Floral Guild Radio
Podcast by Philadelphia Floral Guild
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9 episodesIn this episode, I’m chatting with Rose Oland from Mullica Hill Floral Co [https://www.mullicahillfloralco.com/], a florist shop that has been in business for 37 years. Rose and her mom who founded the shop are dedicated to supporting local flower farms and approaching floristry with sustainability at the forefront. Rose’s perspective of the industry is unique in that she literally grew up in the flower shop and has seen just about everything in the past three decades, including how the industry has shifted from guarded competitiveness to supportive collaboration. Be sure to check out Rose’s Instagram feed @mullicahillfloralco. [https://www.instagram.com/mullicahillfloralco/] It’s a great spot to see all-local designs and get some inspiration for color blending and floral photography. Mentioned in this episode is Phoam Labs [https://www.phoamlabs.com/], creators of a compostable alternative to traditional floral foam. This podcast is brought to you by the Philadelphia Floral Guild [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/], a collective of flower farms in the mid-Atlantic region selling together to florist and other wholesale buyers. We help you elevate your design work and manifest a better tomorrow with locally-grown stems. Visit philadelphiafloralguild.com [http://www.philadelphiafloralguild.com/] to learn more and follow us on Instagram @phillyfloralguild [https://www.instagram.com/phillyfloralguild/] for regular inspiration. Sign up for our newsletter [https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d86966d37f6d2886c5f47b] to stay up to date on what's in season, tips and tricks for design, and the latest episodes. Not near Philadelphia but would like to source local flowers for your business? Check out localflowers.org [https://localflowers.org/] and rootedfarmers.com [https://www.rootedfarmers.com/] to find a flower farm near you. What Can Locally Grown Stems Do For Your Floral Business? Less Shrink: Without the stress of a long ride in the global supply chain, our stems are superior in quality with much less breakage and far better hydration. Less Labor: Our growers do all the work of a studio assistant, stripping stems and making fresh cuts on stems that go directly into water and never leave a water source. This means you do not have to process anything! Less Trash: There are no boxes, packing paper, bubble wrap, box straps, plastic sleeves, and all the other usual trash that comes with a flower delivery from the traditional wholesaler. More Inspiration: Designing with the seasons sparks creativity. No two weeks are the same. More Community: Workign with local growers is a very personal connection. You'll grow your community every time you buy local.
Today we're chatting with Emalee Lally, owner of Bird Seed Florals [https://www.birdseedflorals.com/]. Emalee has been a stalwart supporter of the Philadelphia Floral Guild [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/] since day one. Her design style and story are unique, including her attitude towards being an eternal novice. Three years in the biz, she’s still stretching her designer legs and has found being a beginner has some serious perks. Like coming up with a really clever way to enhance designs in pin frogs! Get a look at her singular design style on Instagram @birdseedflorals [https://www.instagram.com/birdseedflorals/]. This podcast is brought to you by the Philadelphia Floral Guild [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/], a collective of flower farms in the mid-Atlantic region selling together to florist and other wholesale buyers. We help you elevate your design work and manifest a better tomorrow with locally-grown stems. Visit philadelphiafloralguild.com [http://www.philadelphiafloralguild.com/] to learn more and follow us on Instagram @phillyfloralguild [https://www.instagram.com/phillyfloralguild/] for regular inspiration. Sign up for our newsletter [https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d86966d37f6d2886c5f47b] to stay up to date on what's in season, tips and tricks for design, and the latest episodes. Not near Philadelphia but would like to source local flowers for your business? Check out localflowers.org [https://localflowers.org/] and rootedfarmers.com [https://www.rootedfarmers.com/] to find a flower farm near you. What Can Locally Grown Stems Do For Your Floral Business? Less Shrink: Without the stress of a long ride in the global supply chain, our stems are superior in quality with much less breakage and far better hydration. Less Labor: Our growers do all the work of a studio assistant, stripping stems and making fresh cuts on stems that go directly into water and never leave a water source. This means you do not have to process anything! Less Trash: There are no boxes, packing paper, bubble wrap, box straps, plastic sleeves, and all the other usual trash that comes with a flower delivery from the traditional wholesaler. More Inspiration: Designing with the seasons sparks creativity. No two weeks are the same. More Community: Workign with local growers is a very personal connection. You'll grow your community every time you buy local.
We’re back on air with a conversation about selling flowers wholesale. This episode is geared more towards flower farmers, but might be a fun peek behind the scenes for florists as well. Many of you are already familiar with today’s guest, Scott Shepherd [https://www.theflowerpodcast.com/meet-scott]. Scott is the host of The Flower Podcast [https://www.theflowerpodcast.com/]. If you haven’t checked out that podcast yet, be sure you do. Scott has such a unique position in our industry. He studied horticulture in college and has been a producer of specialty stems like hellebores. But his main job over the past three decades has been working in sales and sourcing at wholesale houses, first in Georgia and now in Tennessee. In that role, he’s touched every facet of the global flower market. This episode is an excerpt from a longer conversation that took place on the podcast No-Till Flowers [https://notillflowers.libsyn.com/]. This podcast is brought to you by the Philadelphia Floral Guild [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/], a collective of flower farms in the mid-Atlantic region selling together to florist and other wholesale buyers. We help you elevate your design work and manifest a better tomorrow with locally-grown stems. Visit philadelphiafloralguild.com [http://www.philadelphiafloralguild.com] to learn more and follow us on Instagram @phillyfloralguild [https://www.instagram.com/phillyfloralguild/] for regular inspiration. Sign up for our newsletter [https://view.flodesk.com/pages/62d86966d37f6d2886c5f47b] to stay up to date on what's in season, tips and tricks for design, and the latest episodes. Not near Philadelphia but would like to source local flowers for your business? Check out localflowers.org [https://localflowers.org/] and rootedfarmers.com [https://www.rootedfarmers.com/] to find a flower farm near you. What Can Locally Grown Stems Do For Your Floral Business? Less Shrink: Without the stress of a long ride in the global supply chain, our stems are superior in quality with much less breakage and far better hydration. Less Labor: Our growers do all the work of a studio assistant, stripping stems and making fresh cuts on stems that go directly into water and never leave a water source. This means you do not have to process anything! Less Trash: There are no boxes, packing paper, bubble wrap, box straps, plastic sleeves, and all the other usual trash that comes with a flower delivery from the traditional wholesaler.
Ellen Frost [https://www.youtube.com/user/LocalColorFlowers/videos?app=desktop], owner of Local Color Flowers [http://www.locoflo.com/] in Baltimore, joins host Jennie Love [https://lovenfreshflowers.com/] for a five part series focused on key drivers of flower math for floral shops. An informative listen for both florists and growers! We wrap up the Flower Math series today with Part 5: Being Team Players. Being profitable as a small business, be it a floral shop or a flower farm, is a struggle. We all work with a very perishable product and have risky sales channels. What kinds of honest conversations can gorwers and florists have together about flower math? If we work as a team, rather than just vendors making transactions, can we collecitvely thrive? Or is the system too broken for both gorwers and florists to be profitable in the same transaction? Hear what two seasoned flower professionals have to say on the topic. If you enjoy this episode, be sure to go back and listen to Flower Math Part 1: Pricer Per Stem [https://floralguildradio.libsyn.com/site/flower-math-part-1-price-per-stem] Flower Math Part 2: Product Shrink [https://floralguildradio.libsyn.com/site/flower-math-part-2-product-shrink] Flower Math Part 3: Quality Tiers [https://floralguildradio.libsyn.com/site/flower-math-part-3-quality-tiers] Flower Math Part 4: Delivery and Handling Fees [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/flower-math-part-4-delivery-and-handling-fees/id1731176743?i=1000648218790] Ellen and Jennie both teach online courses that may be valuable to your floral business. Here is a link to Ellen's course [https://thegardenersworkshop.com/florist-school-online-growing-your-business-with-local-flower-sourcing/] and here is a link to Jennie's courses [https://lovenfreshflowers.com/online-courses/]. This podcast is brought to you by the Philadelphia Floral Guild [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/], where we're building community around sustainable local flowers. If you're a florist in the Philadelphia area, we'd love to have you shop with us! Click here to learn how [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/shop-now/]. Not in the Philadelphia region? Find a flower farmer near you by visiting LocalFlowers.org [https://localflowers.org/]. And check out Rooted Farmers [https://www.rootedfarmers.com/] to see if there is a flower collective near you! Now that this series on flower math has finished up, we'll start featuring some new voices on the show. So stay tuned for Episode 6 when we talk to a vetran wholesale flower farmer!
Ellen Frost [https://www.youtube.com/user/LocalColorFlowers/videos?app=desktop], owner of Local Color Flowers [http://www.locoflo.com/] in Baltimore, joins host Jennie Love [https://lovenfreshflowers.com/] for a five part series focused on key drivers of flower math for floral shops. An informative listen for both florists and growers! Fees add up! In Part 4 of the Flower Math series, we expose this often unseen sinkhole for profit. Growers have to charge delivery fees and often collectives and wholesalers charge handling fees. Florists have to absorb all of these fees. We go into how florists should be thinking about working fees into their flower math. Spoiler, opting out of delivery and instead picking up the flowers yourself is not "free". We also talk about what delivery fee florists need to charge their own customers to make the flower math work. If you enjoy this episode, be sure to go back and listen to Flower Math Part 1: Pricer Per Stem [https://floralguildradio.libsyn.com/site/flower-math-part-1-price-per-stem] Flower Math Part 2: Product Shrink [https://floralguildradio.libsyn.com/site/flower-math-part-2-product-shrink] Flower Math Part 3: Quality Tiers [https://floralguildradio.libsyn.com/site/flower-math-part-3-quality-tiers] Ellen and Jennie both teach online courses that may be valuable to your floral business. Here is a link to Ellen's course [https://thegardenersworkshop.com/florist-school-online-growing-your-business-with-local-flower-sourcing/] and here is a link to Jennie's courses [https://lovenfreshflowers.com/online-courses/]. This podcast is brought to you by the Philadelphia Floral Guild [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/], where we're building community around sustainable local flowers. If you're a florist in the Philadelphia area, we'd love to have you shop with us! Click here to learn how [https://philadelphiafloralguild.com/shop-now/]. Why use local stems? You'll hear a lot about that throughout this podcast series but here's a few of the reason: * Less Shrink: Without the stress of a long ride in the global supply chain, local stems are superior in quality with much less breakage and far better hydration. * Less Labor: Local growers do all the work of a studio assistant, stripping stems and making fresh cuts on stems that go directly into water and never leave a water source. This means you do not have to process anything! * Less Trash: There are no boxes, packing paper, bubble wrap, box straps, plastic sleeves, and all the other usual trash that comes with a flower delivery from the traditional wholesaler. * Less Carbon Burned: Imported flowers in the US typically travel 2,500 or more miles in refrigerated planes, trucks and boats to reach you. * Less Disconnect: When you buy flowers from far away, you don't have a relationship with the grower and your dollars fly away from your local economy, the one you do business in yourself. Buying local means you stay connected and contribute to your local community.
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