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Posts Tagged ‘starting a consignment shop’

Love how this shop in Bradenton FL solved an annoyance. This wooden pedestal (more…)

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Too Good to be Threw's Kate hHolmes helps you with Window Displays

Need window ideas especially for resale shops? Too Good to be Threw has lots in our 48-page PDQ!

We’ve taken the three wildly-useful Products for the Professional Resaler at TGtbT.com and combined them to make one big, 48-page PDQ that’s jam-packed with ways to make your shop’s display windows lure people into your consignment, resale or thrift shop, to sell them, and to

repeat your success over and over, every day of the week!

In fact, we toyed with calling this Product

Display. Sell. Repeat.

but decided, instead, to be straight-forward (more…)

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It’s been a while since we talked about your sales counter, (cash wrap, check-out desk, whatever you want to call it) and how vital it is to the operation, appearance, and actual branding of your consignment, resale, or thrift shop it is. As one resaler said to me: “Why do they think your sales counter mess is invisible?

It’s not your private office: it’s your reputation!”

How I agree. Go read the post first, then feast your eyes on these examples of professional, image-enhancing sales and acceptance counters. Click the pix to read more about what I say about them. I guarantee,

you’ll never look at yours the same way again.

Cash wrap with impulse items, a place to consult, and nice recycled wood! From AuntieKate.wordpress.com

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Go read the post about how important your counter is to your business.

Go see more consignment and resale shop decor ideas on Pinterest.

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Recently, Sharon Munroe of Little Green Beans in Austin TX, sent me an intriguing link she thought might be helpful for her fellow HTC Sponsors.

Little Green Beans Austin TX helps TGtbT.com readers

Name badges stay on the side of a filing cabinet when not being worn.

So what did I do? I suggested she give us a report on these Reusable Name Badges. Just a quick note, I said. Here’s (more…)

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Fail at opening a consignment or resale shopAmazing. The four reasons Phil Libin, founder and CEO of Evernote,  Inc.’s 2011 Company of the Year, gives as 4 Reasons You’ll Fail at Entrepreneurship are exactly the four that make ME wince, when I hear a would-be resale shop owner declare them as why s/he thinks a consignment or resale shop is just the right thing to start!

I’ve borrowed his reasons and translated them to our industry. So here are my

4 Reasons NOT to open a consignment or resale shop, because if these are your reasons, your business will fail.

1. You Want to Be Your Own Boss

In retail, the public is your boss. Yes, every single person who walks into your shop. And add to that, those who don’t. When you have a boss, you can refer/ defer/ blame/ hide behind her/him. When you’re our there on your own, you’re on your own. Believe me, there will be days when you’ll long to have a boss. If only so you can call in sick.

2. You Want More Flexible Time

Oh yeh. This is the biggie. Unless you have worked in the upper echelons of retail, you won’t understand that retail is the absolute worst career to have if you want to “come and go as you please.” Until you have in place, have trained, can afford and can trust a crew… you will be in your shop for every hour you’ve publicized as open, plus one or two on either end of the day. Without fail.

3. You Want to Make Money Overnight

I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again: The world got along without your business just fine yesterday. It’s not going to start slinging money at your feet from Day One.

A good shop will start paying its overhead after a few months or a few years; a great shop will enable you to take some profit out of it. A magnificent shop will, after a period of time, provide a very comfortable living for you. But it doesn’t happen overnight, and it doesn’t happen without long hours, hard work, and lots and lots of self-education.

4. You Can’t Afford to Fail

The riskiest retail thing in the world you can do is sign a lease, if you do not have every single cent in the bank ready to be given to the landlord is necessary. Oh, no, wait: the riskiest thing to do is to open a shop without knowing everything you can about the business.

At least once a month, I hear a new shopkeeper say “I can’t afford the Manual.” I’ve learned not to reply to them that every week, probably every day, that they operate in the blind, they are losing the cost of the manual and more.Over and over.

I try not to get to know these folk very well, ’cause it breaks my heart when they fail.

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