Design*Sponge Meetup @ DWR: Pricing, Marketing, and Wholesale
Posted February 20th, 2007 in Designers, Wholesale

Audrey & I are speaking on a panel at tonight’s Design*Sponge meetup for female independent designers. Almost 200 people have RSVP’d, Design Within Reach is letting us use their fancy space, and it’s gonna rock!
Grace has asked us to share what we know on the subjects of pricing, marketing, and landing wholesale accounts. So here’s a quick-and-dirty list of ideas. It’s by no means the last word, so I’ll revise it after the event.
1) Pricing
The principle rule of pricing is that everybody needs to make money - and that includes you. So know your margins, and be sure to base them on wholesale prices.
A mistake designers often make is setting their prices so low (e.g. on their own web site) that they can’t afford to halve them for stores. And nothing is as good for your business as having a long list of happy and active wholesale customers.
Beyond that, anything goes. Pricing is a black art. People love affordable products. But some expensive things sell well because they cost a lot. (To wit: my weird desire to get one of these.) And theoretically, the same product can be sold at different prices to different people.
The key is to make sure it’s your product’s innovation or sheer awesomeness that customers fall for, not the price. If you’re goods really stop people in their tracks, the price should make them feel like they have discriminating taste.
2) Marketing and 3) Landing wholesale accounts
I’ve lumped these together because they’re really two sides of the same coin.
Your chances of interesting a buyer decrease every time you call or email them directly and increase every time they hear someone say your name or see you in print or on the blogs. Go out and make stores come to you. Get exposure, get press, be a known entity. Don’t walk into stores with your products under your arm.
In general, trade shows are a bad place to start. They can be more valuable as your business matures, but not all trade shows are worth the bus fare. Most store buyers don’t take chances on newfangled things - they want you to show them something that’s already hot but that their customers just don’t know about yet. Choose carefully, and invest in a booth when you have a healthy wholesale business you want to augment with new accounts, not when you’re trying to get a foothold in the industry.
Fairs & markets, on the other hand, are usually fun & inexpensive and put you in face-to-face contact with the real people who buy your stuff. And when they have laser-like focus on a particular niche (Renagade Craft Fair. Brooklyn Designs, etc.) they create buzz and get people talking and that can lead to all kinds of good things. If the perfect fair or market doesn’t exists for your niche, you can always start it yourself.
Lastly, remember that context is important. Be wary of putting your products into any milieu that doesn’t set the bar as high you would. Customers, buyers, and journalists will all make judgments about your brand based on the company it keeps. If you’re an indie fashion designer, does appearing on the same web page (or store shelf) as homemade fudge send the right message about your products, your business, or your brand?
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ELSEWARES @ Accent on Design
Posted January 24th, 2007 in New Products, Designers, Wholesale
It’s true. We’re making our NYIGF debut at Accent on Design and our booth is gonna rock! We’re thrilled to be pooling resources with Poketo, AlissiaMT, WATDesign, & Adam Frank.
The show runs Jan. 28 - Feb. 1 and our booth is #3877. So write that on your hand in permanent marker, and come check out the goods. Here’s a sneak preview.

Adam Frank (above) has a cool new product that explores light, shadow, nature, and technology. You’ve gotta see this in person, it’s really amazing. And of course he’ll be showing his whole successful Lumen line…

Poketo is presenting a line of artist-designed melamine plates, loads of wallets, brand new journals, magnets, and more…

AllisiaMT has new jewelry & accessories, including these mirrors and her super-popular rings..

And WATDesign is fresh from The Netherlands with great modular coat racks and groovy paper chandeliers!
We hope to see you at the Javits Center