The right way is the long way: in whisky and marketing

Glengoyne Whisky Distillery prides itself on having the slowest stills in Scotland. My sister and I visited a few months ago, and in huge letters on the doors to the building holding the stills and the washbacks, it reads:

THE RIGHT WAY IS THE LONG WAY

Everywhere at the distillery and on their website and whisky, this particular brand proclaims proudly: we are slower on purpose. For good. To create a different kind of whisky. Even slower, even longer than the others. All good Scottish whisky takes time (there’s a minimum of three years required for whisky to be whisky), but most distilleries let the whisky wait and rest and become its best self over a period of 10, or 12, or 18, or even 25 years or longer.

I’ve been thinking about how much good work goes on in the quiet, in the dark. When the whisky is bottled, it’s clear. None of the flavours from the barrels and the time have come through. And every year, the flavours and the colours begin to seep into the liquid from the barrels. From the bourbon barrel or sherry barrel or port barrel. This happens by the whisky simply….sitting there. In the dark. In the quiet. Being in the right cask with the right flavours, year after year.

Nobody sees it. From time to time the master distiller may test the whisky and see how it’s coming on, but until it’s finished, bottled, and presented to the world, you don’t even know it’s happening. They are doing good work. Slow work. Patient work. The Glengoyne website uses words like “savoured”, “appreciated”, “stillness”. They proclaim “unhurried since 1833”.

I’ve been thinking a lot about rushing. Christmas is one of my favourite holidays of the year, and yet no matter how hard I try, there’s always a little rushing added in. Did I get this secret santa gift ordered on time? What day will we be celebrating Christmas and can everyone in the family make it? Did we order the right food? Did I remember to buy the whisky?

I don’t like rushing. I prefer the long way, the patient way, the quiet way.

My business will be 10 years old in January. A business is like a good whisky. It’s not to be rushed. You can do good things in 3 years (the minimum for whisky to be called whisky), but how much more maturing is done in 10. And how much further there is ahead: how much good, how much depth of flavour and spirit.

As we consider our own brand, and the brand of the businesses we are privileged to serve, we remind ourselves we get to choose. You can decide what your brand stands for – like Glengoyne saying “others may do as they like, but we move slow on purpose and here’s why. Here’s what it delivers for you”. Similarly, PF has a philosophy of the long game. The work you put in now bears fruit many years ahead – and that’s hard. At first it can seem much more appealing to hurry. Rush. Get the quick wins. Use ads or promotions or discounts or offers. Be visible. Get noticed. Go viral. Hurry, hurry, hurry.

But when we see the businesses who are getting that “drip feed” of the best kind of clients coming from they don’t even know where (“you seem to be everywhere!” or “I’ve been following you for years and now I’m ready”), and when we look at where we’ve come in ten years, we’ve realised that’s our style. That’s our game, our brand. The long game with the deeper results.

We’re rebuilding the new PF website, and one of the core messages on it will be “Better, not more”.

Because we want to work with people who don’t want MORE leads for the sake of it. People filling in forms, more prospects, hurry, hurry, hurry. We want to work with those who are tired of more (which cause problems later), and instead want better.

People who honour and value themselves so much they wouldn’t take on a client who didn’t respect that and have similar values, no matter how much money it means.

People who charge what they’re worth, and focus on showing where that worth comes from – a philosophy, an approach, a way, a track record. Sort of like a warehouse full of barrels sitting quietly, producing over a period of years, not minutes.

We get the privilege of saying “yes, we go the long way, and it takes time, and it’s worth it”.

So for those of you who appreciate and lean into that philosophy: you too, keep going.  Take your time. Recognise change and maturation happens slowly, steadily, almost imperceptibly, until one day you have this beautiful amazing thing (a whisky, a book, a business).

Take your time. All the best things do.

Follow me

ON THE GRAM

For today’s video I simply present the sun setting behind the sea in North Carolina. 

This is from a visit to the beach last year, and one of the loveliest sunsets I’ve gotten to enjoy. 

Take a moment - or just 90 seconds - to breathe and enjoy it too. 

Day 56/100 Video Challenge 

#100dayvideochallenge #100days #sunset #northcarolina #beachwalk #getoutside #justkeepgoing #walkswithkaren #barefoot #emeraldislenc #takeamoment #breathe
This week I took a trip down to Manchester for some strategy and finance meets with my own accountants. 

I captured a lot of video footage, none of it including the hours of meets, deep discussions, laughter, curious considerations, suggestions, advice, and support I got from the good people at @wearemap_ . But when you’re in the depth of those deep convos you don’t really remember to whip out the time lapse video (and tbf it would simply show a lot of talking!). 

MAP have been my accountants for over seven years and I continue to be daily grateful for their experience - and the way they ask good questions and suggest ways to think about situations but always respect that the decision and business are mine. 

Now I’m on my way back to Edinburgh and then home! Happy weekend all 🙏🏻❤️✨

(Ps the goofy faces are me attempting to record my video of the day yesterday! Ha!)

Day 55/100 Video Challenge 

#100dayvideochallenge #100days #accountants #businessadvice #advisors #financialmanagement #strategy #creativeagency
Still plugging away, day after day on this 100 day video challenge . 

I’m waiting until I’ve completed it to start gathering all the learnings…but I can tell you now that doing something every day for 54 days so far is definitely beginning to give me glimmers of progress. 

I continue to be curious about how I’ll sum it up when I’m done, but I can already see the impact of doing something small, every day, showing up, and seeing what happens.

What would you love to get even marginally better at? 

(Ps first time I’ve been BLEEPED on insta captions! Haha! Enjoy!!)

Day 54/100 Video Challenge 

#100dayvideochallenge #100days #video #justkeepgoing #makeyourshittypots #quantityfirst #oneatatime #persistence #progress #motivation
Another view from inside the Johnnie Walker experience: this is where you will pause to think all things branding. Yours, your firm’s…and the difference between them. 

In this room are alllll the different kinds of “labels” of JW whisky…red label, blue label, black label…and one of the workers explained he had “proper” names for all the whiskies, like Special Old Highland Whisky and Extra Special Old Highland Whisky. But since no one could remember which was which, they just pointed and said “the one with the black label” or the red label or whatever colour.

There’s SO much to learn here - about the “Striding Man” which is recognised as one of the world’s first brand logos - about connecting your brand to what people want and understand - and most importantly, for those coming to this workshop, considering who you are. How all of this applies to who you are today and what decisions you’ll make about your own personal brand, and how that connects to your business brand (or where it doesn’t). 

And what your Next Big Thing is. 

If you haven’t booked your place on this workshop yet, DM me for all the details. I’d love to see you there if it’s a fit for you - or have a chat about whether it is right for you just now. 

Day 53/100 Video Challenge 

#100dayvideochallenge #100days #personalbranding #brand #businessbranding #accountingfirm #firmowner #accountant #edinburgh #jwprincesstreet #brandingworkshop