Do your emails have your signature on them? Do you know why they should? Do you know how?
Posted in 5- Minute Fixes, Shopkeeping talk | Tagged advertising, email, web |
As some of you might know, in addition to my hard-hitting reportage and fact-finding for the resale industry, I’m also the published mystery author of The Picker Who Perished. My heroine, Wendy Sam Miller, owns Too Good to be Threw, an imaginary consignment shop in Sarasota, and is way too busy to actually cook. So her recipes are simple enough Continue Reading »
Posted in Shopkeeping talk, Slices of (my) life | 4 Comments »
Do you scare your potential consignment, resale, thrift clients off with clutter?
One of the most common complaints about the resale shop industry is that the racks and shelves are too full, that it’s hard to see what the shop is selling. I’m sure you’ve heard this more than once. But an over-full sales floor is not what I’m talking about today.
It’s the OTHER clutter.
The clutter on your web site.
We all know that people don’t read, they scan. They sweep their eyes across to “get the gist.” Heck, we do it ourselves, so why would we think future suppliers and shoppers wouldn’t?
So it’s important to have a clean, uncluttered web site/ blog that delivers exactly what this unknown stranger, your potential client, wants. And since you most likely have a pretty good idea of what these strangers want to know, just give it to them, with no added clutter. Here’s Before and Afters, with the Before examples borrowed from real-life resale shop web sites.
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When you’ve labeled a section on your web site layout “Hours”, adding the traditional notation of a colon and two zeroes is visual clutter.
When you’re listing a retail shop’s hours, even the abbreviations for “ante meridian” (before noon) and “post meridian” (after noon) are overkill. Maybe not if you’re listing hours for a bar, in which case you’d probably need to clarify that you’re open 11 am to 2am… but I think we can assume a shop opens some time in the forenoon and closes some time after 12 noon.

Easier to read in a plain font, plus a few less words and a bit of bolding for the important points.
The example above uses a simpler font, a few less words, and the numbers that potential suppliers are interested in.
More thoughts on fewer words. The example below lists way too many “do-not-accept” items than really is needed. Bed rails? Really? How many of those do they have to say No thank you to in the course of a year?
Tomorrow: Give it to them where and when they want it.
Posted in Shopkeeping talk | Tagged advertising, blogging, web | 2 Comments »
Love how this shop in Bradenton FL solved an annoyance. This wooden pedestal Continue Reading »
Posted in 5- Minute Fixes, Shopkeeping talk, Slices of (my) life | Tagged customers, daily operations, starting a consignment shop | 4 Comments »
If you love Judith Leiber handbags, if perchance you might have them in your consignment, resale or thrift shop, you’ll want to Continue Reading »
Posted in Shopkeeping talk | Tagged selling |





