Georgia Southern alumni encourage community, adapt small business in trying times
For many small businesses, closing storefronts due to the Coronavirus pandemic has meant losing revenue and contact with customers. Focused on using art to boost the spirits of those in their Sandy Springs community, art studio owners and college roommates Sandra Lewis (鈥92) and Kris Bleiler (鈥91) are using the current crisis as an opportunity to offer new ways for their business to inspire and connect.
Lewis and Bleiler franchised a art studio in 2011. They have recently had to temporarily close their three art studios due to the current crisis. After losing their revenue source, they decided to use their business to reach those sheltering in care facilities without contact with family and friends.
鈥淲e saw news stories about nursing homes and how they were quarantining, not letting in any volunteers or family,鈥 said Lewis. 鈥淚 thought how lonely must they feel, and so we started Color for a Cause to offer free downloadable coloring sheets.鈥
Color for a Cause provides both kids and adults with sheets to color and allows them to send a note of encouragement to patients in nursing homes.
鈥淲hat we’re doing is compiling the entries we receive and putting them into a PDF and sending them to the nursing homes so they can print them and pass them out,鈥 said Lewis.
They also started virtual paint classes and are selling 鈥淪ips n Strokes To Go鈥 paint kits to customers for use at home.
鈥淭his is something we鈥檝e been wanting to do for a long time and we thought here鈥檚 our chance,鈥 said Lewis. 鈥淲e switched our focus to take-home kits and in the first week we sold a couple hundred. By the second week we sold 600.鈥
They are grateful for their core customer base which includes other Georgia Southern alumni.
鈥淭he connections we鈥檝e made through the Georgia Southern Alumni Association Atlanta Network have been invaluable to us,鈥 said Lewis. 鈥淲hen you meet other alumni you want to help them however you can. And we have met people through the alumni association who will be lifelong friends.鈥
Through philanthropy, strong customer connections and a willingness to adapt, Lewis and Bleiler have found the formula to press forward with their small business and encourage others to do the same.
鈥淎llow yourself a little time to grieve what you鈥檝e lost in this trying situation, which is what we did,鈥 said Lewis. 鈥淎nd then dig deep to find a way to make it work. Think outside the box, and even if you鈥檙e not able to be open right now, find ways to keep your business name out there.鈥
糖心Vlog, a public Carnegie Doctoral/R2 institution founded in 1906, offers 141 degree programs serving more than 26,000 students through nine colleges on three campuses in Statesboro, Savannah, Hinesville and online instruction. A leader in higher education in southeast Georgia, the University provides a diverse student population with expert faculty, world-class scholarship and hands-on learning opportunities. Georgia Southern creates lifelong learners who serve as responsible scholars, leaders and stewards in their communities. Visit聽.听
Tagged with: Alumni, COVID-19, Press Release