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HATTIE: (In the Studio) What are we learning? If
you've got what people want, they will find you and go out of their way to give
you their money. They don't have to know you personally or live around the
corner from you. However, you can't market from a distance unless your product
is top quality and unique. When your product arrives on the doorstep of a new
customer, it must stand there, all alone. You aren't there to apologize if
something is just not right.
For
these business owners you're meeting, quality is an obsession. Some like to
argue that the Maine work ethic and a traditional commitment to craftsmanship
are the underpinning of the success we see here. I agree. But I see another
common thread that binds these owners. It is a devotion to what they do. They
are in love with what they do. This is their expertise, their gift, and no
matter what happens, they are constantly working to perfect it even further.
Don't think about marketing from a distance unless you have a unique product,
unless you are willing to devote yourself completely to quality.
(Voiceover) Travelers from all over the world enjoy the 10-mile cruise to
Monhegan Island on the Hardy Boat.
STACEY
CROCETTI (Hardy Boat): (Voiceover) It's always been an outdoor state. I think
people think of Maine and they think of the great outdoors and to experience
the great outdoors and the wholesomeness of this state.
HATTIE: (Voiceover) The boat departs from New
Harbor typically twice a day, but for current schedules, see hardyboat.com. To
me, the scenery is both breathtaking and calming. For the young and the old,
the trip created a perfect memory for me.
Unidentified Woman #3: Thank you. Great trip.
Unidentified Man #1: Thank you. Bye-bye.
STACEY: (Voiceover) We really brought it up from
nothing.
HATTIE: (Voiceover) Stacey and Al Crocetti own the
Hardy Boat.
STACEY: Basically, all we did was really buy a
boat. We didn't buy customers. We didn't have one reservation on the day we
bought the business, so we really have had to build it.
HATTIE: Why did you buy a failing business? What's
wrong with you? Like, what, are you stupid?
AL
CROCETTI (Hardy Boat): Absolutely. Absolutely.
STACEY: Probably in hindsight, I don't know. I
don't know. I don't think we were stupid. I think we just didn't know any
better. AL: We didn't have much to lose at that point, you know. It was--yeah.
Yeah.
HATTIE: You were thinking, `We can do this or we
can go get a job.'
AL:
Yeah. Why not take a chance, you know?
STACEY: We figured, worse came to worse, we're in
the hole $40,000 and, well, you know, we could probably pay that off working at
McDonald's.
AL: At
some point, yeah.
Unidentified Woman #4: See you.
HATTIE: (Voiceover) I asked Stacey how she gets
the word out.
STACEY: (Voiceover) As far as print material and
advertising, we have our brochures that we mail out. HATTIE: How do you get
that mailing list? Who do you mail to?
STACEY: Well, it's sort of a selective bunch of
people that I mail to, birding groups. We have really tapped into our birders.
(Voiceover) There are people that have to see
birds. They have a life list, and they list all the different species of birds
that they've seen, and so I do mailings to birding groups that might want to
come out and see Atlantic puffins. This is the only place you can see Atlantic
puffins in the United States. And I think word of mouth is something. I don't
know if you call it advertising, but that's what we really strive for. We want
people to get on our boat or have an experience on the Hardy Boat, whether it
just be with the owners or whatever, that when someone says, `What should I
do?,' their first thought is Hardy Boat. `They're so nice' or `They do a great
job' or whatever, and we try to build that in the community so that when
they're talking to tourists, they say, `Gee, you should really go for a ride on
the Hardy Boat.'
Unidentified Man #2: Watch your step. Welcome
aboard.
Unidentified Man #3: Hi.
STACEY: (Voiceover) I would say our #1
advertising, the one thing that we would not do without, is our Web site. You
don't come to my business to see the Hardy Boat. You come to my business
because you want to see a puffin or you want to see Monhegan, and so the best
thing I can do for my business is put out the word about puffins and Monhegan
Island and New Harbor and how beautiful the Pemaquid Peninsula is, and people
then say, `Jeez, you know, I'm going to go to Maine, and I want to go to the
Pemaquid Peninsula or I want to go see a puffin or Monhegan.' And they type in
the keywords into Yahoo! or whatever and up pops `the Hardy Boat,' and I'd have
to say we've had that site for six years, and, of course, the Web is just
growing and growing and more Web sites are getting out there, more links are
being--that Web, that Net is just expanding, and it tremendously helps my
business because somebody might be at the Bradley Inn because they want to stay
at the Bradley Inn and then they list things to do in the area, and there's the
Hardy Boat.
(Voiceover) And I can track actually where people
are coming from, not just in the United States but throughout the world. You
know, you type in `Atlantic puffin,' you're going to see the Hardy Boat.
HATTIE: Of course.
STACEY: And so I just can't believe --who would
have thought 20 years ago -- something called the Internet would be this huge
big deal? But it is, and it's the one thing I would not do without.
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