I'm trying to do an income projection for the next few years, based on
various sales methods. One market avenue is craft/art shows. I've been
to only 2 so far in my clay-career, and have absolutely NO IDEA
WHAT-SO-EVER what a person could typically include in a budget for
income from this marketing method.
If anyone is willing to share their figures with me it would be much
appreciated, and definately held confidential. My product includes some
functional ware, some mythical sculptures, some functional sculptures.
Any advise for the best craft/art shows to hit in the midwest? (I'm in
NW Wisconsin).
Thanks-- direct responses would be appropriate.. pm...@spacestar.net
On Fri, 7 Nov 1997, Patti M. Fox wrote:
> I'm trying to do an income projection for the next few years, based on
> various sales methods. One market avenue is craft/art shows. I've been
> to only 2 so far in my clay-career, and have absolutely NO IDEA
> WHAT-SO-EVER what a person could typically include in a budget for
> income from this marketing method.
> <snip>
> Thanks-- direct responses would be appropriate.. pm...@spacestar.net
Yo....wait a minute. Please don't make this a private conversation... lots
of us are interested!!! Finding a way to make our Clayart pay for
itself is very relevant to the concerns of this group!
Patti, if you've showed at 2 art/craft fairs then you have, well, two more
sets of income figures than many of us do. Can't you extrapolate from
that, at last to come up with a "reasonable" guess? Or do you mean you've
*attended* two fairs, not showed at them? I've heard a rule-of-thumb being
that you should plan on taking about 300 items to a fair, and plan on
selling about a third of them. Of course, when preparing for the next
fair, you carry over the 200 items that didn't sell. Your prices can be
set at about the average for other exhibitors at a given fair, and you can
always ask the organizers about the show/booth fees.
I have a question, brought to mind by the discussion of the ACC wholesale
shows - how do you decide if wholesale is for you? Does it make more
money? Do you have to be able to stand making the same exact product (for
years and years and years)? Is it better to do a little of both, a
standard line for wholesale and one-off's for retail/galleries? Does
wholesale marketing necessitate hiring other people to handle the volume
of work, either in sales or production?
thanks thanks!
-jenni
in Omaha, where I have about two weeks to throw stuff to sell before
Christmas. Boy, this really makes for some seasonal pressure, doesn't it?
freewill wrote:
> Yo....wait a minute. Please don't make this a private conversation... lots
> of us are interested!!! Finding a way to make our Clayart pay for
> itself is very relevant to the concerns of this group!
>
> Patti, if you've showed at 2 art/craft fairs then you have, well, two more
> sets of income figures than many of us do. Can't you extrapolate from
> that, at last to come up with a "reasonable" guess? Or do you mean you've
> *attended* two fairs, not showed at them? I've heard a rule-of-thumb being
> that you should plan on taking about 300 items to a fair, and plan on
> selling about a third of them. Of course, when preparing for the next
> fair, you carry over the 200 items that didn't sell. Your prices can be
> set at about the average for other exhibitors at a given fair, and you can
> always ask the organizers about the show/booth fees.
>
> I have a question, brought to mind by the discussion of the ACC wholesale
> shows - how do you decide if wholesale is for you? Does it make more
> money? Do you have to be able to stand making the same exact product (for
> years and years and years)? Is it better to do a little of both, a
> standard line for wholesale and one-off's for retail/galleries? Does
> wholesale marketing necessitate hiring other people to handle the volume
> of work, either in sales or production?
>
> thanks thanks!
>
> -jenni
So, as for those 2 shows I went to--
First one.. "Art in the Park" on Father's Day in Rice Lake, WI.
I took along everything off my shelves that I considered presentable.
These shelve are getting pretty full, 'cause I haven't used THE HAMMER
on rejects yet (even though I really need to). I've been a student of
CLAYART for 2-3 years now, and my work has progressed. SO.. I gave it
a shot. Entrance fee-- $30. I took my kick wheel along, and that was
a VERY GOOD MOVE. I was usually surrounded by people watching me
throw. I'm not especially proficient at throwing, but I'm a theatrical
type show-off so this marketing approach worked well. My total sales
were $140, and in addition to that I traded a bowl that I considered
flawed to a metalsmith a few boothes down for a beautiful pair of
ear-rings. He thought I was insulting myself my marking the bowl at
$6... I couldn't justify higher because it was (in my opinion)
seriously flawed.
Second show was even cheaper.. "Town and Country Days" Labor Day
Weekend in Shell Lake. $10 per day. I had one sculptural piece I'd just
finished (of which I was/am very proud) which sold for $115. A few
other pieces made the net $130. I again took my wheel, drew less of a
crowd but completed a bunch of work that I wouldn't have had time to do
otherwise.
I recently received the Minnesota Arts Director which lists entrance
fees, etc., and was stunned by the going rates for other shows. That
realization is what prompted my query to CLAYART..
Has anyone else taken their work/wheel with them to shows? This seems
like such an obvious marketing tool, but I haven't been able to attend
(go see) many art/craft shows so I don't know if it's welcome or not.
Still looking to hear more from others willing to share $$ figures.
Thanks-- Patti
>I have a question, brought to mind by the discussion of the ACC wholesale
>shows - how do you decide if wholesale is for you? Does it make more
>money? Do you have to be able to stand making the same exact product (for
>years and years and years)? Is it better to do a little of both, a
>standard line for wholesale and one-off's for retail/galleries? Does
>wholesale marketing necessitate hiring other people to handle the volume
>of work, either in sales or production?
>
>thanks thanks!
>
>-jenni
>in Omaha, where I have about two weeks to throw stuff to sell before
>Christmas. Boy, this really makes for some seasonal pressure, doesn't it?
Jenni,
I realized when I started wholesale that I needed income immediately and
wholesale provides this. The alternative is local craft fairs and
workshop sales that are not as reliable. I went for 3 years before I
decided to add an assistant to helpme. You don't have to make the exact
product year after year. You can change them each year. Also you can do
both local retail and wholesale. Doing an ACC show is very exciting and
rewarding and can be either wholesale or retail or both.
===================
Don Jones
cla...@highfiber.com
:-) implied in all messages and replies
http://highfiber.com/~claysky
Your questions are good but the answers really are dependent on
the individual. I did the ACC shows from 1972 thru 1987 and yes, you can
take alot of orders a a show like that, whether you make money are not is
dependent on how well you price your work. It was allways interesting to
see a "new exibitor" at a ACC show with under priced work. They took orders
left and right, professional buyers really know undervalued work when it is
presented, and the potter usualy doesn't fill the orders once they realize
they are losing money on every pot they sell.
It helps to have a reproducable line for wholesaling, and that can
be a drag if your not interested in doing production work. We had a line of
stoneware Aquariums and Fountains that were 99% wholesaled, and that grew
into a situation where we had three employees. I found that I did not care
for running a business like that and have gone back to making non
production vessels that are mostly retailed out of our shop, but the
biggest problem you may find with wholesaling could be the
mountains of paperwork and accounts recievable.
I think it is very important to diversify your methods of income
from your pot sales, expecially if it is your soles means of support.
Today we do about 60% of our sales directly from our showroom, 20% is
wholesale and another 20% in commissions. In 1985 we were 90% wholesale and
when the mini recession of 89 hit we felt the bump bigtime from our
wholesale accounts. We were saved only because we were in so many shops (
over 100) so we could weather the storm, but it made me very sensitive to
how vurnable we are to the market.
There is no one way, I have found the best thing I can do as a
potter is to be flexible.
Robert Compton Phone: 802-453-3778
3600 Rt 116 http://homepages.together.net/~rcompton
Bristol, Vermont 05443 rcom...@together.net
I too am just getting very serious about potting for a living. I think I
have one advantage that you do not share. I had been an antique dealer,
doing shows for a living for for 2 years. I did about 55 shows A YEAR!
Yes, sometimes 3 in one weekend. It was gruelling but I wouldn't trade
it for the world, (well, maybe a clean, enviromentally safe world).
Anyway, I don't think that Art fairs are any different. I have attended
Art shows as a participant and observer and talked to other potters. My
assumptions were correct. There are no guarantees but you can limit the
shows that you do by attending them and talking to other artists about
their thoughts on that show and past years shows. Also, look in the ART
FAIR SOURCE BOOK for show ratings.
I don't know if you want to go full time but if you do you will have to
travel. No matter where you live there will not be enough shows in your
area to maintain sales. I traveled all over the east coast. It would
have been great to just do shows in Ohio where I lived but it wasn't so.
Before you can make projections you need to assess your own situation.
How much work can you produce? Is it sellable? Should you present your
'rejects' as saleable items? Is your booth display a card table and a
milk crate or is it high tech with lighting? How will you get to a show?
Is your equipment up to date? The list is endless.
I could go on and on with the research I have done on this and the first
hand experiences. I too wanted someone to give me what they know so I
didn't make the same mistakes that they did. Trust me, antique people
our not as giving as potters. I started small just like you with 4 or 5
flea market type shows: $10-$50 for a one or two day show. I was selling
from $50 to $200 a show and thougt I had gone to heaven. Finally I
jumped in and booked my first real antique show. $200 for 2 days! ! !
I thought I went to Hell! I had sold about $400 at the end of that show
and then the last minute someone came in and purchased a $1200 pie safe.
I sold $1600 at that FIRST show and was sorely admitted back to heaven!
Show Expense- $200
Food----------$ 25
Gas-----------$ 10 This show was in my backyard almost
Lodging-------$ 0 I drove back home
COGS--------- $900 Cost of Goods Sold or COGS
Total $1130 This is what it cost me to do this show!
Sales $1600
Total Profit $ 470 WEEEHAAA
Hopefully you can see why it is so hard to project before you have
experience. If I wouldn't have sold that pie safe at the last minute, I
would have lost money. What if you don't sell that $400 pot at the last
minute? Being in business for yourself is a HUGE challenge and risk.
BUT BY ALL MEANS DO IT! DO IT! DO IT! DO IT!
Just know what you are in for and look at what you have to offer
realistically. Would you want to buy your pots? If not why? Do you have
the time, cash, and patience to sit for a weekend dealing with God only
knows what kind of people and pay $200 dollars or more to do it? It's
not unusual to pay $400-$800 for a good show AND submit slides to be
ACCEPTED to have that opportunity!
You can write off Any expense even resembling something to do with your
business. Bus. cards, displays, travel, motels. . . But those expenses
don't 'pay the bills'.
I just came back from a Tom Radca (cover of CM) workshop. I ask him the
very same question about throwing at shows. I'll paraphrase his
response. 'You end up with a lot of amazed, interested people standing
around you but it won't increase sales and it is a lot of work to drag
everything you need with you. I don't do it anymore.' Most bigger shows
are inside and you only have a 10x10 space anyway.
I would highly recomend doing some more research before you jump, but do
jump. A pretty good book is out called 'The Business of Being an Artist'
It's about being a painter but you can apply most everything. Get a
business plan or a start-up small business book. Business principles
apply to ALL business. If more artists realized that, we would have less
Starving artists. Even the successfull Avante' Guard, that think
business ruins art, have someone 'running' there marketing or a college
paying for their opportunity to be anti business.
If I have painted a scary picture I didn't mean to. I could never work
for someone else after going into business for myself but the hours our
longer and harder. Don't take a risk and jump blindly into a show hoping
that you will be discovered by the adoring masses. Take a calculated
risk by doing some research first. You may or may not be ready to JUMP.
You can only project if you know what you are projecting. Obviously you
already are aware of that so you are half way there.
thanks for listening to me ramble,
Ron
Big Baby Head Studio
Too premature. Try at least a dozen before you do anything. Just two makes me
laugh. Even if you try twenty. you will find it difficult to project. I would
not dream of sharing my experience with you, even if I know a lot about the
stuff. What good does it do?