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Archive for the ‘Mailbox: 1-on-1 Advice’ Category

The postman ringeth rather too frequentlyletter binds your clients more tightly to your consignment shopI’ve tried them all. Every app, program, trick there is to keep myself and the multiple aspects of my life as a consignment and resale consultant, not to mention sister, aunt, volunteer worker, history lover organized. Still, I miss (more…)

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A NFP thrift-store shopkeeper writes: Consignment and thrift shop incoming

Needing some advice on processing donations. Our hospital thrift shop has a lovely, good-sized, well-lit store. BUT … the area to process donations is very small and piles up quickly with, on late Saturdays, yard sale castoffs and sometimes very heavy items. We’re all volunteers, nearly all women, and nearly all in our 60s to 90s!!! How do you manage your piles, in other words?????

Let’s go with the piles metaphor: Applying some Preparation H should do the trick!

First off: Have your H ready-to-go. Depending on how you manage your price tags, HANDY could help move salable goods from piles to perfection. Pre-prepared tags, stored next to where your piles accumulate, could cut tagging and decision-making down to seconds. Whether you store pre-printed price tickets in manila envelopes push-pinned to a corkboard, or have shoeboxes full of $5, $7, $10 tags, just having them to choose from means that bundle of jeans can be dealt with immediately… before they get buried beneath another pile of incoming.

Another H to hep move mounds to desirable merchandise: Think HYGIENIC.. as in cleaning things up so they are sales floor-ready. While I am not always a fan of pre-dampened cleaning wipes, these may be called for in a pile situation: Wiping down those florist vases with glass-cleaner wipes, or wooden goods with a polish wipe, could quickly diminish the incoming catastrophe. On Monday, these lick-and-a-promise goods can be more carefully groomed on the ales floor as volunteers chat, straighten, and cashier.

Then there’s the HORROR aspect of Preparation H: Things that should never have been donated to your cause to start with. You know what I’m talking about: the soiled undergarments, broken figurines, singleton dinner plates. Be relentless in trashing these… don’t be tempted to put these items aside  “to deal with later.” As anyone in the resale industry knows, later never comes. Spend your, and your volunteers’, time on what will raise funds, not sap energy. Sure, maybe that dinner plate will sell for a dime, but is it worth the work and floor space?

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A reader wrote:

I’m doing some consulting work for a furniture resale shop that is NFP (open under 2 years). They do not discount inventory based on date but think we should consider this option to decrease product stagnation and increase sales. Thoughts one way or another? Thanks for providing a great resource!

Reader, there is nothing so fraught with emotion than how a resale shop handles (or doesn’t) markdowns. Why is this? Because resale stores generally only have one of an item, at least one at a time. Whether it’s a bittersweet 1950’s kidney-shaped couch, or a pair of Gucci pumps in her size, it’s tempting the think “Well, the right customer just hasn’t come along yet, so I am going to stick with the price I put on it.”

There’s one big problemwith that attitude. The price the manager, pricing staff, or owner assigned to that item is almost entirely guesswork. What’s it worth? is not a definitive question. To one person, it can be worth nothing (“I hate it”) and to the next person along, it could be worth much more than you thought (“I love it, I’ve been looking my entire life for this… AND I just got my tax refund!”) So what’s it worth? Zero, until it sells. And if cutting the price that was (let’s be realistic here) somewhat arbitrarily assigned to that souvenir beer stein or the pump organ, is what’s necessary to turn said stein into cash in the shop’s till, then so be it. Mark it down. The only way a shop profits is with turnover. Move it on, make room for something new in that space.

Buy it today, It may not be here tomorrow: the resale shopkeeper's best advice to shoppersTurnover is important not only for the dollars to be rolling in and the floor space to be available for new incoming, but for a much more important reason that can make or break a shop: Change. “A new store every time.” “Miss a week, you miss a lot.” The very thought of missing out on something when someone else buys it, makes your goods MORE likely to sell at “full price”… that is, the price store staff set on a consigned or donated item.

If a shop opts to operate without a set (well, somewhat set, there should be some flexibility built into the marketing plan, especially at a non-profit which relies on donations) way to reduce prices on items that haven’t sold in whatever time period they choose, there’s another real danger that could cost the business money: underpricing. The shop underprices to keep things moving. The pricers start assigning low prices to items which could well have sold for multiples of that price, thus depriving the sponsoring charitable group the inflow of cash the shop’s supposed to maximize.

Now, it may well be that your client business does discount based on something else besides age on the sales floor. If they do, I’m gonna take a wild guess and bet that the store manager says “I mark things down by gut instinct if no one’s looking at it… or if it’s taking up space I need for something else… or I get in a better version of the same piece of furniture.” Or even, as a manager I know will do: “I’ll give 10% off anything if they ask. In fact, I often go to a third- or half-off if I really need the sale that day.”

Perhaps they feel haggling is a better way to sell? Some folks love to haggle. And that’s fine, but there is a substantial majority of shoppers who don’t… and who accept the price on the tag as the price it is… and simply don’t buy. Or they can’t find a staffer to ask. Or the only staffer who can do the deal is busy elsewhere or out to lunch.

Now, I am all about adding value rather than reducing price. I’d much rather “throw in” some throw pillows if she’s hesitating on the price of the sofa, or say “tell you what, I know that wonderful centerpiece is what attracted you to this dinette set, so let me give that to you for free”… a technique that works well if you’ve been interacting on the sales floor with that customer, and that is easily done if your shop operates with donated goods. Consignment shops, needing to protect the selling price of other people’s merchandise, might offer double punches on their Frequent Buyer Card as an incentive to purchase rather than reduce before their stated, planned, agreed-upon markdowns dates/ percentages.

But here’s, really, the ONLY reason, especially now, that markdowns should be visible, generous, and (relatively) common in a resale shop:

People want to feel like they are smart shoppers… and part of that is feeling like they’ve outsmarted the “system”… AKA you, the shopkeeper. How many times have we seen, and even cheered on, a shopper who waited out the required length of time until something she wanted was reduced? She’s thrilled! She brag to her friends! She might even hug you! And you’ll feel like hugging her back, because finally those darn Gucci pumps sold.

If your client remains set about set prices, here’s a post about how to add value, instead, that might help. If your client is amenable to introducing periodic markdowns to a clientele that has gotten used to a “take-it-or-leave-it” merchandising process, suggest that they try the Big Tag idea   for a few weeks, even a month. See how much more excitement and word of mouth it engenders, and I guarantee that your consulting clients will be thrilled!

For lots more about how to use price reductions to increase traffic, sales, and the shop’s word-of-mouth appeal, here are the Auntie Kate posts about markdowns. Including Ever wish you could come up with a good, quick, polite answer to the perennial  question, “Do you have sales?”?

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Kate Holmes, Consignment Guru, Resale Guru, Thrift ConsultantBloggers just LIVE for the thoughtful questions posed to them, and Auntie Kate is no exception.

Imagine her delight when this missive from a resale shopkeeper landed on her virtual desktop:

“How long should my consignment period be? I currently have a 90-day consignment period. Should it be shorter? Longer? What symptoms should I look for that might be telling me that?”

Auntie Kate replies:

A shorter consignment period will give you more variety as merchandise flows in and out of your shop. A 60-day period is what many, if not most, shops use. Some shops use 6 weeks; some use a 30-day period.

What’s best for you? If your shop is always overcrowded, and you are turning down things you could sell for lack of space, if you feel the only way to cope with massive incoming is to place a numerical limit on your suppliers…a shorter period might be called for.

Examine the selling percentages for items of different “ages.” I’m sure you’ll find that percentage highest in the first three or four weeks, with the percentage of sales going down as items age. Goods which have been on the sales floor for 60 to 90 days probably have the lowest selling rate, so you could be using up space on items least likely to sell.

I was in a shop one day when the owner was crowing

over the fact that she had just sold a $45 dress. . . which had been on her racks for nine months! Just imagine if she had removed that item at 60 days. That would have given her seven months to use that space for other items. If that space was filled with a $30 item which sold every 30 days, she would have realized $210 for that same space (that is, 7 sales of a $30 item each month for seven months.) And customers would have seen that many more possible choices, and so be motivated to visit more often!

Perhaps one hanger-space doesn’t sound like a lot. But if this held true throughout the shop…Hmm, 10,000 garments times that seven more stock turnovers…Are you worried about making the change from 90 days to 60? Thinking that consignors will desert you? I wouldn’t. Consignors simply want their items to sell. If you explain to those concerned that a faster change of stock means more customers, that should do it.

Oh, and remember 3 things.
Making a Change in your Consignment Agreement The three things you must remember when making adjustments in your consignment agreement at any point in your shop’s progress. Available in our Lunch with Kate mini-Products for the Professional Resaler.

Read more Kate’s Mailbox entries.

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A legit reason to miss Conference. Heather gets a pass.

More than one consignment, thrift, and resale shopkeeper has told me, in the past few days, that although they’d love to attend the NARTS Conference where I’ll be giving two workshops,

“I can’t afford to go to Conference.”

Well, far be it from me how to invest your business budget (hah!) but (more…)

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