Call for Artists, Making Money at Juried Art Fairs, Craft Shows and Festivals
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If you want to sell, NEVER sit. It is too aggressive to get up when someone is in your booth. Stand. If you must sit, have someone else in your booth standing. 16 years of experience speaking.
For some of us, standing for two or three days is physically out of the question. Edema in my feet and ankles and severe arthritis make it next to impossible for me to be on my feet for more than a few hours at a time without sitting down. Generally, I sit down when no one is in the booth, but when someone approaches or enters the booth, I stand and greet them and remain standing for as long as they remain or there are guests in the booth. What I have learned from the shows that I direct is that those people who sit in their booths and do not get up to interact with guests typically have fewer sales. Not getting up can send a message to the guest that you really don't care if he or she buys anything or not. I don't know about you, but when I do a show, I'm not there for the atmosphere, I'm there to sell art!
Interestingly, those patrons who have gotten to know me will approach my booth, tell me not to get up, and get busy looking and asking questions. I get up anyway, but I appreciate their kindness.
Barbara
Art on the Lawn said:For some of us, standing for two or three days is physically out of the question. Edema in my feet and ankles and severe arthritis make it next to impossible for me to be on my feet for more than a few hours at a time without sitting down. Generally, I sit down when no one is in the booth, but when someone approaches or enters the booth, I stand and greet them and remain standing for as long as they remain or there are guests in the booth. What I have learned from the shows that I direct is that those people who sit in their booths and do not get up to interact with guests typically have fewer sales. Not getting up can send a message to the guest that you really don't care if he or she buys anything or not. I don't know about you, but when I do a show, I'm not there for the atmosphere, I'm there to sell art!
Interestingly, those patrons who have gotten to know me will approach my booth, tell me not to get up, and get busy looking and asking questions. I get up anyway, but I appreciate their kindness.
Barbara
Art on the Lawn said:For some of us, standing for two or three days is physically out of the question. Edema in my feet and ankles and severe arthritis make it next to impossible for me to be on my feet for more than a few hours at a time without sitting down. Generally, I sit down when no one is in the booth, but when someone approaches or enters the booth, I stand and greet them and remain standing for as long as they remain or there are guests in the booth. What I have learned from the shows that I direct is that those people who sit in their booths and do not get up to interact with guests typically have fewer sales. Not getting up can send a message to the guest that you really don't care if he or she buys anything or not. I don't know about you, but when I do a show, I'm not there for the atmosphere, I'm there to sell art!
Interestingly, those patrons who have gotten to know me will approach my booth, tell me not to get up, and get busy looking and asking questions. I get up anyway, but I appreciate their kindness.
Barbara
I have to agree with Andrea... the tall chair makes a big difference. Mine is a Hollywood chair and I bought the little arm desk as an accessory. I'm am able to do the transaction right from the chair and I'm at eye level with the customer. The Hollywood chair might be a bit pricey for many but it is built to last and oh so comfortable. I have the Elm version. It is excellent! No regrets.
BTW, you'll save a few dollars if you go through these folks and you get free shipping.
http://tinyurl.com/6f6hvr
This is the same chair as sold on the Totallybamboo.com
http://tinyurl.com/6x95c6
Cheers,
LC
Some of us can indeed stand at shows and others cannot. My wife has rheumatoid arthritis and cannot stand at all. So she sits and demonstrates the product. I have a tall director's chair in my booth but rarely use it except for those slow times. But I indeed stand as much as possible. I'm able to do it because I've been standing at shows for over 30 years. I don't know how to do a show without standing!
Before I got into this business, I worked in factories. I saw people standing in one spot all day for five days a week, every week. Lathe operators cannot sit down. Either can assembly people making automobiles. So how do they do it? How do they stay on their feet for 40+ hours a week?
SHOES!!
They wear shoes made for standing, not walking. Work shoes. Cushioned shoes that enable you to stand at shows for all three days. These shoes are styled today so nobody can tell they're work shoes. I was a robotics programmer in a steel fabrication company before I walked away, and I had to go into the shop on numerous occasions. And I had to wear work shoes in the shop. But they looked just like dress shoes. Nobody can tell. So I wear work shoes at the shows too. They look just like the sneakers everybody else is wearing and hurting their feet. Skechers makes an excellent work (standing) shoe! I need a new pair as my old shoes are over 5 years old now, so I definitely got my money's worth.
But I'm getting older. Sometimes my knees do hurt. Sometimes I must sit down for a while too. Especially when the show runs from 10 am to 8 pm. But I always try to do that when the traffic is slow.
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