Entries from January 2010 ↓
January 28th, 2010 — Recaps, SMB Chicago
When a user interacts with you using YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin etc, there is an understanding between you and the user as to what you will deliver.
There are three general content creation categories, (1) Bulletin Board, (2) Informational (3) Emotional. You should focus on one category for each effort. Sometimes, you can mix 1 & 2 or 2 & 3, but don’t try to do them all in one effort.
Bulletin Board – current news and events. These can be as simple as “new address 200 W. Main”. A Bulletin Board could also highlight an upcoming event. For the most part, this content is specific to a time and a place. Here is an example of a workshop video that was done for SCORE Chicago
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-HXUF46R8c
Informational – “Our new facility is 3000 sq. ft. it includes ..” Product descriptions are also information videos. Training tips, insights into operations etc. Pointed answers to questions. Below you will find a product video and an answer to a question.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKdvEJDFRtE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LkxhWcDZYI
Emotional “ we are creating an environment that will …” A good video tour of a house would be emotional., connecting with you so that you want to live there. Emotional, does not have to be complex. Here is a short video done by Google about a person moving to Paris.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnsSUqgkDwU
Restaurant postings are often emotional. Note the comments on this restaurant video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hb41h5coP0o
A good news story combines, information and emotional. See this news report that I did with First Business News on web development.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1SHvebGW9E
Understand what is the goal of your content. Then, create a place that is consistent with that goal. You can have more than one channel or Twitter effort. One person in Chicago has 5 different Twitter accounts, each one targeted toward a different effort.
Jess Constable, a recent guest on my TV show, has a business that sells jewelry. To that end, she has a website that showcases her jewelry (bulletin board + information). www.jesslc.com . Separately, she maintains a blog that connects with a community providing insights into simplifying your live makeundermylife.com . While the efforts are complementary, she doesn’t sell on her blog.
January 28th, 2010 — Recaps, SMB Chicago
By Marcus Tewksbury
At one point or another I’ve heard someone define crazy as repeating the same exercise but expecting different results. Mentally I have this picture of an old Simson’s commercial where Bart or Homer keeps reaching for a Butterfinger after being repeatedly shocked. Basically, this is exactly how I see most marketers approaching the social space.
The metaphor here is to how the advertising world has learned to run itself by household level data supplied by the Neilsen’s of the world. Was this data every really useful? Did it ever shed insights on what really moved the needle? Or, did we just become so desperate to justify what we were doing we grew to accept them as a course of action. These statistics became an enabler to do our whim – kind of like my Weight Watchers diet.
Why then, when approaching social would we think things would be any different? Immediately, we’ve all jumped on the buzz bandwagon looking for justification. Problem is people have not “settled” yet and are still pushing for a social answer that is more accountable and more related to actual business performance.
As service providers then, the question is how do we step to the plate? How do we provide a measure that truly speaks to business value created? Start by finding the “client of the future.” Producing meaningful metrics is entirely contingent on dumping the current episodic, campaign driven mentality of marketing and re-orientating the go to market with a customer centric strategy. Look for folks who get the “4-B’s” or the like, they are few and far between. Conversely, you can continue to play the Pancho to your clients as they tilt their windmills with cries of “reach”, “popularity”, and “friends”.
January 27th, 2010 — Recaps, SMB Chicago
The Importance of Social Media for SEO
by Sky Opila

Yesterday, Walker Sands’ very own John Fairley moderated a discussion on social media and search engine optimization (SEO) at the Social Media Breakfast Chicago #3 event hosted by SCORE Chicago. John brought up a lot of great points for discussion in the group about social media and SEO, but after attending and discussing with the group I think there are some key takeaways everyone can start using today.
No doubt social media has a large influence on SEO. Take Walker Sands for example. If you Google a brand, such as ours “Walker Sands”, you will find that more than half of the links are influenced by social media. From our LinkedIn account, to Google reviews, to our Twitter stream and even our blog. Social media plays a large part in the content displayed in the search engine results page.
As John put it to the group, all of these social media sites are linking back to your Web site. And even though a lot of sites have adapted no follow links (meaning you may not get the benefit of link juice from them), they are increasing your visibility in the search engine results page.
So what does this mean?
Social media can and does influence your SEO. However, the goals for your brand may determine what strategy works best for you.
If you are an already well established brand, you may want to leverage social media to help you optimize for other keywords and phrases. For example, if chip giant Lays decided they wanted to enter the dessert game and offer chocolate-covered potato chips, simply putting it on their website may not be enough. As part of their marketing campaign they may leverage a blog to discuss the finer points of chocolate-covered potato chips or even YouTube videos about how to make and eat the chips properly. These social media tools in conjunction with their larger marketing campaign will help Lays rank for dessert ideas and chocolate-covered potato chips.
On the other hand, a less well-known and established brand may take a different approach to utilizing social media for SEO. This may include a startup company looking to fill out their brand more strongly. They might focus all of their social media and community building on branded items that help push their name to the top of the search engine results page and help fill out all of the results when someone searches for them.
John Fairley suggests that focusing strong efforts in some channels (the ones that specifically make sense for your business) is definitely better than spreading yourself too thin. He suggests that everyone should get a blog because that is the social media channel that you can most easily utilize to help influence search engine ranking.
Beyond a blog, if Facebook doesn’t make sense for your company, wait to use it. But if Yelp or Twitter does, make sure to not only leverage that but to build those communities into strong locations for your brand.
Thanks to John for leading a great discussion on social media and SEO, also wanted to shout out to the group members at the SCORE event that helped keep the conversation so lively!

Veronica Pasia
Gordon Dymowski
Hope Bertram
Jen Luby
Jenn Sutherland
Interactive Amy Ravit Korin
Laura Wasilewski
Tim McDonald
Elyse Devries
January 26th, 2010 — Photos, Presentations, Recaps, SMB DC

Other than to say thank you to our speakers: Geoff Living (@geoffliving), Shashib Bellamkonda (@shashib), and Alex Howard (@digiphile); our Heads of Table: Andy Carvin (@acarvin), Daria Steigman (@dariasteigman), Shonali Burke (@shonali), Josh Greene (@josh_greene), and Mike Schaffer (@mikeschaffer); and our guests! … there is not much left to say.
Our inaugural Social Media Breakfast DC (#SMBDC) was terrific!
Don’t believe me? Alex Priest did an AWESOME job recapping the event here.
A day before the Breakfast, Alex wrote a blog post version of his Breakfast presentation titled “Trends and challenges for social media in 2010.”
Before leaving for the Breakfast, Geoff posted a “Get Mobile Now” manifesto on his blog.
After the event, Shashib recapped the discussion and included a Flickr slideshow with pictures of the breakfast on his Examiner blog.
One of our Heads of Table, Shonali Burke, wrote a post about the Breakfast table talk, the engaging crowd and the new friends and connections our guests were made that morning.
Thank you all! You have us COVERED!
Check out our event pictures, courtesy of Rachel Rule (@rachelrule), Social Media Breakfast Co-organizer.
More pictures from Amy D. Phillips (@amydpp).
You’ll notice, no one looks groggy
Stay tuned for the next breakfast in early February. Information will be posted on our EventBrite registration page: http://socialmediabreakfastdc.eventbrite.com
Flickr user amydpp
PS: Check out Alex Howard’s awesome Breakfast presentation on “Social Media in 2010″, which he made using Prezi.
January 26th, 2010 — Recaps, SMB Chicago
January 22nd, 2010 — Recaps, SMB San Diego, Videos
As with all 1st events in a new year, you hope that you not only see loyal faces, but new faces. In San Diego, we’ve been having such great turnouts from both loyal and new folks; that I know 2010 is going to be a year to grow. I hope everyone out there reading this feels the same way, no matter what geographic area you reside. This session we took the opportunity to thank Erin Levenson for all her hard work in helping organize speakers, sponsors and content for SMBSD. She has officially started her new role as mommy and I know she’ll be back soon! So Social Media Breakfast San Diego #11 featured our same session framework:
- Good Morning Message – introducing new attendees and how they heard about the breakfast
- Top 10 in 10 – Ten newsworthy trends, apps, services, products, technologies, celebrities that fall within the social media sphere
- Featured Speaker – 20-30 minutes of sharing their story, case study, how-to’s, lessons learned and time for Q&A
- Active Social Project Updates – Our group donates its time to a local nonprofit to help them understand and define their social media strategy; sometimes building tools they need as well
- Feedback in 5 – A time to ask questions, talk about your challenges; leveraging the knowledge of the group to identify solutions

Session #11 featured Jimmy, founder of CARBONita Detail based in La Jolla, CA. What struck me about Jimmy, was his passion for making “green” a part of his business as well as his mission for helping families enjoy their vehicles all over again. Jimmy talked about how social media took him from door-to-door salesman to doubling his customers just from Twitter. His success came from:
- Educating customers
- Providing a clear value proposition
- Offering a sustainable business model that embraced “environmental-friendly” operations
- Not just entering, but creating conversations via Twitter
- Being real and having a voice within a defined niche like auto detailing
CARBONita is an eco-friendly auto detailing company, based in La Jolla, California. The best part is it’s mobile. If you’re in La Jolla or the surrounding area, at your home or office; you can rest assured your vehicle is getting the love it deserves while keeping a minimal carbon footprint. Connect with Jimmy at twitter.com/CARBONitaDetail
After Jimmy answered questions, we started the infamous TOP 10 in 10 and here is some content from that:
- Foursquare – How many of you checked in today? Now it’s not city-specific. GPS-enabled phones can enter new venues easier. So some nice marketing features baked into the app right? Unlocking badges, which potentially could be event-specific, sponsored, etc. City Leaderboards. Potential gold mine for local marketing and advertising? What do you think?
- Dell – So just because Twitter has no revenue model, doesn’t mean Dell is missing out. Revealing they made $3M via their DellOutlet Twitter account. So they started off by “listening” and ended up moving the sales process to a channel that offered quicker access. Is that good for Dell.com? Does that cannibalize their sales?
- Powered purchases the competition – The acquisitions of Crayon, StepChange & Drillteam cover mobile marketing, strategy, branded online communities and social networks like Facebook. As the market picks up, will consolidation and acquisitions continue? Who’s next? Is there a super group in San Diego in the near future?
- Pimp Your Page – If Facebook marketing starts with having a Fan page, what apps are critical to have? Here are 2 I found useful:
- Flashplay – lets you add any Flash elements to your page
- Static FBML – Adds box to your page where you can render HTML and FBML to customize experience.
- Hootsuite raises $1.9M – Founder says it’s on its way to becoming the leading social media dashboard. What do you think? @MrsKutcher uses Tweetdeck though …
- Tila Tequila Too Far? Tila tweeted over 160 times after her fiance past away, sharing intimate personal stories and having Larry King segment canceled.
- Jersey Shore – A lesson in content marketing or bust? From video spoofs, Jersey Shore name generators, tweets, events; MTV package characters, controversy and conversation to create a buzz. (http://www.unlikelywords.com/2009/12/08/jersey-shore-nickname-generator/) (http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/4d2ebc8f52/alyssa-milano-s-evolution-jersey-shore)
- CES Gets Social – Skype and Panasonic ink a deal to have video conferencing on your living room HDTV. Toys controlled by iPhone featuring augmented reality game. The buzz/conversations were endless. Anyone at CES? What was the most interesting new toy?
- Twitter provides keyhole into 7.0 earthquake in Haiti – With hundreds of photos captured and shared via Twitter and Facebook; people saw glimpses of the destruction. Is this type of usage a predecessor for apps that can help during disaster relief from pinpointing the worst areas to locating loved ones?
- Coca Cola’s Social Media Policy – 3 pages and to the point.
Updates about our Active Social Project: Think Together
- Social Media Strategy & Planning Sessions completed
- Porting blog over to Wordpress platform
- Connect with ThinkTogether on Twitter
SMBSD will be taking new nominations for its Active Social Project in February.
You can connect with SMBSD via: Twitter | Our Community | UStream (every session is live & recorded)
January 21st, 2010 — SMB Montreal, Upcoming breakfasts
It’s been a pretty crazy ride since we first contacted Bryan Person and Social Media Breakfast back in early December where we expressed an interest in taking on the role of organizers for the Montreal chapter of this expanding phenomenon.

A phone call or two after the initial email was sent and some back and forth exchanges of Wordpress admin info and some Q&A on how to get started, and our heads were officially under water.
The website and in particular the blog has been an indispensable asset as we find ourselves going back to it again and again. Our hope moving forward is to get more involved in the SMB community on Yammer.com which appears to be continuing to grow.
One of the many challenges we are facing here in Montreal, like I’m sure many of the current SMB host/organizers have as well – is that the Social Media and Tech networks are flourishing, and there seems to be 1,001 different networking events taking place every other day of the week. This becomes a two part challenge in that we are competing for people’s attention amidst all of these other events AND we are new.
To overcome this and break the loop for networker’s (thanks Marty and Xurxo of Bloom Search Marketing for their insight) who have expressed these types of events often cater to the same (type of) people – we are going the extra mile to encourage attendance of small and medium sized business owners and PR/Marketing managers who may or may not have a Social Media strategy in place, or who may not know anything about it at all. Via our membership in several local Chambers of Commerce we have unleashed an email campaign inviting just such people with the offer of a free breakfast and the opportunity to learn something about Social Media.
We hope to build on this strategy for future Breakfast’s and believe that by populating the registration list with those who stand not only to share but learn and ”buy into” these ideas, that we’ll create some leverage and with that continue to be able to go out and get some top-level speakers who could potentially land some new business in exchange for their expertise and time.
One of the greatest appealing factors of this event is the notion that the atmosphere should remain casual, and that it should be an interactive one – where everyone benefits. It is amazing how freely the ideas flow and successes/failures shared in a relaxed atmosphere.
Below are the details, main topic, and speakers for our inaugural Social Media Breakfast – Montreal. Over the next few days I hope to get some bios and photos up of each of the presenters – but would like to thank them now for committing to helping out. The Eventbrite registration form is also located below for those interested in attending.
Wednesday February 17th, 2010
Cost: 0$ – You cannot find a better deal than this! Breakfast included to boot!
From 9AM – 11AM
Event Topic – Social Media for Small Business
Speakers
Com Mirza (@thelemonadeboy on Twitter) – Viral Video Marketing for Brands & Business
CT Moore (http://www.gypsybandito.com/) & Jonathan Kennedy (@jonnywired on Twitter)
Discussions on Blogging & Facebook for Small Business
Only 40 spaces available – First come first served
Contact jeff@heelatch.com with any questions.
REGISTER HERE
The event is going to be taped and posted here along with our recap, so please check back a few days after the event to check it out.
Thanks for reading and wish us luck!!
Jeff Taylor, Founder – SMB Montreal – jeff@socialmediabreakfast.com
January 20th, 2010 — SMB Boston, Upcoming breakfasts
Overview
There are plenty of events designed to foster startups and help entrepreneurs find money, but there are very few events that focus on “The Big Splash:” how do you get the attention your company needs to grow and reach its business goals?
This event is perfect for entrepreneurial organizations–especially bootstrapped, angel-funded and early-stage venture-funded businesses–looking to accelerate their growth and sales using Digital Marketing and Social Media Strategies and Techniques.
In association with Social Media Club Boston and Microsoft, Social Media Breakfast Boston is proud to announce – LaunchCamp – Boston.
The event is designed to help entrepreneurs make the essential decisions needed to launch their brand, product or service. It is organized by PR, marketing, social media and business professionals looking to identify and replicate some of the best practices in the market for moving entrepreneurial organizations along the growth curve.
LaunchCamp takes a fresh look at PR, marketing, social media and management–and the strategies and technologies that have evolved around these areas — and attempts to identify the challenges that organizations face through out the launch process.


Audience
This event is perfect for entrepreneurial organizations–especially bootstrapped, angel-funded and early-stage venture-funded businesses–looking to accelerate their growth using social tools and techniques. It is for both skeptics and those who need to convince the skeptics. It’s also perfect for “intrapraneurs”: innovators within larger organizations who are trying to create change.
Timing
LaunchCamp 2010 takes place on the afternoon of February 4th, 2010. It is being held in conjucntion with a Social Media Breakfast event on the morning of February 4th.
Social Media Breakfast Bootcamp
The Social Media Bootcamp is designed to help entrepreneurs understand the basics of how “social” has evolved from a communications tool to a full-fledged marketing and business management philosophy. It sets the tone for the afternoon sessions, providing a common vocabulary for everyone attending the more in-depth afternoon LaunchCamp sessions.
The Social Media Bootcamp is for both skeptics and those who need to convince the skeptics. It’s also perfect for “intrapraneurs”: innovators within larger organizations who are trying to create change. While many of today’s entrepreneurs understand social well, this is also an excellent chance to make sure you have all your bases covered before your launch.
Schedule
8:00AM: Registration Opens, Breakfast
8:30AM: Opening Keynote
9:00AM: Social Media 101
In many ways, social media is simply the logical evolution of communication tools that were originally developed in decades past. In other ways, it’s very different. This session goes over the history and evolution of social media from the Web 1.0 days and before.
9:15AM: The Implications of Social
Social is changing how companies are doing business, not just how they’re marketing themselves. Understand the full spectrum of applications and ramifications of social media on your organization, and what this might mean for your communications policies.
9:45AM:Morning Break
10:00AM: The 3 Cs of Social, Part 1: Content
It’s all about the content, but how do you create it and distribute it efficiently?
10:30AM: The 3 Cs of Social, Part 2: Community
11:00AM: The 3 Cs of Social, Part 3: Conversation
Organized By: Social Media Breakfast
Hosted By: Microsoft
In Association With: LaunchCamp 2010

Social Media Breakfast Bootcamp is an educational event more than a networking event–the idea being to attract some new folks to the Social Media Breakfast. There is a cost associated with this: $7.00, or included in $25.00 price for the All Event Pass).
January 20th, 2010 — SMB Austin, Upcoming breakfasts
We kick off our 2010 SMB Austin schedule with a presentation from one of Austin’s fastest-growing companies: PetRelocation.com
Here’s the event overview:
- Date: Wednesday, January 27, 2010
- Time: 7:30-9:30am
- Location: Mandola’s Market , 4700 West Guadalupe, Suite 12, Austin, TX 78751. [Map] | [Google Map]
- Cost: The event itself is free to attend, but attendees pay for the cost of their own drink and/or food. See the Mandonla’s Market offerings for coffee and pastries.

Event program: Getting social with PetRelocation.com
Join Kevin O’Brien and Rachel Farris from PetRelocation.com for a look into their furry, four-legged online world of social media. For tail-wagging evangelists, social platforms are quickly becoming the fastest-growing dog parks out there. Kevin and Rachel will speak from two very different perspectives: 1) the CEO’s overview of why social media is important to the company 2) how a social-media employee manages the day-to-day reality of keeping the online conversation going.
Kevin and Rachel will also discuss how C-level executives and managers can work together to take new-media ideas and turn them into results.
Check out PetRelocation.com’s social-media content:
Blog | Facebook Page | Twitter: @PetRelocation | YouTube | Online community
About the presenters
Kevin O’Brien (@_OB_) is the CEO and co-founder of PetRelocation.com. Prior to starting PetRelocation.com with his wife Angie O’Brien, Kevin was an early employee of HotJobs.com, from its startup days in 1998 to going public and then being acquired by Yahoo! in 2001. This move allowed Kevin to self-fund a doggie daycare and pet taxi service that became PetRelocation.com. Although it began as a local business, PetRelocation.com has evolved into a worldwide door-to-door pet travel service, in no small part due to its large online presence. Kevin, never one to shy away from new-media trends, has continued to push the pet-industry envelope by fostering the company’s social culture online as a way of bringing together communities of pet lovers on microsites like MyPetMove.com and TwitPets.com.
Rachel Farris (@MeanRachel) is the director of PR and new media for PetRelocation.com. She was hired as the second employee at PetRelocation.com in 2006 and while working in sales and customer service, she offered to start the company blog. As social media became more important to the PetRelocation.com brand, Rachel was promoted to a full-time online evangelist, authoring the PetRelocation blog and managing the company’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Since then, she has continued to collaborate with Kevin to grow PetRelocation.com’s online presence through social media by securing partnerships and building relationships with other pet, travel, and relocation websites.
Agenda for Austin’s SMB12
* 7:30-8:15am
Event begins. Food, drink, and mingling.
* 8:15-9:00am
Presentation from Kevin and Rachel and Q&A/discussion
* 9:00-9:30am
More mingling and wrap-up
About the Austin Social Media Breakfast
The Austin Social Media Breakfast series is organized by Amie Throndson, Maura Thomas, and SMB founder Bryan Person; it brings together social media veterans and newcomers alike for a morning of eating, meeting, sharing, and learning.
Marketers, PR pros, entrepreneurs, business communicators, bloggers, videobloggers, podcasters, students, new-media enthusiasts, Twitterers, community managers, recruiters, online social networkers, etc. are all welcome!
Making online media?
Please use the #SMBAustin hashtag on Twitter and SMBAustin tag on Flickr.
Questions?
Please contact:
Bryan Person: Bryan – AT – SocialMediaBreakfast – DOT – com

January 18th, 2010 — SMB DC, Upcoming breakfasts
DC’s inaugural Social Media Breakfast (#SMBDC) is this Monday, January 25 at 8am at Teaism on Penn Quarter. We were overwhelmed by the great response and though our inaugural event is sold out, we hope many more will tune in to our live stream and join the conversation: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/smbdc
Next week, we will talk about Social Media in 2010. With January practically behind us, what trends or predictions do you believe will prevail? How can we be visionaries in a space as dynamic as social media?
Without further ado, meet the speakers who will help us start 2010 on the right foot:
* Original copy courtesy of speakers’ blog sites and Google Profiles.
Geoff Livingston (@geoffliving): Geoff co-founded Zoetica, a social enterprise that provides superior communication consulting, training, and strategy to help mindful organizations affect social change. He has worked as a public relations strategist in the Washington, D.C. region for more than 16 years. Dubbed a “local blogging guru” by the Washington Post, Geoff’s award-winning book on new media “Now is Gone” was released in 2007. The book has been cited by the Wall Street Journal as a valuable resource for social media. He continues to blog about communications on the Buzz Bin. He sold his social media boutique Livingston Communications to CRT/tanaka in April of 2009. Some of his professional experiences include United Way of America, Save Darfur, the Goodwill of Greater Washington, Environmental Defense Fund, Live Earth, ChildFund International, the Campus Kitchens Project, the Philanthropy 2.0 Project, Network Solutions, Sully Erna (Godsmack lead singer), and many others.
Shashi Bellamkonda (@shashib): Shashi works at the heart of Web hosting company, Network Solutions, as their first-ever ‘Social Media Swami’ (Director –Social Media). He has helped Network Solutions move into the online space to actively listen to and interact with its customers. Shashi has presented to several audiences on ” ‘Social Media Tools for Small Business’, ‘How to Sell Social Media to Your Boss’ and “Online Reputation Management – Best Practices & Lessons Learned”, at national and regional conferences. He writes a regular DC Social Media Marketing column for the Examiner and has been featured on the Washingtonian magazine’s “Washington’s Top 100 Tech Titans list,” the Washington Business Journal and other publications. Shashi also blogs about social media technology and the coolest new sites and tech-toys to check out. Shashi lives for technology, testing new innovations and helping people with small businesses to succeed. A self-described ‘Internet junkie’ and thought leader.
Alex Howard (@digiphile): Alex is the associate editor of SearchCompliance.com at TechTarget. His work there focuses on how regulations affect IT operations, including issues of data protection, privacy, security and enterprise IT strategy. Before moving his focus to security and compliance, Alex was the associate editor of WhatIs.com, an online IT encyclopedia. In that role, he researched and wrote about nearly every aspect of enterprise IT. Alex is intrigued by technological change, taken with ideas, cooking (he was an #IronChefDC participant in December 2010), the great outdoors, books, dogs, and media, in all forms.
Talk about setting the bar high, huh?
Meet our Heads of Table:

Speacial thanks to: Andy Carvin, Daria Steigman, Shonali Burke, and Mike Schaffer, who will lead conversation at their tables after our speaker’s kick the morning off. Feel free to pick their brains while you enjoy breakfast.
Important notes:
If your plans have changed and you will not be able to attend, please let us now as soon as possible. This way, we can give our hopeful guests on the waitlist the chance to attend the event.
Don’t forget to bring $10 for breakfast. We promise deliciousness.
If you’d like to serve as Head of Table to lead discussion at your table, please let us know by Twitter mention or DM (@smcdc) or email us at socialmediaclubdc@gmail.com. We still have two spots left.
And as always, we are looking for sponsors to partner with us in order to keep food costs down. If you are interested in sponsoring this or any future Social Media Breakfast, please contact us.
See you Monday!