2.
Re: Starting a Woodworking business Feb 11, 2009 12:53 PM
A few suggestions . . .
If you live in (or have a friend/relative who does) a relatively high traffic area, set some of your finished work on the driveway early on a Saturday morning, along with an unfinished piece that you can be working on. People passing by looking for garage sales, taking their children to activities, etc. will be able to see at a glance that you do woodworking and have things for sale. Those who are interested (either in one of your items, or in some light carpentry or finish work will stop to talk.
If you have any spring home and garden shows, flea markets, or craft malls in your area (and if booth space is affordable), consider setting up a display at one or more of them.
To build your "sales" skills in any of those settings, practice engaging people in conversation. One technique (when people stop by) is to introduce yourself and ask for an opinion about one of your items. ("I'd really like your opinion about something. Could you take a look at this and tell me what you think about it?") Then show them the item (one you think they'd be likely to buy or want), and ask them what they think about its quality, usefulness, craftsmanship or whatever is relevant. Then ask what they think you should set the price at. If it's a lot higher than the price you set in your mind, you can offer them a good deal on it as a thank you. You may make a sale without "selling." If the price they set is lower, you can simply thank them for their input (if that happens several times, of course, you'll learn that your prices may be high -- so you can ask follow-up questions to find out what is lacking, and learn if there's something else you should be making/doing). Either way, you'll be gaining experience at "reading" people's interests and at interacting with potential customers -- without having to "hard sell" them.
Hope that helps. Good luck with your enterprise!