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Merchant Awareness Program
Welcome to Rocky Mountain Gun Owner's
Merchant Awareness Program, where we do our part to make Colorado safer by
educating businesses about the dangers of creating a "Criminal Safezone" in
their establishment.
Put bluntly, we believe Colorado is a
safer place with free, law-abiding citizens carrying firearms. Concealed
or open carry, it makes a criminal think twice.
The Merchant Awareness Program is our way
of knowing who doesn't want us to carry in their establishments, and respecting
those wishes, while giving them facts so that they might make a more informed
decision about self-protection.
About the
Merchant Awareness Program
Merchant Awareness
Program: Step-by-Step Instructions for gun owners
Report an offending merchant
(first look at our list and make sure it
has not already been reported)
Look at the list of
offending Merchants
Order "No Concealed Carry, No Money" cards

Business Owners / Managers
Step-by-Step Instructions
Here is how the merchant system works and how you can
help:
1. When you encounter a business which
posts, first get information about the business: Owner name and mailing
address are crucial. Politely ask for the manager and explain that they
have nothing to fear from permit holders. Let him/her know that they
have, in effect, posted an open invitation to armed robbery, endangered your
safety, and that you will not spend money in their establishment as long as
they prohibit concealed carry. You may add that you intend to turn their
name into Rocky Mountain Gun Owners for addition to the "Offending Merchants"
list.
2. Obtain and send to
RMGO the COMPLETE name, address (including zip code), phone number, and name
of the manager or owner.
3. RMGO's
Merchant Awareness Program Director will send the merchant a letter
explaining our position in a non-threatening and tactful manner. The
letter will point out that the merchant has made themselves a target for
robbery as well as increased the danger for every customer that shops with
them.
4. RMGO will place that business on our
Offending Merchants list.
We will compile the list of businesses, update it regularly, and distribute it
via our website, newsletter, and all other available means.
5. We will monitor businesses which remove signs for "cheating."
Any merchant who cheats by returning signs after advising us of removal will
be subject to increased attention in our newsletter for breaking their word.
6. Consider not buying from merchants who post! They have decided
not to support you as a gun owner or permit holder, but do want you to spend
your hard earned dollars in their establishment!
7. Help distribute the list of
"Offending Merchants" and
the "No Concealed Carry, No Money"
cards. Make sure all of your friends have at least one card with
them at all times.
8. Whenever in the area of
Offending Merchants make
certain to drop a "No Concealed Carry,
No Money" card off with the manager/cashier. They'll soon get the
message.
9. Cards are free to RMGO members (anyone who
donates to RMGO in any amount).
However, to help defray our costs we ask that you consider
a small donation. Even a few dollars will
help our cause. Make checks payable to RMGO and mail to:
Rocky Mountain Gun Owners
P.O. Box 27
Windsor, Colorado 80550
Phone 970-482-7646
The Merchant Awareness Program
Rocky Mountain
Gun Owners'
Merchant Awareness Program serves two important functions:
- It is an
evolving database of posted merchants that
serves notice to permit holders where not to break the law by carrying
concealed handguns... it's a list of merchants who don't want law-abiding
citizens to carry concealed weapons on their premises.
- It serves
notice to posted merchants that permit
holders, as principled individuals, will not do business where their right to
lawful, armed self-defense from violent criminal attack is denied.
When RMGO receives information
that a merchant or business dependent on public goodwill is posted, our
organization sends a formal letter of protest to that businesses' owner of
record or corporate CEO or president. The letter politely informs the merchant
or business that:
- Permit holders
have undergone scrutiny by both state and federal law enforcement agencies.
- Merchants who
post against concealed carry invite criminal mayhem from individuals looking
for easy targets of opportunity.
- Merchants who
post against concealed carry have implied assumed responsibility for the
safety of their patrons and may face financial redress in the event of a
criminal act, which results in injury/death of a patron.
- Gun owners are
consumers who represent a valuable commodity.
The name and address of the posted merchant or business is then added to a
computer database which you see on this web site
and in your newsletter (if you are an RMGO member,
that is). If the merchant or business removes their posting signs, the
name of that merchant or business is removed from the list of banning
businesses. Merchants who do not remove their signs receive a follow-up
letter and may also receive 'extra attention' in the form of postcard mailings
or, if necessary, negative publicity events (picketing). Merchants who are
caught cheating also receive extra attention from Rocky Mountain Gun Owners.
The Merchant
Contact Program and You
Rocky Mountain
Gun Owners depends on information gathered from gun owners from around the
state. Therefore the information provided RMGO is only as accurate as what is
provided us from you, the gun owner. The more information about a posted
merchant provided the better.
Turning
Observation Into Action
What do you do
when you encounter a merchant or business that is posted against concealed
carry? Grumble and walk away? Disarm yourself and spend your hard-earned dollars
with a merchant who denies you your right to armed self-defense from societal
predators? Or do you turn a problem into an opportunity?
Those businesses
who change their policy and begin to allow gun owners in their establishment
will not change their minds simply because they received a protest letter
from RMGO. Conversely, a letter from RMGO will rarely be sufficient to convince
a merchant to stop posting. Merchants stop posting because they receive a
steady influx of complaints from the public... their former customers who make
good on a promise to do business elsewhere until the posting policy is
rescinded.
The "Rule of
Thirds"
This program
based on similar efforts by North and South Carolina firearms rights groups, who
have done this successfully for years. Their experience has taught them
what they refer to as "The Rule of Thirds":
- One third of
posted business will immediately rescind a posting policy upon receiving an
overview of the benefit of concealed carry as a strong deterrent to violent
crime. This overview can come from either a communication by RMGO or a
personal visit by a gun owner/permit holder(s).
- One third of
posted business will rescind a posting policy in response to a protracted
education effort by gun owners/permit holders.
- One third of
posted business will refuse to rescind a posting policy no matter what
information is presented them.
They've learned to write off the last third; it's the first two-thirds we'd need
to concern ourselves with.
"Just Do It"
Many merchants
continue to post because they haven't been approached by anyone willing to take
the time to educate them on why gun owners/permit holders aren't a problem.
If your response to encountering a posted merchant is to turn around and walk
away never to return then you shouldn't expect the merchant to stop posting.
Be an
Information Gatherer and Diplomat for the Freedom
Your first
responsibility when making merchant contacts should be to
gather information that it may be sent to RMGO
for entry into our databases. You can accomplish that by simply getting a
card from that business, with the business owner's name (more on that below)
The second task is to present information to the merchant so that a favorable
outcome may be reached. Commit this to memory...it will be explained in
further detail.
When engaging in
merchant contact activities never forget that you are a diplomat for firearms
owners and that first impressions are lasting ones. Rude behavior, being
too confrontational and other unacceptable behaviors, no matter how rudely one
is treated by a merchant, can be counterproductive to our mission.
What's In A Name?
In a word,
everything!
As was mentioned
earlier, your primary responsibility when making merchant contacts is to gather
information.
BURN THE
FOLLOWING INTO YOUR MEMORY:
The most
important piece of information RMGO needs is the name of owner of record or
corporate CEO or president because they are the ones who have decision-making
abilities. It should be your primary goal to get this name above all
else.
You can do a search for a business owner by clicking here.
To really change
a business' practice it's best to deal with the person at the top. It
eliminates the temptation by a lower-level employee to "pass the buck", and a
communication to a merchant with the owner's name on the letter of contact sends
a much stronger message than a letter addressed to "Dear Business Owner".
Admit it, did you ever really pay that much attention to a letter you've
received addressed to "Occupant"? The business' name is obvious, and
getting the address is as simple as opening a telephone book. It's the
owner's name we need. That way, if things go south, as they sometimes do,
RMGO has all the information necessary to forward an official communication.
Case in point: a permit holder in South Carolina approached a retailer and
immediately launched into the posting issue. The retailer took offense (it
happens, they'll get over it) and told the permit holder to leave the store.
When the permit holder asked the retailer for his name, the retailer refused to
provide it. Had the permit holder gotten the owner's name first it would
have made things easier in regard to sending a letter to the individual in
question.
Despite the fact
that we're the good guys, many people regard the concealed carry issue as
extremely controversial. Don't be surprised if a retailer immediately
"tightens up" if the subject is brought forward. It's a natural response
and it's not worth getting confrontational over. It's also for this reason that
one need not even bring up the subject to a store's rank-and-file employees when
obtaining information; many of these folks have little concept of firearms, self
defense, or carrying concealed. Resist the urge to deliver a lecture to
the pimply kid at your local Shop-and-Rob... he has no decision-making
authority.
For whatever
reason, if you cannot get the name of the owner of record or company CEO there
are alternative methods of obtaining it:
-
Secretary of State records
- Owners
business cards (usually in plain sight... get one or two)
- Local chambers
of commerce
- City
Hall/county records (many cities and counties require business permits; the
records are available to the public)
- Social and
professional contacts
- Inquiries from
a posted merchant's adjoining business neighbors
- The post
office
- Telephone
books/yellow pages (just call and ask)
- Inquiries to a
posted merchant's supplying vendors
A merchant who refuses to provide you with his or her name in the belief that
withholding such information will prevent their business from being listed on
RMGO's database is doing so blindly. Merchants cannot operate in the
public eye under total immunity from public record or scrutiny.
Up Close and Personal: The Physical Visit
There are as many
ways to conduct a merchant visit as there are permit holders to conduct them, so
a hard-and-fast formula cannot be provided you. You will simply have to do
what works best for you. Some people simply hand the merchant a copy of
the newsletter and make a follow up visit at a later date. Others make
more formal presentations. Here is a list of Dos and Don'ts for your
consideration:
Do...
- Conduct
yourself as a professional. Dress appropriately - you don't need to wear a
suit and tie. but hunting attire/BDUs/cammies, dirty clothing, clothing in
disrepair, or T-shirts with slogans which could be construed as controversial
should be avoided. Present yourself as an ordinary guy or gal.
Brush your teeth. Don't wear sunglasses (they make you appear cold and
secretive).
- Determine if
the merchant or business is an individually owned proprietorship, a locally
owned franchise, or part of a larger chain of stores.
- Recognize if
and when you get "the run-around". "We are required to post by law",
"Our insurance company made us do this", and "It's corporate policy" are
common brush-off phrases we've heard. Learn to anticipate and deal with
such claims appropriately. Oftentimes a chain store has been posted per
store manager's discretion.
- Remind the
merchant that their present postings bear no legal or practical notice on
criminals. Remind the merchant that they are discriminating against
customers with proven clean records.
- Ask the
specific reason why the merchant is posting.
- Recognize that
educating merchants about concealed carry and reluctance to patronize posted
businesses is not "harassment".
Don't...
- Make threats
or get confrontational with a merchant. You're only likely to get
yourself into trouble with law enforcement.
- Remove any
postings without express permission.
Getting Past and Over the Word "No"
It is our firm
belief that posting issues should be handled by local permit holders working in
their own communities to solve posting issues.
If a merchant is
unreceptive to a contact you may wish to engage in further contacts by having
other permit holders in your area contact the merchant, the idea being if a
merchant hears a steady stream of complaints from former customers they'll
unpost ("When they feel the heat, they'll see the light"). Contact other
permit holders in your area. Conduct a 'phone blitz' or 'postcard blitz'
informing the merchant that you will return your business when your safety
concerns are met to your satisfaction (RMGO can supply you with postcards...you
supply the signatures and stamps).
And finally,
learn to recognize when a merchant or business simply wants no part of concealed
carry/firearms issues. They will continue to be listed on our database as long
as they are posted. If a posted merchant in your area is the scene of a
violent crime notify RMGO immediately.
Verifying
Merchants and Businesses as being No Longer Posted
If you volunteer
to verify that a merchant or business is no longer posted, recognize the fact
that the signs may have simply been moved elsewhere on the premises. You
need to do a physical walk-through. Check every entrance inside and out...
THOROUGHLY. Ask the owner or management if necessary and don't forget to thank
them. If unposted, return your patronage and let them know why.
Report a Posted Merchant
Posted Merchants List
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