Friday, September 16, 2011

5 for $25

The first little small town fair I did, I kept pretty good track of how many items each person bought. The majority of people bought one or two items. There was one person that bought four items, and two people that bought 5 or more items and one of them was actually a lady who have 6 teenagers with her. So at the next little booth I did, I put up a sign that said "5 for $25." So basically, I paid their tax.   At that consignment sale, I had 3 people who bought that much to get the deal (and the sales overall were very slow/few). At the other little fair I did, I have 8 people buy 5 items to get that deal. They were all excited and a few told me they would be calling me to order more. One of them, booked a party. While I figure it costs mea little to get people to buy that much, it made me a lot more than it cost. I figure most of those people would have only bought 2 or 3 items each. Plus, they felt they were getting an amazing deal, will be future customers, and moved more product. I charge exact tax per item (including the tax) so I came out ahead the money collected.

Before you do a "deal,"  think it through.   When I have done a deal and people booked a party, they expect the deal at their party.   And when someone else books a party from that party, they expect the deal too.   If you offer a deal at your house when people come to buy, they expect it everywhere and tell everyone about the deal.  I have told people that when I do a Special, it is at a fair, not at a party  (but most don't like it!)

1 comment:

  1. Question on the 5.50 amount? I just started as a consultant and had my first party a couple days ago and i was doing 5.00 for each item and then when they came up to pay i would add utah sales tax, so are you just charging 5.50 each so if they bought 4 items they would pay $22.00?
    Sorry im just trying to figure that out cause it is really a pain to have to carry dimes, nickles and penny's.. thanks so much..
    Susan cox

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