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

reach out to those in your community with quality items to donate

Reach out to those in your community with quality items to donate.

It’s not easy, being a NFP thrift store these days. (Not that it ever was.) You’d like to reach out to those in your community with quality items to donate to your worthy cause.

But how, with the limited budget and resources most charitable stores operate under?

Rung, a newly-formed NFP store benefiting the Women’s Foundation of Greater St. Louis, has a Boutique-of-the-Month program going.

A new-merchandise shop which is likely to have a clientele that is amenable to Rung’s mission, generous with donations, and willing to work with Rung, can gain recognition by becoming a drop-off point for better donations.

See what it looks like to the public. And a PDF explaining it all to participating boutiques.

Sounds like it could be a win/win, especially if the “real” store is willing to put forth a decent effort in getting their customers involved.

More on NFP/ charity thrift shopkeeping:

If you aren’t an NFP shop but know and love one, why not send them an email linking to this post? Could be, you’d be helping a charity, and building bonds with your non-profit peers. I am sure they’d appreciate it!

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“It’s worth nothing in your closet…your attic…your basement.”

Increase the value of the goods in your shop with TGtbT.com and its Products for the Professional ResalerHow often has any consignment, resale, or thrift shopkeeper said that phrase. After all, if something’s sitting, disused, in someone’s home, it is worth precisely ZERO to everyone.

This is the persuasion we use to get folks to give these items a chance to gain value, to be used…and to make the owner and the shopkeeper a bit of money.

We also use the “It’s worth nothing in your closet…” approach to emphasize that we are adding value to their items by providing a shop, customers, heat and light and showroom and credit-card capability. The amount of value we add depends solely on our skills, knowledge, and retail talents.

And our skills determine our profits.

Your consignment or resale shop increases the value of used goods. Learn to maximize that value with Too Good to be Threw.So why, oh why, if you are buying outright, would you gift your seller with more than her item is worth to her, because of your work and expertise and ability to make money?

That’s what you are doing, if you base the price you pay on a percentage of what you can sell it for. . . rather than the value the seller assigns to her items. Pay X% of what you will sell it for? What you can sell it for to one of your shoppers has nothing to do with the seller’s subconscious appraisal of her goods.

Let’s take a look at some Traveling Pants. Josephine has them. She wants to sell them to you. How much does she value them?

Maybe she bought them on a whim and paid too much. Or bought them on sale or even at a garage sale. Maybe they were a gift from someone. Maybe she swapped the Pants with a friend.

Maybe she loves them and hates that they’ve never fit right. Maybe she hates the color. Maybe they have happy memories or unhappy memories.

Maybe she’s motivated to bring the Pants in to you because she’s a fervent recycler. Or maybe she’s really hard up for money. Or….

The point is, the Traveling Pants have a value to her, and that value, high or low, must be met before she will agree to sell them to you. Are you following me so far?

Grow your business with TGtbT.com's Products for the Professional ResalerNow, consider. None of the above has a farthingsworth of influence on what the Pants are worth to YOU. Because what they are worth to your business has everything to do with the business you have built, that you run, that you finance.

In fact, the better a shopkeeper you are, the smaller your buy-outright cost of goods will be.

The smarter you are about your business, the more profit you are going to make. And that’s how it should be, right? The Traveling Pants aren’t worth more to Josephine because you are talented and pay attention your business. So why pay her X% of the value you have created?

Selling more is not hard with TGtbT.comSuspect that you’re not adding enough value to your incoming goods…whether you consign, buy outright, or turn charity donations into funding? Here’s a Product for the Professional Resaler that you need.


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Sure, you hear compliments constantly about your resale shop. “Everyone says it’s so cute,” says one Worn out shoes? shopkeeper. “People tell me all the time how neat and organized my shop is,” says another.

But what are they not telling you?

That’s what you need to hear. Now no one likes to hear the negatives. It stings. It hurts our pride. We feel it’s unjustified and a matter of their opinion… which, natch, we don’t share.

But until you know (more…)

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Who says you can't use your cat as a paint brush?Creativity can build your business to untold heights. And it can inspire a new zest in your life as well. Who wants to do the same-old same-old over and over again? Maybe it’s time to flex your business muscles and explore new challenges for 2011.

But learning to be creative with your resale business. That’s a challenge! Here’s Step #1  from one of TGtbT.com’s mini-Products:

Business-building creativity in 4 easy lessons: #1

First, identify new markets and opportunities.
Pay attention to the world around you. Are there trends to be taken account of? Is your market changing, and how can those changes help your business?

For example: What do people want to buy from you now, that might be different from when you first opened your shop? How do potential clients learn about you? Is the trend towards ever-cheaper quality in consumer goods going to impact your business and what can you do about it?

Steps 2, 3, and 4 on how to build your business by getting creative are in your copy of 101 Daily Tips for a Better Shop. Don’t have a copy yet? It’s available for Pretty Darn Quick download on Too Good to be Threw’s “Lunch with Kate” Page.

Illustration from sixthman.net

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It’s all too tempting, when a consignment, resale, thrift shop deals in home goods, to use the for-sale furniture as a handy surface

on which to plop things. And thus do no favors to (more…)

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