Archive for the ‘Service Reviews’ Category


FaxCompare.com Announce Critical Updates to Review Website

February 22nd, 2012

With a myriad of internet fax service reviews, FaxCompare.com announces new updates, ensuring the latest and most accurate reviews.

Austin, TX (PRWEB) January 22, 2012

FaxCompare.com has today announced critical new updates to their ever-growing database of online fax service reviews.

The website is a benchmark in helping those looking for internet fax services to find the service most suitable for their needs. New reviews have been added for Send2Fax, SaveOnFaxes, SmartFax, RapidFax and Max Email.

Wanting to always remain up to date, the site’s team of researchers are about to launch a fresh batch of information onto the site, as Marketing Manager Koby Wong explains:

To my knowledge, FaxCompare is the only online fax comparison and review site that regularly re-tests the online fax services we’ve reviewed. The freshness of the information on our site is one of our key differentiators from other review sites on the internet, he says.

Launched in 2007, the site has built a solid reputation as an easy ‘apples to apples’ comparison website of some of the internet’s top online fax services.

“At the end of the day, our goal is to save our customers time, stress and money by doing the heavy work at our end and allowing them to choose the best online fax service for their needs,” says Wong.

To check out FaxCompare’s reviews today, and get yourself on the road to finding the perfect internet fax service for your needs, please visit: http://www.faxcompare.com

About Fax Compare

FaxCompare was created in 2007 and has been helping people select an online fax service that fits their needs ever since. FaxCompare’s goal is to create an easy apples to apples comparison of the top online fax services so visitors to the site can save time and money.

Contact Details

Larry Bills

401 Congress Avenue, Suite 1540

Austin, TX 78701, USA

larry(at)choosewhat(dot)com

512-448-9031

Website Url: http://www.faxcompare.com/

###

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prwebonline/fax/prweb9124241.htm

£20m to be saved – but no facilities will be lost

Off
February 20th, 2012

A SENIOR politician in charge of making 20m of budget savings at South Tyneside Council believes the authority can emerge leaner but stronger.

Coun Ed Malcolm also gave assurances that no borough community facility would be axed – and that frontline services would be protected over the next year.

Savings are to be achieved through a series of service reviews across all departments and by developing “new and more efficient” working.

No area is too small or too large for the savings review – from the closure of mobile toilets to sending less waste to expensive landfill sites.

Coun Malcolm, who was putting a series of recommendations before the council’s decision-making cabinet today, admitted that more council workers would need to go.

It comes as the axe is set to fall on a number of senior management posts.

But Coun Malcolm, the council’s lead member for resources and innovation, says the authority is committed to avoiding compulsory redundancies while pushing ahead with a series of regeneration projects.

Meanwhile, the cabinet was being asked to endorse a freeze in council tax for the next year, and an average £5.80 increase in rents.

Coun Malcolm also dismissed the notion that the council is “cash-strapped”, saying: “I want to put that to bed once and for all.

“We are still a multi-million-pound organisation.

“Yes, there is a shortage of cash and these are challenging times, but we will still be spending £150m over the next two years.”

He highlighted investment in several projects, including a major new solar-efficient housing development in Reed Street, South Shields, and the Green Incubator office development in Laygate, a new community school and swimming pool in Jarrow and the “imminent” redevelopment of Hebburn Town Centre.

Coun Malcolm said: “This is a budget for challenging times, but we have no plans to close children’s centres, no plans to close leisure centres, community centres, youth clubs or schools.”

Although closures may not be on the agenda, the public will see some changes, including reduced opening hours at libraries and increased charges for pest control.

The council is also pushing on with the creation of ‘community hubs’, where several council and health services are housed under one roof.

Coun Malcolm added: “This is a budget for changing times, but we will protect frontline services and ensure no facilities are taken away from the public.

“We will continue to work with our partners, with other councils and with the voluntary sector.”

Twitter: @shieldsGazPaul

Questions mount over Maine treasurer’s property-tax breaks

Off
February 19th, 2012

AUGUSTA Questions lingered Thursday over whether State Treasurer Bruce Poliquin improperly used a longstanding conservation law to obtain property-tax breaks.

Such inquiries could soon come from theGeorgetown Board of Selectmen.

Board Chairman Geoffrey Birdsall said Thursday that no resident in the small coastal town had complained that Poliquins12.3-acre waterfront property was included in a 2009 Legislature-commissioned study as an example of a potential misuse of the states tree growth tax relief program.

However, Birdsall said, that could change, given the media attention generated by the outspoken Republican treasurer.

I expect the microscope will soon be on our little town, Birdsall said.

The 2009 study of the Maine Tree Growth Tax Law program was neither reviewed by the Legislature, nor did Georgetown appear to initiate contact with the Maine Forest Service to determine whether Poliquin was following the terms of a 10-year timber management plan.

The 40-year-old program provides landowners with property-tax breaks in exchange for sustainable timber-harvesting practices on their land.

The program has yielded the state treasurer approximately $50,000 in tax breaks since 2004, according to county tax records.

The tree growth program is administered at the state level. Landowners adopt a plan that the Forest Service reviews every 10 years. In the interim, notifying the Forest Service of potential misuse often falls to local tax assessors.

Tax records show that Poliquin has continued to receive the tax breaks in the program, which has raised questions about whether hes following his timber management plan, or if the town has overlooked his potential misuse of the conservation program.

Poliquins deed from the Sagadahoc County Register of Deeds says, … trees may be thinned only for purposes of view, and the environment shall be completely protected at all times from the excessive cutting of trees.

The deed raises more questions about why Poliquins property was identified with seven problem parcels in the statewide study.

Birdsall said he couldnt recall any complaints about Poliquins property. However, the town played some role in identifying the parcel as a potential violation of the tree growth program.

Geoff Herman, director of state and federal relations for the Maine Municipal Association, was part of the eight-person task force that the Legislature in 2008 charged with reviewing the tree growth program. The MMA has frequently advocated for better enforcement of the law, the misuse of which, he said, has cost municipalities significant tax revenue.

Herman said the MMA in 2008 notified its member towns about the study and asked them to submit examples of potential tree growth misuse. Thats how Poliquins property was identified in the report.

Birdsall, who served as a Georgetown selectman in 2008, said he couldnt remember whether the board was notified that Poliquins property was cited in the report.

The Georgetown Board of Selectmen doubles as the towns tax assessor. Municipal assessors often notify the Forest Service if tree growth landowners arent harvesting timber or doing so in a sustainable manner. However, the Georgetown board also has a private contract with Van Tuinen Tax Assessing Services, which may have identified Poliquins property without the boards knowledge.

William Van Tuinen, who owns the assessing service, did not respond to a call for comment.

Birdsall said the Board of Selectmen likely would address the issue during its Feb. 16 meeting.

Meanwhile, Poliquins political opponents pounced Thursday. Sen. Troy Jackson, D-Allagash, called on the state treasurer to release his forest management plan.

Landowners tree growth management plans are considered proprietary information.

This is the publics business, Jackson said. If the taxpayers of Maine are going to shoulder Mr. Poliquins fair share of taxes for his oceanfront mansion, then we have a right to know whether or not hes in compliance with the very law thats giving him this break.

Herman and the MMA have expressed frustration with the confidentiality of the timber management plans. He said sealing the plans makes it difficult for local assessors to determine whether a landowner is honoring the agreement that often yields significant tax breaks that would otherwise be municipal revenue.

Poliquin, who is under scrutiny for possible constitutional and ethics violations, did not respond to requests for comment.

Poliquin made several attempts to reduce his property tax prior to enrolling in the program.

Poliquin bought the Georgetown property in 2001 for $1.7 million. In 2003, the value of the property climbed to $2.9 million after Poliquin razed existing structures and built a 6,444-square-foot house and other buildings.

In January 2004, Poliquin asked the town to reduce his tax assessment by more than $1.1 million. The abatement was denied, as was Poliquins appeal to the Sagadahoc County commissioners.

Later in 2004, Poliquin enrolled in the tree growth program.

smistler@sunjournal.com

Colorado: Forest Service to review ski area avalanches

Off
February 17th, 2012

By Bob Berwyn

VAIL — A US Forest Service review of two recent inbounds avalanche deaths at Colorado ski areas will be aimed at determining whether the resorts followed all required snow safety procedures required under their permits, and whether any changes are needed, according to Eagle/Holy Cross district ranger Dave Neely.

Christopher Norris, 28, of Evergreen was killed by a slide Sunday afternoon (Jan. 22) on the Mary Jane side of Winter Park Resort, and 13-year-old Taft Conlin of Eagle died the same day in avalanche on a closed slope at Vail Mountain.

Its our responsibility to oversee the operations of ski areas on public lands, said Ken Kowynia, the agencys winter sports program administrator in the Rocky Mountain region.

After expressing condolences to the families of the skiers who died, Kowynia said, When we have a serious incident our protocol is to do a review of ski area operations and the response to the incident to see if theres anything we can learn from this or anything we need to consider changing in response.

The review is being done in collaboration with the Colorado Avalanche Information Center and the resorts, said Kowynia, who visited the Winter Park avalanche site Tuesday and plans to go to Vail Wednesday.

Kowynia said that, from what hes heard so far, the incident at Vail was a straightforward event, involving a skier disregarding a posted closure. He praised the ski patrol response.

They responded with great skill and did a remarkable job finding him and they should be commended for doing so, Kowynia said.

The Vail ski patrol was working under difficult conditions Sunday, and again on Monday, with mass violations of closures on various parts of the mountain, according to a source familiar with the ongoing review of the accident. At one point on Monday, ski patrollers were reporting up to 60 simultaneous violations of closures in Siberia Bowl.

Kowynia said that, in order to remain safe while skiing at a resort, visitors do need to respect closures and other signage.

The slide at Vail was on the upper part of Prima Cornice, which hadnt been opened at all yet this season, according to Scott Toepfer, an avalanche forecaster with the Colorado Avalanche Information Center who visited the site Monday to compile a report.

Toepfer said the slide was about 200-feet wide and ran about 400 vertical feet in complex terrain, with the fracture line at the crown of the avalanche breaking about 18 inches to as deep as 36 inches in spots. In some places the avalanche ran all the way to the ground or on a hard layer very close to the ground.

More frequent inbounds avalanche incidents

Similar Forest Service reviews were conducted following other recent avalanche deaths at ski areas, which have been increasing in recent years, according to Doug Abromeit, director of the Forest Service National Avalanche Center in Idaho.

Last winter, the director of the Wolf Creek ski patrol died in an avalanche at the San Juan ski area during an avalanche control mission. A Jackson Hole ski patroller died from injuries suffered in a Jan. 2010 slide and a Boulder man died inbounds at A-Basin in 2005. There have been several other inbounds and sidecountry ski area avalanche deaths in Utah in the past few years.

Abromeit said that, while the chances of a skier or snowboarder dying in a slide within the boundaries of a resort remain miniscule, the ski industry is aware of the trend. Last weeks meeting of the National Ski Areas Association included some discussion of inbounds and sidecountry avalanche safety, he said, adding that ski resort snow safety experts do a phenomenal job of controlling the avalanche risk, working with what is essentially an inexact science.

It definitely jumps out at me its definitely atypical. Theres no denying the number of fatalities within ski area boundaries is on the rise. Its on every snow safety directors radar, Abromeit said.

Theres a very elevated level of awareness about this among snow safety pros because of the new fat skis, he said, referring to the fact that modern equipment has made it much easier for skiers to maneuver in avalanche-prone terrain.

Abromeit said the cluster of accidents could partially be attributed to pent-up powder demand.

Up until the last few days, people couldnt get off the man-made snow runs. Then it snowed. All of a sudden, dealing with the mountain was almost like dealing with the backcountry, he said.

Its a perfect storm scenario and there have been several reactions. One of them is, at the NSAA meeting, there was discussion of, how do we deal with this? he said.

One area the industry is looking at is how to more efficiently mitigate avalanche risks with the use of explosives. To that end, a Montana State University professor is studying the effectiveness of different types of blasts and the placement of explosives, Abromeit said, explaining that those efforts might be one of the most recent significant developments in the snow safety field.

Additionally, the Colorado Avalanche Information Center will talk with snow safety directors at Colorado ski areas about whats working and whats not working in terms of avalanche control and risk managent, Abromeit added.

What it all boils down to is, its an imperfect science. Theres a lot of spatial variability. Ski patrollers can reduce the risk, but they cant eliminate it, he said.

As skiers use the new gear to access inbounds terrain that was nearly inaccessible just a few year ago, they should consider the fact that, even inbounds, off-piste conditions can prevail. Along with avalanches, powder-seeking tree skiers face a non-avalanche immersion threat, he said, referring to the increased numbers of tree-well deaths, when skiers or boarders are simply trapped and suffocate in deep, dense snow.

The accidents make it clear that avalanche hazards can be reduced but not completely eliminated, said American Avalanche Association president Dale Atkins, a former forecaster with the Colorado Avalanche Information Center.

To have two deaths within a ski area is pretty exceptional, Atkins said. Safety is an illusion in the mountains. Even though the ski areas do a phenomenal job, and people who are educated have a wonderful time, youre dealing with Mother Nature. Were managing risk to reduce the threat.

Reaching a higher level of safety — especially with regard to inbounds threats — ultimately will require a change in attitudes, with skiers and riders taking responsibility for their safety.

You dont see people sneaking around closed signs on highways, Atkins said, suggesting that many recreational skiers tend to take potential risks at ski areas lightly.

All of us have our favorite stash in the ski areas, but generally they start getting skied in November. This year, there hasnt been any ski traffic in those spots through the middle of January, he said, explaining that the normal compaction process that helps stabilize the snowpack in off-piste areas wasnt happening this season.

This year that snow has been on the ground for two or three months, just getting more and more rotten.

Secret Sessions of Congress

Off
January 25th, 2012

Congress has the constitutional authority to conduct its business in secret and to close its proceedings to the public whenever it deems secrecy necessary.  A new report from the Congressional Research Service reviews the justification, history and frequency of secret sessions of Congress.

Since 1929, the Senate has held 56 secret sessions, generally for reasons of national security or for consideration of impeachment questions. On December 20, 2010, for example, the Senate met in closed session to discuss the New START Treaty with Russia, the CRS report said.  Since 1830, the House has met behind closed doors only four times: in 1979, 1980, 1983, and 2008.

The proceedings of a secret session are not published unless the relevant chamber votes, during the meeting or at a later time, to release them. Then, those portions released are printed in the Congressional Record.  See Secret Sessions of the House and Senate: Authority, Confidentiality, and Frequency, November 30, 2011.

Business Card Section of ChooseWhat.com Updates UPrinting and GreatFX Reviews

Off
January 7th, 2012

We continue to regularly update our business card service reviews to ensure that the latest information is displayed on our website and that it accurately reflects a providers service offering.

Shake-up of Kent’s libraries planned by county council

Off
January 4th, 2012

by political editor Paul Francis

Shops, surgeries and schools could all have a role to play in
Kents library service under a far-reaching shake-up planned by
Kent County Council.

But details of whether any libraries will have to close remain
unclear as the council says it plans to listen to what local
communities want to see happen before making specific
decisions.

And there is no indication yet of the extent of possible job
losses.

There are already concerns that unless volunteer groups or
parish councils step in, some smaller libraries may end up
shutting.

County councillors and library staffwere told about the
strategy yesterday.

Under the
review, KCC says it wants residents to be at the forefront of the
debate about what should happen to the 99 libraries.

It also plans to extend supermarket-style self-service tills in
more libraries raising the prospect of job losses and
says book borrowers could end up in shops and surgeries rather than
stand-alone libraries.

Library chiefs say they want to listen to new ideas about how
best the service can be run at a time when the budget is being
cut.

It wants groups of councillors on so-called locality
boards some of which have yet to be set up to examine
options.

The authority says it has no specific target for the amount of
money it needs to save.

The council has acknowledged the issue of cuts is a sensitive
one that could lead to legal challenges, as has happened
elsewhere.

Cath Anley, head of KCCs library service, said the review was
not just about transferring libraries to volunteer groups.

There are some neat solutions that will improve services by
allowing us to join up other services. Schools, shops and surgeries
could all help us, she said.

We want to sit down with local members and explain what
opportunities might be there for us.

Asked about the prospect of campaigners challenging any cuts
under legislation that requires councils to provide a library
service, she added: The legislation is flexible enough but we will
only really know if there is a challenge.

Cllr Mike Hill, cabinet member for customer and communities,
said: This approach represents a fresh way forward for library
services.

It balances the needs to modernise services, work with
communities to find innovative and efficient ways to maintain a
local library service and meet our statutory responsibilities.

However, opposition parties have expressed misgivings.

Cllr Ian Chittenden said: Some of these locality boards havent
even been set up and are dealing with two of the most contentious
issues facing the council in the library and youth service
reviews.

What happens if the local community wants to keep its library
but theres no offer from the voluntary sector?

The issue of libraries is sensitive for the ruling Conservatives
at County Hall.

A backbench revolt forced earlier plans, involving the potential
closure of up to 40 libraries, off the agenda.

The review is expected to last several months, with a range of
public meetings likely to be involved.

Friday, November 18 2011

How Blogs Influence Branding,Purchases and Recommendations

Off
January 1st, 2012

Bloggers, from hobbyists to professionals, often write about brands, and
their growing influence should make brand representatives continually
evaluate the relationships they have with these bloggers.

Most bloggers write about brands in some way or another. According to
the State of the Blogosphere 2011 report from blog directory website
Technorati, 38% of all bloggers post about brands that they love or hate
and 34% write product or service reviews. Professional full-time
bloggers or part-time professional bloggers who write as a way to
supplement their income are more likely to blog about brands than their
hobbyist, corporate or entrepreneur counterparts.

Bloggers are increasing in their influence over readers and other
bloggers. Last years Technorati State of the Blogosphere reported
that 29% of bloggers are influenced by other blogs they read. This year,
that number jumped to 68%.

As bloggers gain influence and write about brands, the relationships
between blog writers and brand representatives are important for
companies to focus on. Most bloggers have a good relationship with brand
representatives. Nearly half of all bloggers (49%) characterized their
interactions with such representatives as somewhat or very favorable.
Only 3% said their interactions were not at all favorable. However, 40%
of all bloggers said they didnt know how to characterize their
interactions with brand representatives.

This large group of unsure respondents could have mixed feelings about
the communications they receive from these brand representatives,
affecting their relationships with the reps and their brands. Of all
bloggers, 17% said brand representatives had asked for things that would
compromise the credibility or content standards of the blog. This is
roughly the same percentage of those that said the representatives were
knowledgeable about their blogs and content (14%), are genuinely
interested in building a relationship (16%) and provide information that
has value for readers (23%).

As bloggers continue to grow in influence, their coverage of brands and
their interactions with brands products, services and employees will be
of greater interest to companies. Brand representatives who connect
with bloggers must be sure to work with these writers to keep the
relationships thriving.

Source: eMarketer

How MiNeeds, a Local-Services Startup Run by Software Guys, Softened Up for …

Off
January 1st, 2012

“Then we said, ‘You know what? We’re very data-driven,’” Malhas says. “We have a philosophy in this company: It’s not my opinion or your opinion. Let’s let the data decide.”

So they tested the idea with a wedding services site that had a special look and feel, and the results were basically a slam dunk. Conversion rates of people coming to the site for wedding services doubled, and MiWeddingNeeds was born. Even after a very quiet debut in February, some 5,000-7,000 brides per month are coming to the site to help plan their big day.

If MiNeeds does its job right, a good chunk of those brides-to-be could become repeat customers. More than a quarter of them are already searching for honeymoon packages to add on after the wedding, Malhas says. And it’s obvious where things go from there.

“Suddenly, she starts to think about the mortgage,” Malhas says. “When she comes back from the honeymoon, she starts looking for home-related services.” Baby-related services might not be too far behind. “The lifetime value of that bride is massive,” he says.

That success is a big part of why MiNeeds sees a bright future for its twist on local services search. The startup lets consumers post the services they want performed and gets professionals to bid for the business, offering up reviews and ratings to help make the choice. Outside of the wedding vertical, the startup still maintains its standalone site for all kinds of services, from photographers to house cleaners to lawyers. Investors include Paul Thelen, founder of Seattle’s BigFish Games, and former Yahoo chief data officer Usama Fayyad.

The company is definitely not alone. There are several other players in the sector, including membership-based service reviews site Angie’s List, which just raised more than $100 million in its public stock-market debut. Other companies like San Mateo, CA-based startup Redbeacon or ServiceMagic, a unit of media conglomerate IAC, use a similar mechanism of letting professionals bid for consumer jobs.

MiNeeds claims more than 50,000 service providers have signed up so far to bid for jobs through its website. Servicemagic claims more than 80,000, and Malhas says Yellow Pages has in the neighborhood of 800,000. But MiNeeds seeing strong growth and should have more than 100,000 professionals signed up by early 2012, Malhas says.

“Once we go over six figures in terms of professionals, we’re no longer a small player. Even today, I’m sure people are eyeing us and thinking, ‘Who are these guys?’” Malhas says. “Once we’re over six figures, it’s at a point where they can no longer ignore us.”

MiNeeds, which has offices in Seattle and New York, is generating revenue but focusing on growth over profitability, Malhas says. The service is free to use for consumers and free to join for service providers, but MiNeeds requires a paid subscription from the skilled professional to actually communicate with possible customers. Prices are tiered, from about $25 to $100 per month.

As for the possibility of other verticals to follow the wedding example, Malhas says MiNeeds has hedged its bets by securing domain names and doing some preliminary research. So far, shopping for home or legal services, for instance, may not require a special site. But they’ll keep their minds open this time.

“Looking at the data there, it does not seem that we need to have a white label for each of those industries,” Malhas says. “Then again, I might be completely wrong, and it might be worth launching it to see the conversion rates.”

Curt Woodward is senior editor at Xconomy Seattle. Reach me at cwoodward@xconomy.com. Get story feeds and more on Twitter @curtwoodward and Facebook on.fb.me/curtwoodward.

Blow-dry bar concept heats up

Off
December 29th, 2011

Sharon Dhaliwal, 33, is one of those clients. As her time in the chair comes to an end at Blo Blow Dry Bar, she studies herself critically and then smiles, satisfied.

At my regular hairdresser, this would cost $65 or $70, says Ms. Dhaliwal, looking at her thick, dark hair now teased up slightly at the back and falling down into glossy curls from there. Here, the 30 minutes of styling has cost $35. I usually come just for special occasions this particular Saturday, shes off to a birthday party at a lounge but Im thinking of starting to do it every week.

Ms. Dhaliwal and many other women like her women who want a little hit of pampering and glamour but dont want to pay a fortune for it are the target audience for Blo, a new entrant into Canadas $4.5-billion market for personal-care services.

Its a hyper-charged and rapidly shifting market, with day spas, nail and makeup bars, and salons offering everything from mens facials to braids-only weaves, all competing for recession-weary customers and their limited discretionary dollars.

Blos essential premise is that it will provide that slice of glamour by streamlining what it offers and charging less: No haircuts. No colouring. Just a wash and a blow-dry style for less than your regular hairdresser was charging you.

Blo got its start in 2007, when 20-year-old Vancouverite Devon Brooks came up with the idea for one of her class assignments at the London College of Fashion.

Ms. Brookss mother, Judy, a self-described serial entrepreneur, had already started two businesses in Vancouver. She looked at her daughters business plan for a blow-dry bar, thought it was a great idea, borrowed some money on a line of credit, and worked with her daughter to start the Yaletown salon in June of that year.

It produced positive cash flow within the first month. By July, 2008, the Blo team had opened two more salons one at a downtown hotel, and one on Granville Street near Vancouvers old-money Shaughnessy neighbourhood.

Around this time, Blo had been brought to the attention of Toronto-based entrepreneur Ari Yakobson and his business partner, Paul Spindler, who realized that this new concept could be meshed with their experience in franchising hair salons. The two already had a salon franchise called Melonhead focused on childrens haircuts.

I was instantly impressed, says Mr. Yakobson. Its an affordable luxury, something that makes a person feel great without spending an absolute fortune.

He also liked the way Ms. Brookss team had developed a franchise-ready system that laid out exactly how each salon should look and operate. Within months, Mr. Yakobson had an agreement for an undisclosed amount to purchase Blo and merge it with his Melonhead operations; the new outfit, Head Co. Inc., would combine Ms. Brookss concept with Mr. Yakobsons and Mr. Spindlers franchising experience, keeping the Blo brand completely distinct.

Today, there are 18 Blo salons five in the United States, with two more due to open in Miami this month.

But, while the concept has proved successful so far, the road ahead is bumpier.

Blo, which started out as one of the pioneers in the market, is now facing considerable competition, especially in the United States, where Mr. Yakobson and Mr. Spindler are concentrating all of their efforts.

The company also faces an uncertain economy, and the challenge of maintaining standards in a business that is all about service. Its not like a hamburger, Mr. Yakobson says. Its all about the training.

While Blo promotes itself in marketing materials as North Americas original blow-dry bar, the evidence suggests otherwise. Forensic Internet research reveals that New Yorker Julie Flakstad started a new kind of salon in the citys meat-packing district in 2005 called Blow, the New York blow dry bar. By the end of the first year, she had served 10,000 customers and had a profit margin approaching 15 per cent from an original $300,000 investment.

But even if Blo wasnt the first, Judy Brooks did manage to create a unique and unforgettable brand for when the inevitable competitors came along.

Every salon has the hot-pink counters and mod pink lampshade, the Philippe Starck clear-plastic Louis Ghost Chairs and the clear-glass pendants above the stations, all the choices of Vancouver interior designer Lesli Balagno.

The design team also came up with a name for everything, using the Starbucks model of never calling something a medium when you can get customers to use the word grande.

Every salon has a book with a menu of cutely named hairstyles: Holly Would, Red Carpet, Hunt Club. The linguistic cuteness also extends to the titles for lead stylists and customers Style Bosses and Hair Cadets, respectively and, of course, the name of the salon itself, Blo, with its frequent exhortations via hot-pink buttons and web messages to Blo Me.

We just nailed that fricking brand so well. It was just cheeky and fun, says Judy Brooks.

Blo was a new kind of venture for Ms. Brooks, whose early career included teaching aerobic-exercise classes for Vancouver fitness entrepreneur Barbara Crompton in the late 1980s. In 1990, when she was only 27, she formed a company with two other fitness entrepreneurs/young moms that focused on injury prevention.

Though she doesnt own BodyLogic any more, it still bears her touch: a cool name, a unique logo and a codified system for assessing workplace problems. Ms. Brooks used that same business structure on her second company, a workplace conflict management business called ProActive ReSolutions, and eventually on Blo.

Mr. Yakobson liked the solid image the Brooks team had created. That wasnt all that he saw, though.

We were attracted to the aesthetics and the look, but also the depth of the system, he says, using the franchisors favourite word for what is, essentially, a how-to guide that lays out every detail of how each salon should look, feel and operate. Blo had the operating manuals youd expect for a company with 300 locations, he says.

Mr. Yakobson and his team made some adjustments to Blo after the acquisition went through, adding more hair-washing stations, a better floor plan and a slightly toned-down shtick. We have reduced some of the sexual innuendoes, he says.

But the basics have stayed the same, and Blos image still comes across as unforgettably provocative which, as Mr. Yakobson has discovered, draws more potential franchisees than does his Melonhead brand.

Blo is an easier sell because of the sexiness. The big cities like it. It sometimes doesnt work so well in the Midwest or in suburbs. But, at the same time, it gets attention so its always a balance.

While Mr. Yakobson is convinced that the sexiness will continue to sell as Blo expands into the United States, unlike in Canada, he doesnt have the field all to himself.

In the last three years, the US has seen a wave of new independent blow-dry operations and the launch of one other significant franchise chain, called Drybar. That chain, started in Los Angeles in 2008, now has 12 locations in California, Arizona, Texas, Georgia and New York, and is talking about expanding to other cities.

It has gone for a slightly more sedate image than Blo. Although Drybar also has cutesy hairstyle names, based on drinks (Manhattan, Cosmopolitan, Southern Comfort), the brands dominant colours are the more neutral charcoal grey and a sunny yellow. There are no blo me puns. (Nor, as is the case with www.blomedry.com, is its site likely to lead a careless Googler to the web page for a far different kind of consumer service involving blowing.)

Mr. Yakobson acknowledges that there are a lot of blow-dry bars around these days, some opting for a slightly different look, some sailing very close to the wind of Blos image.

Theres nothing we can do to prevent someone from opening a blow bar. There are always copycats, he says. But we aggressively defend our brand.

He cant stop a chain like Drybar, which has emulated many of the elements of Blo while steering clear of exact reproduction but Head Company has sent out more than one cease and desist letter to salons that have come too close.

But even if there were competition in Canada, franchising expert Wayne Maillet says, its not necessarily a bad thing. McDonalds, Wendys and Burger King have all managed to come up with slightly different angles to selling meat on buns: one kid-friendly, one fresh-focused, one emphasizing we do it your way.

Similarly, competing blow-dry salons can target different markets: younger, older, single, family-oriented, and so on. The bigger challenge for franchises, he says, is developing clearly defined operating procedures where the customer is going to have a consistent experience.

Mr. Yakobson says thats why Blo has chosen to pace its growth. We could be growing significantly faster if we wanted, he notes. Were growing through a controlled environment. We want to make sure we have the right partners and the right locations.

Blo franchisees have to pay $25,000 for the franchise, as well as 6 per cent of their gross revenues as a royalty fee, and variable advertising fees.

On top of that, franchisees typically invest $200,000 to set up their small shops between 400 and 1,000 square feet and cover all the usual operating expenses that any business would.

Mr. Yakobson expects to sign agreements with 10 to 12 more franchisees within the next year, all in American big-city markets like New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Washington and Chicago.

The company would also like to develop franchises in Quebec, something it hasnt managed yet because of language laws and other complications. But Blos new home turf, Toronto, is full up, he says, with eight locations in the metropolitan area. Thats enough for a service that caters to a tight niche. We are very conscious of the investment by the franchisees and we dont want to jeopardize that.

One of the essential elements for any franchise is a head office that ensures franchisees help maintain the company brand, by rigidly sticking to exactly the same look, quality of service and procedures.

A franchise company that sells a product at least has some control over what the customer gets, by delivering the same taco ingredients, fitness equipment or cups to all of its franchisees. But a franchise based on services, like Blo, depends on the scary human variable: a person who may be fast, slow, more talented, less well trained, chattier, gruffer or somehow different in any one of a hundred ways than others delivering the same service.

Reviews from the influential Yelp website make it all too clear that customers are hyper-aware of variances in service. For the Hollywood Blo, the comments range from awesome to Blo Blow Dry Bar blew for lack of a better term, with occasional references to better service at Drybar.

In Vancouver, the reviews cover the same wide spectrum f rom I had a terrible experience to my hair felt like it was floating, along with more than a few that seem suspiciously promotional. More often than anything else, the reviews detail the great or awful service from a particular stylist.

To create a level standard of service, Blo requires that all staff at a new salon attend Blo U (yes, really), which seems to consist of a chain-letter method of training. A senior Blo stylist oops, Style Director teaches one class to the new recruits, then picks out one of them to be a Chief Style Boss. That person gets additional, intense training, which she then passes on to the rest of the staff.

Mr. Yakobson says that, in addition to Blo U, the company works to maintain standards and support franchisees with periodic visits from head-office personnel. Franchisors arent in the business of policing, he notes, so our primary role is to be their helper. lsquo;These are the four things youre doing wrong and the 30 things youre doing rightso lets focus on the four. But ultimately, a franchisees success depends on variables outside of head offices control: location and, especially, how good franchisees are at sticking to the established system.

Success also depends, of course, on that giant and capricious variable: the economy. Blo is part of whats called the masstige market that part of the consumer world which caters to middle-class buyers looking to buy a tiny slice of the yacht-and-trust-fund life at a reasonable price. Some marketing experts say the masstige market is vulnerable during tough times as people cut even little luxuries from their budgets. Others say they can do just as well, as people use treats to keep themselves going even while theyre squeezing elsewhere.

Mr. Yakobson is confident that, despite three tough years that saw masstige product lines from Target to Coach take a hit, the Blo franchise will continue to do well. People are cutting back on old luxury theyre going longer between full-service salon haircuts and colourings and buying fewer fur coats but theyre still saving some money for new luxury: blow-drys and fake furs. The economy, particularly in the US, is challenged, to say the least, he says. But I believe women will continue to get their hair done. And our numbers are steady, even as the economys gotten worse.

Judy Brooks is watching all of it from afar these days. After Blo merged with Melonhead to become Head Co., she stayed with the new organization for a year and a half as president, helping to develop new franchises. Then she pulled back remaining as a shareholder but moving on to her current position as chief of staff at Nurse Next Door, another franchise company in rapid-expansion mode.

Ms. Brooks, with her 1,000-watt smile, still talks about Blo enthusiastically. But she also hints at some behind-the-scenes tension that, ultimately, sealed her decision to leave.

One was a lawsuit. Ms. Brookss company and Melonhead were sued earlier in 2011 by one of Blos minority investors, hairdresser Kevin Lai, for $39,000 that he said wasnt paid to buy out his original $60,000 in shares. Mr. Yakobson says that was some kind of mix-up between Mr. Lai and the founders; Ms. Brooks says it was money that the Melonhead team were supposed to pay out but didnt until she prodded them to make good.

Ms. Brooks also talks about things shed do differently if she were in charge. Blos salons are still pink on the outside, but she doesnt see the brands spirit reflected at the centre of the company. Its important for the head-office culture to reflect the franchise culture, she says.

As for the complaints on the Yelp website, Ms. Brooks thinks those could be reduced through an energetic customer-satisfaction program, where any customer who appears less-than-happy gets special attention.

Shed also be developing far more franchises: If I was going to do it, Id do 60 a year.

And the all-important training: Shed be trying to standardize that even more by producing videos, rather than using the current chain-letter approach. Big franchise systems are always looking at how to do things better or faster, she says.

Despite her reservations, Ms. Brooks says shes proud that the ideas her original team came up with have stood the test of time.

One of my definitions for knowing youve started a successful company is that it can still flourish after youre gone. I loved it, but Im not really about hair; Im about business. Im proud of Blo, the brand. Im proud every time a Blo opens. But it was time to let that one go.

Special to The Globe and Mail

This article originally appeared in the December issue of Report on Small Business magazine.

Join The Globes Small Business LinkedIn group to network with other entrepreneurs and to discuss topical issues.

Our free weekly small-business newsletter is now available. Every Friday a team of editors selects the top picks from our blog posts, features, multimedia and columnists, and delivers them to your inbox. If you have registered for The Globes website, you can sign up here. Click on the Small Business Briefing checkbox and hit save changes. If you need to register for the site, click here.