The secret to getting more done in your maker business
When I ask the members of Makers’ Momentum Club whether they would like more time or more money, there’s usually one clear winner. More time. We all want to have more time. More time with our friends and family. More time for creating. More time to do all of those...
How to spot an Art Scam
As small businesses whose details are widely shared online, artists and makers are an ongoing target for scammers. Sadly the combination of inexperience in business (lots of us are just starting out), susceptibility to flattery (because we make our own products) and working alone (no one to offer a double check) means that we will continue to be seen as a soft target for those who make their living by deception.
It’s all just FEEDBACK
What if I said that the majority of the problems and difficulties you are facing in your handmade or art business at this moment in time are all linked? What if I said that they are the result of one small error? What if I said that none of them could even start to get fixed before you correct this error? It’s an error that all of us are making every single day. It’s an error that’s completely understandable and completely human and yet completely toxic to your business.
What to do when you’ve got FAR TOO MUCH TO DO
As solo business owners there are always more things to do than there are hours in the day. It can feel like we’re in a constant state of overwhelm. It doesn’t take a genius to realise that, when you’re overwhelmed, you need to cut back on some things. But which things do you choose when everything seems equally important? The fact is that most of us have a strange relationship with what is important. If asked, we know what is important to us, but the things we do on a daily basis often don’t correspond to it.
Learn to love marketing with this mindset shift
I learned a lot about marketing from buying a new coat for my job. When I first started work as a stockbroker in the City of London I needed to get a new coat for wearing on the many business trips I took as part of that job. I knew it had to be classic and well crafted and it also had to be practical to deal with being thrown into the overhead bin on an airplane (and sometimes shoved under the seat in front)
Four ways that planning can help you cut back on overwhelm and stop your business running you.
I’m guessing you’re feeling pretty exhausted right now. I’m writing this in December when most of us are on our last legs but even if you’re reading this in February, or June, or October, I’m willing to bet that you’re still tired and pretty stressed out. Maybe you’re struggling for sales and it feels like such a constant uphill battle to get your business off the ground. Maybe your business is growing and you’re struggling to cope with the extra work without help.
Black Friday and the wrong way to talk to your customers about buying handmade
I’ve got strong opinions about Black Friday.
Actually I’ve got strong opinions about publicly complaining about Black Friday.
Black Friday is a relatively new phenomenon here in the UK and each year there seems to be more and more polarisation around the event and more and more Anti Black Friday blog and social media posts from makers. To be clear, I don’t believe that anyone should ever feel obliged to discount their products.
How to manage your handmade business in a recession
This year there has been not one, but two shocking election results that have resulted in the world stock markets moving sharply downwards. These shocks have caused people to be very concerned about the economy and, in some cases, fearful for the future. You might be one of those people or you might not. This post is not about politics. It does not matter if those people fearful for the future are right or wrong. It does not matter if their predictions become reality or not.
Why you want your customers to say NO.
One of the best pieces of business advice I ever got was to get my customers to say no more quickly and more often.
Don’t worry, I was really dubious too. I mean, don’t we want our customers to say yes? Yes to buying our products, yes to joining our mailing list, yes to following us on social media, yes to telling all of their friends about us. No really isn’t the outcome that we’re looking for.
Writing Terms and Conditions for your Stockists.
There are so many challenges involved in running a handmade business and for many of them, we can’t really see them coming or know what kind of impact they’ll have on our business. Banking crises, Global Financial Meltdown, Brexit, Inflation, Consumer Confidence....
If you’re waiting to be discovered, try this in the meantime.
I’m willing to bet that, whether you’ve been selling what you make for years or for just a very short period of time, at one point you landed a magazine feature, or you bought some advertising, or you got accepted into a gallery, or your product got tweeted or...