Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

6 Reasons Why You Must Let An Employee Go As Soon As You Know It’s Not Working

Author: Kristen | Published: June 6th, 2011 | Comments 0 | Retweet

“We wear a lot of hats around here.” This is a statement that is probably uttered in every single startup company from time to time. Some days it seems like I wear more hats than the guests at Kate Middleton and Prince William’s wedding!

One of those hats involves hiring and firing employees.  Finding the right people who hold themselves to higher standards than anyone else ever will, understand our vision, want to be involved in making it a reality  and complement the company culture we are creating, is a tall order.  I am getting better at it, but I will openly admit that I have gotten it wrong more times than I would like.  These are hard-learned lessons. (more…)

Recent Graduates — How to Blow My Mind in a Job Interview

Author: Kristen | Published: March 27th, 2011 | Comments 0 | Retweet

Recent graduates

So you graduated. What's next? The first step on your career path.

These are exciting times here at 3 Birds Marketing.  We’re still a young company, but we’re also hitting our stride.  We have a number of very exciting opportunities in front of us.  As a result, we’re in growth mode as some of you may have noticed from all of the recent tweets about the positions we are currently looking to fill.  I’ve been doing quite a bit of interviewing lately for everything from director level positions to ground floor opportunities.  I am becoming rather adept at reviewing a resume quickly to determine whether a candidate possesses the requisite skills and experience.

For me, if the core qualifications are met, the cover letter determines whether or not I’ll schedule an interview.  It goes without saying that your resume and cover letter should be free of spelling and grammatical errors (how can I possibly expect you to sweat the details in the work you do for us if you don’t even get them right when you’re trying to make a good first impression?).  I want the cover letter to grab me and make me want to meet you.  I want the cover letter to demonstrate that you’ve done some research and that you “get” my company as much as can be expected from the outside looking in.  I want for your cover letter to give me a glimpse into your personality beyond your pedigree. (more…)

Welcome (Back) to Our Interns

Author: Kristen | Published: January 25th, 2011 | Comments 2 | Retweet

Being right across the street from UNC certainly helps attract top notch interns

Ah, the beginning of a new year and a new semester. Apart from the excitement of a brand new year in front of us, nothing makes the end of the holiday season more bearable than the realization that soon our interns will be returning to us and new interns will be joining their ranks. We feel fortunate to have so many bright students from the University of North Carolina, Duke and other nearby schools interested in internship opportunities with us. We appreciate the energy, enthusiasm and fresh approach our interns bring to our company and the way they approach their assignments. (more…)

Auto Dealers: Twitter and Facebook Are Different. Do You Have A Different Approach For Each One?

Author: Kristen | Published: December 15th, 2010 | Comments 2 | Retweet

Birds of a feather can flock together on Twitter

I love Twitter. I will admit that when I first started a Twitter account for myself, I didn’t get it. I wasn’t sure who to follow and no one was following me. I tried a couple tweets and waited for something to happen, but nothing did. I might as well have been in my closet with the lights off spouting profundities for all of the people who were hearing what I had to say. I concluded that Twitter wasn’t for me and decided to stick with Facebook.

That was until I went to a marketing conference about a year ago. I attended several presentations I found valuable. At the end of each, the speaker included his or her Twitter handle on the final slide. I returned home determined to figure Twitter out. I began by following the speakers I had seen at the conference, listening to their tweets and I gradually branched out from there. Over time I became more vocal and began to connect with others. For me, Twitter is a great tool for exchanging ideas with people in the industries I inhabit, staying on top of articles and blog posts on subjects of interest to me and connecting with people with similar interests. I especially love to use Twitter at conferences. In fact, prior to the 9th Digital Dealer Conference in Las Vegas earlier this year, I had many Twitter exchanges about #DD9 and then enjoyed meeting my new Twitter friends in real life at the event (hello @austinthompson @arnoldtijerina @cfousek @BrentWees @michele07 @john_m_bowman). Andretti Brown (@BrokeDesign), one of our incredibly talented designers, is another person I “met” on Twitter and eventually convinced to come work with us at 3 Birds. For all of these reasons and many more, I consider Twitter an invaluable tool.

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Thank You. Period.

Author: Kristen | Published: December 13th, 2010 | Comments 2 | Retweet

Thank you.  [Pause.]  I wanted to let the words sink in for a minute. These two words are simple but powerful especially when they stand alone.  I have been noticing lately that, all too often, thank you is either completely forgotten or it is used like a foot in the door.
Sometimes an unexpected, but heartfelt "thank you" can go a long way
If you read the blog, you know I have three young children so I don’t always hear as many thank yous as I would like.  After all, I am merely here to serve the needs of my adorable little dictators.  But I like nice manners.  I am certainly not the only person who laments the erosion of manners in contemporary society or complains about what feels like a rising tide of entitlement infecting human interactions.  I would certainly like for my kids to grow up and inhabit the polite camp, so I am trying to instill and reinforce good manners in them.  I am often heard whispering or prompting, “Did you remember to say thank you to so-and-so for such-and-such?”  As a result, they tend to be pretty good about saying please and thank you out in the real world, but at home, it can be another story because the things Layton and I do for them are viewed as part of our job descriptions as parents.  When one of my kids spontaneously thanks me for something that I have done for them, it feels like a gift.  It’s a snapshot of the people I hope they will grow up to be and confirmation that all of the everyday things I do to try to make their lives run more smoothly are not just wallpaper.  Yes, I am pretty easy when it comes to stuff like that.  I am also a sucker for macaroni necklaces.

Sometimes thank you can get lost at work too.  Managers forget to say thank you to their reports or think that they don’t have to thank people just for doing their job. But a simple thank you can go a long way.  Thank you can be a nod to an employee for having a strong work ethic.  It can serve as recognition of the fact that members of your staff have choices about where to work.  It also demonstrates that, as a supervisor or boss, you take note of what your team is doing well and not just the times when mistakes were made.

Thank you can also be used strategically in an attempt to achieve the objectives of the thanker.   I call this a tactical thank you.  You have likely seen this personally and in business.  It happens when a friend, neighbor or co-worker thanks you profusely, pledges her undying appreciation and, after giving you a moment to bask in the glow of being recognized for your good deed, asks you to do something else for her.  Companies do this too.

Marketing campaigns that thank customers for their business and include a coupon or incentive to encourage the consumer to purchase products or services again in the future are a component of most marketing strategies.  Don’t get me wrong, loyalty programs, encouraging repeat business and customer retention campaigns are an important part of most B2C marketing strategies for a reason – they’re effective.   We do them.  You should do them too.  I am simply saying that sometimes it is nice to say thank you just for thank you’s sake and the holidays are an especially nice time to do that.  By all means, keep doing what you’re doing, especially if it is working for you, but think about adding a piece to tell your customers thank you.  Period.  People will notice and it will distinguish you because it doesn’t happen enough.

Simple. Different. Powerful.

What Are You Hoping To Get Out Of The 9th Digital Dealer Conference?

Author: Kristen | Published: October 12th, 2010 | Comments 3 | Retweet

what-are-you-hoping-to-get-out-of-the-9th-digital-dealer-conference
Len Wohadlo and Kristen Judd at the 9th Digital Dealer Conference

Len Wohadlo and Kristen Judd at the 9th Digital Dealer Conference

I remember being a fourth grader and being so excited when my music teacher told my class that we would each get to pick an instrument to learn to play it that year. It was explained that we would be able to borrow an instrument from school before purchasing our own. I selected the flute as my instrument of choice. At the time, I wanted what my friends and I considered to be a “girl” instrument which essentially left me with the choice of a clarinet or a flute (in retrospect I wish I had been less concerned with gender stereotypes and picked the trumpet). I ruled out the clarinet because I didn’t want to deal with changing the reeds because the whole process seemed somewhat unsanitary. The flute, with its lighter more streamlined case, won for reasons that had nothing to do with making music.

While I enjoyed toting my flute back and forth to school for a while and announcing that I played an instrument, I didn’t really, at least not outside of music lessons at school. I didn’t practice. Not surprisingly, I didn’t improve. When the time came time to return the borrowed flute and buy my own or discontinue lessons, the inevitable conversation with my parents took place where actual passages from the official parents’ handbook were bandied about like – applying myself and getting out what you put in. I find myself thinking about the applicability of these concepts as Layton and I fly to Las Vegas to attend 3 Birds Marketing’s first Digital Dealer Conference and we discuss what our goals are for the show. (more…)

I Learned (Almost) Everything I Need To Know About Business From Hell’s Angels

Author: Kristen | Published: October 5th, 2010 | Comments 5 | Retweet

If someone had told me two years ago, that I would soon be living in Chapel Hill and running an integrated marketing agency with Layton, I would have laughed at the notion. At that time, I was working with my best friends (who also happen to be the finest lawyers I know) at the San Francisco law office that we started together.

After 15 years as a criminal defense attorney, I still loved my job and my colleagues. We had forged a tight team that emphasized each member’s strengths and provided clients with vigorous representation and a great deal of personal attention. We were doing challenging legal work, getting great results for our clients and we were making good law. Through hard work, dedication and high professional standards, we had managed to establish a successful practice based exclusively on positive word of mouth and referrals in an extremely competitive legal marketplace.

When Layton proposed going into business together after the split with his partners at izmocars, I wasn’t looking to change careers. But, life had thrown us a curve ball and instead of leaning into it and taking the walk, we decided to swing for the fences. (more…)

The Entrepreneur’s Challenge: Building a Business that Runs Smoothly With and Without You

Author: Kristen | Published: July 28th, 2010 | Comments 3 | Retweet

Having a successful business shouldn't mean that you can't go on vacation

As I begin to write this post, I am sitting in a beach chair on a sandbar on Cape Cod. I am observing my three children band together to stand up to three older boys who stomped my seven year old daughter’s sand castle. At first, my daughter and her big brother summoned the courage to confront them about their misdeeds. Momentarily rebuffed by smart words and nonchalance from the older boys, they regrouped, recruited their four year old sister and her friend and set about to give the boys a taste of their own medicine. My rag tag bunch lined up behind the goal where the boys were playing soccer and, whenever the ball came their way, they shagged it and kicked the ball as far in the opposite direction as they could in order to make the boys run to retrieve it. Before long, the hurt feelings and tension had been replaced with giggles. The older boys seemed to appreciate my kids’ spunk and sense of humor and they all wound up racing to meet the ice cream truck and sharing Chocolate éclairs and snow cones together. (more…)

Are We There Yet? The Importance Of Listening, Making Pit Stops and Taking Side Trips Along the Way to Reach Your Ultimate Destination

Author: Kristen | Published: July 4th, 2010 | Comments 1 | Retweet

It's not only the destination that matters

This Independence Day, Layton and I had a bit of independence since our kids are at the beach with their grandparents.  I convinced Layton to have a Green Day with me, a day of riding bikes everywhere we go instead of using the car.  I was surprised that he agreed as anyone who knows him will likely be as well.  The plan was to ride for a bit, then go down to Franklin Street in Chapel Hill to have brunch and from there to stop at a bookstore on MLK Jr. Boulevard on our way home.  It became immediately apparent that his idea of riding for “a bit” and my idea of riding for “a bit” were radically different. (more…)

Do your vendors and service providers “get it”?

Author: Kristen | Published: June 24th, 2010 | Comments 0 | Retweet

do-your-vendors-and-service-providers-get-it

When the alarm on my iPhone goes off, the first hint of day break is still a good 30 minutes away.  After I have laced up, I open the back door expecting cool morning air to greet me as I step out into the dark but I immediately feel heat and humidity surround me instead.  I begin my ritual by starting my Polar monitor.  Today, a light bulb went off over my head.  I realized that I use the heart rate monitor every time I run or bike to collect data, measure my performance and keep myself honest in the same way that we measure the success of the marketing campaigns and initiatives we run for our clients.  Although it may be a bit of an over generalization, runners tend to be an obsessive bunch.  It is not unusual for runners to keep training logs, food journals, lists of their favorite runs, to have a system for breaking in new running shoes and incorporating them into the rotation and other quirky recording proclivities.  Maybe we’re all just trying to control what we can and to collect data to analyze and try to make sense of what we can’t.  I guess, at my core, I believe that hard work and data have a way of driving results in almost all things, and if they don’t, it’s not for lack of trying.

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