isn’t different, it’s just attention-getting for attention- getting’s sake,” said Miya Ferguson of Willow & Bloom in Seattle. Non-fussy translates into monochromatic, mono-botanic and free of traditional fillers, Majerik said. Foster sees Gen Y customers gravitate to loosely arranged bouquets but doesn’t try to anticipate what blooms they will choose — she only does pre-made arrangements for holidays. While that may seem to put productivity at risk, Foster said she’s able to profitably custom make each in-store order by keeping designs uncomplicated. At Boulder Blooms, single-type exotics or other types of artistic, stylized arrangements “seem to really appeal to younger customers buying for themselves,” Park said. For those buying gifts, she’s had success attaching meaning to flower varieties to help customers to “connect and personalize.” She recently did a vase arrangement that included five types of flowers for a five-year anniversary (a variety for each year of their time together) and sent a card explaining why the flowers were chosen. “The significance of the flowers Stuck in a web of high prices? Choose your own price with the Live Internet Auction Choose from two on-line auctions. The North American Auction 2:00 p.m. EST Monday, Wednesday & Friday The Dutch Auction 8:00 a.m. EST Monday, Wednesday & Friday 60% of FlowerBuyer customers that use the auction save more than 20% when they buy. 40% 40% 30% 20% 22% 20% 10% 0% 10% - 20% 20% - 30% Savings Savings 30%+ Savings hothouse design Never without a new way of looking at things, owner Mandy Majerik, AIFD, rarely backs away from a challenge — a trait that attracts Gen Y. makebid@flowerbuyer.com 1.877.MAKEBID (625-3243) The magazine of the Society of American Florists (SAF) Florist Review – 2.1875” x 10” 27 > WHY SHOP HERE seems to buy the sender a little more confidence,” she said, a key to building loyalty with young customers. That confidence also comes in handy for that 20-something on her way to a knitting party, book club or fondue dinner. The Iconoculture interviews indicated a growing trend of hosting among Gen Y-ers. “This is really where those singletype arrangements shine,” Park said about hostess gifts. “A vase full of fragrant lilies, or a single stem of cymbidiums, or even a tall vase filled with curly willow works here. They seem to appreciate the simple splendor.” We Totally Want to Hang Out Together … and Party the flower bar Ainslie Simmonds left Manhattan to open this airy shop in Larchmont, where young dads can check their e-mail while lounging in the “man chairs.” Just What Do You Know about Flowers? *percentage of each age group answering “extremely well” to each answer TOTAL (n=1,557) GEN Y (n=519) GEN X (n=512) BABY BOOMERS (n=526) HOW TO BUY OR ORDER FLOWERS 50 48 50 51 BEST PLACES TO BUY FLOWERS 41 34 43 46 HOW TO PERSONALIZE A GIFT OF FLOWERS 36 36 36 36 THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF FLOWERS AVAILABLE 34 33 31 38 WHICH FLOWERS ARE APPROPRIATE FOR WHICH SITUATIONS 29 30 27 31 SOURCE: SAF Generations of Flowers Study, bases on 1,557 online interviews in January 2009 by Russell Research, an independent research firm. 28 FLORAL MANAGEMENT | JULY 2009 | WWW.SAFNOW.ORG Getting Gen Y in the shop is a considerable challenge, the research shows, as this segment is significantly less likely than other age groups to know the best place to buy flowers. (See chart on the left.) To get them through the doors, shops must be inviting but not claustrophobic, personal but open to the masses and, you know, fun. “This shop is an extension of our lives, there’s no wall between us and them. We’re honest about who we are and let our personalities shine through,” Foster said. “If you were to walk in right now, you’d feel like you were in a room full of friends, hanging out, listening to good music and having a drink toward the end of a tough day.” The Flower Bar reaches out with its open-kitchen, family-friendly environment. “We have ‘man chairs’: cozy leather chairs where dads can sit and check their Blackberries,” Simmonds said. She has also formalized her “get in here” mantra with a robust schedule of parties and classes. Taught by a designer trained at the New York Botanical Gardens, the twice-weekly classes give her commuter clients access to Manhattan designs without the price tags. The Flower Bar’s Girls Night Out design parties appeal to the upper end of Gen Y, the new moms who’ve traded the bar scene for the playground and are looking for way to get out of the house and feel connected. The Flower Bar also SAF Talks ‘Bout All Generations Boomers and Gen X-ers count too. See the key findings of the SAF Generations of Flowers study at www.safnow. org/GenerationsStudy. partners with local art galleries, musicians and restaurants that provide food from catering overruns. In Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood, which calls itself the “Center of the Universe,” Willow & Bloom has opened its doors to local artists and musicians. Ferguson often hosts trunk shows with jewelry designers, most recently with one who makes handmade, all-natural wedding pieces. “I’m lucky to be in such a rich, creatively dense area,” Ferguson said. While it may sound a little risqué, the Valentine’s Day Stripper Party at HotHouse Design in Birmingham is as innocent as it is popular among customers who have clamored for it for the past two years. Majerik sends cheeky invites to a select group of loyal fans and customers, inviting them to come into the studio, have some drinks and strip … roses. For their effort, they get a head-turning T-shirt that says “Stripper Party” and a chance “to feel like an insider,” Majerik said, about two key Gen Y-defining traits: collaboration and connectivity. As word spreads, more people want to risk their manicured nails to strip roses. “Once I get them in the studio, they’re mine,” Majerik said. And speaking of stripping, some customers at Main Floral may show a little skin this summer. O’Bannon said she is toying with the idea of hosting a temporary tattoo giveaway in the shop — with images of flowers, of course. We Don’t Take Ourselves Too Seriously Whether it’s by making cheeky comments on Facebook, hosting stripper parties or dancing around the shop, florists who connect with younger customers aren’t afraid to unleash their inner child at work. JULY SALE 40% Off Jetwrap Floral Delivery Sleeves CLEAR FROSTED Sleeves protect against unfavorable weather conditions and they reduce the risk of damage during delivery. They help conserve valuable cooler & delivery space during busy holidays, and aid in keeping stems from getting tangled. Jetwrap sleeves are nested in bundles of 50 and available both in vented and non-vented. 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All claims to damaged goods must be reported within 15 days of receipt and held for inspection. Return orders require authorization and may be subject to a 15% repacking/restocking fee. The magazine of the Society of American Florists (SAF) 29 > WHY SHOP HERE main street floral The staff, (from left) Sara Christenson, Dawn O’Bannon, Megan Swanson and Melissa Riley, bring a little sass to the Midwest. “You have to let them in on the joke,” said Foster, who often kids around with male customers of Church Street Flowers about the, ahem, rewards of bringing home flowers. When Foster, Shinfeld and Foehr bought the shop from their former boss, Michael Ritz, they wanted to assure loyal customers that the shop was still in trusted hands but also introduce a younger demographic to the fresh new faces behind the counter. So they did a sophisticated full-color ad in a San Francisco shelter magazine, focusing on a high-end design. Then they grabbed a photographer friend and, along with their head designer, stuffed themselves into a delivery vehicle for an ad in The Onion, the mock newspaper known for its irreverent humor. The ad simply showed the four young women hanging out of the window with the copy: “We deliver.” For Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day, Church Street ran three ads on KPIG, a jam band station that targets the male demographic. The ads featured two guys trash-talking about whose mom is more awesome. Another had a dude suffering the consequences of buying his sweetheart a Safeway bouquet. 30 “The guys loved it — and I know this because it seems like every one of them who heard the ad had to tell us, ‘Hey, I heard you on KPIG,’” Foster said. The shop’s Facebook updates have the same “we’re serious about awesome flowers and not much else” vibe. Majerik also uses her Web site and Facebook page to put her out-sized personality on full display. In addition to showing off her award-winning designs, her posts reveal her bubbly enthusiasm for working with flowers and brides. On the HotHouse Web site, one section is devoted to showing “behind the scenes” activity of the staff. Attendees at a recent bridal show saw the shop’s playful side, when they found sheets of bright red toilet paper inside their promo bags. On one side, it read, “Your wedding’s when? And you haven’t booked with HotHouse Design yet?” The other side read, “Oh sh*t.” Main Street Floral’s blog, MySpace page and Twitter feeds offer a colorful peek into the shop’s cooler and personality. On the staff page of the blog, 20-something driver Megan candidly writes: “I’m either really cranky or really funny, there is no in-between.” Designer Sara gushes about her newborn and admits to kissing pictures of him all day. We Won’t Talk Down to You Treat a Gen Y customer like she can’t afford to indulge and you’ll be treated to a vision of her walking out your door. Many young professionals have the money, but are choosy about where to spend it, said both Ferguson and Thomson, who both have a concentration of tech companies near their shops. FLORAL MANAGEMENT | JULY 2009 | WWW.SAFNOW.ORG “I tell my staff that when they’re talking to customers to forget all the rules, because the only right way to design something is the way that customer wants it,” Thomson said. They’ve also become skeptical to what they think of as “Hallmark holidays,” she noted, echoing the SAF research about Gen Y’s indifference to buying flowers for traditional holidays. “They’re not suckers. They’re not going to buy something just because you or some marketing campaign tells them to,” said Thomson. “It’s like ‘I am a smart individual who knows that roses cost more at Valentine’s Day so I’ll just wait.’” Florists must make it easy for this generation to celebrate “life occasions,” and make a case for turning every day into a flower-worthy occasion, according to the consumer experts cited in the Generations of Flowers study. “Pink-slip” peony bouquets, “Sign a Lease” lily bouquets, even “Get Well” flowers for a sick Mac — all are quirky ways to resonate with the small, but meaningful moments, in customers’ lives. “You don’t want to be the one compartmentalizing flowers to certain roles in their lives,” Foster said. “Our generation doesn’t like boundaries. At the shop, we just become part of their lives, so they’ll still be coming back to see us when we all get old.“ Amanda Long is the managing editor of Floral Management. She is a Gen X-er and not a slacker. E-mail: along@safnow.org Who, What, When, Where and Y See the people, places and things that help these shops connect with Gen Y, including a stylized ad campaign at www.safnow.org/ photostogo.