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Posts Tagged ‘promotions’

ReSell RePlace ReJoice...and let them KNOW you do!

ReSell RePlace ReJoice…and let them KNOW you do!

Forget the New Year’s Resolutions for a moment. Don’t beat yourself up with stuff you know you NEED to do.

Instead, indulge yourself today and think about how great you are and how far you’ve already come.

Go ahead, think about what you are proud to have accomplished in your consignment or resale shop last year.

Good for you! Have you let your marketplace’s consumers know about it? Although that in itself, communicating with potential customers, might be your proudest feat! A lot of you have utilized the Twitter and Facebook world this year, including me.

Has your feat been a journey worthy of passing on to your peers? Let us know. We LOVE success stories from the biggest to the smallest, toughest to most gee why didn’t I think of that?

So tell us, what wonderful thing did you do, business-wise, last year? Why was it successful and in what way? What would you warn us against doing? And how do you plan on building on or expanding your success in 2010?

Go ahead: Be PROUD and be LOUD. It’s just us resale fans here, sitting on the bleachers. Brag. Strut. Show off your stuff. We encourage justifiable pride on this, the first day of the New Year.

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What are they saying about YOUR consignment shop?Is there still time to improve your consignment or resale shop this year?

You betcha. Take the next few days to sit down and read. And make (more…)

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little Christmas trees can mean a BIG boost to rresale sales

If you have a shop which sells kidswear, go find little fake Christmas trees.

You’ll need them next November 1.

Little kid-can-carry trees that small ornaments can be hung on. Buy them all when you find them. 

It’s gonna be a great holiday promo that will boost not only Christmas sales, but your shop’s community-activity profile as well. 

Now’s ALSO the best time to

plan for next year’s holiday season to be even better than it was this year! Order TGtbT.com’s PDQ of  Holidays in Resale for your advance planning.

More holiday decor items you might want to stock up on, and why.

Okay, why little trees?

Here’s the plan: You want families to remember your shop in November and December. So you build a promotion that will keep customers coming back regularly during this time span.

You start with the beginnings of a season-long giveaway: a little Christmas tree per child.

Each week, you offer something to decorate this tree. Depending on how much time and energy you and your staff can devote to this you can offer:

  • A workshop once a week for the kids to make an ornament through materials and lessons offered by your shop.
  • A branded “kit” of take-home-and-make supplies with easy instructions.
  • A how-to handout per week with an ornament-making idea for kids to try at home.
  • A completed ornament for the children to hang on their tree. These could have a theme: Week One, an ornament representing transportation “I’d drive from anywhere to visit MyShop,” Week Two a teeny piggy bank for “I am learning to save money by shopping resale at MyShop,” and so on.

Some notes:

  • Be aware of the safety factor: no small parts, no instructions involving sharp knives, ovens, epoxy!
  • Be sure your promotion actually promotes your shop with your logo on all kits, instruction sheets, maybe even a sticker sheet for them to fill as they try the various ideas you offer.
  • If you are offering an instruction sheet, keep the past weeks’ around so some kids can play catch-up as time goes by.
  • (You might even offer a full collection of these ideas as a stocking-stuffer freebie to parents and teachers, or a post-holiday idea book they can use next year.)

Don’t want to deal with those little trees? Vary the promotion by having a big, bare tree in your shop window. The participants can hang their ornaments on your tree and the community can watch the tree become bedecked with a dazzling array of imaginative ornaments. (Bonuses: A great photo-op for local media and a way to bypass the necessity for display changes for weeks! And the week after Christmas? They can bring in their visiting relatives to see the tree they helped build, and then reclaim their ornaments to use on their tree next year.)

So what has this type of promo done for your business?

  • Increased traffic in your shop at a time when families might be lured away to the malls and big-box retailers
  • Built community involvement and shown community acceptance of your business
  • Provided a news-worthy story for the media
  • Promoted loyalty to your shop by your clientele by starting a new tradition
  • Increased the growth of consumer habits…let’s go to MyShop this week!
  • Perhaps decorated your shop windows for little effort and built the appeal of your shop’s location by the tree’s display
  • Given consumer families and their out-of-town family a reason to come to the shop between Christmas and New Year’s.

This idea specific to shops which carry childrenswear is from KidBiz: It’s NOT Child’s Play, one of TGtbT.com’s Products for the Professional Resaler

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Friends & Family Discounts work for consignment shops too!Wanting to spur some action in your resale, thrift, or consignment shop in the next week or two?

Why not take a leaf from the department stores’ play book and offer a Friends & Family Discount?

It couldn’t be (more…)

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Sweets for the sweet...your sweet customer!Tucking an extra in your customers’ shopping bags is a nice gesture anytime, and especially during the holidays. It shows appreciation…and builds word-of-mouth. That’s the shop that put a little something in my bag I was telling you about.

Maybe a prewrapped candy cane with your biz card tied on with a bit of ribbon? An added touch that creates a touch of loyalty to your personable shop: Writing Happy Holidays & signing your card on the back.

Who knows, this might even turn into a every-holiday tradition for your shop, and your customers.

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