Rabu, 06 November 2013

HOW TO MAKE IT BIG WITH A USED BOOK STORE

Operating a used book store is a lot like owning a recycling
 center - not too glamourous until you take a look at the publician ' s
 bank account.

 This is an example " absentee - hotelier " type of business, or a small
 investment type business for someone to start while gate down
 a regular, full time job. The type of person " best - profitable " to
 running a successful used book store, is a man or woman who loves
 to read, has cool books over the years and enjoys
 associating with people of consonant interests.

 Start - up risks average high, with the average time expression needed
 to become firmly established, about 3 years. After that " becoming
 established " stage however, you should be able to enjoy clout
 of a business without extreme market fluctuations, plus an income
 close to $50, 000 per year or more.

 Ideally, a used book store will need a market family of at
 least 50, 000 persons to platform it. Try to locate your store in a
 " high traffic " area, as near as possible to a college or
 university campus. Something to bear in mind is the shopping
 habits of the average used book buyer: First, he is a browser. He
 notices your shop, drops in and begins looking around to see what
 philanthropic of books you have available. If he spots something that
 really interests him, he ' ll probably buy then and there. If not,
 and provided you ' ve made him stroke in clover this first time in
 your store, he ' ll be back - dropping in to browse whenever he ' s in
 the area.

 Shopping Malls are an select locations for book stores.
 Locations near other, or " new " books stores are also very good -
 if the buyer doesn ' t find what he wants in the " other " book
 stores, he ' ll check your store. Grocery store shopping centers
 are oftentimes fortuneless locations for book stores of any considerate.

 It ' s important that there be a lot of casual strollers in your
 setting area, and that you revivify these people to drop in,
 and browse around.

 If you want the entire front of your store to be a show
 window... take pains to arrange your window display in an
 unstopped fashion, pageant the kinds of books you
 have... However, a window display is not really necessary... more
 important is a window for the passers - by to see into your
 store... At any degree, if you do go with a window display, keep it
 low - never more than 36 inches high flying start a lot of room for the
 people passing to see in youe store, and notice the people
 browsing thru your books. We know of one successful operator who
 had members of his family, connections and friends, purposely
 " browsing " thru his store, just to project that affectionate of carved figure for
 the store.

 Once you have your store locality selected, stain the entire
 interior in a rayless, broiling color, such as mahogany. Stick a
 lighter shade of indoor / outdoor carpet throughout. The lighting
 should be indirect, and reasonably subdued to give the store a warmish
 perception.

 Locate your checkout obverse counterpart to one of the side
 walls... You don ' t want it blocking or guarding the easy entry or
 exit from your store. You want your customers to endure opulent
 just visiting your store. in other words, do gadget you can
 to spur the browser, because it ' s proven time and time winnings
 that the browsers are the book buyers. Allow the people to come
 and do oftentimes as they please; to pick up swing thru the books
 that interest them; to read them and " fall in enjoyment " with them.
 These will be your real book buyers.

 Your book shelves should run along each side wall, and across the
 back of the store. Don ' t build them more than six feet high.
 Factor these shelves into sections about four feet wide, and
 at the top of each section, place a sign
 indicating the general subject matter of the books to be start up
 in that section.

 Paper the walls of your store, from the top of your book shelves
 to the ceiling with posters - - colorful and descriptive junket
 posters, broadway show billboards, operate posters and full color
 dust jackets from books that are perennially popular.

 The next apparatus is to build or buy half shelves, tables and
 revolving racks for other or more books. The half shelves - - about
 4 feet wide by 4 feet high and akin to book cases in your
 home - - should be located at right angles to your wall shelves, and
 in the rear of your store. The tables should be about 3 feet wide
 by 4 feet long, and about 30 inches high. These also should be
 located at right angles to your wall shelves, but closer to the
 front of your store. A revolving wire form, to clasp currently
 popular or specially featured books, and located at the front of
 your store, will be a momentous extra merchandising effort that ' ll
 really pay off in sales of your books.


 In locating your half shelves and tables down the middle of your
 store, stagger them - - one 3 feet from the wall shelves, the next
 one 6 feet out, then 4 feet and so on. This will allow people to
 be " seen " in your store; cut down on the appearance of a formal
 or military layout, and project a more casual tactility for
 browsing and this is precisely what you want. This amicable of
 arrangement will cost you some space, but it will be worth it
 with another traffic.

 Another merchandising idea that works very well is a couple of
 revolving wire racks on wheels... These you push outside and
 position near the entrance to your store. You can characteristic popular
 paperbacks, and a few oversize hard cover books with golden,
 flashy colors in these racks.

 Your store hours should match those of your neigbors... In fact,
 you cold " jump off to a quick start, " by opening a half hour
 earlier than your neighbors. Use his opening half hour to take
 care of paperwork, and get yourself organized for the day. When
 the early shoppers see you ' re open early, they ' ll begin coming
 into your store to " browse and snuff time " while they wait for the
 other stores to open.

 If you cannot be there to " open the store, " then hire part time
 help. The best arrangement is house wives or college students in
 4 hour shifts at the minimum dinero.

 First off, write out a list of duties you want each clerk to
 perform while he ' s on shift. In addition to captivating care of sales
 transactions, you might want him to do some stocking, dusting,
 cleaning, sorting and prcing.. Regardless, you ' ll have fewer
 problems and enjoy prominent profits if you formally write these
 " shift duties " out, and post them as business requirements, and
 tell them when you visit for hired help.

 Look for, and try to hire only book lovers who are personable,
 outgoing, and have some sort of business aptitude. You the train
 these people in all phases of your operation, with the knowing in
 mind that they will run the store in your absence, and eventually
 be your store executive. the best way to find such people is by
 talking with your customers, observing which might be willing to
 work for you, and which of them might best fulfill your needs.

 You ' ll need a outside sign for your store - preferably one that
 hangs right angles to the flow of traffic in front of your store.

 Many successful used book stores utilize hand - carved wooden
 symbols, while others display painted symbols with calligraphic
 lettering. By all means, spend the extra hundred dollars or so to
 have spotlights installed on your store front, focusing on your
 store symbols. Backlit resourceful symbols just don ' t create the
 moneyed spitting image necessary for the success of a good used book
 store

 Newspaper and / or broadcast advertising will be much more
 expensive than it ' s worth. Your best stake is to create a
 well-off sensibility and open supplication for browsers, price your
 stock fairly, scrape together on personal service, and let
 word - of - ingress advertising and time do the rest.


 Even so, you should run an ad in the unprincipled pages. feasibly and ad
 in the college paper, and from time to time, personal sales ads in
 your local shopping papers. Inexpensive flyers inviting people in
 to exchange books, or to just browse, can be printed at your
 local quick print shop and handed out or placed under the
 windshields of cars in the larger shopping center parking lots.
 Advertising, and special sales during holiday periods such as
 Christmas, Gigantic ' s Day and Father ' s Day are much quite
 effective in bringing new customers into your store.

 Most used book store entrepreneurs use their own book collections
 as start - up inventory base. In addition, talk to as many
 neighbors, friends and relatives as possible for the donation of
 books. Then start making the rounds of all the garage sales and
 flea markets. You should have at least 10, 000 books in stock when
 you open for business - and that ' s a lot of books. Search for
 books to sell - those you can buy for 25 cents or less - - in all
 thrift shops, Goodwill stores and Salvation Army outlets. Church
 bazaars and estate sales also sometimes provide you with almost
 " complete " libraries.

 You might place a small ad in your newspaper announcing that
 you ' re looking for good used books to buy. Generally, you
 evaluate a book according to the price you think you can get it
 for in your store. Then you subtract two thirds of that total,
 and offer that as your " buying " price. Always separate the books
 you feel certain you can sell from those you aren ' t sure about.

 It ' s going to take awhile for you to become proficient as a book
 buyer, but with practice and some experience, you ' ll quickly
 develop the " intuition " you need to realize a profit on every
 book you buy. Always flip thru the pages of each individual book,
 and be sure of its condition before you quote a price. In many
 instances you ' ll also find that out of a box of 25 books, you ' re
 only interested in buying 10... The seller will generally be
 wanting to get rid of his books, now... And for a couple of
 dollars more than your " bid price " on the 10 books you want,
 he ' ll let you have all 25 of them.. This is like a windfall to you
 because you can always use the " unwanted " books as leader items
 or extras to generate traffic during two - for - one sales; all books
 on a certain table for just a nickel each; or your choice of free
 books for everyone coming in to browse on certain days..


 You should carry hardcover as well as paperback books. Pay no
 more than 25 % of new price for a mint condition hardcover book,
 and buy only those you are certain can be sold in your store. pay
 no more than 10 % of the new price for a mint condition used
 paperback, and steer clear of the hard - core sexually oriented
 books.

 Visit the libraries and book stores in your area. Observe what
 people are interested in reading and what they ' re checking out or
 buying. Stock your store with these kinds of books.
 
 below is a listing of the kinds or types of books you should
 consider stocking in your used books store:

 BUSINESS BOOKS: These should include books on leadership, career
 advancement, time management and people management.

 HOW - TO BOOKS: These should include all the self - help and
 self - improvement manuals you can find - - mail order, auto repair,
 carpentry, metalwork, home building, gardening, and business
 start - up.

 COOK BOOKS: You ' ll probably be surprised at how many people buy
 books relating to the culinary arts. A well stocked cookbook
 section will mean definite profits for you. Forget about books on
 dieting, home economics, and etiquette - - these just don ' t do well
 in used book stores.

 SPECIAL INTEREST BOOKS: Watch and listen to the people of your
 area... Be on the lookout for people into World War, history,
 aviation, sports perfection, movies and just plain old book
 collectors...

 PAPERBACKS: Women ' s romance, science fiction, mysteries, and
 historical novels are all good movers - - currently enjoying an
 upsurge in popularity and sales. These will be the " best movers "
 in your inventory, so develop good sources of supply, and price
 them for fast sales.

 Building and maintaining your inventory, while continuing to
 rapidly turn that inventory over, can be handled in a number of
 different ways. It ' s not a good idea for you to exchange two or
 three of your customer ' s books for one of yours. There ' s always a
 variance in price, plus you may not want the type of books your
 customer is offering to trade.

 The most feasible plan seems to be to give the customer a " credit
 chit " for each book you buy from him. Simply
 have a supply of business cards promoting your store, printed at
 your local quick print shop. On the back of the card, have them
 print something along these lines:

 " The bearer of this card is entitled to _______________ cents
 credit on 50 % of the listed price of any book at Ye Olden Book
 Store / s / Your Signature. "


 Then when someone brings in a couple of books to sell, you pay
 him in credit chits, marking in the amount and signing your name
 on the card. An easier way might be to have your signature
 printed on the cards when you order them - - you or your clerk would
 simply fill in the credit amount, and emboss the card with a
 notary - type embosser.

 Usually, you allow 20 to 25 cents for mint condition paperbacks,
 and about one quarter of your selling price for hardbacks. Always
 make sure the customer understands that regardless of how many
 ' credit chits " he has, the credit chits can only pay for half the
 purchase price. This of course, is to protect your cash - flow
 problems, and your income of " hard money. "

 Many used book stores add to their income potential by adding
 tape cassette lending libraries. These are a real money makers
 with a kind of service tat lends out " books on tape " and special
 learning programs where portions of the rental fee applies to the
 purchase of the original tape cassette.

 A great many used book stores add to their income by running mail
 order book selling operations in addition to the retail business.
 This is a natural, either for a retail operator wanting to expand
 his market or a mail order operator wanting to increase his
 income.

 TYPICAL USED BOOK STORE START - UP COSTS....



 1, 000 TO 1, 500 SQUARE FOOT STORE

 RENT ( 1st and Last month ' s ).......... $1, 000 to $2, 000

 UTILITY & PHONE DEPOSITS............. $50 TO 300

 INSURANCE ( 1st Quarter Payment )....... $100 TO 200

 LICENSES & PERMITS................... $50 to 250

 INVENTORY............................ $2, 500 to 5, 000

 SHELVING & REMODELING................ $2, 000 TO 5, 000

 MISC ( Decorating, checkout counter
 cash register, supplies........ $1, 000 to 1, 500

 LEGAL & ACCOUNTING................... $600 TO 1, 200

 ADVERTISING & SIGNS................... $1, 000 TO 3, 500
 __________________

 TOTAL................................ $8, 250 TO 18, 950


 OPERATING CAPITAL.................... $5, OOO TO 12, 000

 Entrepreneur should have enough operating capital in reserve to
 not only keep the store operating for the first year, without
 counting on anticipated profit, but also enough for unseen
 emergencies without having to count upon income from the store to
 see him through.



 TYPICAL USED BOOK STORE MONTHLY OPERATING COSTS...

 PAYROLL............................. $1, 500 to $2, 500

 OWNER / OPERATOR SALARY............... $1, 000 to $2, 000

 RENT / LEASE.......................... $ 600 to $1, 000

 ADVERTISING........................ $ 500 to $ 1, 000

 DEPRECIATION........................ $ 100 to 150

 UTILITIES & PHONE................... $ 150 to 300

 PRINTING & STATIONERY................ $ 100 to 200

 SHIPPING COSTS...................... $ 100 to 150

 INSURANCE........................... $ 50 to 100

 MAINTENANCE......................... $ 50 to 100

 MISCELLANEOUS....................... & 100 to 150
 ____________________

 TOTAL............................... $4, 200 TO 7, 650

 OPERATING COSTS..................... $4, 200 TO 7, 650

 ANTICIPATED SALES................... $5, 000 TO 8, 500

 NET PROFIT BEFORE TAXES............. $ 800 TO 850

 PRO FORMA ANNUAL INCOME ( B / T )....... $9, 600 to 3, 000


 A word of caution: Though you must project an open, COMFORTABLE
 invitation to browsers and would - be book buyers, you MUST also
 inconspicuously guard against shoplifters and outright thieves.
 The best is to place mirrors strategically throughout the store
 so you can see your customers from the checkout desk at all
 times. Your smaller and more expensive books should be kept up
 front SO that you can see them and what your customers are doing
 with them, without seeming to be guarding them. There are a
 number of theft prevention gadgets and devices available, but
 even more important is alert hired help that can keep an eye on
 the customers without making them feel they ' re being watched.

 The risks of starting a used book store are high for the dreamer
 unaware that it ' s just another retail business and should be
 handled as such. Well organized and intelligently - operated used
 book stores are very stable, and they provide a very comfortable
 income for the owner - operator willing to persist thru the
 start - up period.

 This can be the kind of business you ' ve always dreamed of owning,
 but you ' ll have to have the patience to let it grow and the
 perseverance to see it thru to its ultimate success. With these
 thoughts in mind, I say reach for the sky and may the angels of
 paradise always be smiling upon you with endless good fortune!




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