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gergistheword
01-16-2014, 03:06 AM
Hey everyone.

This topic has been covered a couple of times in the past but it's been a while so it may be relevant to many of us.

Here's my situation.

I am confident in my skills as a technician on the shopbot as well as the rest of the woodshop but I am low on work. I have made signs. I have done some one-offs. I have done a few prototypes. I have even carved a 4ft tiki head for a local bar. The problem is that I haven't found enough regular work to support my wife (and more importantly my daughter due in April). I know that there is work around but I haven't found it yet.

So far my marketing has been limited to some social media posts like Facebook and Twitter and a few happy customers that pass my contact info to friends.

I'm looking for a few strategies to drum up business.

One option I'm considering is cold calling some of the local manufacturing companies with a script something like this...

Hi,
My name is greg flanagan. I found your company while searching for local manufacturing businesses. Could I speak with someone about what you do there? I am curious about the industries in our neighborhood.

I run a small job shop in Northeast Minneapolis and I’d like to see if there is a way we can help each other out. If it’s OK I’d like to stop in sometime for a chat about your work.

What do you think? What other strategies have worked for you when looking for new work?

myxpykalix
01-16-2014, 05:02 AM
A shopbotter here you should seek out and talk to is Eugene King. He's a treasure trove of selling advice. His main thing is small items and craft stuff but his strategies could be applied to selling boogers if you wanted to.:D:eek::rolleyes::p

scottp55
01-16-2014, 05:34 AM
Eugene is your best bet, and very timely question as he can't cut right now.http://www.talkshopbot.com/forum/showthread.php?t=18882

gc3
01-16-2014, 11:01 AM
you need to find a niche...it's taken me 3 yrs of of hard work to create a market here with our machines but it has finally started to pay off. You have to be able to convince clients that they need your product...

Brady Watson
01-16-2014, 11:51 AM
You have to be able to convince clients that they need your product...

Word. People are buying YOU. Get confident - that sells light nothing else.

Read: "How to Win Friends & Influence People" & "Think & Grow Rich"

Watch: The Secret, now on NetFlix

-B

gergistheword
01-16-2014, 12:17 PM
Great. I really appreciate the help. I have sent a message to Eugene and invited him to this thread.

What niches have people found? Craft? Industrial? Construction? Signage?
Are any of you making a living in your shop or is this supplemental income?

Brady, thanks for the suggestions. I have read "How to Win Friends..." but it may be worth a refresher. Think & Grow Rich is a new one to me. I've added the secret to my queue.

genek
01-16-2014, 12:17 PM
Just sent you a message... Send me your phone number will call you...

genek
01-16-2014, 12:18 PM
JUST SENT YOU A MESSAGE... SEND ME YOUR PHONE NUMBER WILL CALL YOU... SEND TO eking1953@yahoo.com

gergistheword
01-16-2014, 12:21 PM
Thanks, Eugene. I just replied to your email. Looking forward to chatting with you.

Greg

stump
01-16-2014, 01:40 PM
Have to agree with Brady on the books, but I think time can be spent better than watching "The Secret".

Do a search for threads started by Eugene King. He has written many about how he markets. Go through them, read them, re-read them, that call and talk with him. That along with some self confidence and you should be on the right path. Remember, information is only part of the process. You actually have to go out and sell.

A good book I just finished is "To Sell Is Human" by Daniel Pink. Lots of material on how selling has changed and how to sell in today's world.

Just my 2 cents...

bleeth
01-16-2014, 02:11 PM
A Shopbot is a tool that when used professionally (not hobbyists) is usually bolught to enhance their existing business. There have been some exceptions that have worked out. Of those I know of, the people involved developed a firm business plan including their marketing strategy. No business can make it without one.
Contrary to the old saying, the world will not beat a path to your door because you built a better mousetrap. Why not? Easy. Nobody will know you did!
Although some basic principles of marketing are universal, different things work in different areas. If you are going to sell to other businesses nothing pays like making some samples and just showing up. You can call and ask for an appointment all day long and not get one. Everyone today is besieged by marketers e-mailing and calling them, and in most cases you won't get past the receptionist, who is already trained to not bug the boss with cold callers.
So the first thing you need to decide is what do you want to make and sell.
You say you have made some signs? Then call on sign companies and if they don't have a CNC offer to do cutting for them. Take samples.
Call on cabinet shops and offer to cut parts. No small operation, of which they are many, can cut cabinet parts nearly as well or quickly as a CNC. Even though I make cabinets as the core of my business, I cut parts for other shops because I convinced them that I could cut their cab sides quicker than they could, with all shelf, hinge, and drawer slide machining done for quick and easy assembly. The average guy is going to be able to cut the parts on a saw for an average kitchen in one day, and then have to machine them for hardware. A PRT can do it all in a few hours.
Cut a big Tiki and some other 3-d things? Make some samples and call on Interior Designers, Architects. Walk in with something really cool in your hands and get the receptionist on your side. People respond to you AND something they can see. Carry a portfolio. Contrary to what a lot of internet junkies think, the world does not always go shopping on the internet.
When seeking private clients for my custom built furniture I did a slick postcard with photos and mailed it out to the local zipcodes with the highest percapita earnings. For every hundred mailed out I would get a job. Mailed the same card to Interior designers, and then followed up with a phone call. If I got the "I didn't get it" line, I apologized, asked them to verify their mailing address, and told them I would send another. Then followed up again. I got clients worth many thousands of dollars that way. But remember, I was a furniture maker long before I bought a Shop-bot, just as Eugene developed his line long before he did.
And believe it or not, you can get jobs from the forum and/or 100k garages. I have gotten several clients that way and some end up repeat business. Reall bread and butter jobs.
You are in a major metro area. IMHO as long as you market well you can't help but get business. The downside you will find is that you end up working nights to put out the work because you need to make sales calls in the daytime.

GeneMpls
01-16-2014, 04:49 PM
Sent you a PM with my phone if you want to chat. Gene

gene
01-16-2014, 08:22 PM
I made a sign on the shopbot and carry it to any work that i am doing . Put it in front of the place i am working . I also met a guy thru a realitor and have been doing work for him as he flips houses as well as does repairs on other peoples homes , Has been very good lately . Go offer your skills to people who need work on houses that are planning to be sold or just purchased . even if it is low end stuff you never know where the road may lead to.

gergistheword
01-18-2014, 02:24 AM
Eugene, you are very kind and generous with your time. Thanks for all of the great advice. It will be a big help and I look forward to chatting again soon.

Gene, thanks for the PM. You are about 10 minutes away from me. Small world. I'd love to chat.

I realize that at the end of the day the shopbot is only a tool. It's not going to make money on it's own. Making a living doing what I love and having the opportunity to do that from home with a daughter on the way is the motivation I need to focus a little more. I've always been interested in so many things that focusing on a single product, line of items, or even category of customer (small production runs, signs, industrial widgets, whatever) scares me a little. I fear getting locked into always producing one thing and getting bored.

I need to face that fear and pick something already! My goal is to line up at least 12 items that I can crank out in batches. I'm thinking of trying to tap into the fantastic Minneapolis culture.
Great bars and restaurants.
A desire to buy local.
A wicked awesome food scene.
An exploding craft beer scene.

I've got a design for a 750ml wine bottle/bomber bottle carrier.
Simple tap handles are on the list.
I'm also drawing up some home bar ware like ice mallets, muddlers, citrus reamers, and of course small cutting boards (scrap's best friend).

shilala
01-18-2014, 08:32 AM
Every time I make a little sign or door sign for someone, I invariably get calls.
In order to get started, I did a couple small signs for local friend's businesses and gifted them. If I get an idea for a place that I think would go over real well, I'm not above making a miniature iteration of the project to show them.
I only do what moves me, and I turn away tons of work, because I don't need or want to make a living from the bot. Regardless, I've got a queue of projects for people a foot deep.

I think it's very easy to move things that I'm excited about. If I had to make wooden donuts and hammer handles, I don't think I'd be very successful. I need my projects to be something special, and something people realize as such. Then it just works.

I do have a background in sales from long ago and learned from some of the best. Lots of excellent seminars along the way. It was all common sense, no hucksterism. It was about selling to people who needed the product. That's easier than selling to people who "want" a product.
Regardless, people will spend anything for entertainment. If a piece adds to the enjoyment of their hobbies or lives, it's an easy sell. It'll just sell itself. Add to that the fact that they'll need to wait in line and they want it all that much more. :)

Brady Watson
01-18-2014, 08:41 AM
I need to face that fear and pick something already!

No you don't. Just get into action. The Universe can't nudge you if you aren't moving. You can be a job shop that takes on whatever comes down the pike, but there comes a point if you are good enough, where you'll get to pick & choose. Practice being who you want to be. If you do the work, you'll 'be there' before you know it.

-B

chiloquinruss
01-18-2014, 09:39 AM
All 'artists' carry a portfolio of their work to show clients. As a ShopBot artist you need to do the same. Most folks are not attuned to CNC and have no concept of its capabilities. Make some small samples of your work. Brand the backside with your contact information and leave them with your prospect. Do a little homework on your prospect and find out what THEY do and figure out what YOU do that might help them in their business. In your homework research see what their competiton might be doing. Samples do work, much better than just pictures. Pictures they can get out of a magazine or off their IPhone but samples, well . . . . . Russ

MogulTx
01-18-2014, 11:03 AM
You have gotten a lot of good advice on this thread. The most salient, IMO, is from Brady. He is telling you not to put up a roadblock in your own head. DOn't tell yourself you have to solve every question before you get into business.

What I think you should do is to take all the posts on this thread, print them out, and study them. Take the ideas and categorize them as to marketing strategy, business operations advice, potential business categories/opportunities, etc.

Sort them as to how they might be useful to you.

Make your plan of action.

Start acting.

And then, when you are hip deep in working your way into business, please, please, please remember: All the planning you did will not address what you actually wind up doing because your customers have no idea what was rambling around in YOUR head. SO be prepared to modify your plan.

A couple things: You MUST earn a living for your growing family. Try to get a $ a minute (or whatever the going rate might be in your area) for the work you do for a customer. (drawing, setting up cut files, operating the bot, etc.) I try to get this. My pricing to myself ( my principle customer) is usually at this level. There is no sense in setting yourself up as a minimum wage worker ( or less). You are taking a risk in business. You need to get a reasonable income to pay for that risk. And second: Resolve that you will succeed. Not that you will work at this unless it looks like it is not working out. Resolve that you will work nights, weekends, holidays, etc., in order to make it work. Resolve that you will ask for tips, tricks, advice from the people here, to make this work. Resolve that you will ask your customers or potential customers for work, to make this work. Be IN the game. Be convinced that you will do this. Be convinced that in 3 years, you will have hired a machinist to assist, so you can sell and run the business. Resolve that you will build the business until you have the income and your employees will have the income, to justify making the effort...

And stick with it ESPECIALLY when it seems like it is too hard or too boring, or too something to go on.

THEN you are in a winning business.

Best wishes for a fantastic operation and a better life.

Monty

Mayo
01-19-2014, 03:13 AM
Well Greg you may have opportunity in the bar/restaurant businesses if you can come up with something that you can make for them.

Some general ideas:

Condiment organizers for each table - something to hold the salt, pepper, sugar, creamer, hot sauce, napkins (or whatever).
Make these with the restaurant logo on them. If wood is not appropriate for their decor, there's acrylic or aluminum. These could be as simple as a small pan shaped rectangle.

Mens Room and Ladies Room door signs
(Something more pertinent to the restaurant or bar than a generic sign from a hardware store)

Fast Food places - do they need signs on their self service trash bins that remind customers not to throw out baskets or silverware?
Do they need a sign that says ORDER HERE or PICK UP HERE?

A lot of bar/pub places around here just use empty cardboard 6 pack containers on the tables, to hold extra napkins, silverware rolled in napkins, salt & pepper & hot sauce. I bet their beer distributors give them these for free (to promote beer). Why not make a similar looking container out of wood or acrylic and put the Bar name and logo on it? Make it look like a 6 pack container but in wood or acrylic.

Does the bar need a more attractive way to display their top shelf brands? I think I remember someone on here designed a very cool looking shelf that lit up to accent the bottles.

Can they use a daily specials board? You can make a nicely framed one that uses dry erase board or chalkboard paint or even an acrylic faced one that uses florescent crayons on it and has a black light so the writing glows.

How about a small table top drink special holder - something maybe to hold a 3x5 index card or even business card size, that they can slip a card into with the daily drink special printed on it.

How about signs that read:
NO TEXTING - Spend time with the people you're here with!
:rolleyes:

Bud Love
01-19-2014, 12:33 PM
WOW!!!
What a thread!!
A guy puts out a question and the answers he gets are FREAKING Amazing!
Answers from Senior members who have been down the road blazing a trail and learning through trial and error.

And what do they do??

They share what they learned and what they know to work and not work!
An AMAZING group of guys and gals!

Still waiting on my machine!
Everyday is one day closer to it being shipped!!

Thanks

gergistheword
02-03-2014, 10:59 AM
I'm compiling some of this fantastic advice into a series of blog posts at 100kgarages. I hope it will help others. Please let me know what you think, or better yet, leave your comments on the blog.

I've delivered a batch of valentine picture frames to a local shop. I have a couple orders for barware, and I've even found a local restaurant willing to buy my clean hardwood sawdust. Now I need to ramp this up about 100% and we might have something.

genek
02-03-2014, 11:14 AM
I'm compiling some of this fantastic advice into a series of blog posts at 100kgarages. I hope it will help others. Please let me know what you think, or better yet, leave your comments on the blog.

I've delivered a batch of valentine picture frames to a local shop. I have a couple orders for barware, and I've even found a local restaurant willing to buy my clean hardwood sawdust. Now I need to ramp this up about 100% and we might have something.
post a link to the blog on the forum.

gergistheword
02-03-2014, 12:46 PM
I meant to include the link. Whoops. Here's the first post.
http://100kgarages.com/blog/2014/01/for-fun-and-profit/#.Uu-7FnlH38s

genek
02-03-2014, 01:24 PM
i meant to include the link. Whoops. Here's the first post.
http://100kgarages.com/blog/2014/01/for-fun-and-profit/#.uu-7fnlh38s
how do you get to read it all it stops in the middle of a sentence and i can not find the rest.

genek
02-03-2014, 01:29 PM
i meant to include the link. Whoops. Here's the first post.
http://100kgarages.com/blog/2014/01/for-fun-and-profit/#.uu-7fnlh38s very good article. Goes on what i have talked about on here. All should read this post.

joe
05-04-2014, 09:29 PM
Greg,

Your original post was "How to Drum Up Business".

Lets move back there and forget all the sage advice. Those of us who have businesses, have a product to offer. That's what you'll need to enter the trade. Gone are the days when you could open up a general store and do everything for everyone. It's necessary to a product that's going to sell. If you want to make knives and spoons, make them to enter the market. But it's necessary to choose a line of business that's high volume, low price or high quality and a higher price. That's your choice.

Forget all the strategy, lets see what you can do. Show us something that makes our head swim. That's the key.

Also you'll need a professional website. DON'T do it yourself. Just take a look at how not to make one in this thread.

phawks_99
08-15-2014, 11:01 AM
Eugene King can you give me a call also. 276 618 2055

genek
08-15-2014, 10:42 PM
Eugene King can you give me a call also. 276 618 2055
Patrick we are out of town doing the Ky State fair. we do not get back to the room till after 10:30

chadagmsign
08-18-2014, 01:36 PM
Had no Idea that 100Kgarages had a blog on it.

glad I found this post!!

raymond.clark
02-16-2018, 12:14 PM
CNC Operator position open near Jackson, Mississippi. Starting salary $40,000-50,000