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Posts Tagged ‘consignment’

How to Consign (or sell) your underloved items idea brochure from TGtbT.comWhen a potential supplier to your consignment, resale, or thrift shop asks about bringing items in, what happens?

I mean, besides your friendly, upbeat enthusiasm?

Do you have a how-to brochure right on your counter (and in your entry and by the dressing rooms for easy pick-up) that they can take home with them, to

turn their impulse into dollars for them, your shop, your cause?

No, no, no. I do not mean a copy of your consignment agreement or a flier about the good your charity does. Or even “what we buy.” I mean a real, honest-to-goodness how-to handout that will not only

increase quality incoming

but save you time,

and save them face.

If you don’t have a how-to handout now or if yours is not as welcoming as you would like, this would be a good weekend to develop one.

Points to remember as you develop the language for your brochure:

  • Keep it light and easy, open and encouraging.
  • Use bullet points (they’re so easy to scan, aren’t they? You’re doing it now.)
  • Show your personality. Imagine you’re speaking to one person. You wouldn’t boss them around, would you?
  • Brag on your business. Project confidence that your shop will be able to sell their goods well.
  • Point out, in a subtle way, how your shop can help them pass on their underloved possessions better/ more effectively than any of the alternatives available to them.

Don’t forget to include:

  • What’s in it for them (it’s not ALL about the money. Offer alternative reasons to sell their items to you, consign them at your shop, donate them to your cause.)
  • Give them justifications for getting rid of “perfectly-good” possessions (they really do need permission!)
  • A simple, step-by-step way to tackle that big job of cleaning out.
  • A selling message about your shop (after all, everyone’s a customer, even those with overloaded closets and cupboards!)

Then, before you produce your brochure,

check it for spelling, typos, awkward sentence structure. Better yet, have someone else check it (it’s hard to see one”s own mistakes, isn’t it? Happens to me all the time.) You don’t need to follow those 5th-grade grammar rules about incomplete sentences and dangling participles, but you do need to make it understandable.

Then give it to

a handful of honest, eagle-eyed and sharp-brained friends, customers, buddies for their opinion. Does it sound easy? Appealing? Lucrative? Does it present your business the way you’d like to be perceived? Are they all revved up to sort through their stuff?

Sound like too big a job? You have more pressing matters at the shop? You could simply

order the Customer Service Brochures Layout Idea Kit from Too Good to be Threw, which has this brochure and 8 others for $49. Heck, $49 is less than a half-hour’s for a graphic designer. That’s NINE different brochure ideas you can use as the starting point for your own Customer Service Brochures. You can even, if you wish, take the printed-out brochures directly to your local printer, ask that your shop logo, address, etc be pasted in, and order up as many as you like!

Past Weekend Warrior suggestions.

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Bad review on your consignment shop? Bury it!

Peer reviews, social media, whatever you want to call it…if you want your business to gain customers from the web, you need to manage not only what you say about your business (watch those Facebook entries!) but even more, (more…)

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Bandaid puppetsHere’s a past resale/ consignment post which bears repeating.

Are you sabotaging your business in obvious and subtle ways?

Read how I found yet another reason not to numerically limit incoming goods when I was forced to follow a rule that makes no sense. Besides the reasons we already can see. ‘Cause it messed with my head.

A pinprick here, a pinprick there and pretty soon your business is bleeding real bad.

The photo’s from http://www.momsmarbles.com/ which is a pretty cute site.

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Read Part 1: Seasonal sales and their consignors

Vital at Seasonal Sales: The Volunteers

Volunteers at a seasonal consignment sale.

Volunteer spot-checkers...and spots they did find, but surprisingly few.

Now, every seasonal sale varies from every other…even all the JBF sales have different aspects. But all of them have opportunities that are win-win: the seasonal sale and the year-round shop can partner in so many ways.

Today let’s look at how volunteers are a crucial part of making a seasonal sale workable, how they use and how they reward volunteers.

Can volunteers a part of year-round shops? You betcha. Read on.

The key to the success, both in (more…)

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As you can guess, my answers to our headline question will be positively in the affirmative. But before we get to explicit idea-sharing, let’s take a look at one seasonal sale venture: the Just Between Friends event in Tampa, Florida. Follow me, year-round consignment and resale shops, as I explore:

Thanks to my Just Between Friends Sale HQ friends, Shannon and Daven and Michelle, as well as the Tampa-area franchise owners Holly and Christina Ruhlig (they’re married to brothers), I was invited to poke around at the JBF seasonal sale in Tampa this week.

A consignor wheeling toys in, in a laundry cart

A necessity for seasonal sales: laundry carts so consignors can put their own big items on the selling floor.

Seasonal sales depend on three groups: the consignors, the volunteers, and the franchisee owners. I think consignment, resale, and thrift store owners can learn from, teach, and work with seasonal sales, so let’s take a look at all three groups. First:

The Consignors: Intake Day

I arrived (more…)

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