Starting an Arts & Crafts Business
Think all you need to know is how to knit or paint? Not quite. If you want to start a serious crafts business, you'll have to focus on the business and the craft.
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It's a common fantasy, and why shouldn't it be? It
sounds amazing: Instead of forcing your crafting time into nooks
here and there--after dinner, before the kids wake up, on the
weekends--you'll start a business so you eat, sleep, breathe
and, most important, live off your hobby. But such is life that nothing is as easy as it seems. You may
have the skills to create wonderful handiwork, but starting a
successful crafts business calls for much more than that.
"[There's] a separation [between] those who are crafting
for fun and extra money and those who start out with the idea,
'I intend to make money from this, so I'm going to do it
right,'" says Barbara Brabec, a homebased business expert and
author of Make It Profitable! "And I've
always said in all my books that the people who succeed are those
who have a financial reason to do so." So here's your first step: Decide why you're really
starting this business. "If you're doing it for love or
extra money, that's fine--you can have a lot of fun. You can
make enough to keep yourself in craft supplies for the rest of your
life, but you're never gonna bring home the groceries,"
says Brabec. "If you're in it because you actually need to
supplement your family income, then you need to get
serious." Content Continues Below
And what does getting serious entail? Read on to find out how to
get started. Start reading. You don't necessarily need an MBA to
succeed in a crafts business, but knowing how to wield a mean
needle isn't enough. "It's not necessary to have a
business background, but if you don't have one, [it is]
necessary to read up," says Susan Brandt of the Hobby Industry
Association, which counts crafts manufacturers, publishers,
distributors and retailers among its members. Brandt suggests visiting your library to find business magazines
and texts as well as checking out community resources like adult
school classes. "If you can visit some large gift centers or
markets, try to find people who'd be willing to talk to you
from noncompetitive areas," adds Brandt. "There are a lot
of very generous people who remember that somebody helped them when
they started." 10 Steps to Startup- Find out about zoning regulations, licenses and permits.
- Acquaint yourself with IRS regulations.
- Register the name of your crafts business with local
officials.
- Call your telephone company.
- Open a checking account for your business.
- Obtain a retailer's occupation tax registration
number.
- Learn about federal regulations applicable to your crafts
business.
- Set up a good record-keeping system.
- Make sure you're properly insured.
- Decide which printed materials you need in order to do an
effective promotional and selling job.
Source:Handmade for Profit (M. Evans & Co.)
by Barbara Brabec
Originally published in the April 2002 issue of HomeOfficeMag.com
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