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Also, how would I reach out to a company to make a healthy relationship with them.
This. There must be thousands of people in the country having a stab at wax melts and candles.making them is by far thee easiest part, selling them to non friends will be the very hard part
Hi I started selling candles, diffuser and waxmelts about a year ago now, I started on Etsy and now have my own website. I average about 10 - 15 sales a month ( so still very small at the moment but i am able to balance it around my full time job) I still have not invested in a wax melter yet. I would suggest waiting till you have constant sales before investing in a one as you want to make sure you get value for your money. You want to make sure it is not sitting being underutilized. As for building a relationship i would suggest sending an email to the wholesaler you are interested in working with to discuss your needsHi. I am 22 and I am looking to start a candle-making business one of the things I was wondering about is at what point should I buy a big candle wax Melter? Also, how would I reach out to a company to make a healthy relationship with them.
Good advice from a competitor there @davidmylessHi I started selling candles, diffuser and waxmelts about a year ago now, I started on Etsy and now have my own website. I average about 10 - 15 sales a month ( so still very small at the moment but i am able to balance it around my full time job) I still have not invested in a wax melter yet. I would suggest waiting till you have constant sales before investing in a one as you want to make sure you get value for your money. You want to make sure it is not sitting being underutilized. As for building a relationship i would suggest sending an email to the wholesaler you are interested in working with to discuss your needs
My daughter did something similar during lockdown and made loads via Facebook and Instagram, but it completely died on its arse when the lockdowns ended. I was selling about 1000 printed mugs a month during lockdown, but again, that ended when lockdowns did. During lockdown, people had nothing to do and just bought anything and everything.Wow! now that's a lot of negative responses. Way to knock a 22 year old down UKBF.
I understand being realistic but some responses on here can just be completely soul destroying.
Yes what everyone is true but if everyone thought like that then nothing would ever evolve. All it takes is to come up with a new and interesting concept for a candle or some unique scents and you could be well away.
Especially if you go down a subscription based setup. The nice thing about candles is, they burn and perish. Therefore candle lovers will keep coming back.
You don't actually need thousands of customers, just a decent regular subscriber based. Even at an achievable 300 subscribers with a £5 profit margin would make you a tidy £1,500 p/m. Add some unique sales and maybe a few b2b orders and you've got yourself a tidy little business.
My wife during lockdown started making candles just as a hobby. I won't give her secret away but she came up with a very simple, yet unique twist on the traditional candle. Without too much effort at all, mainly word of mouth on Facebook she was shifting about 20 a day. Gave it up when we had our son last October but she was amazed how something that was essentially just something to do during lockdown very quickly became a bit of a money earner for her.
How much of it dying on its arse though would due to lack of progression of the business and marketing because it was so easy during lockdown - no future planning was done.My daughter did something similar during lockdown and made loads via Facebook and Instagram, but it completely died on its arse when the lockdowns ended. I was selling about 1000 printed mugs a month during lockdown, but again, that ended when lockdowns did. During lockdown, people had nothing to do and just bought anything and everything.
Couldn't agree more with everything you have said.Have an ethical and sustainable approach by using the following:
Cater for a niche market.
- Natural ingredients only
- Soy wax
- Hemp wicks
- Containers from recycled materials
- Biodegradable packaging.
- Target vegans
Visit craft markets, local boot fairs, related exhibitions.
Good luck.
Sounds advice. I totally agree about the local fates and small shops that may sell them. I have seen a trend recently with stand alone coffee shops having little stands where they sell local products. Win-Win, likely generates a customers and they make a few quid from the sales.I think you’re simplifying the market if you expect ‘one company’ to be your target.
As it’s been said, getting regular sales is going to be the difficult bit. The last gift trade show I was at there were dozens of people selling candles.
Whether you want to invest thousands of pounds in a stall to an event like this is doubtful. Your market should be small shops, craft fairs and markets.
If you haven’t gone round all the suitable shops in your town/city/area personally and tried to persuade them to stock your products then do so before expecting a big company to swoop in and be your saviour.
I'm not disagreeing with you on any of that. What I really meant was, the OP has probably seen people during lockdown making a financial success of selling candles, wax melts etc etc that can be easily made with a low barrier to entry. (Same can be said of vinyl cutting, sub printing etc). by the end of all the lockdowns there were far too many people doing all these kind of things. Some will survive and improve and grow, loads more wont.How much of it dying on its arse though would due to lack of progression of the business and marketing because it was so easy during lockdown - no future planning was done.
As they say, "Anyone can sell an umbrella when it's raining".
If data was utilised, offers provided to existing customers and additional offers were put in place then I am sure your daughters sales would have undoubtedly dropped but not died on their arse.
I take you point. Funny your mention the vinyl cutting and sub printing. The company I work for is a Printers. We definitely saw an increase in all kinds of quirky processes over lockdown where people were clearly experimenting.I'm not disagreeing with you on any of that. What I really meant was, the OP has probably seen people during lockdown making a financial success of selling candles, wax melts etc etc that can be easily made with a low barrier to entry. (Same can be said of vinyl cutting, sub printing etc). by the end of all the lockdowns there were far too many people doing all these kind of things. Some will survive and improve and grow, loads more wont.