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It’s been a year of adaptation and adjustment for artisans and entrepreneurs, and the holiday season won’t be any different. That’s why we created a 3-part webinar series called, “From Making to Selling: A NextFab Made Online Series for the Makers and Artisans of Philadelphia.” (Listen to the full webinar series here.) In our first webinar, we chatted with two incredibly experienced business minds—Susan and Ken. NextFab member, Susan Murphy, is a professor in Business Operations at the University of Delaware and the maker-founder of local ornaments company, Jawnaments. Ken Tomlinson is our Chief Financial Officer at NextFab and supported our RAPID Hardware Accelerator Program with his investment experience. In our first webinar, these top business dogs gave us simple and effective insight into “Financial Planning For The Holidays.”
We all love simple answers and Susan gave us exactly that: The #1 priority for financial planning is creating a feasible price.
Let’s start with Business Economics 101. If your price is too low, your profit will be minimal. If it’s too high, your demand will be minimal. Business Economics 102 focuses on the wider ecosystem. Of course, we know the ecosystem doesn’t mean how products look surrounded by green plants and pretty flowers (although there’s a free photoshoot idea for your next Instagram post). What we really mean is how you plan and price in relation to the existing marketplace and competition.
Ken had two key points:
Susan’s top tips are:
Susan explained, “A sustainable price is one that considers the scale of production such that you are making profits that grow over time.” Buckle up my friends, we’ve entered Business Economics 103. Here are the course conclusions:
View this post on Instagram A post shared by Jawnaments.com (@jawnaments)
A post shared by Jawnaments.com (@jawnaments)
Everyone is prepared for the Black Friday sales and pre-Christmas discounts from retail giants. As small-batch producers, are discounts really beneficial to makers? Both Susan and Ken believe promotions are more beneficial than discounts. Only put handcrafted products on sale if necessary. Offering discounts when your income is stable is like switching from a steady table saw to a wobbly hand saw when the table saw was working quickly and effectively. If the table saw is working, why switch to something more challenging? Similarly, if customers are happy paying full price, why offer a discount? By discounting unnecessarily, you may disappoint those who paid full price and discourage others from purchasing outside of sales. Promotions, like “buy 5 get one free,” encourage larger orders and don’t bring any negative reputational impacts.
Craft fairs are the traditional selling spot for many artisans, and for good reason. Susan’s top tip for this was to not just go for the sake of going. Be aware of the total cost of attendance in relation to your likelihood of sales.
Add up fair fees as well as travel, staffing, and supplies costs and use it to determine how many products you need to sell to break even (or make the desired profit.) If it looks like you’ll need to sell more products in a day than ever before, you might want to pass on this fair. Since many of the craft fairs have been canceled this year due to COVID-19, invest the time and money you would’ve used into online marketing strategies or other selling routes. (Side note: We dive deeper into the topic of selling without craft fairs in our second webinar of the series. Go give it a listen!)
From Susan:
From Ken:
This webinar gave great insight into the financial side of business planning and showed how to stabilize economics in these uncertain times. To learn more about planning, promoting, and selling during the pandemic, listen to part 2 of the “From Making to Selling” series!
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