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collective Marketing Ideas to Promote Your Craft company
Dec 12th
Net Krafter : collective Marketing Ideas to Promote Your Craft company
Getting started on Facebook couldn’t be easier… Or more considerable to panning online gold. Generate a profile that contains the best copy inherent to make your business look not just good, but hot, hot, hot. After your personal profile is in place Generate a Facebook business Page for your company.
How? Easy. Scroll to the lowest and click “Advertise”. And, get ready to jump for joy… It’s honestly free! Click on the Pages tab and upload a logo and input some copy that portrays your craft business in the best inherent light.
Then, just as you would in other venues, start reaching out to inherent customers by “sharing” your business.
Your first contacts, or “Facebook Fans” as they’re called, will probably be real friends and family. But even the most social of entrepreneurs will need to enlarge well beyond that right away.
Don’t be indiscriminate, though. One of the worst things that can happen to an online business is to begin a spiral of negative word of mouth. Spend some time tailoring your message and your list to optimize your chances of inescapable word of mouth.
You can reach out to crafters with similar interests – jewelry designers, doll makers, potters… Anyone your business line(s) happen to be. Some will be competitors, others will just be concerned amateurs who love crafts as you do. Ask them to spread the word, and give them helpful tutorial content, free samples, and more to encourage them to follow through.
Twitter is an additional one superb way to spread your message, and can sometimes work even quicker. But you trade off speed for volume. Twitter is intended more for real-time communication. It’s sort of like Internet chat on steroids.
Twitter is a great social networking tool for online craft business owners who want to announce things that are happening right now. Having a sale? Tweet it. Discovered a new material or technique? Share your enthusiasm in up to 140 characters of text.
Use Twhirl to carry on multiple accounts if you have multiple craft-related businesses, such as glassware and textiles. You don’t have to be tied to the computer all day, though. Use Twuffer to queue up tweets that will go out whenever you want.
In all these cases, you want not only to reach the audiences that populate these sites but drive them to your websites. Here again, use a miniature discretion, but all the time make sure your friends know where to find your business. After all, there’s no point in building a good mousetrap – or mouse earring – if no one knows where to buy it.
Both Facebook Pages and Twitter are where you can -
Share pictures, pictures, and more pictures! Let me say it one more time: Pictures. Use the Facebook Photo application to Generate and update photo albums with amazing images displaying your skill and creativity.
Step it up a notch by creating videos of your most beloved and most recent creations. Zoom into the details of your products that make them stand out from the rest. Description all sides of them as you’re describing what they’re seeing. If you haven’t done it already, spend in one of those very affordable Flip camcorders. Come to be well-known with downloading them to your computer, and uploading them to Facebook.
provide tips on how to store the products when not in use or being displayed.
provide tips on how to ship the items
Do you offer a fix service if something gets broken? Remind them how they can get the goods back to you for repair.
If not, possibly you can offer some fix tips for them so they can take care of minor repairs. How about providing some fix video tutorials? Even written tutorials will be helpful.
provide gift ideas – the holidays are close. Do you offer a special allowance if man purchases more the one item (one for themselves and one or more for gifts for others). This is a great time to encourage multiple purchases.
Give an incentive if you can, possibly you can provide free shipping if their order is over a inescapable dollar amount. Or throw in gift wrapping as your freebie.
Craft businesses typically had/have origins at craft and gift shows. Maybe you could provide a list of shows in your area, your state…even good – multiple states or regions.
When you’re attending a show, take pictures or even videos. Take your Facebook Page Fans along for the ride. Tell them about your plans, your experiences, the excitement, the surprise bonus you never incredible to find. By all means, if you’re going to be displaying your products at some shows you’ll want to let everyone know where you are going to be at. You might even get some unexpected visitors that happen to be in the area. How great would that be!
Share ideas about the best ways to display and use your products.
Don’t forget to share a nice backstory. Let your visitors know how you got started, what inspired you, a timeline of your progression.
notify visitors of goods options you provide when man orders from you. A collection of colors, sizes, shapes, special features, etc.
If you’re concerned in doing this sort of thing – how about turning your knowledge into revenue? Hold workshops and classes, even Generate video tutorials. Then you can announce your new offerings to your visitors.
Do you donate to a charity? Why not get your visitors complex and offer a ration of their buy to the charity or cause. Here’s an additional one idea on this front. What if you organized a donation drive with your online community? possibly you could be the convention place for handmade toys and other objects that could advantage those less fortunate. You and your fans could come together to preserve a base cause.
Don’t forget to relate to your visitors how your goods fills their need. What is it going to do for them?
Since you have products, you’re in a prime position to hold a monthly contest where the winner receives something you’ve made. possibly for every 50 new Fans you pick a new winner. Keep running this for as long as you like.
What about sharing a list of online craft directories? Ask for input from your page fans, see if they can lead to this list.
I’ll bet you’ve tried quite a estimate of materials to ultimately get your products just right. How about providing some reviews on materials that have not lived up to their advertising, or those that have made your crafts come to life and were exactly what you needed. This could also be a great conversation starter with other crafters visiting your site.
Do you have any tips on what to do with your leftover materials? Is there the possibility of providing your visitors with ideas on how to recycle what they don’t use from projects?
I’d like you to think less “online craft store” and more “online crafting community”. Encourage the sharing of ideas, materials, issues, troubleshooting, resources, etc. It should be a place everyone wants to visit so they can participate in conversations and lead some of their considerable content. It could be one big happy family! When like-minded habitancy get together, amazing partnerships and joint speculation opportunities happen. Doors open. Deeper connections are made. Doesn’t that sound like the society you’d like to build?
If you know of some other crafters that have products which compliment yours, why not share these resources with your visitors? possibly the other crafters could refer visitors to you as well. Now would be a great time to set up a referral or affiliate program. What a win-win situation all around.