Can you Make a Living Selling at Craft Shows?

 

I’ve met many people through the craft show circuit who sell at craft shows full-time. Especially when they’re selling items on the craft show bestsellers list.

 

I remember chatting with a jewelry vendor who spent her entire year traveling to different shows. I had a table beside her at a 3-day event so I got to ask lots of questions…like “how do you do it?” Although she had some online and wholesale sales, the main source of her income came from craft shows.

 

The short answer to: can you make a living selling at craft shows?

 

Absolutely.

 

But it’s not a matter of signing up for as many craft shows as you can.

 

I’m going to share some tips in this article to help you get the most bang for your buck out of craft shows and use them to earn a living from your handmade business.

 

 

Are craft shows worth it?

Craft shows can be worth the time and money you put in if your products have good profit margins, you spend your time wisely when preparing, and you have a good sales and marketing strategy for the event.

 

Too many vendors don’t track the hours spent preparing for a craft fair, setting up their display, selling during the event, and packing up after. When they deduct all the expenses related to a craft fair, they realize they haven’t made much money.

 

They also believe making money at a craft show is as simple as setting their products on a table and waiting for people to buy.

 

You need to be prepared to plan an effective display and be a salesperson at the event; your products won’t sell themselves. There will also be many shoppers who are interested in your products but aren’t able/ready to buy that day. So it’s not just about selling at the event; it’s also important to market to those who don’t buy.

 

When you put the effort in to actually sell your products (and not just wait for people to buy) and market your business so sales continue even after the event, you can make craft fairs worth your time and money.

 

 

Why craft shows aren’t always profitable

There are always expenses when it comes to running a handmade business, such as:

 

PRODUCTION EXPENSES

The costs associated with the production of your products:

  • Material costs – cost of all materials needed to create a product that’s ready for sale (this includes packaging if you sell a product such as cream sold in a container)
  • Time costs – the time it takes you to make each product, completed to a state that it’s ready to be sold (e.g. the time it takes to package your products and attach proper labels must be included in production time)

 

 

BUSINESS EXPENSES

Your total sales must also cover the other costs associated with operating your business, such as:

  • Tools & equipment, as well as their maintenance
  • Shipping materials
  • Office supplies (ink for your printer, envelopes for invoices)
  • Marketing supplies (business cards, postcards, flyers)
  • Gas to drive to and from the post office or craft supply store
  • Transaction fees
  • Taxes, business registration fees, licenses, etc.

 

 

And then, let’s not forget about your time associated with each of your business expenses. Time spent:

  • Researching and buying tools/equipment or bringing them in for maintenance
  • Packaging shipments and your time to drive to the post office and stand in line
  • Purchasing office supplies, printing invoices, addressing & mailing invoices, etc.
  • Handing out marketing supplies
  • Researching, buying, paying for and driving to and from craft supply store
  • Filing taxes, applying for registration or licenses/permits, etc.

 

 

CRAFT FAIR VENDOR FEES

When you sell at craft shows, it’s not just the vendor fees you must account for.

 

There are several expenses related to craft shows, such as:

  • Craft fair booth fees
  • Additional vendor fees:
    • table and chair rental
    • access to an electrical outlet
    • swag bag fees
  • Display fixtures and props
  • Signage
  • Gas to drive to and from the venue
  • Food and parking for the day
  • Bins to transport stock
  • Credit card transaction fees
  • Shopping bags and tissue paper

 

And of course, we must account for your time:

  • Driving to the bank and getting smaller bills for change
  • Packing stock into bins and those bins into your car
  • Driving to and from the event
  • Sourcing, designing, and planning craft show display
  • Setting up and taking down your display
  • Selling at the event

 

As you can see, craft show costs add up and eat into your profits.

 

However, craft shows also give you the opportunity to make more sales…a lot of sales in a short amount of time. The increase in sales helps cover the added costs.

 

But you’re not guaranteed to make a bunch of sales, just by showing up with your products.

 

Which is why it’s so important to properly prepare for each one.

 

You must:

  • Find the right craft shows that are a fit for your products and brand, and attract the type of customer that is likely to buy from you.

 

  • Create a display that strengthens your brand and tells people they’re buying a quality product from a reputable business (not someone who’s made a couple of items and might not be around next week if there’s an issue with their purchase).

 

  • Sell! It’s not enough to sit behind your craft show table, answer questions if any come up and ring purchases through. You must talk with everyone who stops by your space and say the right things that encourage a sale (you don’t have to be pushy; just try to connect with your shoppers).

 

 

There’s more to a successful craft show but these are a few “musts” to get started.

 

5 DAYS TO A STANDOUT DISPLAY will also help get you started. Over 13,000 of you have already joined but if you’re one who hasn’t yet…get the lessons for free here.

 

You may also want to take the following steps to increase your chances of making a profit at your next craft show:

 

How to Earn a Living Selling at Craft Shows

The following steps can help you be more profitable and successful when selling at craft shows.

 

STEP 1 – Increase profit margins

Technically, your profit margins are calculated once you’ve deducted all costs, including those from a craft show.

 

However, you don’t know which craft shows you’ll be accepted to for the year and will have a hard time knowing all your expenses before you set prices.

 

Not to mention, when running a small handmade business, most of us aren’t necessarily forecasting our expenses for the entire year, setting marketing budgets, etc.

 

We’re doing our best to plan ahead, but for the most part, are taking it month by month, or quarter by quarter, rolling with the punches.

 

So if you have extra padding around your profits, it leaves wiggle room to cover “unknown”, “unplanned” or “hard to predict” expenses.

 

That’s the reason the following price equation is commonly used:

Material costs + time costs = production costs

Production costs x 2 = wholesale price

Wholesale price x 2 = retail price

 

The “multiplying by 2” factors in the unknown expenses we’re likely to run into.

 

So before you jump into selling at craft shows, take a look at your profits, based on the expenses you’re aware of.

 

Keep it easy and simply look at last month’s numbers.

 

  1. Add up all your sales for the month (which is your revenue)
  2. Add up your total costs (include your wage)
  3. Then subtract total costs from your revenue

 

Is there money left?

 

If so, how much?

 

*If you don’t know your revenue, didn’t track your costs, have no profits, or are in the red, you may be interested in THE SUCCESS PLANNER.

 

If you don’t have much money left over, it makes it harder to profit from craft shows.

 

For example, let’s say you profit $5 with each sale. That profit doesn’t take into account the costs of a craft show that popped up this month.

It’s a small craft show and your total costs associated with it are $100.

You would need to sell 20 items just to cover the costs of doing the event (e.g. cover table fees, parking for the day, your time spent setting up, selling and taking down, etc.)

You don’t just want to break-even though, so you must sell more than 20 items to earn a profit from that craft show. If you wanted to profit $100, you would need to sell another 20 items.

40 items total to cover your expenses associated with the event, and hit your profit goal.

 

First, you must know your numbers. How much are you actually profiting once you deduct all costs and pay yourself for all your time?

 

Then work on improving your profits. You may find a way to save on materials, speed up production, cut back on packaging, or sell more at a craft show.

 

 

STEP 2 – Stand out

When I run out of coffee beans, I don’t just buy any bag of beans. I make a trip to Co-Op to buy “Co-Operative Coffee” because they package their coffee beans based on where they’re grown. I prefer the taste of coffee beans grown in Ethiopia and Co-Operative Coffee makes it easy for me to find them by labeling one of their bags of beans “Ethiopia”. I’m sure there are other brands that source their beans there, but I don’t have time to read the fine-print on all the bags in the grocery store.

 

When I need a gift for that “hard to buy for” person, I go to Uncommon Goods because they carry a ton of unique products (like a Shitake Mushroom Log Kit) you can’t find in other stores, and they make it easy to shop by theme/interest (e.g. spring or gardening themed gifts), or by the person you’re buying for (e.g. women, men, kids).

 

These two businesses stand out to me among a sea of other businesses doing something similar. Because of that, they’re always first to mind and have turned me into a repeat customer.

 

There will always be several other businesses selling handmade jewelry/soap/accessories/art/etc. and everyone’s work is amazing.

 

Therefor, there’s more to capturing sales than simply having nice jewelry/great smelling soap/trendy bags/beautiful art.

 

Can you:

  • Stand out through branding? A good example of this is Dawn dish soap. What’s inside the bottle is comparable to other dish soaps on the shelf, but the outside of the bottle has a cute duck and a brand name us animal lovers tend to favor because they help clean up wildlife affected by an oil spill.
  • Alter your products so they have a unique angle? Method dish soap changed what’s inside the bottle to help them stand out on the shelf. Their dish soap uses non-toxic, plant-based ingredients.
  • Create an amazing experience for your shoppers? LUSH creates a unique shopping experience through their: payment process, tailored customer service, store layout, etc. You can read more about it here: https://econsultancy.com/how-lush-is-raising-the-bar-for-in-store-experience/

 

Not quite sure how you might alter your brand, products, or experience to stand out at a craft show or why it really matters? Let’s look at another example.

 

Let’s say I was selling jams at a craft show and you stopped by my table. Nothing was particularly different about my jams; they seemed pretty similar to the ones your grandma makes.

 

I may argue that my recipe is a little different or a family secret, and that’s why people will buy from me rather than another vendor or business.

 

My recipe may be different, but all jams taste good, so there needs to be something else that sets mine apart.

 

Shoppers may buy a jar from me if they need jam and they stumble upon my booth.

 

But will they stock up, buying multiple jars so they don’t run out?

Will they find me online after the event and pay to have a jar shipped to them if they can’t really tell the difference between my jam and Smuckers’?

Will they seek me out at future craft shows and save the money in their pocket to spend at my table?

 

Probably not.

 

If I wanted to see more sales at a craft show and even more roll in after the event, I would think about reasons shoppers may feel more compelled to buy from me, and me only, when it comes to jam.

 

Here are a few ideas:

  • BRAND – I may decide not to touch my products and simply change the way they’re perceived:
    • I may change my packaging and use squeeze tubes to save busy lunch-making parents from having to dirty a butter knife for the peanut butter jar AND the jam jar.
    • I could design a new label and make them more appropriate for gifting. Strawberry jam could be labeled: “Wishing you a fruitful life in your new home”, or “Wishing you many sweet moments in your marriage”, or “You’re my jam” so they become perfect housewarming, wedding or Valentine’s Day gifts.

 

  • PRODUCT – I may alter my jam recipes and focus on one of the following niches:
    • Reduced-sugar jams for sugar-conscious diets.
    • Jams that incorporate healthy ingredients such as flax seed or chia seeds.
    • Finding a way to “hide” vegetables in my jams so they taste like regular jam but have a serving of veggies, perfect to market to parents of picky eaters.
    • Unique flavors. You wouldn’t find strawberry or raspberry jam at my booth but might find flavors such as watermelon jam, or savory flavors such as bacon or onion jam.

 

  • EXPERIENCE – I could set up a tasting station, showing shoppers the different pairings that can be created with jam. Then walk customers through the steps to build a personalized jam set based on their preferences. I may even personalize jam labels with the customer’s name.

 

If I were to implement one of these ideas, I’d become known as more than just someone selling yummy jam. I may even create a buzz at the event (“Have you sampled the bacon jam at the booth over there? You should check them out!”)

 

Think about ways you can stand apart from other vendors or businesses selling a similar product to yours. Start with looking at your brand, products and the experience you create for shoppers, to see if there are any opportunities to separate from the crowds.

 

 

STEP 3 – Offer varying price points

Shoppers don’t know what they’ll find at a craft show, so they don’t typically go with the purpose of buying a specific item. They’re there to browse.

 

The amount of money you’re willing to spend when browsing vs. shopping with a purpose, is usually less.

 

If you weren’t planning to buy a new painting but come across one you love at a craft show, you’d probably need time to think about it before spending over a hundred dollars, and might take a business card instead of buying that day.

If you’re just browsing the craft show and come across a pair of $15 earrings you love, you’re more willing to spend $15 on the spot, without having to “think about it”.

 

Having a range of prices helps increase sales, and thus, your profits.

 

NEVER lower your prices to create more appealing price points; lower your costs first.

 

If you only have products priced $100 and up, you may only need one sale at a craft show to cover your costs, but you would make more sales if you have products that appeal to the average budget of craft show shoppers, which tends to be around the $50 mark and under.

 

For example, a painter may feature 5 original paintings, each priced over $100. If shoppers aren’t prepared to spend that much, but love their work, the painter may have the following products/price point options for them:

  • Smaller framed print for $40
  • Un-framed prints of the original paintings sold for $20 each
  • Wall decals for $10/each that use an element from the original paintings (e.g. a flower decal that mimics a flower found in the painting of a bouquet)

 

If all your products are priced over $50, consider if you can create profitable products at lower price points.

 

On the other hand, if your products are priced low, give shoppers the option to spend more money with you. Introduce new higher-priced products, higher-quality/greater quantity products, or bundle products together.

 

For example, if a soap vendor sells $5 bars of soap, a shopper may be looking for a gift and want to spend more than $5. If they only offer $5 soap, the shopper isn’t going to fill a gift basket with 10 bars of soap. So they may buy one bar and spend their money with other craft show vendors selling gift items.

 

The soap vendor may create more purchasing opportunities by offering one or more of the following:

  • $10 bars of soap that are bigger than the $5 ones, or that use higher-quality ingredients
  • $25 soap pack with 3 scents of soap and a loofah packaged in a gift box
  • $30 jars of cream or bottles of liquid soap
  • $50 set of lavender scented soap, cream and bath salts

 

A person can only buy so many bars of soap but these options allow them to spend more if they love their products.

 

What price points do you currently offer and are they limiting your shoppers’ purchasing? Consider if you need to add lower or higher price points to your lineup.

 

 

CONCLUSION

In order to make a living through selling at craft shows, or for craft shows to be worth your time, they must be profitable.

 

To increase your chances of making a profit you should:

 

PREPARE

Properly prepared for each craft show. Additional resources:

 

HAVE GOOD PROFIT MARGINS

Know your numbers, how much you currently profit and find ways to increase those profit margins. Additional resources:

 

HAVE A USP (unique selling position)
Give shoppers a reason to buy from you that day and continue to buy from you in the future. Additional resources:

 

OFFER DIFFERENT PRICE POINTS

Offer products that fit within the typical craft show shoppers’ budget. Check out Tactic #3 in the article linked below for some ideas:

 

 

You may also be interested in:

 

 

What are your tips for making a profit at craft shows? Please share in the comments!

 

 

 



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8 Comments

  1. Gives me a lot to think about before I commit to a craft shop. Thanks!

  2. Marion Wheatland says:

    Love your articles. Always so informative with lots to chew on.

    I have to be selective for markets because not all markets will want my products. Catering to the pet industry, I fine going to pet expos and craft markets that welcome pets (to walk around with the owners) are the best ones for me because that is where long-haired pets and their owners tend to be.

    Giving out free samples, as well as having sign-up sheets, is a good way to let the pet owners become used to the idea of having their pet fur spun.

  3. Put prices on your items!!!! I can’t tell you how many times vendors have lost business over this! If a vendor is chatting shoppers arent going to interrupt to ask a price, they’ll move onto the next vendor!

    1. joanne rusaw says:

      I so agree. I have walked away from many things because there was no price on it. Not everyone likes to talk and ask for a price of every thing.

    2. Shelley Moore says:

      Grateful for this tip; thank you!

  4. I used a 8×10″ framed price list near each group of items with related graphics. I also included brief care instructions (i.e., hand wash only) and gifting ideas (“Makes a great housewarming gift”)

  5. I have purchased most if not all your ebooks and I’m working my way through them.

    I make Popcorn Pouches, not the ones for popping corn but pouches that “act” like popcorn bags; they lay flat but pop up and expand for your items. They come in five sizes, you can use them to help you become more organized. Use them for cosmetics, corralling items in your purse or backpack, first aid, essential oils and so much more.

    My branding COLORS are black, white, silver, gray as basic backdrop colors, adding gold specks, perhaps adding purple, and aqua for punch. I’m going for a more elegant (expensive look). I would like to insert a little bit of humor with the idea of Popcorn Pouches, but I’m not sure how to do that. I would appreciate any ideas you may have.

    1. Shelley Moore says:

      ‘Pop’ open your life and get going!

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