Three men smiling and holding copies of the book 'Turning Tables' under an outdoor wooden pergola with string lights and a guitar nearby.

Printed and Digital Publications

from the desk of Bruce C. Bryan

Turning Tables

Everything I Needed To Know About Business I Learned As A Server
International Bestseller!
Book cover of 'Turning Tables' with a white plate at the center, featuring the subtitle 'Everything I Needed to Know About Business Learned as a Server' and author Bruce C. Bryan's name at the bottom.
Join Bruce for a conversation with Jen Brothers, Reverend Therapist and Nonprofit Leader, as they explore Chapter 11 of Turning Tables: Work for Tips.
Turning Tables: Everything I Needed to Know About Business I Learned Serving Tables is available now from most major booksellers.

40 West

Two Brothers On The Trip To Mark A Lifetime
40 West Book Cover

WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING🧏

"

Full of insights and great stories.

"

Robert Kulp

Black Dog Salvage

"

This universal story of two brothers on a road trip rings so true it had me longing to take a long drive with my siblings to reconnect and rediscover the power of family.

"

Beth Macy

New York Times Best Selling Author

Insights from Bruce C. Bryan

B2Seeds written by Bruce, hosted on the 5Points Creative website through the years.

The Reason4Giving

The Reason4Giving

The Reason4Giving

One-size-fits-all—except when it doesn't.

We have a traditional Giving Day in November and many other giving days taking place throughout the year in different communities. “It's more blessed to give than to receive” as the verse states. Every one of our clients gives of their time, treasures, and talents to a nonprofit, and I believe all of them support more than one. 

The process of a business making a donation is often different than for an individual. Businesses invest in the communities in which they operate for a variety of reasons. Over the past few decades, I’ve observed companies making contributions—both to the nonprofits I lead or serve (The Spot on Kirk, Help Save The Next Girl Foundation, Healing Strides of Virginia)—and to other worthy organizations.

During a recent presentation I made to the partners of the Community Foundation of the New River Valley, I shared four reasons businesses usually give:

                                                                                                                                            To feel good

                                                                                                                                          To get attention

                                                                                                                                                 To help

                                                                                                                                   To exercise their passion

Naturally, some gifts are given in honor, in memoriam, or in recognition of someone or something, but bundle all the other business donations and you’ll find they fit neatly in one or all of these buckets.

How2Shift Your Approach

One-size-fits-all—except when it doesn’t.
 
If you’re a nonprofit or serve on the board of one, take a moment to look at the above list and help your executive director or director of advancement understand the impact of this information. Most nonprofits have their prepared selling presentation (aka, “canned approach”) and it’s usually focused on the good they do and the needs they have. So, continue to share those stories that lay out your organization’s mission and the projects that need funding.
 
At the same time, be sure to align the mission and needs of your nonprofit with your donor’s interests and reasons for supporting you. Doing that will make everything come together for the nonprofit and for the donor. It’s a win for everyone.
 
Taking this extra step also strengthens the meaningful connections and relationships you have with your donors. Additionally, the donor gains insight on how their support can provide a greater return on their investment. Help your donors make an even bigger difference by making a difference for them too. Grow together!

August 8, 2024
5 min read

Basic Knowledge4The Best Play

Basic Knowledge4The Best Play

Basic Knowledge4The Best Play

Choose your words carefully!

Sometimes it can be easy to tell when out-of-towners are doing the marketing and advertising. There’s nothing wrong with hiring an out-of-town firm—in fact, we help clients all over the Southeast and have worked with businesses as far away as Michigan, Kansas, and California.

However, when you are missing familiarity with a region, it’s important you ask a lot of questions. Gather even more information than you might normally. Quite frankly, you need to learn to speak their language. I spent a few decades in Ohio and Michigan, and if you’re going to sell a cold carbonated beverage there, you’d better call it a “pop” and not a “soda.” Say “pop” in Virginia and you may just get a strange look, like you’ve just said “youz guys” instead of “y’all.”

It’s important when conducting business to ensure you are choosing your words and examples carefully. Everyone in Northwest Ohio knows how to pronounce Maumee just like Michiganders can locate The Thumb. Around Greater Roanoke, there is a specific way to pronounce Buena Vista and Staunton (Bew-na Vista and Stan-ton). And there’s no “s” in the Roanoke suburb called Cave Spring.

These are basic things you have to get right as a marketer, but it goes beyond the way cities and suburbs are pronounced or how to order a Coke.

"Ya Got2Know the Territory"

That statement comes from "The Music Man," one of the first musicals I ever saw. My parents loved plays—and that means I followed suit and learned my way around a show tune. In the movie version, Robert Preston starred as the traveling salesman, Professor Harold Hill. There are many famous songs from the Broadway show, but in "Rock Island" he sang energetically that "ya gotta know the territory." Ain't that the truth.

Choose your words carefully. It’s not just for a car wash. You must learn early that not every business has a customer. Some refer to them as clients, users, followers, or in the case of a medical practice, patients. Those words matter, so it’s best to talk that through with your prospect before you start a relationship. Beyond that, it’s wise to be completely confident that the targeted area is spelled correctly.

If this were the first time a billboard in our market depicted Cave Springs, then you could note it and move along. On the other hand, when you see it a few times, it’s suddenly fodder for a local writer to use as an example of focusing on the value of familiarity with language, pronunciation, and locations. And if you’re traveling through Roanoke, remember there’s only one spring, so it’s actually Crystal Spring and Cave Spring.

July 10, 2024
5 min read

How 2Be Smarter

How 2Be Smarter

How 2Be Smarter

Where did the curiosity of our youth go?

Time for a confession. There are times when I’m not the upbeat, energetic guy many of you may think I am.  

While I often draw energy from people, there are plenty of times when people can drag me down. There’s a certain type of person who can zap my strength. Those who either swear they’re the smartest person in the room or who work hard to convince you they’re the smartest person in the room. They really put me in a bad place.

You know what I’m talking about. They’ll tell you all the things they know. Then they’ll share the best way to do this or that. Committed to proving their point, they are sure of their facts and their opinions. (Sometimes it can be hard to tell the two apart.) They’ve been to the best places, impressed the most important people, and they know exactly how everything works. There’s absolutely nothing they can learn from you. 

I think it’s that last thought process I find most objectionable. When I consider how a person can truly believe that, it gets me thinking. So, to pick at that concept a little more, I looked up some statistics I had heard tossed around and confirmed something I had surmised.

Apply This Approach4Improvement                                                                                                                                            

Pay attention to who is asking questions and who wants to learn more.
When you do that, you start to determine who is actually the smartest person in the room. According to Forbes, only 15 to 25% of adults spend time asking questions. The same survey determined that roughly 75% of all children ask questions. Apparently, when we become adults, we know everything (or think we do).
Where did the curiosity of our youth go?

 Start by figuring out what you’d like to learn. Be determined to ask more questions.Listen to the answers and then ask more questions. That’s the best way to grow as a person, a marketer, a leader, and a business owner. Once you stop asking questions, you become the person who thinks they’re the smartest person in the room. The know-it-all.

 However, don’t stop there. Start paying attention to other people and the times when they ask questions. You’ll come to the same conclusion I did; in fact, very few people ask questions. It’s a sad commentary on our world when there is so much we can learn from others and so many places to access information. We go to Google instead of going to each other. I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve left a function or a dinner and commented to my wife that not a single person asked me a question.

 The most interesting people ask the best questions.

 Think about that and then work on your inquisitory skills.  

June 7, 2024
5 min read

Planting Ideas2Help Your Business Grow

Planting Ideas2Help Your Business Grow

Planting Ideas2Help Your Business Grow

There are plenty of tools at our disposal at any given time, and we have to know when and how to use them to fix our clients' problems. You're running your business and it's not necessary for you to understand how to apply those five critical tools we use in our business . . . you just have to know who to call.

Tools4The Job


It’s difficult to recall those cold January nights of a few months ago when we’re enjoying the temperatures and the flowers that the month of May has sent our way. Yet, I can easily recall a very cold January night when the heat pump, at a house we own, broke. There were cute little babies in our midst and we needed heat. It was not a “Sweet Virginia Breeze,” but a cold, cold night.
Fortunately, I have a client (Thanks Bower Heating & Air Conditioning!) that was available to make an evening service call. They found our heat pump in the crawl space and quickly identified the problem. The motor was broken. Unfortunately, 18-year-old heat pump motors don’t loosen easily. Aaron visited his truck and returned with just the right tool. I know I should have asked him the name of it, just in case I ever needed to own one.

When he returned, he said, “this tool is the only way I’m able to loosen those screws.” The message was clear – you have to have the right tools to get the job done.  Aaron went on to say, “this tool was one of the first ones I got when I started in the heating and cooling repair business.” He made it clear there was no way to get at that motor without this exact tool. Which got me to thinking.

Know What You Need2Get The Job Done  


Now, I am not particularly handy when it comes to fixing things. That work always baffles and intimidates me.

Yet, when it comes to marketing and advertising, I know the tools are different, but the approach is actually the same. There are plenty of tools at our disposal at any given time, and we have to know when and how to use them to fix our clients’ problems. We utilize them in five key areas: marketing, advertising, digital, branding, and communications. Sometimes we use the tools to create a strong internet presence. Other times for a powerful TV campaign, an impactful PR strategy, or an internal branding approach.

No one solution fixes all problems any more than you’d take just one tool to a cold nighttime call in January.  Furthermore, that 5-star Bower guy knew exactly which tool to pull from his toolbox that would get the heat back into the house with those two sweet babies. I knew to call them. They knew what to do. And I didn’t need to own that mystical “motor-taker-offer tool” myself, after all.

You’re running your business and it’s not necessary for you to understand how to apply those five critical tools we use in our business. It’s the same as when I reached out to Bower . . . you just have to know who to call.

May 6, 2024
5 min read

Change4Change's Sake

Change4Change's Sake

Change4Change's Sake

What is happening in the sports world that applies to those of us in business and industry?

Recently I read an article in The Roanoke Times about the Virginia Tech athletic director. He was talking about hiring big-time coaches and how that process works. The first football coach he hired happened after one relatively quick meeting and an on-the-fly negotiation. The whole process took place within a few days.

Coaching changes always make sports news and often cross into the mainstream media. Hires are done with multiple teams competing for the same big-name leaders, and as the VT AD shared, the decisions are made fast and for big dollars. Mistakes can cost millions or tens of millions of dollars. In fact, just a few months ago, an NBA professional basketball coach was fired in his first year after just 43 games (with a 33-10 record).

What is happening in the sports world that applies to those of us in business and industry?

Over the past decade, the NFL has had an average of 6.2 head coaching job openings each year. This year, as the NFL prepares for their annual draft in the next few weeks, there are eight new coaches leading their teams. One third of the teams will have new multimillion-dollar coaches in charge by the start of the season.

Bringing It2Small and Mid-Sized Businesses

The owners of these professional franchises and the front office personnel aren't likely to admit they've made a mistake. Players are getting paid a lot of money. Blame must go somewhere. Naturally, it s the leader s fault.  Let s fire the coach and see if a new voice can lead the team in a new and better direction.

Often the coaching approach switches from a  players coach,  who can identify with the team, to a disciplinarian who demands conformation. Then they switch back when that doesn't work. While many teams in the NFL have changed coaches multiple times, one team, the Pittsburgh Steelers, has had only three coaches over the past 54 years. All three of them have had winning records and won at least one Super Bowl. Remember, this article isn't about sports, it s about business.

Think for a moment about the value of consistency.

Most of you have your team, your clients, your prospects, and yourself in the mirror. You've put faith in the employees you have in place. You've weathered the storms, helped them improve, coached them as they coached others, and determined what wasn't working right when things weren't going well. Skip the scapegoat mentality and focus on improvement and better outcomes. If you can improve your leadership, that s the best course. You don't have a group of media outlets breathing down your neck or hundreds of thousands of fans screaming for change. It s your decision to make and yours to live with. Do all you can for them before making your own  coaching change for change's sake.

April 9, 2024
5 min read

TV Awards Show4Got to Include the Networks

TV Awards Show4Got to Include the Networks

TV Awards Show4Got to Include the Networks

Through the years, I've shared my professional background in television advertising sales. As a salesperson, I kept a close eye on the annual Emmy Awards. The more awards our shows won, the easier it was to sell commercials to advertisers – plus it was more fun to brag when you represented a network affiliate that won a big haul.

Through the years, I’ve shared my professional background in television advertising sales. As a salesperson, I kept a close eye on the annual Emmy Awards. The more awards our shows won, the easier it was to sell commercials to advertisers – plus it was more fun to brag when you represented a network affiliate that won a big haul.

In 1999, when I was with an ABC-owned station, The Practice and NYPD Blue won a bunch of hardware. Edie Falco won the Best Actress in a Drama Series for her role in The Sopranos on HBO. That year, nine of the 10 primary awards were won by a major broadcast network.

When the Emmy Awards were handed out in 2014, five of the 10 primary awards were won by major broadcast networks. Breaking Bad had begun its incredible run and captured a handful of awards, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus was no longer on Seinfeld and took the award for her role in VEEP.

Recently, the Eagles were losing an NFL football game badly, so I tuned into the 2024 Emmy Awards. I was familiar with most of the shows being nominated, so it caught me off guard when only two of the top 10 winners were from a major broadcast network.

That’s a real trend, and there are reasons for it. For now, I’d like to share my observations about television’s biggest night.

Deliver Your Message2the Audience Where They Are
The reality is people are consuming more video than ever. They’re just not watching in the locations where past generations had their eyeballs and where advertisers and agencies traditionally placed their ads. Granted, broadcast TV still has the largest concentration of viewership, and when big events are happening, the nation tunes in to ABC, CBS, Fox, or NBC.

However, they are also watching cable networks, which during my sales career were the upstarts. Now the cable networks are being challenged by the streaming services – today’s up-and-comers. While audiences are consuming record amounts of programming, they’re watching on totally different devices. Our media director says, “I watch the internet on my TV, and television on my phone and computer.”

It’s a mixed-up media world, and making sense of it can be very difficult. There are rapidly developing options complicating your thought process as to where to invest those valuable advertising dollars. That’s why so many of our clients depend on our understanding, expertise, and direction as we guide them through the murky waters of “television” advertising.

March 12, 2024
5 min read

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