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The Rural Voice, 1993-12, Page 34Getting it together Small food producers, clothing manufacturers and crafts people join together in catalogue marketing venture in Huron County By Keith Roulston 30 THE RURAL VOICE you've checked off your Christmas shopping list until you've come down to that person you leave to the last every year, desperately waiting for inspiration. You want something special, not something this person is likely to ever have seen in a store somewhere, but something of quality. You pull your hair out — where do you look for a unique gift. Well, a group of small specialty food makers and crafts people in Huron County are hoping to provide the answer with a new catalogue featuring locally made products. The catalogue was mailed to more than 20,000 homes across Ontario and into the United States in November as part of a unique example of co- operation between the arts and the rural community. Christmas From the Country is a 24 -page catalogue that includes everything from apple butter to garden furniture and screen doors, all of it made locally. Participants in the catalogue, operating as a co-operative venture, range from local weavers to such commercial heavyweights as The Old Mill and Benmiller Inn. The idea for the catalogue sprang from the minds of David Peacock, marketing director of the Blyth Festival, and Rhea Hamilton -Seeger, book publisher and columnist for The Rural Voice, who is active in community development in Huron. The two were taking part in a think tank on community development in Blyth last spring when the idea arose. Someone noted that one of the trends of the future seemed to be mail order sales. Someone else mentioned the possibility of this helping build a new cottage industry in the county and the need for co-operation between the various people seeking to build the rural economy. Peacock then realized that the Festival's 20,000 -name mailing list provided the perfect opportunity to put the whole thing together. A small group of cottage industry proprietors began meeting weekly for lunch at the Blyth Inn in the spring, building toward the publication of their first catalogue this spring. For some people, the catalogue idea struck an immediate note of excitement. The Festival's mailing list has been carefully guarded to protect the privacy of the Festival patrons and this was an opportunity to speak to a potentially huge market. "I got involved because it looked like a very good way to reach a wide audience with information about our farm and our product," says Tony McQuail, whose Meeting Place Farm advertises its apple butter and freezer lamb through the catalogue. "I also like the idea of a group of people getting together to show people what they have to offer." In return, the Festival helps stretch its promotion budget in these difficult times for arts groups. The cost of mailing a brochure to the full list of 20,000 people is nearly $6,000. Ordinarily, the Festival's Christmas mailing to sell vouchers as Christmas presents would have had to have been restricted to a small portion of the list. As a member of the co-operative effort, the Festival was able to buy four pages in the catalogue for a fraction of its full mailing costs. Meanwhile, small cottage industry operators can have a chance to speak to a wide audience at costs they can afford. "Ordinarily, small operators couldn't even think of a mailing to a huge mailing list like this," says Peacock, who serves as the interim president of the group that organized the first catalogue. As it is, members could advertise their products for as little as $150 for a quarter page, plus a $25 membership fee. As well as having their products advertised, the catalogue looks after all the problems of shipping and delivery. Catalogue customers can send their order by mail or can dial a toll-free number and the products will be shipped to them by courier. Customers have the advantage of being able to order products from several different small businesses with one phone call and having it all charged to a credit card. Orders are being filled by Dave and Judie Glen of Glen Farms, a small specialty food manufacturer at Ethel (see page 26 for story). The couple have been involved in the project since the first meeting. "Dave and I have felt there's a lot of talent in the area and felt there should be a vehicle to market their products," Judie says.