Diversifying When The Show Is S$ (Tradecraft)
The game trade has recently become, what's the technical term? Right, a shit show. So you naturally want to diversify into new product lines. I highly recommend this, provided you can find the right mix. Most veteran store owners will tell you, that mix is a struggle. It's not that we can't sell comics, toys, pop culture, or pop tarts, it's that getting those new lines to reasonable performance levels can be difficult.
Diversification depends on the kind of store you run. If the word "gamer" appears in your store title, we can assume you're likely to run a business that appeals primarily to hardcore hobbyists. However, if you've spent the extra money to build a store that appeals to the general public, you've got more options.
Even with a family friendly specialty shop, there is still the issue of location. My store is family friendly, but I have close to zero foot traffic. There are reasons to go there, as in it's a destination store with geeky stuff nearby, but there's nobody walking by.
I spent $20,000 on toys when I moved to my larger location because my competitor had a lot of toys and I needed new, diversified inventory when I doubled my retail space. Toys seemed safe. Boy was I wrong. This was a disaster, not because toys were bad, but because I had no foot traffic. My selection was just alright, not enough for my business to become a toy destination, especially when there were plenty of better options. I also misunderstood the nature of the toy market, which relies on a lot of volume to move low cost items, often stocked in depth. I would have a wall of board games in single quantities next to a wall of toys that only made sense stocked six deep. Toys were not for my store. Neither were comics, and a bunch of other things I tried.
Sending back a pallet of Melissa and Doug |
- Examine your specific set of circumstances rather than following what others do.
- Avoid declining markets (comics, Funko POPs, for example).
- Find things that add value for your existing customers.
- Ask around to see what people are interested in. Frisbee golf? Airsoft?
- Look for gamer adjacent products before striking out into new areas.
- Find publishers who don't directly compete with you. I backed a Kickstarter today that offered me exclusive sale of their game!* *except at conventions, on their website, in contests, at the BGG store...
- Look for favorable terms, margins, or net priced items with flexibility.
- Test the waters with minimum orders but remember to follow up quickly so you don't lose momentum.
- Test the limits of your concessions with additional snacks, coolers full of drinks, and potentially hot food options.
- Consider a long term investment, like diversifying into a coffee bar or real estate or anything else.
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