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Food producers and buyers connect through virtual tastings thru 2021

Presented by Vermont Specialty Food Association and Vermont Retail and Grocers  Vermont Business Magazine With many in-person events canceled through 2021, the Vermont Specialty Food Association (VSFA) and the Vermont Retail and Grocers Association (VRGA) are working together to bring specialty food producers and wholesale buyers together virtually. The 2021 Virtual Tasting Series will invite some of Vermont’s best specialty food producers (think maple, chocolate, jams, coffee, pickles, snacks, and everything in between) to pitch to wholesale buyers of all shapes and sizes. How does it work? Participants join the live virtual event: Producers will pitch their brand and products. Buyers will learn about these products and have the opportunity to ask questions. 

In Final Holiday Stretch, Vermont Businesses Have New Ways to Reach Customers – NECN

Updated on December 15, 2020 at 6:09 pm NBC Universal, Inc. With just over a week to go until Christmas, many shipping deadlines for online orders are here, or will be very soon. That has brick-and-mortar retailers and indie merchants hoping shoppers will remember them for in-person shopping while wearing masks and sanitizing their hands, among other COVID-19 prevention measures. Some small businesses in Vermont also have new ways of reaching customers. This is huge, florist Meredith Clayton said of a winter market she took part in last week in downtown Burlington. Clayton said her business, Clayton Floral, lost sales to the pandemic, in the form of bouquets and arrangements for weddings and orders from hotels and restaurants.

In final holiday stretch, Vermont businesses have new ways to reach customers

In final holiday stretch, Vermont businesses have new ways to reach customers © Provided by WPTZ Plattsburgh-Burlington With just over a week to go until Christmas, many shipping deadlines for online orders are here, or will be very soon. That has brick-and-mortar retailers and indie merchants hoping shoppers will remember them for in-person shopping while wearing masks and sanitizing their hands, among other COVID-19 prevention measures. Some small businesses in Vermont also have new ways of reaching customers. This is huge, florist Meredith Clayton said of a winter market she took part in last week in downtown Burlington. Clayton said her business, Clayton Floral, lost sales to the pandemic, in the form of bouquets and arrangements for weddings and orders from hotels and restaurants.

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