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Free Internet Marketing Lessons
Moonlighting Idea: Create and
Sell Kids' Craft
Kits!
by Mike Morgan
Here's a twist on the
old "sell
your crafts" theme. How
about creating and marketing a craft kit for your craft?
Instead of selling a completed project, you sell a
materials-included, ready-to-do craft project. It doesn't
necessarily HAVE to be geared toward kids, but those seem to
sell well.
For example, since our Cub Scout Den recently built some
birdhouses from kits, let's say you like to build
birdhouses. To build one, let's say you need to cut some
1/4" wood into a variety of shapes, glue some pieces
together, and nail some others together.
You would cut the wood into the all of necessary shapes and
sand them. Your kit would consist of the pre-cut wood, all
the nails (plus extras), and instructions. All of this could
go into a Zip-Loc baggie and be sold for a few dollars.
Just about any small and relatively easy craft can be sold
as a kit "baggie". Crafts using wooden thread spools seem to
be popular lately -- those would be perfect candidates for
kits.
Remember that the more difficult or involved the craft, the
better you will have to write the assembly instructions.
PRICING Set your price at about four times the cost of
materials. However, if you are going to sell crafts for
kids, try to keep the price below $10.
For kids crafts, create "bundle packs" of 6-8 of the same
project at a little bit of a discount. This will make it
very attractive to Scout leaders and parents shopping for
birthday party activities.
MARKETING Write a press release -- or have one written, if
you don't know how -- and make sure the local newspapers
(free and paid) and radio stations (especially AM stations)
get it. This is the kind of story they love, and a feature
story will get you a lot of exposure.
Create flyers for your local community bulletin boards.
Call you local Scouting (Boy- and Girl-) council office and
find out when they have their leaders' meeting, called a
"Roundtable" in Boy Scouts. Arrange to speak for five
minutes at one of these meetings. Bring a kit or two for
demonstration and plenty for sale, since you might make some
immediate sales.
Talk to your local craft shop. Many are surprisingly open to
the idea of selling local craft works -- but most crafters
assume they won't be, and never ask!
If you do a craft that can be packaged as a kit, and aren't
doing that, you are bypassing what could be a very lucrative
avenue for revenue!
About the Author
Mike Morgan owns Bison Creek Author Services, publisher of
the FREE ebook "How to Beat Shoplifters & Increase Profits!"
It's FREE, and free to give away -- a perfect "bonus" for
your website visitors. Get more information now at:
http://bisoncreek.com/shoplifting/
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