Blog Writing for Gardening Businesses
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B2B B2C Blog Writing for Garden Industry Businesses

 

I Can Help You With Your Blog

Is your blog helping your business? Or is it sitting there minding its own business? Let’s wake it up.

When was the last time you put a fresh blog up? Some time last year? Let’s get it, and keep it, current.

Does anyone read your blog? If you’re not seeing the clicks or getting calls or emails and comments from readers then you know the answer. Let’s get you readers. Readers become customers. Contact me through the form below.

You Can’t Do It All Yourself

Most business owners are too busy to write their blogs. Just like yourself. Throwing out product descriptions as blogs doesn’t help you. Let those do their own work on another page. Readers want to know HOW your product or service will HELP THEM.

Every Business Needs A Blog

You need blog posts that your customers want to read. And that potential customers will read, nod their heads, and contact you or click the purchase button. If you have readers, you’re gaining and retaining customers. Contact me.


CLICK ON OVER TO MY BLOG FOR SAMPLES OF MY WRITING.

TO SEE A SAMPLE OF MY MAGAZINE WORK FOR BH&G, CLICK THE BUTTON BELOW. I’m especially proud of it!

Your Blog Can Tell Stories To Those In Need About The Joys of Gardening With Your Accessible Gardening Products And Services. I can help you with other gardening stories as well!

You can contact me through my LinkedIn page. Thanks!

 
 
 
SANDY STIEFER

SANDY STIEFER

Accessible Gardening Can Change Lives

Sometimes we find ourselves facing challenges. We might be disabled from the time we are born, or later, due to accidents, illness, or aging. We may have once loved to garden but now find it difficult or painful due to age-related conditions. Or we may have never tried it but have been told it can be physically and mentally therapeutic. There are many reasons why gardening is important to a wide demographic within the accessibility community. Your company products and services help those who have never tried gardening to learn a new skill, and others to continue their favorite activity. Along with that new skill comes the joy and satisfaction that only gardening can give.

Accessibility Tools Bring Back Purpose And Fulfillment

A small example:

  • Hand tools with handle extension that grips the forearm for stability.

  • Pruning shears made for hands that have lost strength.

  • Raised garden beds that accommodate a walker or wheelchair.

Per the National Gardening Association (NGA) over 35% of U.S. households grow food either at home or in a community garden. During COVID19 the interest in backyard gardening exploded. People worked from home, the kids schooled there too. It was a great time to learn to garden for the entire family. Gardening should be inclusive, and those with disability of any kind should be able to do it, even if it’s a little patch of radishes grown in a flower pot.

Per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):

  • 1 in 4 U.S. adults live with a disability.

  • The most common disability type, mobility, affects 1 in 7 adults.

  • With age, disability becomes more common, affecting about 2 in 5 adults age 65 and older.

  • Over 26 million Americans suffer from osteoarthritis.

Osteoarthritis alone disables many people who hurt too much to enjoy gardening. Arthritis affects the knees, hips, hands, feet, and spine and is responsible for many mobility problems. A wide range of accessibility products can keep them, or get them, gardening again. Disability affects children and the elderly, and everyone in-between. Garden accessibility programs are used in nursing homes, assisted living, senior centers, schools, and memory care centers, as well as by homeowners in their own backyards.

So let’s get going on your blog. Let’s keep it current and interesting. And while we’re at it, let’s make it fun. If the subject allows.


 
Adult and child in garden