5 Lessons Learned Surviving Craft Shows
Once a Scout Mom always a Scout Mom

Patience is a Virtue
If you’re going to be selling crafts, you’re going to need patience. Patience with your customers. Patience with yourself. After all, if you’re in sales, you have no guarantees about how well a day is going to go. There are so many variable factors that can go into a show. Amount of customers, weather, location, and even people's mood that day. Having patience and reminding myself my "why?" kept any negative thoughts at bay. Even if I didn't do as well as I expected, my main mission was to get my name out there. I always made my vendor fee so everything else is just gravy.Found My Brand Voice
Surviving craft shows can be very overwhelming. There are alot of factors to consider. From payment processing and your display, I have evolved over the last year. It didn't happen immediately. Every show I learned and invested. My goal was to just get better after every event. The best advise I received was from a class by Nichole Stevenson Secrets of Selling at Craft Fairs: How to Get In, Make Sales, and Grow Your Business. What resonated with me the most was a craft show booth is the first window into our business. You need to represent! You want someone to walk in just like they walk in a store. Add your personal touch and brand. However, branding isn't about the colors and logo but the "feeling" you want to bring to your customers. When I thought about Canine Crazies I thought about dogs. What feelings do dogs give me? What are things that remind me of dogs? Walks in the park, goofiness and happy. So I decided to focus on those key elements by building a craft booth that looked like a dog park! From a chain linked fence to grass on my collar display. I now only try to select happy bright colors of fabric for dog toys and adorable patters for collars. I even took it a step further and found a toilet bowl to make people laugh. Really thinking about how my brand "felt" vs "looked" gave me focus. It created engagement and people remembered me. I learned that when I'm confident in my brand, surviving craft shows became less daunting.
From My First Shows
To My Last
What's Hot and What's Not
I'm a data nerd. I can't help myself. I like to observe and watch. Collect relevant information as it helps me make better decisions. At every show, I observed customers. People didn't realize but I was watching how they were interacting with my products. From the positive and the negative comments or what simply attracted their eye. Some people had questions, especially snuffle balls and snuffle mats. I actually am glad I heard concerns too as it helped me improve my designs. Some items such as fleece tug ropes ALWAYS sold no matter how slow the traffic was that day. Reviewing sales numbers ensured my hottest items were always in-stock.. Direct customer feedback was simply invaluable. In return I increased my sales at every event.Crafting is Community
The best thing about the crafting community is the people I have met. The handmade marketplace are passionate people. They take pride in what they make and want to share it with the world. We help each other... may it be babysitting each others booth, helping put up pop up tents or loaning each other things we forget like scissors. Surviving craft shows together is what bonds us. We thrive on inspiring and supporting each other. After several months of isolation at home, it felt soooo good to reconnect. I made friends with makers but also my local community. The best part: I met ALOT of dogs. I am blessed that I now I have a pool of people that if I saw them on the street they would not be a stranger. They are my tribe. My social life. So thank you to my makers, market managers, hooman customers and most importantly DOGS for giving me a fantastic 2021. You have not only helped me become a better business, you have helped me grow as a person. What's in store next year? Although my heart will always adore markets and I won't be able to resist a good show, bring on online development! I can't wait to connect beyond my local community and continue to share with you the fun Canine Crazies has to bring.About the Author
Dog Mom, traveler, foodie and canine crafter. Kimberly is dedicated to enriching the lives of all dogs. She is inspired by her Two Idiot Balls of Fluff, two snow dogs, Bear and Koda, Kimberly is passionate about sharing with you all the things she learned raising her fur babies.

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