Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘resale shopkeeping’

“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.


Save

Read Full Post »

These are actual rocket scientists. Notice that they do not look like typical resale shopkeepers.

Think resale retailing is complicated? Nope.

It’s as simple as AIDA.

First,  (more…)

Read Full Post »

A Too Good to be Threw Teeny Tip fior Consignment, Thrift & Resale StoresHere’s a Teeny Tip from Too Good to be Threw, Products for the Professional Resaler Snow still eating into your shop’s traffic?

Great!

Here’s a task you can do, on and off, until you have a finished

Policies and Procedures Manual

for your current or potential staff.  As you do (or run through, in your mind, if the weather’s keeping everyone away today!) each task, write it down, step by step, in detail. Such as

  • Greet incoming supplier
  • Take items from her/him
  • Remark on how good she/he must feel to have sorted out some underused possessions
  • Verify consignor’s number. Double-check that all groupings are clearly labeled with correct number…

and so on. This is a good start on your policies and procedures manual.

Next, you might want to work on your employee manual, where you set down your expectations and duties of staff. Resources for this: Some generic information is linked on the TGtbT Links Page.

If managing, training, and overseeing staff is something you need to get proactive about, TGtbT has an amazing DOUBLE Product for the Professional Resaler to help.

Not in the mood to do this Teeny Tip? Choose another! More Teeny Tips for consignment, resale, and thrift shops. Or add YOUR Teeny Tip here by commenting!

Save

Read Full Post »

If ever there was a business where the need to be organized was paramount, it’s the consignment, resale, and thrift industry.

So getting and staying organized is a hot topic amongst resale shopkeepers. To give you some insight, we’ve gathered

How some Professional Resalers keep organized:

Peggy: I email the store from home with to do lists.

Deb McD: I call and leave myself a message!! I’m also an avid list maker-even if I forget the list, I can kinda visualize what I wrote down.

Jessica: If a lot of what you need is on a computer,  PCAnywhere by Symantec is a life saver! It allows you to operate your store computer from home and vice versa.

Kate: A square-bottomed canvas tote plus a clipboard or plastic see-thru envelope for notes. That way, physical things and lists get where they are going. My staff knew to clip (with spring clothes pins) notes to me or to the tote rather than rely upon my remembering it in the middle of a hectic day. The tote’s square bottom meant it sat upright, easy to toss things in, obvious to remove and do something WITH whatever was in it.

Add a yearly diary. In it, record when you started planning your St Pat’s event, when you called Yellow Pages to change your ad, daily/ weekly/ monthly/ YTD sales figures, exceptional happenings (even name and phone of a customer who offered to help, had an in with a specific group, etc.) This diary functioned as a “Beat Last Year”, scheduling reminder, and contact database.  I remember and think about things a lot better if I write them down rather than keyboard them.

Bonnie: Like Kate, I use a big tote bag back and forth from home to the store everyday. It usually goes full both ways – clothes that need washing, bills, notes get put in the bag all day. Then I deal with it when I get home, and start filling it up with stuff to go back to the store. My daytimer lives in the tote unless I am using it. Still, I always manage to forget something!

Janis: A “phone message book” that is in duplicate with a post-it note feature. I or employees write notes & phone numbers and take/send them home so I can remember to do stuff … and the copy is there at the store in case I forgot! I also keep old books to keep track of things. I have a tote bag/brief case that I carry the papers & bills back & forth. I use vinyl pencil cases for each day of the week – whoever closes will put the daily reports, receipts, messages and backup disk in them. Usually, it’s me who closes, but the idea is that anyone can keep up with all the daily stuff. I keep the past couple days at home and rotate them – each day has a backup disk, so I actually have 6 historical backups.

Connie: Go with a voice recorder. You can buy those for around $30. Also you could leave yourself or employees a voice memo on the answering machine. (That is, if your machine has this feature)

MarKay: My method is kind of primitive, but effective. I tape or staple a Post-It note around the handle of my purse.

An organized Auntie KateMy personal 2 Best Tips: Use a clear over-the-door shoe organizer bag to hold tagging and other back-room supplies.
And (promise you won’t laugh) I use clothes pins to clip notes to myself (well, my clothes, really) as I gallivant around the store.
Tip #2 1/2: Call yourself: when you think of something super-important, leave a message for yourself on your phone. Just don’t let anyone catch you doing it or you’ll feel really silly. Trust me. —Kate

These suggestions were taken from an older “survey” we did. Share YOUR stay-organized-in-your-resale-shop tips by commenting!

Save

Save

Read Full Post »

What if you looked at your consignment, resale, or thrift shop differently in 2012?What If…

you thought of your consignment, resale, or thrift shop just a little differently in 2012? Would your shop be more successful? More fun to run? Would you find unexpected supporters and fervid fans if you just approached things a tiny bit differently?

This week we’ll present a few What Ifs for you to consider. And what if you took the (more…)

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »