Gift biz on wrapped episode 226 she said,
Speaker:I don't understand why you're so upset.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:well, I don't know anything more than I did when I
Speaker:got here.
Speaker:And she said,
Speaker:well, of course you don't.
Speaker:You already knew you could do this.
Speaker:At Tinton,
Speaker:gifters, bakers,
Speaker:crafters, and makers pursuing your dream can be fun.
Speaker:Whether you have an established business or looking to start one
Speaker:now you are in the right place.
Speaker:This is give to biz unwrapped,
Speaker:helping you turn your skill into a flourishing business.
Speaker:Join us for an episode packed full of invaluable guidance,
Speaker:resources, and the support you need to grow your gift biz.
Speaker:Here is your host gift biz gal,
Speaker:Sue moon Heights.
Speaker:Hi there Sue,
Speaker:and I'm so happy that you're joining me here today.
Speaker:I'm in the middle of a lot of travel right now.
Speaker:I was just in San Diego for a conference.
Speaker:For those of you who might be familiar,
Speaker:Pat Flynn had his very first conference,
Speaker:Flynn con number one.
Speaker:So this was an investment in my own self development.
Speaker:We talk podcasting,
Speaker:online courses and overall business growth online.
Speaker:See I practice what I preach.
Speaker:This was an investment in myself and my business so that
Speaker:I can show up better for you guys.
Speaker:Then I jumped over for a quick trip into Mexico,
Speaker:like a two day quick trip because it was a family
Speaker:birthday celebration that I kind of snuck in between two other
Speaker:trips and now this week I'm going to be headed out
Speaker:to Phoenix for a couple of days for the national gift
Speaker:basket convention.
Speaker:I'm logging lots of air miles,
Speaker:which is really good because I always take specific,
Speaker:really intense projects and I use that airtime to really focus
Speaker:because there's no phone,
Speaker:there's no email and I can really just stay in tent
Speaker:with no distractions most of the time anyway,
Speaker:I'm planning to do a meetup while I'm in Phoenix,
Speaker:so if you're in the area,
Speaker:I would love to meet you in person for all the
Speaker:details. Jump over to my Facebook group,
Speaker:gift biz breeze.
Speaker:That's where I always announce if I'm going to be out
Speaker:of town,
Speaker:possibly in your town and scheduling a meet up so there
Speaker:you can see what towns and then I give you all
Speaker:the specifics.
Speaker:So if you're in Phoenix,
Speaker:let's see each other this week.
Speaker:Before we get into the show,
Speaker:I have a question for you.
Speaker:How'd your day go yesterday?
Speaker:Maybe a crazy question.
Speaker:I know and yes,
Speaker:you heard me right?
Speaker:If you were to rate yesterday,
Speaker:how much did you get done?
Speaker:How far did you advance toward your goal?
Speaker:Or maybe in your mind saying what goal?
Speaker:Many of you have told me you aren't sure whether what
Speaker:you're doing is the right thing for your business.
Speaker:You're confused that you may be focusing on the wrong things
Speaker:and wasting time and money and you compare yourself to others
Speaker:and feel like you're just not up.
Speaker:Sound familiar?
Speaker:Maybe you find that you're busy all day long,
Speaker:but when you finish up,
Speaker:you haven't accomplished much of anything at all.
Speaker:I've been there too until I started working with what I
Speaker:now call the power of purpose.
Speaker:I made a free video for you that explains how to
Speaker:boost your productivity and get results using the power of your
Speaker:purpose. Isn't it time to make all the effort that you
Speaker:put into your business and your life do for you what
Speaker:you've intended.
Speaker:Now, full disclosure,
Speaker:this video does lead into showing you my brand new inspired
Speaker:daily planner,
Speaker:but listen,
Speaker:you don't need the inspired planner to get all the advantages
Speaker:out of the power of purpose that I show you in
Speaker:this video.
Speaker:So if you're interested in discovering a new way to work
Speaker:through your days,
Speaker:so your time is intentional and your results are real,
Speaker:I encourage you to go over and watch this video and
Speaker:you can find it at gift biz,
Speaker:unwrapped.com forward slash planner.
Speaker:That's gift biz unwrapped.com
Speaker:forward slash.
Speaker:Planner. I'm really excited for you to hear from our guests
Speaker:today. Last week I teased about the industry she's in because
Speaker:it's a gift biz on wrapped first.
Speaker:Meg is a stationary designer.
Speaker:Well, she started that way and still is today,
Speaker:but today she's so much more than that too.
Speaker:It's always interesting to see how the first vision that someone
Speaker:has for their business adjusts and morphs into something a little
Speaker:bit different as time goes on.
Speaker:One of the things about the guests side bring on the
Speaker:show is that even if they have a different product blind
Speaker:than you do,
Speaker:they are all still makers,
Speaker:so you can always learn something from people outside of your
Speaker:specialized product niche,
Speaker:sometimes even more because you can get so cocooned into your
Speaker:category and so single focused the sometimes you miss other opportunities,
Speaker:thought creative things that you can bring to your product,
Speaker:marketing of your business,
Speaker:et cetera,
Speaker:that you find from learning about someone in a totally different
Speaker:product space than your end.
Speaker:I know you're going to find a ton of value in
Speaker:Meg's story and her advice,
Speaker:so without any further delay,
Speaker:let's move into my chat with Meg Today.
Speaker:It is my pleasure to introduce you to Meg Sutton of
Speaker:Belle and union.
Speaker:Meg is the boss lady and doodler behind Belle and union,
Speaker:a company that sells letterpress printed cards,
Speaker:art prints,
Speaker:Southern inspired wrappings and handcrafted artisan goods brimming with vintage wit
Speaker:and wisdom.
Speaker:The total little bit of a foodie twist,
Speaker:all 100% made in the USA.
Speaker:Meg, the business in 2012 after falling in love with letterpress
Speaker:while working in a boutique shop,
Speaker:Belen union launched their first brick and mortar store in San
Speaker:Antonio, Texas in July of 2018 the shop houses the working
Speaker:studio as well as offers creative workshops across a wide variety
Speaker:of subject matters.
Speaker:Meg values encouraging people to slow down and enjoy the sweet
Speaker:moments in life.
Speaker:Gathered round a table filled with smiles and laughter and when
Speaker:she's not doodling or coming up with Bella and union's next
Speaker:great product,
Speaker:you can find her sipping Thai tea,
Speaker:chasing her pup with her husband and curling up with a
Speaker:good book.
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:Meg, that life sounds fabulous.
Speaker:Welcome to the gift biz on wrapped podcast.
Speaker:Thank you so much for having me.
Speaker:I'm thrilled that you're here with us and as tradition has
Speaker:it on the show,
Speaker:I'd like to have you give us a little feel for
Speaker:who you are by describing yourself through a motivational candle.
Speaker:So if you were to help us envision what this candle
Speaker:looks like by color and quote,
Speaker:what would it be?
Speaker:So this is actually a really fun question because I'm attempting
Speaker:to work on a candle line right now.
Speaker:Oh boy.
Speaker:And I'm all about candles,
Speaker:so that's great.
Speaker:So it's definitely been forefront of my mind.
Speaker:I would definitely say my color would have to be white
Speaker:cause I want it to go with anything,
Speaker:any decor,
Speaker:no matter what room of the house.
Speaker:Plus white to me is just clean and classic.
Speaker:Definitely sophisticated too.
Speaker:But as far as what I think I'd want it to
Speaker:say, I've kind of fallen in love with this quote by
Speaker:max Dupree,
Speaker:who was the head of Herman Miller,
Speaker:the office furniture brand.
Speaker:Such an amazing iconic company.
Speaker:Yeah. But he said we cannot become what we want by
Speaker:remaining what we are.
Speaker:And I just find those words really powerful and inspiring right
Speaker:now for a lot of reasons.
Speaker:But I think a lot of small business boss ladies and
Speaker:entrepreneurs in general can really relate with that.
Speaker:Just knowing you got to take that next step to really
Speaker:get where you want to go.
Speaker:Absolutely. And that's a little bit fear provoking and all,
Speaker:but it's exciting at the same time you're moving into something
Speaker:different. Kind of like a butterfly emerging from a cocoon or
Speaker:something maybe.
Speaker:Yes, yes.
Speaker:Oh, got it.
Speaker:Well Meg,
Speaker:give us a little bit of your backstory.
Speaker:How did you get to where you are today?
Speaker:Sure. So I studied graphic design in college,
Speaker:so I've always kind of been in a design mindset you
Speaker:could say.
Speaker:But like most designers I wasn't necessarily thrilled with the idea
Speaker:or maybe not most.
Speaker:I personally was not thrilled with the idea of going super
Speaker:corporate. I love the ability to make things by hand and
Speaker:really have something tactical.
Speaker:Cause unfortunately with graphic design,
Speaker:so much of it lives in the digital world and so
Speaker:it wasn't quite as fulfilling for me as an artist.
Speaker:And ultimately a maker.
Speaker:But after graduating school,
Speaker:I didn't dive quite right in,
Speaker:I guess you could say.
Speaker:I did go work at an advertising agency for about a
Speaker:year as expected.
Speaker:I hated every minute of it.
Speaker:It just wasn't a good fit for me.
Speaker:Again, it wasn't making things and I didn't really feel like
Speaker:my voice was being heard.
Speaker:So on the side I was doing wedding invitations as I
Speaker:think most designers do at one point in their career.
Speaker:It's just kind of a Rite of passage.
Speaker:And it got to the point where I was doing so
Speaker:much of that work that I essentially had two full time
Speaker:jobs. So my advertising job was about an hour away from
Speaker:where I was living.
Speaker:I would have to be out of the house by seven
Speaker:and I wouldn't get home till probably at least seven to
Speaker:eight at night.
Speaker:And then I would start my other job with the invitations.
Speaker:And so after that first year,
Speaker:my husband put his foot down and said,
Speaker:Nope, you got to pick one.
Speaker:I don't ever see you.
Speaker:You're buried.
Speaker:It's too much like pick one.
Speaker:Well, I can tell you that our listeners,
Speaker:a lot of them are in that situation right now and
Speaker:can completely relate.
Speaker:And I would venture to say,
Speaker:don't have a husband who say please,
Speaker:It's a lot.
Speaker:I was running myself into the ground and that's just not
Speaker:sustainable as a human being or as a business either.
Speaker:And in the back of my mind,
Speaker:I had always had this idea of having my own line.
Speaker:So while I was in school,
Speaker:I worked at in doorbell,
Speaker:little boutique in Savannah,
Speaker:Georgia. And that was where I first discovered the art of
Speaker:letterpress. So we sold letterpress greeting cards.
Speaker:And it was amazing to me that there were people out
Speaker:there whose job was to design and print cards and like
Speaker:they, that was their life.
Speaker:They made a living doing it.
Speaker:It was amazing.
Speaker:So I was fortunate enough to go to the national stationery
Speaker:show a couple of times with my boss as a buyer
Speaker:and I just felt like my eyes were open to this
Speaker:whole world that I didn't know existed.
Speaker:So while I'm working this advertising job and doing all these
Speaker:invitations, like in the back of my mind it's like,
Speaker:okay, could I maybe work for myself?
Speaker:So I went back to the stationery show in 2011 just
Speaker:to walk it and see,
Speaker:okay, is this realistic?
Speaker:Can I do this?
Speaker:And I remember sitting on the staircase of the Javits,
Speaker:which is this huge staircase for anybody that hasn't been there.
Speaker:And I was crying and the woman that was with me
Speaker:was laughing because she said,
Speaker:I don't understand why you're so upset.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:well, I don't know anything more than I did when I
Speaker:got here.
Speaker:And she said,
Speaker:well, of course you don't.
Speaker:You already knew you could do this.
Speaker:To me,
Speaker:that was kind of this really big aha turning point.
Speaker:So I went home and quit my job at the ad
Speaker:agency and I spent the next year working on our first
Speaker:collection. So I went back to the stationery show in 2012
Speaker:with my own line.
Speaker:And that was kind of,
Speaker:as they say,
Speaker:history, That is such a great story on so many levels.
Speaker:First I have to tell you that I used to show
Speaker:at Javits all the time at the stationary show.
Speaker:In fact,
Speaker:I think it's just been recently as circulation and people walking
Speaker:the floor seems to have started going down that I stopped
Speaker:doing that show cause I'm out at a lot of shows
Speaker:still. But that's not one of them anymore.
Speaker:So we were probably there at the same time probably sadly
Speaker:the stationary show it was doesn't even exist anymore.
Speaker:It just kept getting smaller and smaller and so they ultimately
Speaker:beginning actually back in January of 2019 it combined with New
Speaker:York now,
Speaker:which is the gift show that happens twice,
Speaker:right? It's not the same by any means anymore unfortunately.
Speaker:But there is something wonderful about stationers there.
Speaker:They're just a big happy family and it's a very supportive
Speaker:industry feel so lucky to be a part of it.
Speaker:I find your story really interesting too because the person who
Speaker:responded to you and you were sitting on the steps crying
Speaker:saying, you really already know.
Speaker:Why is it that we don't recognize that in ourself?
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:take somebody to tell us that I've heard this in different
Speaker:variations over and over again.
Speaker:Why do you think that is?
Speaker:I think a lot of times as artists,
Speaker:there's just this innate central feeling that I don't know that
Speaker:we're just not capable.
Speaker:We can see it in other people,
Speaker:but we can't turn it around and see it in ourselves
Speaker:for some reason.
Speaker:Yeah, exactly.
Speaker:I don't know what that is,
Speaker:but it does seem to be this like central artist connection
Speaker:that we just all question ourselves.
Speaker:I think of imposter syndrome,
Speaker:that's so common with so many artists.
Speaker:I know I struggle with that,
Speaker:but it's just feeling like you're out there faking it and
Speaker:really you're not.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:we're, everybody's taking it one way or the other.
Speaker:Some of us just might do it better than others,
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:But it does seem to be a common thing and I
Speaker:wish we all just believe in ourselves even a little bit.
Speaker:And I know I'm bad at it too,
Speaker:so. Yeah.
Speaker:Well, I always say that just acknowledging and recognizing that everybody,
Speaker:even people,
Speaker:I mean people can look at you Meg and say,
Speaker:look at all of the success she has and what she's
Speaker:doing, and she still has imposter syndrome.
Speaker:How can that be?
Speaker:So just acknowledging that that happens.
Speaker:The bigger,
Speaker:the more known,
Speaker:the more successful you get doesn't mean that that imposter syndrome
Speaker:goes away.
Speaker:Not at all.
Speaker:It might diminish,
Speaker:but it rears its little ugly head from time to time.
Speaker:It definitely does.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I think about Kate spade and her incredible story and just
Speaker:how heartbreaking it is.
Speaker:That's somewhat in our eyes who was so wonderfully successful,
Speaker:still struggled internally so much so.
Speaker:I mean we're definitely not alone by any means.
Speaker:Hopefully all are surrounded by these wonderful communities and you are,
Speaker:even if you haven't found it yet,
Speaker:but they're there and just knowing to take advantage of that.
Speaker:Absolutely. I didn't mean to get to a topic like this
Speaker:that's so heavy so fast,
Speaker:but just to share with our listeners,
Speaker:what do you do when those thoughts come up?
Speaker:How do you handle them?
Speaker:I try to just kind of approach it very logically and
Speaker:take a deep breath for small and just kind of talk
Speaker:my way through it.
Speaker:If I can talk it through with somebody else,
Speaker:that certainly helps because then I can kind of get out
Speaker:of my own head.
Speaker:But if it's just me and I'm really struggling with something
Speaker:like literally just taking the time to stop and think about,
Speaker:okay, look around you,
Speaker:look at what you've built.
Speaker:Because I have such a tendency myself to ignore all of
Speaker:that and just forget how we got here and there's so
Speaker:much amazingness in and of itself and that part of the
Speaker:story. So just taking a deep breath,
Speaker:stopping and I guess taking stock,
Speaker:how we got to where we are.
Speaker:I mean it wasn't luck or magic or anything like there
Speaker:was a lot of hard work and doing something right.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:this idea also just occurs to me because I didn't read
Speaker:in the intro your whole bio because it's really long,
Speaker:but you have a lot of features in well-known publications,
Speaker:country living,
Speaker:Rachel Ray,
Speaker:Southern weddings,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:Do you put like a board or anything somewhere where you
Speaker:could look at that sometimes and say,
Speaker:okay, this is good.
Speaker:I don't,
Speaker:I should,
Speaker:I have a stack of most of the magazines that we've
Speaker:been featured in on my counter and I mean it's,
Speaker:it's gotten pretty deep.
Speaker:Um, we've been very fortunate to be featured quite a bit.
Speaker:So that could be something someone could do.
Speaker:Like when you get accolades,
Speaker:and it doesn't have to be some of these big names,
Speaker:it could be just a local magazine that's highlighting you.
Speaker:How awesome is that?
Speaker:That helps bring you back and just remember that you've made
Speaker:progress in,
Speaker:you've come along.
Speaker:Absolutely. So let's go back.
Speaker:We're still on the steps.
Speaker:Javits. Okay.
Speaker:So now you're motivated and,
Speaker:okay, you've got this.
Speaker:What are the first steps that you did to get a
Speaker:line ready?
Speaker:Because you're saying the very next show you were there exhibiting
Speaker:I was,
Speaker:so for me,
Speaker:I did things a little backwards even though in my head
Speaker:it was entirely logical.
Speaker:Most people I think probably start retail.
Speaker:So they opened a little Etsy shop or maybe they just
Speaker:have their own website so it's direct to consumer.
Speaker:Whereas for me,
Speaker:I knew starting out I was not going to have enough
Speaker:of a customer base to make the business sustainable from day
Speaker:one. So in order to get gain more momentum and really
Speaker:get the name of the brand out there,
Speaker:I knew we needed to go wholesale.
Speaker:So with wholesale you're selling direct stores but they are having
Speaker:to buy certain minimums so your orders are going to be
Speaker:a lot bigger at least hopefully.
Speaker:And that answers the question of why you would go back
Speaker:and exhibit at Javits right away.
Speaker:Right. So literally I had not sold a single card,
Speaker:not even to my mother when I stepped foot in Javits
Speaker:the next year.
Speaker:Literally that was my debut to the stationary world was at
Speaker:that show.
Speaker:Okay. So this is going to be really helpful to our
Speaker:audience. I know because they're not necessarily cards,
Speaker:but whatever the product is that they have.
Speaker:What did you have ready?
Speaker:So you spent your whole year getting set then for the
Speaker:show. I'm guessing For the most part,
Speaker:I mean I probably could have been a little more productive
Speaker:at times.
Speaker:I feel like that last month before is when all the
Speaker:good stuff happened.
Speaker:But you had to design your car like you had to
Speaker:create your line,
Speaker:right? Yes.
Speaker:And formally start the business and all of that stuff.
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:Well, and I had to learn how to let her press
Speaker:because quite frankly,
Speaker:I didn't know how to do that yet.
Speaker:So we ended up finding a little tabletop letterpress in an
Speaker:antique mall in Florida,
Speaker:which we were living in Georgia at the time,
Speaker:so we had to drive down and pick it up.
Speaker:But I mean,
Speaker:I didn't know anything about it other than the fact that
Speaker:I loved what it did and I assumed I would love
Speaker:the process,
Speaker:which fortunately did turn out to be true.
Speaker:But yeah,
Speaker:so that year was spent like learning the craft of letterpress.
Speaker:Designing for letterpress is a little bit different than just designing
Speaker:for digital printing.
Speaker:So just kind of having to reteach myself in some ways
Speaker:and then also deciding how the heck do you make a
Speaker:cohesive collection because I could have just designed whatever I wanted
Speaker:and put it out in the world,
Speaker:but that wouldn't have necessarily made any sense.
Speaker:So I knew I needed to present a line to these
Speaker:retailers that they could merchandise and have it all make sense
Speaker:together. Just that cohesive brand identity and vision across the board.
Speaker:So something as simple as picking a limited color palette.
Speaker:That way everything falls in the same range.
Speaker:And in the beginning with our cards,
Speaker:I had decided to stick with this idea of Southern phrases
Speaker:and so that was another underlying thread to everything And that
Speaker:stayed true to this day with all your products.
Speaker:It has like put a little asterisk.
Speaker:So we're in the process of moving away from that and
Speaker:we actually have been for several years for a lot of
Speaker:reasons Moving away or integrated or diluting it a little bit
Speaker:and having other things as well.
Speaker:Both. I would say I don't currently have plans to add
Speaker:any more of the Southern based lines or phrases to the
Speaker:line. In fact,
Speaker:we just did this huge purge of the collection,
Speaker:so I think we had about 150 cards and what we
Speaker:call our general store line,
Speaker:which is the one with all the Southern base phrases.
Speaker:And I think we got it down to about half that
Speaker:think it's between 50 and 60 cards right now.
Speaker:And I think it's just going to be that is that
Speaker:line for better or worse.
Speaker:So it's our favorites and top sellers,
Speaker:that kind of thing.
Speaker:But really we're kind of moving forward with the brand and
Speaker:I think that's why I liked that quote so much.
Speaker:Right now we cannot become what we want by remaining what
Speaker:we are.
Speaker:And I think in a lot of ways hiding behind the
Speaker:southernism system,
Speaker:he called me back.
Speaker:So it's been really challenging in the best of ways to
Speaker:figure out,
Speaker:okay, what is it I really want to design when I'm
Speaker:not necessarily hiding behind something else.
Speaker:Interesting. Were you feeling like add,
Speaker:you were bringing new products that there was more interest.
Speaker:Was it a numbers issue too?
Speaker:Like you're seeing that some of the other things that aren't
Speaker:as Southern phrased or all that or selling more?
Speaker:Yes and no.
Speaker:It just depends.
Speaker:Obviously when you're selling to the entire country and you're going
Speaker:to see trends,
Speaker:you would think that the Southern isms would sell best in
Speaker:the South.
Speaker:But believe it or not,
Speaker:they did better in the Pacific Northwest and California and new
Speaker:England. No kidding.
Speaker:Yeah, it's the funniest thing.
Speaker:I know if they just think it's kitschy or what.
Speaker:But the South like on the whole has actually been kind
Speaker:of my worst interview sales,
Speaker:which I still find hysterical but I don't know,
Speaker:it's just,
Speaker:I started this business when I was 23 years old and
Speaker:I've grown up a lot since then and I need the
Speaker:line to grow up with me I think.
Speaker:So it's a combination of product and then just also what
Speaker:you have interest in.
Speaker:Sure. Absolutely.
Speaker:Even where you're gravitating to and all that.
Speaker:Okay. Let's jump back one more time.
Speaker:Cause I do have a question.
Speaker:One final one.
Speaker:I promise we're going to move forward on this.
Speaker:No worries.
Speaker:I really do.
Speaker:But we're still at that first show.
Speaker:Take us through how things went at that time.
Speaker:The stationary show was maybe two and a half or three
Speaker:days long.
Speaker:How did it go?
Speaker:Any learning or advice cause you were new and young then
Speaker:doing your first show.
Speaker:Granted it was to a wholesale market versus consumer because we
Speaker:have a lot of people who listen,
Speaker:who do the craft shows,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:not necessarily the wholesale shows,
Speaker:but how did you do,
Speaker:what learnings did you have from those first few days at
Speaker:your very first show?
Speaker:Sure. So I very much was focused on getting to that
Speaker:show, showing my line.
Speaker:Like everything I did in that year was about get to
Speaker:the stationery show,
Speaker:which while I was very focused,
Speaker:I think it was also kind of a mistake.
Speaker:Running a business is a marathon,
Speaker:not a sprint.
Speaker:And people that have listened to me talk before.
Speaker:No, I say that a lot.
Speaker:And it's true because you have to look beyond that one
Speaker:show and unfortunately I didn't do that,
Speaker:but we'll circle back to that,
Speaker:but keep that in mind.
Speaker:So at the show itself,
Speaker:I launched a line that had I believe 32 greeting cards
Speaker:because I wanted to have a good range for people to
Speaker:pick from to be able to meet our minimum and not
Speaker:feel like they had to order everything.
Speaker:Which I do think is key for new businesses that are
Speaker:considering wholesale is make sure you're offering your retailers a variety
Speaker:without forcing them down this path of literally they have to
Speaker:order every skew from you to hit your minimums.
Speaker:But we had 32 cards,
Speaker:I think 12 gift wraps,
Speaker:60 towels for notepads,
Speaker:like it was a pretty wide variety actually for just starting
Speaker:out. In fact,
Speaker:a woman walked by and said,
Speaker:there's no way this is your first year,
Speaker:like you know what you're doing.
Speaker:I'm like,
Speaker:no, I just came prepared a big planner so well that
Speaker:had to make you feel good.
Speaker:It did.
Speaker:Absolutely. I will have to give some credit to Katie hunt
Speaker:of trade show bootcamp,
Speaker:which is now called proof to product.
Speaker:Yep. Katie's been on the show.
Speaker:Yeah, I love Katie.
Speaker:So I took her series back when it was still a
Speaker:teleconference, so I think I was in like the second alumni
Speaker:class or something.
Speaker:So way back when,
Speaker:but definitely her series was super helpful in terms of planning
Speaker:for wholesale.
Speaker:So everything from what is a line sheet versus a catalog
Speaker:and like how do I price myself all this stuff,
Speaker:how do I build a booth?
Speaker:So we actually decided,
Speaker:I'm a firm believer in presentation is everything.
Speaker:So I did not want anybody to know that it was
Speaker:my first year.
Speaker:Like they're not going to know I'm a one woman show
Speaker:and we're doing this in my garage and that kind of
Speaker:thing. So we invested in having a booth built for us
Speaker:for that first year,
Speaker:knowing that we could use it year to year after that.
Speaker:So while it was more money up front,
Speaker:it was going to save us in the long run,
Speaker:which I think was smart.
Speaker:In fact,
Speaker:I just sold that booth earlier this year,
Speaker:so it's lasted us seven years.
Speaker:So I've definitely saved a lot of money in the long
Speaker:run, but I don't know,
Speaker:I, we presented ourselves best foot forward and I went into
Speaker:that show wanting one order because I remember Katie had said
Speaker:in one of our calls,
Speaker:shows are about more than just orders.
Speaker:You're networking,
Speaker:you're planting seeds.
Speaker:Like don't be discouraged if you only get one order.
Speaker:So that's all I wanted.
Speaker:I just wanted one.
Speaker:So what's your guests?
Speaker:Do you think she got that one order?
Speaker:We'll find out right after a word from our sponsor.
Speaker:This podcast is made possible thanks to the support of the
Speaker:ribbon print company.
Speaker:Create custom ribbons right in your store or craft studio in
Speaker:seconds. Visit the ribbon,
Speaker:print company.com
Speaker:for more information.
Speaker:We walked away with over 50 accounts.
Speaker:Wow. That first show,
Speaker:I was riding a high for sure.
Speaker:That must have blown your mind.
Speaker:It absolutely did.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I literally launched a business and a matter of three and
Speaker:a half days,
Speaker:so that was a pretty incredible feeling.
Speaker:Well, congratulations.
Speaker:But circling back to what I mentioned before,
Speaker:that whole,
Speaker:it's a marathon,
Speaker:not a sprint.
Speaker:So I had spent pretty much every dime that I had
Speaker:saved for my wedding invitation business to get to the show,
Speaker:not considering that when I got home and I had all
Speaker:these orders to fill,
Speaker:how the heck was I going to pay for all that?
Speaker:Right. So I think we wrote around $15,000
Speaker:worth of orders for that show,
Speaker:which keep in mind those shows are really expensive.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I probably broke even all things considered by the time you
Speaker:factor in.
Speaker:Yeah, transportation and food and lodging and the show itself And
Speaker:the booth cost and all of that.
Speaker:Exactly right.
Speaker:That's a good thing to just pause here for a minute
Speaker:and to have people understand is some of those bigger trade
Speaker:shows are expensive.
Speaker:So you really want to think and be prepared.
Speaker:This isn't like a last minute,
Speaker:like the craft shows are a little bit less expensive.
Speaker:Some of the concepts are the same though,
Speaker:Meg, in terms of what you're doing there.
Speaker:You want to sell product,
Speaker:but it's,
Speaker:I call it one big focus group.
Speaker:You're able to interact with people who may or may not
Speaker:buy your product,
Speaker:lot of learning and all of that,
Speaker:but the big shows.
Speaker:Yeah, 10 or 15,000
Speaker:easy. Oh,
Speaker:very easy.
Speaker:I mean that's even being conservative.
Speaker:It would be very difficult for you to get out of
Speaker:a show for less than 10,000
Speaker:just because your booth cost alone is probably at least $6,000
Speaker:and lodging in New York city for a week is probably
Speaker:$2,000. Like it just adds up very quickly.
Speaker:Well, in Javits charges for anything,
Speaker:like you're not allowed to carry a box in practicum.
Speaker:They're going to charge you for drayage and all that.
Speaker:Yeah. You can't lift a hammer or you'll get in trouble.
Speaker:Right. It's a lot.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:Okay, so you've got $15,000
Speaker:worth of orders and now,
Speaker:so what did you do?
Speaker:I cried a lot because I realized that's not going to
Speaker:help Meg.
Speaker:No, I know you gotta know your numbers.
Speaker:That's really what the key takeaway of this is going to
Speaker:be. So I had $15,000
Speaker:worth of orders and it was going to cost me $20,000
Speaker:to create all of the inventory that I needed to fill
Speaker:those orders.
Speaker:No, obviously that was more inventory than I needed,
Speaker:but because of things like minimum order quantities.
Speaker:Right, exactly.
Speaker:Got it.
Speaker:Not even taking into consideration all the money that I just
Speaker:spent to be at the show,
Speaker:it was going to take all of this extra money to
Speaker:actually fill those orders.
Speaker:So that was a hard lesson learned.
Speaker:So was it a bank loan was,
Speaker:it was a mom didn't want to see me fail from
Speaker:day one loan.
Speaker:I was very lucky in that she basically guaranteed she was
Speaker:my loan in the sense that she knew I had that
Speaker:money coming in and that I could immediately turn around and
Speaker:pay it to her.
Speaker:Right. And so that's what I did.
Speaker:So pretty much our net ended up being zero after that
Speaker:first show.
Speaker:But it got us off the ground.
Speaker:But then you had inventory of which to build.
Speaker:Exactly. Yes,
Speaker:correct. Yeah.
Speaker:Well thanks mom.
Speaker:Yes. No,
Speaker:mom is a lifesaver.
Speaker:Mom is actually still a part of the Bella union team.
Speaker:She's our operations manager.
Speaker:She keeps me online,
Speaker:still checks the books on a weekly basis.
Speaker:So I'm very grateful to have her as part of the
Speaker:team. That's fabulous.
Speaker:Okay, so you filled the orders.
Speaker:How did you interact with the different shops in terms of
Speaker:understanding if the product was moving and then getting reorders and
Speaker:all that?
Speaker:How does that work?
Speaker:I will be the first to admit I was not very
Speaker:good at followup and it's something that is being ever worked
Speaker:on to this day.
Speaker:We've made a lot of changes to fix that,
Speaker:but I had just hoped like I would send off these
Speaker:orders and they would sell out and then they would order
Speaker:again. And unfortunately it doesn't really always work that way.
Speaker:Being a shop owner myself now I understand how easily things
Speaker:get forgotten.
Speaker:So what happened?
Speaker:So yeah,
Speaker:so share with us so that we understand better,
Speaker:cause I'm imagining as a shop owner you've got people approaching
Speaker:you with product all the time.
Speaker:I mean for us it hasn't been that bad yet because
Speaker:I think a lot of people understand that we're mostly carrying
Speaker:our own product or right,
Speaker:but it's also a little bit different.
Speaker:So with my line being 100% made in the U S
Speaker:I wanted the store to be the same way and that
Speaker:immediately cuts the playing field down quite a bit.
Speaker:We get submissions occasionally and we've got a file cabinet that
Speaker:maybe the timing's just not right at that particular moment,
Speaker:but we like their stuff and we'll hang onto it.
Speaker:I in a group with ShopKeep ladies and everybody kind of
Speaker:has a different approach on how they handle those sorts of
Speaker:things. Unfortunately,
Speaker:I know no answer has kind of become the new no,
Speaker:which I personally hate being on both sides of it.
Speaker:Like I just don't think that's fair.
Speaker:I mean if you're taking the time to reach out now
Speaker:I say that with a caveat.
Speaker:If it's very clear,
Speaker:it's just some form email or whatever,
Speaker:like where you didn't actually do your research.
Speaker:Well, I can't promise I'm going to give you the time
Speaker:of day,
Speaker:but if I can tell that you really made an effort,
Speaker:but maybe it's just not the right fit or the timing's
Speaker:not right,
Speaker:I want to give you that feedback because I know back
Speaker:when I was starting out,
Speaker:I would have appreciated that.
Speaker:So I try well and then they're not going to approach
Speaker:you again either if they understand that.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:Yeah. So I mean it's twofold in that sense,
Speaker:but I don't know.
Speaker:It's, we haven't been discovered maybe yet as a store,
Speaker:so we're not dealing with hundreds of submissions per week like
Speaker:some of my friends are,
Speaker:which sounds crazy.
Speaker:But yeah,
Speaker:followup was definitely not something I was very good at.
Speaker:We launched at that first show and then it became,
Speaker:okay, well now we need to launch a holiday collection.
Speaker:And so really I would only reach out to my retailers,
Speaker:whether via snail mail or email,
Speaker:if I had a reason to just to say,
Speaker:Hey, this product is new Christmases coming up.
Speaker:Do you need holiday cards?
Speaker:So and I started working really on the next line to
Speaker:go back to the show the following year.
Speaker:Okay. And so a little different for you for sure,
Speaker:especially now because you've got your own shop,
Speaker:et cetera,
Speaker:but what would be a best practice?
Speaker:What would you advise people who are in that situation where
Speaker:they've already placed product,
Speaker:when they have a list of retailers,
Speaker:how often and in what manner should they follow up with
Speaker:people? So we've actually implemented something that I think is really
Speaker:cool and I don't really see other people doing.
Speaker:When we send out an order,
Speaker:two to three weeks later,
Speaker:we send a handwritten note just to say thank you and
Speaker:to check in obviously being a card company,
Speaker:like it's kind of duh,
Speaker:why wouldn't you send a card?
Speaker:But it's just that extra point of building that relationship with
Speaker:that retailer and we're starting to see that come back to
Speaker:us because you're just taking the time to remember them.
Speaker:It's not simply a sales transaction at that point because that's
Speaker:something that I've noticed as a retailer now.
Speaker:It's like I get my order and then I never hear
Speaker:from you again.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I kind of want you to check in with me.
Speaker:I may be the total opposite of most shop owners,
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:But as far as best practices,
Speaker:don't call.
Speaker:Nobody wants to talk on the phone.
Speaker:Quite honestly,
Speaker:especially if you're pitching a line.
Speaker:But email is great just to drop me a quick note
Speaker:and say,
Speaker:Hey, hope you're loving everything.
Speaker:Let me know if I can get you anything short.
Speaker:Sweet to the point.
Speaker:Just let me know that you actually care and are thinking
Speaker:about us and that I wasn't just dollars in your bank
Speaker:account. Right.
Speaker:It's a personal thing in a lot of ways.
Speaker:Our shop is pretty small,
Speaker:so for us to add you like it's a big deal
Speaker:to me and I hope that you feel that way too.
Speaker:Well, you're sharing your whole customer base,
Speaker:the whole audience with whoever it is who's providing that product.
Speaker:So it reflects on you as well as them.
Speaker:Sure. So you want to be selective for sure.
Speaker:I'm also thinking that trade shows are really good for this
Speaker:too because let's say you're not exhibiting,
Speaker:but you're going and looking at product,
Speaker:you can also then go and meet with everybody who's product
Speaker:you're carrying to deepen the relationship.
Speaker:For sure.
Speaker:I mean trade shows are funny beast.
Speaker:They've gone through a lot of transition.
Speaker:I feel like in the last few years,
Speaker:even since I started,
Speaker:I've seen this huge shift.
Speaker:Less people are going to the shows both on the vendor
Speaker:side and the retailer side,
Speaker:which makes it difficult because the shows are so expensive.
Speaker:If you're not writing the orders,
Speaker:that return on investment becomes questionable.
Speaker:I know for us personally,
Speaker:we exhibited in New York last February,
Speaker:so February of 2018 and at the time it was the
Speaker:worst show we had ever had.
Speaker:I don't think we even broke even like it was pretty
Speaker:depressing. So we took the rest of the year off because
Speaker:we were focused on getting the shop opened.
Speaker:So I will admit wholesale kind of suffered for us last
Speaker:year, but it was just because we were otherwise focused.
Speaker:Right. And then we decided to change it up this year
Speaker:and we did Atlanta for the very first time back in
Speaker:January of 2019 and everyone had told me,
Speaker:Oh my gosh,
Speaker:Atlanta, you'll do double what you do in New York.
Speaker:Like it's going to be great.
Speaker:And since it's in the South,
Speaker:it's totally a perfect fit for you.
Speaker:It was by far the worst show I've ever had.
Speaker:I hit the same experience with Atlanta.
Speaker:It was awful.
Speaker:Yeah, it was funny.
Speaker:We won an award for best visual display and I kept
Speaker:joking that it was just my constellation prize because the show
Speaker:was just so horrible.
Speaker:And I hate that.
Speaker:I hate to say that.
Speaker:Well, and it's so big.
Speaker:It is.
Speaker:And we were in a great section.
Speaker:I wasn't going to do it unless I got the section
Speaker:that I wanted.
Speaker:And I have a friend who was in that same section
Speaker:who said it was one of the best shows that she
Speaker:had ever done.
Speaker:No, granted,
Speaker:I have no idea what that actually means.
Speaker:Her best show could be the equivalent of my worst show.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:But it was enough that we are certainly questioning our presence
Speaker:at trade shows,
Speaker:which makes me sad At trade shows overall or that show
Speaker:in particular Trade shows.
Speaker:Overall, I don't see us going back to Atlanta.
Speaker:The one exception would be perhaps if we were in a
Speaker:rep group,
Speaker:but I have not necessarily found a lot of success with
Speaker:those either.
Speaker:So there's definitely a lot of unknowns right now as far
Speaker:as how do we reach our customers.
Speaker:There's just this big flux happening with wholesale.
Speaker:I feel like there's so much emphasis on direct to consumer
Speaker:right now and I think wholesale is just kind of getting
Speaker:lost in that process.
Speaker:Well, and I definitely have seen the same thing with trader
Speaker:Joe's. I used to go to about 12 a year,
Speaker:then I dropped to six and now I may be at
Speaker:really four where we're exhibiting really big and then I do
Speaker:really very narrow industry shows that are more learning versus traits.
Speaker:So we do both,
Speaker:but it's not those big ones anymore.
Speaker:I'm seeing much more success in the smaller shows.
Speaker:Interesting. Yeah,
Speaker:just a whole different thing.
Speaker:12 shows sounds really exhausting.
Speaker:Like I'm just tired thinking about,
Speaker:I would never do that again.
Speaker:Even if the shows were good,
Speaker:I would never do that again just because I don't know
Speaker:if you set up your own booth or you have someone,
Speaker:so like just the setup and tear down and all of
Speaker:that. It's a lot of work.
Speaker:We did three shows I think two years in a row
Speaker:and that was about enough to do me and yeah,
Speaker:so I cannot imagine 12 but they're fun.
Speaker:They are.
Speaker:It's wonderful.
Speaker:Interacting with people,
Speaker:seeing customers,
Speaker:meeting new people,
Speaker:love all of that.
Speaker:But I could have someone do the front end and the
Speaker:backend of it until I go just do the booth.
Speaker:I'd be happy camper.
Speaker:That would be the way to go I think.
Speaker:Yeah. Okay,
Speaker:so we are so off track here.
Speaker:Let's go back.
Speaker:Let's go back to,
Speaker:I really want to talk about how you decided to add
Speaker:in a brick and mortar store into the mix.
Speaker:Was this always something you were thinking about or was there
Speaker:something that sparked the decision?
Speaker:It was definitely not an always,
Speaker:in fact that boutique that I had worked at in college.
Speaker:So she closed before I ever even thought about exhibiting with
Speaker:my line.
Speaker:I think it was in the spring of 2010 but she
Speaker:had said to me,
Speaker:don't ever open a store.
Speaker:So that was kind of always in the back of my
Speaker:mind. So I had met my husband in Savannah,
Speaker:Georgia and that's where I started the company.
Speaker:He was in the military at the time,
Speaker:but when he got out he decided to go back to
Speaker:school, which brought us to Texas.
Speaker:So we were in college station for four years and then
Speaker:he graduated.
Speaker:Got his dream job eating ice cream for a living.
Speaker:Yes, it's a real job.
Speaker:Oh my God.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:Are you serious?
Speaker:Like he's a flavor ice cream flavor testers.
Speaker:So he is a food scientist and product development.
Speaker:His first,
Speaker:I guess team that he worked on was the frozen team.
Speaker:So he worked on ice cream a lot.
Speaker:He's in deli and bakery now,
Speaker:so it's not as fun.
Speaker:Like, I think his project at the moment is salads,
Speaker:which is just not nearly as exciting and better for the
Speaker:waistline. But I agree.
Speaker:Go by Joyce.
Speaker:He got his dream job,
Speaker:which is in San Antonio,
Speaker:and I'm fortunate in that with what I do,
Speaker:as long as I have access to FedEx and the post
Speaker:office, generally speaking,
Speaker:I can work from anywhere.
Speaker:But I decided that with this move,
Speaker:if I was going to try my hand at retail,
Speaker:this was the time to do it.
Speaker:And the reason for that was it didn't make sense to
Speaker:me to go rent commercial space for our studio because up
Speaker:until that point I had been in the garage essentially.
Speaker:Now it was a really nice garage and we made it
Speaker:work, but I was busting at the seams and quite frankly,
Speaker:I wanted to feel a little more legitimate as a business
Speaker:because I think we were going on five or six years
Speaker:and at this point.
Speaker:So it just didn't sense to me to rent commercial space
Speaker:because then you're shelling out money for rent every month and
Speaker:that's just taking away from any profits that you might have
Speaker:from your orders.
Speaker:So in my mind I said,
Speaker:okay, let's have the cute little shop in the front and
Speaker:the studio can be in the back and the shop will
Speaker:make enough money to cover the rent.
Speaker:So wholesale can continue operating at no additional overhead.
Speaker:This was my big plan.
Speaker:Sounds good.
Speaker:Yeah, it sounds great.
Speaker:It sounds really,
Speaker:really simple and straightforward.
Speaker:I wish it would've gone that way.
Speaker:Not so much,
Speaker:but it was a good effort,
Speaker:we'll say.
Speaker:So what happened?
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:life happens.
Speaker:So I was not familiar with San Antonio.
Speaker:I grew up mostly in the Houston area of Texas.
Speaker:So it was this whole new city to me.
Speaker:I don't know a soul in it.
Speaker:So I'm researching all over town.
Speaker:Where do we need to be with our store?
Speaker:Cause there's not really,
Speaker:what I would call it,
Speaker:a centralized kind of shopping area in San Antonio.
Speaker:Like there's little pockets here and there and they all have
Speaker:different vibes and that sort of thing.
Speaker:So I researched everybody and got a feel for what the
Speaker:rent was in each area.
Speaker:The space that I settled on is a little bit North
Speaker:of downtown and it is definitely an established retail development,
Speaker:but it's not one that I would say a small business
Speaker:friendly. I mean if you're talking,
Speaker:these are major chains.
Speaker:Like at the time that I opened there was a Starbucks
Speaker:on the corner or a trader Joe's.
Speaker:Kendra Scott is next door to me.
Speaker:So I mean you're talking major brands,
Speaker:but no,
Speaker:I think that would be great for you because of the
Speaker:traffic that comes into those stores.
Speaker:Exactly. That was my thought process.
Speaker:I said,
Speaker:you know what?
Speaker:Nobody knows my brand from a hole in the wall.
Speaker:Seeing Belle and union on the side of the building means
Speaker:absolutely nothing.
Speaker:So I cannot have any sort of a location that is
Speaker:going to be considered destination cause nobody knows me.
Speaker:So I need to be found,
Speaker:I need to be discovered.
Speaker:So we signed the lease,
Speaker:which was higher than we probably would have liked,
Speaker:but it doesn't matter how little your rent payment is every
Speaker:month if you're not getting foot traffic,
Speaker:because if you're not getting foot traffic,
Speaker:you can't pay the bills period.
Speaker:And so,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I've got friends with shops all over the country and they
Speaker:had said it's going to be worth the higher rent if
Speaker:it means you're getting that foot traffic.
Speaker:So we bet it all in a lot of ways.
Speaker:And we had done all the math.
Speaker:I had every kind of spreadsheet you could imagine.
Speaker:We opened the doors in July of 2018 and within two
Speaker:months of opening four businesses around me closed.
Speaker:No. Yeah.
Speaker:So that was a pretty big hit.
Speaker:One of the businesses with Starbucks and that was just depressing
Speaker:on a personal level.
Speaker:Well that's shocking.
Speaker:Well, yeah,
Speaker:from one Starbucks lover to another,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:kind of broke me with my habit a little bit,
Speaker:I guess you could say,
Speaker:but Oh God.
Speaker:Yeah. It's really hard when someone that's kind of already fighting
Speaker:with this idea of imposter syndrome.
Speaker:Here I am the small business trying to play with the
Speaker:big boys and Starbucks can't even pull through like that was
Speaker:a big hit mentally for sure.
Speaker:So it's,
Speaker:we've definitely had a lot of learns in the last,
Speaker:But what would you have done differently?
Speaker:What were your other options?
Speaker:Looking at different places.
Speaker:It would kind of be luck of the draw depending on
Speaker:anywhere you went because you would never have expected that to
Speaker:happen. Exactly.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I couldn't have planned for that.
Speaker:I mean short of taking a lawn chair and sitting in
Speaker:one location for a week to see what foot traffic was
Speaker:like, which I mean is really,
Speaker:if you were considering opening a store,
Speaker:not half bad idea,
Speaker:I would slightly recommend it actually.
Speaker:But you had that foot traffic at first when you went
Speaker:in, you had that foot traffic because it was full.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I felt good about it.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I don't give him the information I had.
Speaker:I think I made the best choice that I possibly could
Speaker:have. Okay,
Speaker:so now you have this challenge,
Speaker:your foot traffic has dramatically dropped.
Speaker:Yes. And we're talking within just this year.
Speaker:Cause now you're just,
Speaker:you're in your anniversary right now when your anniversary.
Speaker:Yeah. So what types of things did you do to try
Speaker:and overcome that?
Speaker:The foot traffic problem?
Speaker:Sure. So one of the big things that we did pretty
Speaker:early on was added workshops.
Speaker:No one in San Antonio was really doing anything like that,
Speaker:at least not consistently.
Speaker:And so we knew that that was a way to kind
Speaker:of differentiate ourselves and get people through the door because that's
Speaker:the thing that we've learned.
Speaker:If we can get them through the door,
Speaker:generally speaking,
Speaker:they're going to buy something,
Speaker:which is great.
Speaker:Our conversion numbers,
Speaker:like the individual sales data that we have is wonderful.
Speaker:That's what I keep telling my Baker,
Speaker:but just not enough of it.
Speaker:Just need more feet through the door.
Speaker:So doing workshops early on,
Speaker:we don't necessarily make a lot of money off of workshops
Speaker:because you're having to pay the instructor and buy snacks and
Speaker:all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:But it's more an investment.
Speaker:And again,
Speaker:getting new people through the door and getting the word out
Speaker:there that we're here.
Speaker:That's been a really big part of it.
Speaker:Yeah. So did you find people that were going to the
Speaker:workshops then shopping and buying something in the store also?
Speaker:Yeah, so what we do is we offer 10% off your
Speaker:purchases the day of your workshop.
Speaker:So generally speaking,
Speaker:people will come in and take their class and then shop
Speaker:afterward. It's kind of funny,
Speaker:the patterns we see in certain classes,
Speaker:I swear nobody shops and then other classes,
Speaker:everybody shops,
Speaker:it's hit or miss sometimes.
Speaker:And you don't know that until that day.
Speaker:But I love that you're doing the 10% the day of
Speaker:the workshop because it's not like the thing,
Speaker:Oh I need to go now but I'll come back.
Speaker:Cause you know a large percentage of them will forget,
Speaker:lose the coupon or however it is.
Speaker:But if they're right there,
Speaker:there's a sense of urgency.
Speaker:If I want to use this,
Speaker:I've got to use it now before they leave.
Speaker:Yeah, it is Plan in the moment thing and I mean
Speaker:I think that's been a big part of what we have
Speaker:been good at so far.
Speaker:Wonderful. Yeah.
Speaker:What I really Like about this is you just didn't curl
Speaker:up and say,
Speaker:okay, these big stores are gone.
Speaker:Hopeless case is not going to work for me.
Speaker:You just took control of the situation.
Speaker:Right. Again,
Speaker:maybe for a minute,
Speaker:and it's funny,
Speaker:I sound like I'm a crier,
Speaker:but I'm really not.
Speaker:It was one of those things that even if I had
Speaker:wanted to curl up into a ball and just say,
Speaker:okay, we're done.
Speaker:Quite frankly it's too expensive to do that.
Speaker:Right. Cause you had signed a lease.
Speaker:Exactly. Yeah.
Speaker:So even if my shop wasn't here,
Speaker:guess what?
Speaker:I'm still stuck paying rent on the lease until that's up.
Speaker:So it's kind of like,
Speaker:alright, we're going to push through.
Speaker:We have to make this work.
Speaker:Like we have to,
Speaker:this is what we have and if I give up,
Speaker:it's going to take the whole business down with it,
Speaker:not just the shop.
Speaker:Right. And so you got creative.
Speaker:We've certainly had to,
Speaker:Yeah. With your workshops,
Speaker:anything else that you would say or if someone finds themselves
Speaker:in a similar situation?
Speaker:Any advice Patients?
Speaker:Honestly, we're still having people to this day come in and
Speaker:say, Oh my gosh,
Speaker:did you just open?
Speaker:It's like,
Speaker:well, no,
Speaker:we've been here almost a year.
Speaker:There's actually apartments that are above us and some of the
Speaker:residents, they'll come down and be like,
Speaker:when did you open?
Speaker:So people just,
Speaker:I don't know if it's a technology thing that they're just,
Speaker:they're so focused on going from point a to point B
Speaker:that they're literally not looking up and looking around.
Speaker:As silly as that is,
Speaker:it's kind of true and I've,
Speaker:in fact,
Speaker:we have people say it all the time,
Speaker:like, Oh,
Speaker:I just ran into Kendra and was going to go back
Speaker:to my car,
Speaker:but I caught you out of the corner of my eye.
Speaker:So we definitely hear that a lot.
Speaker:But we've definitely started dabbling with more paid advertising.
Speaker:It wasn't something that I wanted to do or hoped that
Speaker:I would need to do,
Speaker:but it's definitely helping.
Speaker:It's simple things.
Speaker:Just boosting a post for an event on Facebook or through
Speaker:Instagram, something like that because it's pretty amazing what you can
Speaker:do with targeting these days in terms of advertising,
Speaker:so you can say specifically like only target women ages 25
Speaker:to 45 and a five mile radius of the shop.
Speaker:Like you can get so specific to,
Speaker:you know that you're reaching only the people that are most
Speaker:likely going to come And you're seeing the results when you
Speaker:do that,
Speaker:you're seeing an increase in traffic.
Speaker:Yeah, this slow growth thing,
Speaker:we definitely have people come in and say,
Speaker:I always saw you on Instagram or something on Facebook.
Speaker:We've been doing a lot to try to stay in the
Speaker:forefront of people's minds via local media,
Speaker:so there's a couple of local shows that they'll bring us
Speaker:in and I'll do like a father's day gift guide or
Speaker:whatever it is.
Speaker:Staying again in the forefront of people's minds in whatever way
Speaker:that's possible,
Speaker:whether that's a local magazine or a local TV segment.
Speaker:We try to do at least one thing a month.
Speaker:They consistent.
Speaker:And so do you have someone helping you with this?
Speaker:How is your back of the house starting to get structured
Speaker:in terms of people helping with marketing promotion or advertising campaigns,
Speaker:all of that.
Speaker:Sure. So I am definitely not a one man show anymore.
Speaker:I could only do so much.
Speaker:I a girl who does just contract work for me.
Speaker:So she's based out of Dallas,
Speaker:which is about four hours away and she handles anything that
Speaker:falls under the PR umbrella.
Speaker:So whether that's getting a podcast interview or local media segments,
Speaker:anything like that,
Speaker:she's the one that spends between five and 10 hours a
Speaker:month. So you know,
Speaker:not a huge investment but enough that it's getting our name
Speaker:out there on a consistent basis.
Speaker:So I have that.
Speaker:I have another woman who does a lot of the social
Speaker:media management and marketing because honestly social media can get overwhelming
Speaker:very quickly.
Speaker:And I think as small businesses,
Speaker:there's a lot of pressure on ourselves to do that on
Speaker:our own.
Speaker:And quite frankly,
Speaker:I don't think it has to be that way.
Speaker:So Allie,
Speaker:her company is actually for a past creative.
Speaker:If anybody wants to check her out.
Speaker:She's really wonderful.
Speaker:But she does pretty much all of my photography so I
Speaker:don't have to worry about that anymore.
Speaker:She does everything from helping me schedule posts to pushing ads
Speaker:out. Like she is basically my right hand gal these days.
Speaker:It feels like in a lot of ways,
Speaker:but just learning,
Speaker:you don't have to do it all on your own is
Speaker:really important.
Speaker:So those are my two contract.
Speaker:But then I've also got a full time shop manager.
Speaker:She came to me via Instagram actually of all places heard.
Speaker:We were opening up in San Antonio and just wanted to
Speaker:put a bug in my ear.
Speaker:But she came to me with tons of corporate retail experience.
Speaker:So she had been a manager at a restoration hardware and
Speaker:an anthropology,
Speaker:like all these incredible retail giants.
Speaker:And here she was wanting to work for my tiny little
Speaker:small business.
Speaker:But that has been a wonderful partnership and I owe a
Speaker:lot of the success that we have had in the last
Speaker:year to her.
Speaker:And then in addition to that,
Speaker:we have a few part timers who help carry the load
Speaker:both in the retail and wholesale actually.
Speaker:So they may have a shift where they're watching the shop,
Speaker:but say no one's in the store.
Speaker:They can be packaging cards for wholesale or something like that.
Speaker:So they're kind of doing double duty,
Speaker:which is really great.
Speaker:Right. But it sounds like each person clearly with your PR
Speaker:person in your social media for management and marketing,
Speaker:those tasks are specifically under their jurisdiction,
Speaker:which is great because then you can do what you're supposed
Speaker:to do.
Speaker:And I think so many times as a business owner,
Speaker:we don't do that.
Speaker:We do try and keep everything ourselves because it's a cost
Speaker:savings. Let's face it,
Speaker:and somehow we say like we're not big enough for,
Speaker:we shouldn't be doing it yet.
Speaker:Where really I think we start to stunt our growth because
Speaker:we're doing a lot of things maybe a little bit.
Speaker:Well, instead of really having someone who knows what they're doing,
Speaker:do it.
Speaker:You've got your small business,
Speaker:like a big business at the end of the day,
Speaker:whether that's just the systems that you use to stay organized
Speaker:or asking for help when you need it to get the
Speaker:right people.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:yes, it's going to cost you some in payroll,
Speaker:but if you're hiring the right person,
Speaker:they're going to bring back tenfold,
Speaker:which you're spending on them.
Speaker:So that's definitely key.
Speaker:And the other thing is I heard at a conference one
Speaker:time, the speaker was talking about how as the boss,
Speaker:you need to make sure that you're chasing the hundred dollar
Speaker:bills and not the single dollar bills.
Speaker:Your time is unbelievably valuable as the head creative or whatever
Speaker:it is you're choosing to do in your business.
Speaker:So you need to make sure that you're doing the things
Speaker:that only you can do.
Speaker:It's hard to do though.
Speaker:I mean it's easy to get wrapped up,
Speaker:but the little day to day things when really it's like,
Speaker:okay if I take a step back and honestly even just
Speaker:taking out a pad of paper and a pen and being
Speaker:like, all right,
Speaker:what do I Meg actually have to do?
Speaker:What can no one else do?
Speaker:And you might surprise yourself by what it is that you
Speaker:can and cannot let go of Or you might need a
Speaker:little mind adjustment that says,
Speaker:do you really have to be the one who does this?
Speaker:Sure. I'm struggling with that right now with some of the
Speaker:podcast stuff cause I'm still holding on to way more than
Speaker:I should and I know it.
Speaker:I'm getting there.
Speaker:I'm almost at that line.
Speaker:Not quite,
Speaker:but I'm almost there.
Speaker:That's half the battle for sure.
Speaker:For sure.
Speaker:It is.
Speaker:Well I just love everything that we've talked about.
Speaker:You have had such great insight for,
Speaker:I know a lot of our listeners and we've gone into
Speaker:some topics that we haven't covered in depth here,
Speaker:so I really,
Speaker:really appreciate that.
Speaker:Share with us a little bit.
Speaker:You were mentioning in the beginning that things are changing,
Speaker:your product lines,
Speaker:changing a little bit,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:Can you give us a little peek into the future here?
Speaker:Sure. When I'm not hiding,
Speaker:I guess behind someone else's words in a way,
Speaker:like via the Southern items.
Speaker:I find currently that I'm really being inspired by color and
Speaker:texture and I want to kind of use those to really
Speaker:push the limits of what I can do with letterpress.
Speaker:We've kind of pulled our focus in word for awhile there.
Speaker:We were working on gift products that other people were making
Speaker:for us,
Speaker:but honestly my job became so much supply chain management,
Speaker:but it was a lot in,
Speaker:you're actually making less money,
Speaker:so anytime you can do things yourself from a product perspective,
Speaker:obviously you have to balance it out with the labor and
Speaker:your time and that sort of thing.
Speaker:But anything I can do internally printing myself is kind of
Speaker:the goal,
Speaker:so I'm just really playing with how do I think outside
Speaker:the box and do things that we haven't seen done before.
Speaker:Let's see.
Speaker:Sneak peeks.
Speaker:I'm definitely playing with handmade paper,
Speaker:which is not really something I've seen a lot of yet
Speaker:in the stationary industry,
Speaker:probably because it's costly,
Speaker:right? That will be your upscale line for sure.
Speaker:Yes. Oh,
Speaker:it's definitely that.
Speaker:But then how can I make something,
Speaker:maybe that's not handmade paper,
Speaker:but have that handmade feel?
Speaker:So whether that's using torn paper and layering it and then
Speaker:putting a coat on top of it.
Speaker:There's a lot of possibilities there.
Speaker:Honestly, it's so early.
Speaker:It's been brewing I think really since the store opened because
Speaker:the store to me is where I want to go with
Speaker:the line.
Speaker:So now it's just trying to figure out,
Speaker:okay, how do I get the line to catch up to
Speaker:where the store is?
Speaker:So I've kind of been playing with this idea of sophisticated,
Speaker:whimsy being really what kind of defines fun as a whole.
Speaker:Oh yeah,
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:Yeah. All right,
Speaker:well now I'm going to have you take it up even
Speaker:a further notch and this is kind of a virtual thank
Speaker:you. On behalf of myself and our listeners,
Speaker:I want to offer you a virtual gift.
Speaker:So this is a magical box containing unlimited possibilities for the
Speaker:sneak peaks that you said.
Speaker:So even more than that,
Speaker:your future.
Speaker:So this is your dream or your goal of almost unreachable
Speaker:Heights that you'd wish to obtain.
Speaker:Please accept this gift and open it in our presence.
Speaker:What's inside your box for the future?
Speaker:I'm so cheesy and like literally the first thing that comes
Speaker:to my mind is like,
Speaker:Oh my dad is paid off.
Speaker:Hey, there's nothing wrong with that.
Speaker:Feels some obtainable at the moment for sure.
Speaker:I'm honestly daydreaming these days about beyond my lease,
Speaker:what that looks like and I would love to be able
Speaker:to own my own space so I get to be the
Speaker:landlord and I want to bring in others in the community
Speaker:with their amazing gifts and almost have this artist collective.
Speaker:We started working with a local Potter to teach our workshops
Speaker:and I want her to be able to have a space
Speaker:to have her wheel and just make,
Speaker:and who knows.
Speaker:I just,
Speaker:all these amazing talented people are in the San Antonio community
Speaker:and I don't feel like there is this space for everybody
Speaker:to come together and share their gifts and be able to
Speaker:work outside of their garages.
Speaker:Oh my gosh.
Speaker:I could totally see that.
Speaker:I really could.
Speaker:Yeah. That's really what I want to work toward and there's
Speaker:a lot of obstacles in the way.
Speaker:Mostly involving money.
Speaker:We're like putting this out there in the environment so that
Speaker:it comes back to you.
Speaker:Yeah. Really just being able to own my own space and
Speaker:have this kind of artist collective and be able to really
Speaker:focus on the making.
Speaker:Again myself,
Speaker:because I think a lot of small business owners know pull
Speaker:reason. You started this business becomes such a teeny tiny part
Speaker:of your day to day.
Speaker:I think you go away from it and then as you're
Speaker:suggesting, then you come back to it as you've gotten bigger
Speaker:when we can spin off some of the business stuff to
Speaker:others. Absolutely.
Speaker:Alright. If our listeners want to know more about you online,
Speaker:where's the single place you would direct them?
Speaker:Let's see.
Speaker:Probably my Instagram that's,
Speaker:we're updating that almost daily.
Speaker:You can find out the current news workshops we have in
Speaker:the shop or if there's a sale on the website or
Speaker:anything like I feel like everything's in Instagram and our handle
Speaker:is at Bella and union co.
Speaker:Okay, Perfect.
Speaker:And give this listeners,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:there'll be a show notes page with all the other links
Speaker:to Meg's website and everything else.
Speaker:So feel free to resource that when you want.
Speaker:And I definitely,
Speaker:my favorite line so far as I was snooping around your
Speaker:website was the bread and butter cards.
Speaker:I thought those were so fun.
Speaker:So I'm not telling you guys what that's about.
Speaker:You got to go check it out yourself on the website.
Speaker:So Meg,
Speaker:thank you so much.
Speaker:This has been just an unbelievable talking with you,
Speaker:hearing about your experience.
Speaker:It's so fun that we were at the same stationary show
Speaker:way back when doing different things,
Speaker:but how you've evolved since then.
Speaker:So thank you so much for sharing everything that you have
Speaker:today. I really appreciate it.
Speaker:Thank you guys for listening.
Speaker:It's always an honor to share my story.
Speaker:Such a great journey Meg is on with her business.
Speaker:I wish I could have known her back in those early
Speaker:days of the stationery show,
Speaker:the years when she was just getting up and running.
Speaker:It would have been such a joy to watch her progression
Speaker:along these past years,
Speaker:but we can all now watch her grow into the future
Speaker:and I know it's a bright one for sure.
Speaker:Next week we have a guest whose story put me in
Speaker:one of those speechless moments.
Speaker:I have so much respect for the challenging path she's faced
Speaker:and worked through with courage and strength.
Speaker:She shares her struggles with us and has a ton of
Speaker:advice on protecting your business and your brand.
Speaker:Okay, so here's a little bit of a teaser.
Speaker:My guest next week has played a part in preserving Rosa
Speaker:parks legacy and has worked on the estate for a Reetha
Speaker:Franklin, but that's all you're getting for me.
Speaker:Until next week.
Speaker:I'll see you all then and until next Monday.
Speaker:Make it a great one.
Speaker:Bye for now.
Speaker:After you listened to the show.
Speaker:If you like what you're hearing,
Speaker:make sure to jump over and subscribe to the show on
Speaker:Apple podcasts.
Speaker:That way you'll automatically get the newest episodes when they go
Speaker:live, and thank you to those of you who have already
Speaker:left a rating and review.
Speaker:By subscribing,
Speaker:rating, and reviewing,
Speaker:you help to increase the visibility of gift biz on wrapped.
Speaker:It's a great way to pay it forward to help others