Creative Shop Talk with Wendy Batten

Wendy Batten, Creative Retail Mentor

How do I attract more customers to my store? How do I get more sales? How do I book out my shop's events and workshops? How do I do retail marketing and social media for my store? These are the questions that creative retail business owners ask Wendy Batten, creative retail coach and mentor. Wendy works with creative shop owners all over the world and with industry leaders. Her speciality is working with creative retailers to get control over their brick and mortars to avoid burnout and overwhelm while achieving more success and profits. In Creative Shop Talk, Wendy digs into the problems and solutions that "accidental shopkeepers" and hobbyists turned retail business owners face. Wendy dives deep in mindset and best practices for retailers with masterclass trainings, business strategies, expert guests and industry insiders, and more. Each episode is designed to help busy and passionate creative shop owners take action, work through their overwhelm and get focused on strategic business areas. Thinking about opening your own creative retail shop? Ready to stop playing shopkeeper and "winging" the business stuff? Looking for more foot traffic? Want to turn your brick and mortar into a viable business? Want predictable profits? Want to take the next step to run your store and not let it run you? Turn to Wendy Batten to take the proven steps to achieving your dream store, living your creative life and helping your amazing customers.

  1. 19 HRS AGO

    304. Hospitality is an Inside Job: How Leadership and Small Moments Shape Your Shop's Reputation with Guest Expert Stephanie Miller Vincent

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview In this episode, we're continuing our series on building an exceptional reputation in our retail businesses by looking at hospitality through a leadership lens. I'm joined by Stephanie Miller Vincent, founder of SMillerVision and former guest on the podcast. We dig into what hospitality really means beyond being friendly or providing good service. We talk about why it starts inside your business and how your team experience directly impacts your customer experience. We also explore how consistency, culture, and attention to small details shape how your shop is felt by customers. This isn't about scripts or surface-level service. It's about the standards you set, the care you show your team, and the everyday moments that quietly build your reputation. If you've ever thought hospitality is just one more thing to add to your plate, this conversation will help you see it differently and understand where to focus instead. Our Key Topics Why reputation is built from the inside, starting with leadership and clarity The difference between good customer service and true hospitality How team culture and care influence customer experience Why small, consistent actions matter more than big gestures The role of leadership in modeling and reinforcing hospitality Common misconceptions about hospitality in retail settings The impact of trust, communication, and involving your team How micro moments shape brand perception and customer loyalty Key Takeaways for Shop Owners You can be friendly and provide service and still not be hospitable. Completing tasks and being polite isn't the same as creating a meaningful experience. Hospitality is about how you make people feel, not just what you do for them. We can't expect anything from the people we lead that we don't model ourselves. Your team is watching how you show up every day. If you want a certain level of care and attention, it has to start with you demonstrating it first. Hospitality is creating a feeling or emotion, not just completing tasks. Customers remember how they felt in your space more than what they bought. That emotional connection is what builds loyalty and trust over time. The little things are what build or erode your reputation over time. Small, everyday details often go unnoticed until they become a problem. Paying attention to them consistently is what strengthens your brand. If the small things don't matter, the big things don't matter either. Ignoring minor issues signals to your team that details aren't important. Over time, that mindset affects everything from culture to customer experience. Take a moment to notice the small things in your shop this week and consider what they might be saying about your leadership and your brand. Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Episode 293: The Difference Between 'Nice' and 'Kind' in Leadership   Episode 252: Creating a Culture of Hospitality in Your Retail Business with Guest Expert Stephanie Miller Vincent Episode 208: Stacking Your Team with Guest Expert Shelli Warren   Sales Accelerator Program - This on-demand program is ready for you RIGHT NOW. (The price is going up mid-April!) You'll learn how to get more visibility in your community, attract more of the right people into your store, increase your per-customer sales, and see more repeat customers who come back again and again. Grab it today and get started right away!   Let's hang out in a private coaching session!   Join my Love List! - This is my email list. Get on it so you are the first to know when the next live masterclass is taking place!    Follow along and chat with me on Instagram!   About Stephanie Miller Vincent and SMillerVision For more than 30 years I've worked in hospitality in both Canada and the USA. I've had the pleasure of leading teams at White Point Beach Resort, Snake River Grill South, Pinnacle Entertainment's L'Auberge Lake Charles Casino Resort, and The Quarterdeck Resort. My mission is to return hospitality to its roots of caring about people, starting with the employees. Follow along with Stephanie and SMillerVision:  Facebook | LinkedIn | Website   About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    40 min
  2. APR 6

    303. How to Build an Exceptional Retail Brand That Attracts the Right Customers

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview In this first episode of a three-part series, I'm talking about what it really means to create an exceptional brand in today's retail environment. I'm sharing what I'm seeing in shops right now and why being "fine" or average is no longer enough to stand out or stay relevant. We'll look at how your reputation shapes your brand, why trust and meaningful connection matter more than ever, and how to start refining your brand to attract the right customers. This is about getting clear on who you serve, how you want them to feel, and how your brand shows up in every part of your business. Our Key Topics Why "fine" or average brands struggle in today's retail environment The difference between attracting the right customers and trying to get more shoppers What it means to build a brand based on trust and meaningful purchases Why your brand is defined by what customers say about you How to audit your brand through customer experience, feeling, and consistency The impact of pricing, merchandising, and service on brand perception Why consistency builds trust and inconsistency erodes it The role of brand evolution and revisiting your strategy over time Key Takeaways for Shop Owners Your brand is what people say about you, not your logo, colors, or fonts. It's shaped by their experience, what they remember, and what they share with others after they leave your shop. Trying to serve everyone waters down your brand and makes it less effective. Getting clear on who you are for allows you to create a stronger, more focused experience. Great brands are not for everyone. Customers are choosing what feels right, not just what is available. Meaningful connection and trust are influencing buying decisions more than convenience alone. Your pricing, service, and experience all communicate your brand before you say a word. Every detail sends a message about who you are and who you are for. Consistency in experience, messaging, and service is what builds trust over time. When things feel inconsistent, it creates hesitation and weakens your reputation. Take a moment to reflect on what your customers are really experiencing and what your brand is asking them to feel.   Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Sales Accelerator Program - This on-demand program is ready for you RIGHT NOW. (The price is going up mid-April!) You'll learn how to get more visibility in your community, attract more of the right people into your store, increase your per-customer sales, and see more repeat customers who come back again and again. Grab it today and get started right away!   Let's hang out in a private coaching session!   Join my Love List! - This is my email list. Get on it so you are the first to know when the next live masterclass is taking place!    Follow along and chat with me on Instagram!   Episode 221: How to Raise the Bar on Excellence in Retail with Guest Expert Jeffrey Shaw   Episode 215: Coffee Break Chat: Customer Service vs. Customer Experience About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    24 min
  3. MAR 30

    302. Retail Mystery March: Why Your Shop Has a Big Following but You Aren't Making Money

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview In this final episode of the Retail Mystery Series, I'll walk you through one last fictional case where a well-established shop with a strong brand and large social media following was still not making money. On the surface, everything looked successful, but the business ultimately closed. Why? This episode unpacks what was really happening behind the scenes and why growth in followers did not translate into profit. I'll share what went wrong, what could have been done differently, and how shop owners can avoid falling into the same pattern. If you've ever wondered whether your marketing efforts are actually leading to sales, this conversation will help you step back and evaluate what's working and what needs to shift. Our Key Topics The difference between building an audience and building a customer base How focusing only on social media can limit overall marketing effectiveness The role of a complete marketing plan in retail success Why leadership time should be focused on business growth and data, not just content creation The importance of understanding the "game" you are playing as a retailer Key Takeaways on Social Media Marketing A large following does not guarantee sales or profitability. Are your efforts to grow your audience bringing customers in or just entertaining them online? Social media is only one small part of a larger marketing ecosystem. The shop relied almost entirely on Instagram and Facebook, without other strategies in place. A balanced approach that includes visibility, nurturing, and in-store experience is necessary. Your marketing should be designed to attract buyers, not just attention. The content was entertaining and shareable, but it was not speaking to ideal or premium customers. As the owner, your primary role is business growth and strategic decision making. The role of the owner is to focus on direction, metrics, and long-term success. Every marketing activity should have a clear purpose and intended outcome. Whether the goal is foot traffic, product sales, or customer engagement, clarity is essential for results. Take a moment to reflect on your current marketing efforts and ask whether they are truly supporting sales and growth in your shop. Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Sales Accelerator Program - This on-demand program is ready for you RIGHT NOW. You'll learn how to get more visibility in your community, attract more of the right people into your store, increase your per-customer sales, and see more repeat customers who come back again and again. Grab it today and get started right away!   Join my Love List! - This is my email list. Get on it so you are the first to know when the next live masterclass is taking place!    Follow along and chat with me on Instagram!   Episode 296: Building a Retail Business Through Live Social Selling with Mastermind Member Amy Cseh of Schoolhouse Salvage About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    19 min
  4. MAR 23

    301. Retail Mystery March: Why Strong Sales Don't Always Equate to Healthy Profits

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview In this episode of the Retail Mystery Series, I'll walk you through a common situation many shop owners experience but struggle to explain. Sales are strong. The shop is busy. Yet there is little cash left at the end of the day and bills are starting to pile up. Through another fictional case study, I'll explore how this happens and what shop owners need to examine when revenue looks good but the numbers still do not work. By looking closely at percentages, expenses, and how sales goals are actually set, I'll show you how to uncover where the money is really going. If you have ever wondered why busyness does not always translate into profit, this episode offers a simple framework to start understanding your numbers and make more grounded decisions in your retail business. Our Key Topics Why strong sales do not always translate into healthy cash flow What happens when sales goals are based on assumptions instead of actual business needs What it means to look at rent, payroll, and operations as percentages of sales - especially if you've recently moved or had a change up in expenses recently Why sales goals should be calculated after understanding expenses and margins  What reverse engineering your numbers from the bottom up looks like for a retail business What it means to attach your marketing to a clear and calculated sales goal Key Takeaways on Knowing Your Margins Sales goals should be calculated after understanding margins, expenses, payroll, and operations. It should be the last number you determine when you are looking at your numbers.   Comparing a new location to old numbers can create misleading expectations. If you've recently seen an increase in a large expense (like rent), you need to adjust your goals to cover.   Percentages help reveal whether the business structure actually works financially. It doesn't matter how high your revenue is if you aren't covering your expenses and planning for profits.    Understanding where every dollar goes protects your business from cash flow surprises.   Marketing efforts should be attached to a clear and calculated sales goal. Your marketing campaigns, newsletters, social media posts, etc. shouldn't be planned until you know exactly what numbers and margins  you are needing/wanting to hit. If sales look strong but the money still feels tight, this episode offers a simple place to start understanding why. Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Profit Planning Masterclass: This standalone masterclass is available for free to Inner Circle and Mastermind members. If you aren't a member, you can purchase it as a stand alone class for just $47, including the back-of-the-napkin profits calculator.   Join my Love List! - This is my email list. Get on it so you are the first to know when the next live masterclass is taking place!    Follow along and chat with me on Instagram!   Episode 169: 5 Easy Ways to Increase Your Profit Margins (and Why You Should!)   Episode 292: The Real Starting Point for Building a Profitable Retail Business About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    15 min
  5. MAR 16

    300. Episodes Later: Consistency, Passion, and the Reality of Long Haul Leadership

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview In this 300th episode of the Creative Shop Talk Podcast, I'm sharing a personal reflection on what it takes to keep showing up in business over the long haul. Rather than revisiting past highlights, I'm sharing honestly about consistency, passion, and the ongoing work of building something that lasts, like your beautiful business - and like this podcast. I'll explore why business owners need to pause and ask whether the things they do consistently are still aligned with their goals, energy, and strategy. I'll also introduce a simple way to think about passion in business by identifying the fuels that keep your fire burning and the drains that slowly put it out. Our Key Topics What reaching 300 podcast episodes reveals to me about consistency in business The importance of business owners asking whether ongoing efforts still have purpose What passion in business looks like over the long term and how it is okay if it evolves How to identify fuels and drains to help sustain motivation Building a Thrive List and scratching your entrepreneurial "creative itch" Key Takeaways around Consistency and Passion in Business Consistency without strategy or purpose can become a waste of time. What's your why? Does it align with the day-to-day things you are doing in your business?   Passion in business naturally shifts and evolves over time and that's okay.   Paying attention to fuels and drains helps to protect your energy as a business owner. What fuels you and your business? What drains you? Do more of the fuels - defer/delegate/delete the drains if you can. Life outside the business supports the energy needed to lead it. I love to help retailers with "life-first" business goals. Feeding into your life will energize you to lead with passion in your retail business. Regular reflection helps keep your business aligned with what matters most. "Nothing awesome happens without energy and enthusiasm." - Wendy Batten Take a moment to reflect on what is fueling your work right now and what might be quietly draining it. I'd love to hear what you come up with.  If you are in any of my coaching containers, reach out! And if not, dive into my DMs on Instagram and let's chat. Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Episode 194: Feeling Stuck? 20 Prompts to Help You Flip Your Mindset   Episode 225: Practicing Self-Care While Running a Retail Business   Episode 285: Avoiding Retail Burnout: Closing Loops and Leaning In to Your People   Join my Love List!   Follow along and chat with me on Instagram! About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    28 min
  6. MAR 9

    299. Retail Mystery March: Is Your Inventory Priced for Profit?

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview Why would a shop that has been open for over a decade, has loyal customers, strong brands, and steady traffic have stalled growth or even a decline in business? In this second installment of the Retail Mystery series, I share the fictional case of a home decor shop owner who feels stuck after 13 years in business. Profits are still coming in, but not at the level they once did. The owner points to the economy, weather, rising wages, and shifting customer habits. All valid concerns. But when the deeper investigation begins, a different pattern starts to emerge. This episode invites experienced shop owners to pause and look beyond external factors. If business feels harder than it used to, I'm offering practical clarity on where to look and what may need to shift inside the store itself. Our Key Topics What happens when you stick with "comfortable" and "easy" when it comes to inventory planning Why you need to keep up with modern customer needs based on your goals: social selling, social media, e-commerce, etc. What happens when you blindly stick to the keystone method of pricing your goods (100% mark-up, 50% profit margin) Why you need to be properly priced Key Takeaways around Inventory and Pricing 1. Evaluate whether each brand is earning its keep on the shelf and per square foot. Doing this will help you determine which brands are making you money and where you may be able to better utilize the space by bringing in something your customers will love. 2. Keep inventory fresh, especially for loyal local customers who have already purchased. Are you attending market to find out what the newest trends are? 3. Update merchandising so customers continue to notice and engage with what is new. Build new displays to keep things fresh. Revamped displays, even with the same merchandise, will help regular customers see things differently. 4. Price properly. The keystone method for pricing isn't cutting it anymore. If your customers won't pay what you need to charge to make the product worth carrying in your shop, it's not a viable product.   "Being nicely priced will put you out of business." - Wendy Batten Take a moment this week to look at your shop with fresh eyes and consider what areas may be ready for a thoughtful shift. Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Episode 104: Tight on Cash Flow? Let's Turn Your Old Inventory Into Cash for You   Episode 168: Merchandising to Sell: Intuitive Merchandising   Join my Love List!   Follow along and chat with me on Instagram! About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    11 min
  7. MAR 2

    298. Mystery March: Why Sales Decline When Shop Standards Slip

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview In this first Mystery March episode, I'm sharing a fictional case study about a thriving yarn shop that begins to see a quiet decline in sales after the owner steps back into her CEO role. On the surface, everything looks fine: is it the economy? What is going on? Instead of blaming the economy or foot traffic, I'll reveal what really happened. This episode explores how small, overlooked shifts in standards can slowly erode customer experience and impact profitability, even in a strong, established business. Our Key Topics What to look at before making assumptions about the economy and foot traffic How to identify when creep sets in Why you must fix small customer experience breakdowns and shop standards inconsistencies right away The difference between customer service and shop standards Writing down, teaching, and reinforcing standards Key Takeaways around Shop Standards and Shop "Creep" Sales can decline quietly when standards are not clearly defined and reinforced. What feels obvious to you isn't necessarily obvious to your team.   Small, repeated inconsistencies can lead to customers slowly dropping off. You know that dead plant in the window? Your customers notice it.   Shop standards must be written down, taught to staff, and reinforced. Be sure everyone is on the same page so that even the smallest things are consistent, like the shop's playlist.   You can step into your CEO role without sacrificing the experience inside your shop. Do not use shop creep as an excuse to be in the store more. Take a moment this week to look at your shop through the lens of standards and ask yourself what might need to be written down, taught, or reinforced. Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Shop Standards Masterclass: (for Inner Circle members) Does your shop run 100% as you imagine in your dreams? Everything is sailing along, smooth, you and your team have systems in place, the shop looks, feels and is 100% as you want it and had a vision for?    Join my Love List!   Episode 268: Awesome Isn't Accidental: Raise the Retail Standards in Your Shop   Episode 256: Retailers in the Wild: Elevate Your Retail Shop Using These Observations From My Time in New Zealand Episode 144: How to Create a Customer Journey Map About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    15 min
  8. FEB 23

    297. The 15-Minute Monthly Reset for Retailers

    With host retail coach Wendy Batten   https://wendybatten.com/podcast-intro/   Episode Overview In this episode, I'm sharing a practical look at the power of a monthly business debrief. Sparked by a coaching client who resisted the process at first, this conversation walks through what a debrief actually is, why it matters, and how it can be done in as little as 15 minutes per month. We all have that kind of time! For experienced shop owners who feel profitable but unclear, busy but reactive, this episode offers a grounded structure for closing out the month with intention. Wendy explains how reviewing key numbers, marketing efforts, operations, and priorities can help you move from running on memory and mood to leading with clarity. If you want to feel more in control of your shop and less overwhelmed by it, this episode outlines a simple habit that can shift how you lead your business: the monthly debrief. Our Key Topics What a monthly business debrief is and why it matters The difference between rolling into the next month and intentionally closing one out Reviewing key performance indicators such as sales, profit, margin, inventory, and marketing metrics Evaluating marketing, events, and promotions to see what translated into revenue Looking at financial health through a profitability lens Using an operational checklist to assess team energy, customer feedback, and flow in the shop Identifying the "big rocks" that deserve focus next month Aligning monthly reflection with 90-day planning Moving from reactive decision-making to pattern recognition Key Takeaways about the Monthly Debrief A monthly debrief can be a simple 15 minute CEO activity that builds clarity over time. We have a tendency to just keep rolling from one month to the next, but the truth is you don't need a ton of time to do a debrief. Take 15 minutes and do it. Looking at patterns in pricing, marketing, and operations can help you identify and stop potential issues before they start. What KPIs do you want to track? What metrics are important to you? (Sales, profit margin, average order value, foot traffic, etc.)   Sales alone do not equal success; profits and clarity matter more. Where did your PROFITS come from this month? How can you replicate that in future months?   Measuring what you worked on shows whether your efforts actually translated into revenue and profits. Which events worked? Which didn't? Did you advertise on a billboard or elsewhere? Did it bring in new customers? Did you send out weekly emails that brought new customers in?   Consistency over several months builds confidence and a greater sense of control. You don't have to keep "remembering" month after month. You'll have it all on paper so you can refer back and begin making decisions based on the patterns the monthly debriefs reveal.   "Stop running your shop on just memory and mood." -Wendy Batten If you have been moving from month to month without stopping, this is your invitation to pause, reflect, and give yourself that simple monthly date with your business. Resources Mentioned and Related Episodes: Profit Planning Masterclass: (free for Inner Circle members and Mastermind members) Go from not knowing the RIGHT numbers to easily finding more profit in your business using my simple "back of the napkin" training.   Join my Love List!   Episode 263: Why CEO Time Isn't Optional in Your Retail Business Episode 197: The Monthly Debrief: A Simple Activity All Retail Shop Owners Should Be Doing About your host, Wendy Batten In case we haven't met…I'm Wendy Batten. I've been a small business owner, coach, and mentor for over 25 years. I help thoughtful, established entrepreneurs step into their role as CEO and build businesses that are profitable, meaningful, and supportive of the lives they want to live. My work blends real-world strategy with a life-first philosophy, shaped by lived experience, not theory. I've been there! Through honest conversations and practical insight, I invite you into bigger thinking about leadership, possibility, and how to build both business and life on purpose. For more support from Wendy Hang out and connect with Wendy on IG All of Wendy's current programs and services for shop owners can be found HERE.  Never miss an episode! Subscribe to the Creative Shop Talk Podcast and get the tools, inspiration, and strategies you need to thrive as an independent retailer.Click here to subscribe to iTunes!  Loved the episode? Leave a quick review on iTunes- your reviews help other retailers find my podcast, and they're also fun for me to go in and read. Just click here to review, select "Ratings and Reviews" and "Write a Review" and let me know what your favorite part of the podcast is. So grateful for you! Thank you!

    23 min
5
out of 5
14 Ratings

About

How do I attract more customers to my store? How do I get more sales? How do I book out my shop's events and workshops? How do I do retail marketing and social media for my store? These are the questions that creative retail business owners ask Wendy Batten, creative retail coach and mentor. Wendy works with creative shop owners all over the world and with industry leaders. Her speciality is working with creative retailers to get control over their brick and mortars to avoid burnout and overwhelm while achieving more success and profits. In Creative Shop Talk, Wendy digs into the problems and solutions that "accidental shopkeepers" and hobbyists turned retail business owners face. Wendy dives deep in mindset and best practices for retailers with masterclass trainings, business strategies, expert guests and industry insiders, and more. Each episode is designed to help busy and passionate creative shop owners take action, work through their overwhelm and get focused on strategic business areas. Thinking about opening your own creative retail shop? Ready to stop playing shopkeeper and "winging" the business stuff? Looking for more foot traffic? Want to turn your brick and mortar into a viable business? Want predictable profits? Want to take the next step to run your store and not let it run you? Turn to Wendy Batten to take the proven steps to achieving your dream store, living your creative life and helping your amazing customers.

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