Selling Your Woodworking Art
Selling Your
Woodworking Art
By Jerry Mifflin
Our challenge
as craftsmen and intarsia
artists is to discover our
markets. You need to know your
market, who is your customer?
Are you selling a product to
local or global customers.
If you’re
selling to local customers say
out of a storefront, you must
know if you are in the right
market and selling at the right
price for this local customer.
If you’re not showing the right
product to the right customer
base, chances are there will not
be any sales, are at least very
few.
It
only makes sense that If your
selling a product that is not of
use to the customer and its not
something that they see they
want or need, you had better
find either different markets or
a different product to sell from
your store.
I use to have
a shop that sold simple crafts
like little animal yard and
driveway signs. I sold lots of
country style decorative items
for the interiors of their
homes. These items sold well
because I was living in a rural
area where my customers had big
yards and long driveways. These
people loved the country style
of decorating. They loved the
crafts I was making for them. I
had other craftsmen producing
items for me to sell for them. I
was producing and selling to my
market base.
If I was
trying to sell the country style
signs or plaques where I am
living now, in the city, I would
not do so well. For my customer
base is not the same. Their
yards are different, their
driveway is short and their
interior decorating may not be
the same kind of “country
style.” So for this new customer
base you have to change your
product line.
Does your
product fit into the decorating
scheme of most of your
customers, if not very few are
going to buy. You must be
certain that your craft fits
with your prospects or your
business will fail. You must
take the time to study this.
Find the proper market place.
Crafts people
are used in having friends and
loved ones telling them how cool
and how beautiful there craft
is, this is encouraging. The
problem is that it’s not
realistic. You need to get input
and about your product from a
source that will give you a
helpful honest response about
your product.
When your
customers come into your shop
and say how much they like what
you’re doing but walk out
without buying anything you have
to ask yourself, what’s wrong?
Are you in the
right market for the craft you
sell?
If your craft
fits your customer, how is your
price? The price you sell your
product for may need to be
adjusted up or down.
For the price
setting you need to look at your
competition. At what price are
they selling a comparable
product. Ask yourself can I make
a profit selling my product at
that price. Can I sell my
product and get a higher price?
What can I do to make my product
worth more money?
I now sell
art, “intarsia woodworking art”
that is higher priced, which
means for the customer to let go
of the money, she will have to
really love your product.
Crafts, can be
a tough market. I am a
cabinetmaker, caught up in the
world of art. I love to add
artistic designs to cabinet
doors to make them stand out
from what other people build.
The cabinets add atmosphere to a
room by giving the room
character and there by adding
value.
I have managed
to sell a lot of my work over
the years. My prices are usually
from about $200 to $15,000
depending on the work involved.
As I said before, some time ago
I had a craft shop in a small
town. I built every wood craft I
could think of to build and it
was fun, but not really much
money.
The money only
comes after you learn the
business end of the craft
market. As a cabinetmaker I have
learned the hard way that you
must get paid for the hours that
you work, even when you love the
work.ÂÂ
How much
should I charge for my work?
It’s basically
the same for most businesses,
how much do you want to pay
yourself per hour. Just add to
that a percentage for overhead
plus a percentage for profit and
add material cost. That gives
you a charging rate for all of
your products. You must add the
profit, that gives you the money
to grow, like buying more tools.
My charging rate depends on if
it’s commercial or residential,
$45-$85 per hour depending on
how custom the work is. In my
old “craft shop” my charging
rate, at that time, was $35
hour, the price fit the product
and the overhead.
If you can
sell your craft as “ART” it will
increase the amount you can
charge for your product.
Perceived value! Do you have
awards! Do you have newspaper
and magazine articles about you!
Do you have references? Have you
developed a recognizable name
for your market? If not, you
need to work towards these
things. All of this adds to the
perceived value of your craft.
Intarsia
woodworking is my craft, my art.
It’s the work I look forward to
doing. Find the craft you love
to make, find the correct
customer base, set a reasonable
price for your work and your on
your way to a successful
satisfying life.
Jerry Mifflin
creates many works of Intarsia
Art and gives away patterns of
his work for other crafters to
use. Articles and information on
how to build intarsia are on his
website, http://www.intarsia.us/
, specializing in that
woodworking art and business.
For patterns and a how to do
intarsia art e-book go to
http://www.freeintarsiapatterns.com/
to get yours.
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