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Halloween Business Perspective

Michael Jackson Thriller

By Halloween each year on October 31, the performance of most B2B business is already determined with just 40 work days left in the year. According to various sources, Halloween is the #2 retail spending holiday of they year with over $10 Billion or $35 spent for every man, woman, and child in America. Unless falling on a weekend, nothing is closed and no one gets a paid day off. Who said fear doesn’t sell?

On LinkedIn, the number of Halloween articles is difficult to determine and worldwide there appear to be over 150 related companies and groups with Halloween in the name. Like any good promotion, the business reality of Halloween pales in comparison. There are a lot of conflicting ideas about Halloween and you can either ignore it or stay relevant.

Halloween Storytelling

As a kid, Halloween was always a confusing time. We didn’t have a lot of money, so fancy costumes and big parties were not a thing. When you live with deformity year round, you can never be the cool kid no matter what the hero costume – yet other kids playing monster never bothered me. With the houses being at least a mile apart in rural Oklahoma, treats (which are heinous tricks unless chocolate) were always shared with close family and friends.

Back then there were only 3 TV stations. You heard about history and read about and repeated ghost stories. What you conjured in your mind was always much more frightening than anything you saw or experienced. Regardless, basketball (the king of sports) had started in earnest. That’s often what’s missing today in most marketing, just telling something relatable and educating rather than promoting your product or expecting an instant customer and sale.

Halloween Facts and Myths

Halloween Marketing

My buddy Spike (below), the celebrity dog, may not have too much more time left and he’s a Texas Ranger this year. For certain, you should be nicer to your marketing folks because they do a hell of a lot of work over months or years before it pays off. If you’re doing direct response marketing, you’re also destined to offend someone. For Cybersecurity Awareness Month, I grew about a thousand followers personally and 100 for the firm and we added some new recurring business on a mountain of activity and content:

Spike Fream

No Trick Or Treat At The Top

For all of you business leaders, only you can appreciate what your colleagues go through running a business. Thank you and lets all be grateful as we go into November. Your mission is to protect those around you as we finish out the year:

  1. Gather up that bone pile of old equipment wiped for privacy to donate to charity and tidy up the office
  2. Invest in your business and lower tax (including the services) with Section 179 Expense as out of warranty hardware and unsupported software are an enormous business risk
  3. Schedule a cyber risk analysis as required by law for all businesses under the FTC Safeguards Rule – as well as most cyber liability insurance.

Schedule a no obligation consult to know your risks.

My mission is to help ONE BILLION business leaders avoid willful neglect and leverage competitive advantage using cybersecurity. Usually, it’s less about technology and more about solid business practices like having an ever-green post for Halloween sharing what you’ve done to do your part for Cybersecurity Awareness Month. It’s a strategy to both share your insight, document your journey, and already have a defense against any negative posts. Privacy is one of the biggest issues of our time and you need to get in the game.

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