Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Not-for-Profit Resale’ Category

Think of all the good your shop does for your community:The good consignment, resale, and thrift shops do in their communities

  • You collect items which, while unsalable in your business, are useful and needed in various charities around town. Quite possibly you even donate your time, sweat, and gas money delivering these items around town.
  • Perhaps you maintain consignment accounts whose proceeds go directly, as cash (always needed!) , to charitable causes. Perhaps you actively seek out non-profits to partner with in this way.
  • You donate door prizes and silent auction items and things for goodie bags to charitable fundraisers. Maybe you take out ads in the Band Boosters program or give the local theater group some costumes and props.
  • Unsold items are carefully sorted by you for donation where they will do the most good.
  • You donate space and your traffic to the Pep Squad booth selling Christmas wrap, the Girl Scouts with their cookies, the animal shelter with their hug-a-pup event.
  • Your provide a sales outlet for handmade crafts from the assisted-living crafts programs or a venue for the community college’s interior design classes. Maybe you do presentations on entrepreneurship at a local school or give a “dress for success” show at the women’s resource center.
  • You donate a portion of sales proceeds from various events (bag sales? dollar racks?) to local non-profits.
  • You provide X jobs for the community and plow back $Y into your community…a substantial figure, when you count consignor/seller income from selling through you, salaries, rents, local business supply purchases, on and on…)

Do you get full value from the good you do in your community?

Do you publicize your good deeds and the helping hands you extend to a broad spectrum of local assistance?

It’s one thing to donate clothes to a church’s free clothing pantry or to give $1 per bag sold at your bag sale to the emergency shelter. It’s another thing to let your marketplace know that you are fully vested in, and active with, people helping people right here at home. That, when they patronize your business, they are taking part in a network of loving concern that reaches not only their lives, but their neighbors’ as well.

Think of it this way: when you let people know that you’re doing good, you’re inspiring them to do the same.

Toot your horn. Modesty only becomes those who sit back and don’t do anything to interweave their lives with others’.

Be bold in declaring that when folks do business with you, it benefits not just them, but also your community. Step up and say

“We step up and we thank YOU for doing the same by dealing with us.”

Read Full Post »

NHow social media can be used by the consignment, resale, thrift store industryARTS recently asked me: “What social media do you use?” It’s the first in a series of questions they are posing to the workshop presenters for Conference 2011, to introduce the speakers to association members. That’s an easy question to answer. But the bigger question I’d like to ponder is:

How do you, as a resaler, use the social media you spend so much time on?

So, (more…)

Read Full Post »

Has your consignment or resale shop grown like Topsy?One thing I noticed on my trip to 5 eclectic shops the other day, was the extent to which

fixturing matters.

The two very-funky shops had, on purpose, mismatched fixturing. This gave a nice cluttery feel to their shops, and since all the fixtures, from clothes trees to tables, were for-sale merchandise, it made sense.

But the three upscale shops, the ones commanding the best prices, (more…)

Read Full Post »

Making a big deal out of their entranceDoes your resale or consignment or thrift shop carry a good number of small wall decor items?

This “garden arbor” style of entry, set flush against the store’s entry, could be a great way to not only give you a bit more hanging display space, but also (more…)

Read Full Post »

Happy Valentine’s Day… you know how much Auntie Kate {hearts} resale shopkeepers of all sorts (well, Resale makes my heart RACE!except for some sorts; let’s be honest here 😉 )

And because Auntie Kate adores you, she wants you to know that it’s only 18 weeks until our resale industry’s annual Conference. This year it’s in Dallas. (Read about it.) (And read what Auntie Kate thinks about Conference.)

Auntie Kate has full confidence that you CAN afford to go.

Every shopkeeper…whether consignment or buy-outright…can afford to go. Yes, you can. It’s up to you. 18 weeks…can you increase your profits by just $20 a business day, and tuck that money aside to invest in the second-greatest* learning experience in your chosen field?

Of course you can. $20 extra profit a day is a piece of cake, and investing the $1800-$2500 you could be making between now and then will net you ten, twenty, even 100 times your investment, if you truly take in, absorb, question and filter all the knowledge you will get from Conference.

How will you be able to afford it?

Get out the Products for the Professional Resaler you already have in your business reference library. Find those strategies and ideas you thought were a possibility, but which you’ve not gotten around to doing. Then do them. Simple as that.

Don’t have any Products for the Professional Resaler? Get some. There’s even the cheaper-than-a-grilled-cheese Lunch with Kate Products.

Don’t want to spend ANY money making money? Then read everything here on Auntie Kate the Blog, review the hundreds of free tips and hints on TGtbT.com, get a glimpse into how your customers think at HowToConsign.com, follow Too Good to be Threw on Twitter and Facebook, and see what the Sharers have to say on our Professional Resalers’ discussion board.

(Oh, and if you’re a manager rather than the owner of a shop? Start working on the boss/ the board of directors now to pay for your professional education…and show them how you’re making the $20 extra a day with a little help from Auntie Kate!)
.

Because Auntie Kate KNOWS you can’t afford NOT to go.

.
* Conference is second only to all the Products for the Professional Resaler offered at Too Good to be Threw. The Products are always there for you, 24/7/365 and Conference, fun as it is, lasts just a few days. Plus, the Products, even if you buy them all, are cheaper and do not require mascara.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »