Showing posts with label #WomensDay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #WomensDay. Show all posts

Feb 21, 2017

Interview with Lane DeVries about Women's Day 2017

Women's Day (March 8th) is dedicated to celebrating women and honoring their achievements by expressing our respect, appreciation, and love. Originally founded in New York City in 1909, Women's Day is celebrated around the world; in the U.S., we have been witnessing the rising popularity of this holiday over the last three years.

Julie Randles, writing for the California Cut Flower Commission (CCFC), interviewed Sun Valley's Lane DeVries to get his take on the growth of this holiday and the potential it has for the flower industry. 

Women's Day Signs


What growth have you seen in Women's Day since you won the marketing award for your work?

Sun Valley has seen a steady rise in sales for week 8 and 9 due to Woman’s Day. The biggest gains have been in tulips, which are a perfect flower for Women’s Day.  This growth has also been helped by in-store signage, display boxes, and stickers which help make Women’s Day an event.



Why did you decide to take the lead in trying to get traction for this holiday?   


Lane DeVries Sun Valley In the American flower industry, there is a disproportionate focus on Valentine’s Day and Mother Day. Those two holidays are where we collectively, as an industry, have our focus, and that is also where we see the growth in sales.

But it’s not good for our industry to keep focusing only on those two holidays-that’s not good for product quality. The higher you make those peaks in demand, the more negative consequences for consumers and therefore, for repeat sales, and it hurts growth of the category as a whole.

My vision – the whole premise of our initiative – is to increase flower consumption in America. And I believe the way to accomplish that is to find other opportunities to buy flowers without taking away any efforts from Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day. By driving sales throughout the year, we will put a fresher product in consumers’ hands, which, over all will increase demand for flowers.

What would you like to see happen next with this growing flower-related holiday? 

So far this year, we have been thrilled to have customers calling and asking about Women’s Day flowers and promotions. The floral industry as a whole is doing an amazing job of creating awareness and generating sales for this holiday. Next, we would like to see other retailers and industries promote the holiday, such as home and garden centers, balloon and greeting card manufactures, and food and beverage companies. Women’s Day shouldn’t just be promoted at florists and supermarket floral departments.
Women's Day Marketing Materials

 
We would also like to see more attention in the media. The idea of Women’s’ Day is simple, and positive. Showing respect and gratitude for the women in our lives is something we can all appreciate, and of course, flowers do an exceptional job of conveying these feelings. In a world dominated by our smart phones, social media, and an unending news cycle, an opportunity to recognize and say thank you to our mentors, our coworkers, our elders, and our daughters in real time is proving to be a welcome addition to the traditions we celebrate.          

How else can we help grow this holiday?

Sun Valley started promoting Women’s Day in 2010. Ideally, we’d like all our fellow flower farmers, as well as, retailers and wholesalers to put together their own Women’s Day programs. We need consumers to see Women’s Day everywhere they look in early March. Look as the average floral department at Valentine’s Day, the overwhelming amount of red makes it impossible to walk by and not think about Valentine’s Day.   Now, imagine that department leading up to March 8th promoting Women’s Day with a huge display of flowers, balloons, colorful signage and other merchandise.  The potential is enormous.      
Sun Valley Women and Flowers

Thank you Julie and Lane!

We have some great marketing materials for Women's Day; contact up your sales rep if you want to join in and take advantage of this awesome holiday!

Tulips for Women's Day



Mar 8, 2016

Women's Day Freesia Tsunami

Today is March 8th, so you know what that means....
 

To celebrate here on the farm, we'll be giving a mix of Sun Valley's finest flowers to all our female team members.  These valuable women help make the world of color a reality day after day.



One of the fine flowers included in these Women's Day bouquets is the beautiful and fragrant freesia.  A note about growing freesia--the soil is kept warm for healthy stem development, then for the moment(s) of truth, the soil is cooled so that the freesia can "set bud" (aka, begin producing its beloved flowers). 
That moment is now.  While the rest of the country is experiencing winter storms, our own Oxnard farm is experiencing a freesia tsunami, and it is beautiful!







Freesia are particularly fitting for Women's Day--a classically styled flower that performs well under pressure, with a lovely scent, and long vase life.

We'll be following the day's activities closely, sharing the good stuff and posting our own, so stay tuned @LilySunvalley on social media to see how women are being celebrated all over the world, all day long.  Follow more Women's Day happenings (and share your own) with the social media hashtags below:

 Happy Women's Day. 










Mar 1, 2016

Lane DeVries and WFFSA Talk Women's Day


Recently, Lane DeVries contributed an article to WFFSA (Wholesale Florist and Florist Supplier Association) about Women's Day and the floral industry. The article is below, or feel free to check it out in-situ on the WFFSA site, here.  We're proud to partner with WFFSA and support their continued advocacy for all things Wholesale Floral. 

Lane with some of our Sun Valley Team Ladies

  Women's Day 2016

Tuesday, March 8th is Women’s Day 2016. I can’t believe it has been six years since Sun Valley started talking about this opportunity to increase flower sales in the first part of March. Over the years, I’ve given countless presentations and spoken personally with hundreds of people, explaining the potential that Women’s Day holds.

Our efforts have paid off in two key areas.

Sun Valley’s sales of tulips and other flowers in week eight and nine have been rising steadily as our Women’s Day marketing efforts have reached deeper and deeper into consumers buying patterns. There is no other factor in the marketplace I can attribute to this growth. Women’s Day is placed squarely between Valentine’s Day and Easter, so it is perfectly positioned to keep the momentum of Valentine’s Day going right through spring. This was the vision six years ago: to keep our production at a steady level, and not have a precipitous gap in sales while waiting for Easter and Mother’s day.  With a broad swath of support across the industry, this vision is coming to fruition. Thank you for taking the time and effort to participate, and I sincerely hope you are seeing the bump in sales that we are. In an industry with (sometimes) different interests, it is gratifying to see us all working together for the common good.


 Secondly, we are truly blessed to work with flowers. Is there any other product on the market that brings such joy, has no adverse health effects, and which are generally bought to be shared? With Women’s Day, we have had an uphill climb to create awareness, but as you know, people love to receive flowers. It is a fundamental state of the human experience. So as people learn about Women’s Day and participate in Women’s Day, we are seeing that they will likely continue participating in the event. The effect of this day keeps flowers in the home and office, and gives consumers more time to appreciate flowers and to get accustomed to flowers as part of their lifestyle – which leads to more sales.




Yes, this is a marketing effort, but the growth is organic as consumers enjoy this new opportunity to share flowers. I’ve heard some criticism saying that we are building a “Hallmark Holiday” and I have thought about this quite a bit. Occasions such as Grandparents Day, Boss’s Day and Administrative Professionals’ Day were created without the help of Hallmark; they were created by individuals and groups that had a need to celebrate and honor a particular part of society. This is exactly the history of Women’s Day. It started in the United States in 1909, and immediately swept across the globe. It is a day to show our honor and respect for women.  

To Hallmarks’ credit, they were able to seize an opportunity and offer their product to a consumer base that was looking for help in expressing themselves.




As an example, Marian Lucille Herndon McQuade, a stay at home mom from West Virginia, initiated a campaign for a single day in which to honor grandparents. Mrs. McQuade started her campaign for a nationally recognized day in 1970, and after nine years of working tirelessly, including taking her message from her home in West Virginia to Washington D.C, she achieved her goal. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter proclaimed the first Sunday after Labor Day each year as National Grandparents Day.


At this point, Hallmark saw an opportunity to increase sales and to ride on the coattails of a movement which was being championed at a grass roots level. This is good business, and it mirrors what we are doing as we promote Women’s Day. Women’s Day is an established grassroots holiday; we are here, offering flowers as the best way to celebrate this holiday.

Again, thank you to all the WFFSA members and supporters that are working diligently to create awareness and promote Women’s Day. When we work together, the sky is the limit.

Lane DeVries,
Sun Valley



 




Mar 4, 2015

Start the Tradition, Women's Day 2015



tulips for women's day

Women’s Day is coming Sunday, March 8th. Now is a great time to bring a new tradition to your family, and to your community. Women’s Day is all about celebrating women.  Its roots go back over a century as the event was first celebrated in New York City in 1909.

perfect women's day flowers

Today, it stands as a great opportunity to honor and respect the woman in our lives. Whether you are a woman or a man; we all have amazing, inspirational women in our lives, and the opportunity to celebrate these woman is a special thing.

what to buy on womens day? flowers!

This year Women’s Day is on a Sunday, a day which many folks are lucky enough to spend at home; maybe going to church, maybe watching a game, or just playing with the ones we love.

Celebrating Women’s Day with your family is a fun way to give flowers to moms, daughters, grandmothers, baby sitters and close friends. Starting this tradition in your family is a great way to cheer for all the accomplishments that come with being part of a family, but often do not get recognized.
womens day 2015

Celebrating Women’s Day in your community includes teachers, day care providers, mentors and all the women that make your community thrive.
Flowers express the intangible. They are so simple in their essence, yet the meaning they carry is very potent.  Women’s Day was first celebrated in the United States, so it is only fitting that you join the celebration with American grown flowers. 

American grown flowers for American women is a wonderful tradition to start in 2015.
popular flower blogs