What, ME Sell Art?

A few days back an artist posted a question about how to engage prospective customers.  Here's a place to start.

 

Getting Artists to be Better Salespeople

 

Hmm, the working assumption is you want and need to sell more of your art.  Granted many artists don’t do their thing for income or as a biz.  And that’s OK, but IF you do, and sales are slow, those over-stuffed shelves of aging art inventory can be like a creative spirit-robbing, inspiration-thief in the night.  There’s the Usual Suspects to move art: add another art fair, drop price, run sales, try the next gallery, place ads, get a new agent, hold events with wine and cheese, get a new web site, start a blog, etc.  But what about the secret weapon.

 

Become a better Salesartist.

 

Whether you know it or not you DO sell every day…products, ideas, opinions.  After all my years of hanging around sales and selling professionals what’s THE BEST sales tip/definition I've ever heard?                                      

 

A sale is nothing more than a transfer of enthusiasm.


Attributed to Brian Tracy in The Psychology of Selling, this declaration is widely known in sales circles, is simple, unforgettable, and rich.  It bears mantra-esque repetition.  Transfer more enthusiasm. Get more sales.

 

Don’t confuse this nugget with selling STYLE.  Many different styles are effective.  Like your favorite clothes, you use a combo of ones that fit well, are comfortable, blend naturally with your personality, build confidence, and are tailored for who you’re selling to at the moment.

 

Actively transferring enthusiasm to prospects shopping your art is another matter.  It starts with a ‘reveal’ and communicates the core of your passion.  Passion you got, you’re an artistPass FORWARD the passion (think electricity through wire) and now you’re a cookin’ hot Salesartist.


If you CAN take the time, sure it will pay to study the art of selling:  get a few books, read some sales blogs, attend seminars, get CD’s, fine-tune techniques, practice and apply to your art selling.  If and when you overheat with ‘too much information"...

...just talk to a customer.  Directly.  Listen…the words they use, what they see, what they like or dislike, what they feel, about YOUR work.

 

Then your turn…Transfer the Enthusiasm.

 

Much success, Rick

 

 

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Comments

  • My husband is in Toastmasters (he was an Area Governor last year). He also (early in our marriage), did the Tupperware demonstrations (while I recruited). Those two experiences have helped him talk to our potential customers with greater ease. Me? I'm terrified of people. So, I go into my theatre training, and just pretend I'm not so scared-and talk, have fun, engage, and relax with whoever walks into my booth.
  • It really is true! I appreciate it...

    Crystal

  • Way to go Crystal...and it does get easier.  Success breeds success.
  • HELLO ALL! That was me that posted the question! I did a weekend show over Labor Day, and I put everyone's advice to work! At first, I felt like I was going to totally flip, but once the first few folks were in my tent, it got so much easier!!! AND!!! All of my artist's help and advice (take a bow, all of you who responded to my questions...!!!) WORKED! I am still rough around the edges, but it was SO much easier for me!!!

    HAPPY CREATING AND THANK YOU ALL AGAIN!!!

    ~Crystal

  • You DO have to be interested in your prospective customer...nothing matters more.
  • Exactly! I found the best way to become adept at being genuinely enthusiastic and speaking with confidence was from Toastmasters. My sales improved dramatically once I gained that skill. It just took practice in a group of supportive people who help each other become more effective communicators. Toastmasters International is an amazing organization.
  • Absolutely.  Some say..."well, I don't want to be pushy".  Being 'pushy' is a style problem and a usually comes from the seller having no real interest in the customer.  If you listen to the customer, and then engage with them, sharing part of your story and passion and how it fits in with where the customer is coming from...then sales can happen.
  • I agree.  Nothing is worse than looking at art while the artist sits bored in the corner, ignoring you.  Enthusiasm by the artist goes a long way toward sales.  I've often looked at a picture or photograph and asked the artist where the location was.  Most of the time the answer is too the point and brief. A enthusiastic artist tells me more about location and the inspiration for the picture.  When they are finished, you get a better idea of why they made the photograph or painted the picture.

     

    A enthusiastic artist will come across as friendly and customers buy from people they like.

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