Friday, 28 December 2007

Can't make a living from handmaking?

Are you struggling to make a living out of your handmaking? Well , if you are focusing on making more, faster, then you're probably concentrating on the wrong thing. And, you will most likely never solve your income problem that way. You need to know about a little secret known to the best entrepreneurs... and every traditional jeweller. Let me explain...

A while back, I read about a property developer who only invests in the most exclusive postcodes. His rationale? The labour costs the same whether the end result can be sold for £500 / sq foot or £5000. Likewise, the materials. Yes, more expensive variants are demanded but they are justified by the higher rate of return. By only operating at the top of the market, this entrepreneur makes more on every pound of labour and material invested.

You can do the same. In fact, old school jewellers already know this. Take a diamond engagement ring. What are they selling? The setting? The platinum band? Of course not. It's all about the diamond. The ring is just the vehicle to sell the diamond. For the super rich, jewellers create pieces to 'carry' ever expensive combinations of stones. Look at celebrity bling; it's dripping with high quality stones. And, on each stone the jeweller makes a wholesale-to-retail mark up. A margin that far outweighs the value added by the jeweller's labour.

Think about it. You can make a necklace in silver with cubic zircona and sell it for £39.99. You could make the same necklace and use diamonds and white gold or platinum instead and sell it for £3999. Either way the production time/labour is going to be very similar. And, the necklace may even look very similar. But, the profit couldn't be more different. Instead of making £25 - £30 you might make £2500 - £3000!

Like all great ideas, there is a downside. You are going to need more money (working capital) because more money is going to be tied up in your stock. Plus, you've got to be able to achieve the right level of 'finish'. And, if your designs don't sell, this probably won't help them. That said, if you are producing stuff that sells , but find you just can't produce enough quickly enough to make a living, here is an answer. And, best of all, it's one that generations of jewellers (and entrepreneurs) know works!

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Tuesday, 18 December 2007

Wanton Neglect & Handmade On The Net

Sorry for the lack of posts lately. Lame I know, but I've been absolutely snowed under over at the day job - gift retailer pressies4princesses. The Christmas rush is always a sleepless, work-a-thon nightmare and this year, with sales up 100% again, was no exception. With things finally starting to slow down - literally in the last hour or two - I've time to start feeling a little Christmassy myself and to get back on track with this blog.

A friend bought this to my attention from The Guardian newspaper today: The shape of things to come. Among the trends that the trend-spotters and futurologists(!) have picked up on is "Handmade on the net". The idea that more and more people are and will seek out "authenticity" in our anonymous, artificial, mass-produced world and they see handmade goods as offering this. That's fantastic news for us all. Long have handmade gifts taken a disproportionately large share of our sales over at pressies. It's something we've actively sought to develop - hence the Handmaking Heroes Handmade Gift Competition. Got your entry in yet? No - then please hurry!

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