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Archive for the ‘5- Minute Fixes’ Category

Instagram prop for your consignment shop! This is my friend Bill. He’s standing outside the Historical Society of Sarasota County‘s 1902 church, and the promoters of a visitor attraction, Tour de SRQ, have offered him and his buddies the loan of an Instagram-reminiscent photo frame.

Win win! Bill gets something to post on his social media graphic and Tour de SRQ gets promotion via his friends’ “shares” as well as a web-site-worthy snap for their own PR.

Might be the start of a great prop for your consignment or resale shop!

How to, from Kate: Get a personalized digital file from various Googled sites (around $12), then take it to your local print shop to get the actual frame printed on foam board or Coroplast® and cut out (prices vary). Or better yet, find a LOCAL printer who’s hip to social media and who can do it all in one stop for you.

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Avoid these "oops" moments in your consignment or resale shop, advises Auntie Kate of TGtbT.comOnce upon a time, I dreamed up a promotion where every one of my customers who returned a postcard to my shop would get entered into a drawing for a $50 gift certificate.

Trouble was, I didn’t get someone else to proofread my copy…

And it so happened that about fifty of my customers mis-read it, thinking

THEY would receive a $50 gift certificate just for returning the postcard.

Chances are, everyone who read it thought the same, but most of them had the good sense to realize that that was probably NOT what Kate meant.

Now that was an “Oops!” moment.

So in an effort to save you the embarrassment, financial cost, or lost business that you might make, here’s 5 ways to avoid an “oops” in your business.

  1. Make sure your web site tells the world where you are. I just visited one, very attractive, consignment shop web site with six pages. The usual: Home, About, How to Consign, Gallery, and so on… but there was only one place where I could actually determine where this shop was. It was (finally!) on the Contact Page… and even there, it as way down at the bottom of the page.
  2. You work so hard on your broadcast emails. Provide multiple links in that email to your web site or your Facebook page, so folks can refresh their memories on why they adore your shop, where you are (see number one above!) and when you’re open.
  3. In the news? Terrific! When strangers click to go to your site, make sure your home page assures them that they’re in the right place. Something as simple as a nice big photo front and center of the reporter in your shop (taken by a friend or staffer) with a “Thanks, Susie Cutesie and Channel 7 News, for stopping by the other day!” Leave it up for a week or two, then swap it out with another “talk-of-the-town” moment.
  4. An oops that’s all too easy to make. And a simple memory trick to avoid making your friends, followers, and fans wince (not to mention your high school English teacher.)
  5. And last but most definitely NOT least… get somebody else to proofread your public announcements and promotional copy. Not just for typos, but for understanding. Better yet, get several somebodies. That way, you won’t have to hand out $50 gift certificates right and left.

A few more “oops” moments: Here and here.

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What shall I post on my social media today? Auntie Kate has some ideas...Tired of always posting “buy buy buy” messages in your social media? Believe me, your viewers/ followers/ fans are even more tired of reading nothing but these over and over.

Break up your blatant advertising with something social. Like tips, jokes, thoughts.

In fact, rule of thumb is, (more…)

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There’s nothing worse than working with new hires who JUST DON’T GET your sense of humor. They may be wonderful talented folks, but believe me, your (more…)

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I was early this Saturday for a meeting, and decided to stop by a small consignment shop I’d visited before.

Theda Bara would have been the ideal consignment shop shopper!

Theda Bara, shown here in 1917, would have loved to see your Weird & Wonderful shop racks!

It’s a perfectly-fine shop, and I’ve bought here before, so I thought I might find a treasure or two.

What I found?

(more…)

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