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GET INVOLVED!
- Hold a town meeting. Figure out the strengths and weaknesses of your town. Set some goals.
- Form groups to brain storm. Write down your ideas...and share them. Encourage others to do the same.
- Start raising money or support for specific projects.
- Ask more downtown merchants to become involved in the revitalization process.
- Develop a good relationship with your local news media.
- Publish a newsletter or write a regular column for your newspaper to keep your community informed. Get on the Main Street Arkansas mailing list to find out what's happening in other cities.
- Ask for help from the chamber of commerce, the regional planning commission, local colleges or vo-tech schools, the Co-operative Extension Service, the Small Business Development Center, utility companies and others.
- Work with your local financial institutions. Ask them to make a commitment to downtown revitalization.
- Apply for status as a Certified Local Government through the Arkansas Historic Preservation Program. CLG status can provide funding for projects to enhance the downtown.
- Visit downtowns with Main Street programs to find out what others are doing.
- Stop complaining and start doing.
- Develop a slide show about your downtown. Take it to civic clubs, schools, the chamber of commerce, and the city council.
- Develop a program to encourage small physical improvements to downtown buildings such as new or repaired signs, paint, or awnings.
- Look for a building that can be dramatically improved with a relatively small cash outlay. Repair or remove torn awnings, fix broken windows, and repair broken signs.
- Deal with the parking issue: Count your parking spaces. Add signs to your public parking lots. Develop a voluntary contract to get business owners and employees to agree to leave prime parking places for the customers.
- Take "before" photos and develop "after" drawings of buildings to encourage renovation.
- Encourage building rehabilitation that respects the heritage of each building and the downtown.
- Work with property owners to clean and maintain vacant buildings. Nobody will rent a building filled with junk if any other alternatives exist. Ask community groups to install and change displays in vacant windows.
- Pretend you are a visitor; really look at your downtown. What do you see?
- Take into account handicapped access to your sidewalks, public buildings, and stores.
- Is your street lighting adequate? Encourage merchants to light their windows as a low cost advertisement to passers-by.
- See business owners on the importance of attractive window displays. Ask a creative person to work with merchants monthly to change window displays.
- Hold a downtown clean up. Repeat it quarterly.
- Buy or build good quality trash receptacles. Put them where the trash is and empty them regularly.
- Keep sidewalks and alleys free of trash. Plant and water flowers, pull or cut weeds.
- Replace hand-lettered signs with professional graphics.
- Invent a retail promotion (that's not a sale).
- Organize a festival. Have food, music, something for children, a free souvenir, and overlapping events.
- Prepare a promotion calendar that allows plenty of time to plan for promotions and name a separate chairman for each promotion activity.
- Make it easy for things to happen downtown and encourage community groups to plan their activities downtown.
- Develop a downtown logo and use it on stationery, newspaper ads, shopping bags, posters, and flyers.
- Promote your downtown history through a walking tour, a brochure, or school programs. Hold an architectural treasure hunt.
- Work with the schools to display student's artwork or awards inside downtown businesses. Today's children are tomorrow's customers.
- Develop a business directory that lists the kinds of goods and services available and shows where to park. Distribute the directory through the chamber of commerce, the utility companies, and motels.
- Talk about what's good in your downtown.
- Develop a downtown slogan and encourage all downtown businesses to use it.
- Survey your downtown businesses to find out what they sell and to whom. Identify customer needs that aren't being met. These are business opportunities.
- Complete a building inventory that includes size, ownership, cost of rent or lease, and availability.
- Gather census information on your community and trade area.
- Learn what superior customer service means in today's market and stress its importance downtown. Encourage your downtown merchants to visit stores in the area and learn from the competition.
- Learn about your downtown's zoning regulations.
- Count how many people work downtown. Downtown is one your town's biggest employers.
- Renovate upper floors and recruit services or professional businesses. Upper floor housing increases downtown's customer base.
- Hold an advertising and marketing seminar.
- Hold regular get-acquainted coffees for merchants hosted by a different store each month.
- Ask the city how it is working to strengthen the downtown. Ask local industries how they feel about downtown. Discuss the results with others interested in downtown revitalization.
- Calculate financial projections on vacant buildings. Rental costs will determine how much can be spent on building rehabilitation.
- Be informed about free or low-cost business assistance that could benefit your downtown merchants.
- Establish uniform hours for downtown stores. Make it convenient for your customers to shop on their way home from work.
- Recognize that downtown businesses are important. Let the owners know it.

Main Street Helena updates it’s window display each month highlight a different activity in the community.

Showdown at Sunset, a reenactment of the historic Tucker-Parnell feud each summer in downtown El Dorado.

Mark Miller, Main Street Arkansas Small Business Consultant provides business assistance to local retailers in Main Street communities.




