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31st December 2020, 08:40 AM #1Novice
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- Dec 2020
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Making a buck from your woodwork?
Hi, Happy New Year everyone!
Noobie here. I'm wondering how many forum members use their home-based workshops to make wooden items that they sell regularly - furniture, small wooden household utility items, etc. I've looked here for threads asking similar questions, but haven't seen any so far.
I plan to set up my home-based workshop with at least some part-time income in mind. Semi-retired older dude and not chasing global corporation status
I have quite a bit of general woodworking and carpentry experience, but I need to learn more - how to set up my workshop with money-making in mind, the most likely best-selling items, and so on.
I'd greatly appreciate any advice Thanks in advance,
- Josh
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31st December 2020 08:40 AM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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31st December 2020, 02:44 PM #2GOLD MEMBER
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- Aug 2011
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- bilpin
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- 3,559
I don't think you could have picked a worse time. Ive been in the timber trade for over 50 years and have been making furniture for at least half of that time. I still do a bit as asked but the asking is getting pretty quiet these days. Sure, things will improve. The big question is when? In the meantime, i'd be taking the oportunity to buy some cheap but good fire sale machinery and source some suitable timber at a realistic price. Without these two commodities you are fighting a losing battle. Setup cost vs income is critical.
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31st December 2020, 10:10 PM #3GOLD MEMBER
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- Aug 2004
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- Perth WA
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- 2,035
I find that you have to make it and they will come... eventually.
Experienced in removing the tree from the furniture
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1st January 2021, 12:24 AM #4SENIOR MEMBER
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- May 2013
- Location
- Auckland, New Zealand
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- 997
I have a home based shop and generated steady and increasing income for close to 10 years now - whenever I made money I put that in the workshop by buying more efficient machines.
You need to find your market, something you can do quickly(really depends on what it is), properly and something that is in the "trend" and something that is competitive when compared to imports.
Once you have build up your name then the orders will come - My advertising spend is zero, I dont even have a website, but I am busy all year round making stuff people wants.SCM L'Invincibile si X, SCM L'Invincibile S7, SCM TI 145EP, SCM Sandya Win 630, Masterwood OMB1V, Meber 600, Delta RJ42, Nederman S750, Chicago Pneumatics CPRS10500, Ceccato CDX12
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1st January 2021, 07:54 AM #5
I don't do this anymore but a few years ago I did a small ad on gumtree saying I could make kids Toy crates, boxes,.and little storage shelves etc all targetted towards kids and keeping their stuff tidy as that's what I was doing for mine
Every request I received was for something completely bespoke and custom for adults ha. Desks, floating natural edge shelves , boxes etc etc which surprised me. Then people thanking me on Instagram spread the word and I had more orders come in.
The thing that surprised me the most was my opinion that I can't compete with the big stores on material costs but all the people that approached me were looking for that custom piece they couldn't find on those stores and were willing to pay for it. There was enough of a niche that it kept me damm busy and was able to invest money back into my tooling. I enjoyed it and will do something similar but smaller scale later
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1st January 2021, 08:18 AM #6SENIOR MEMBER
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- Jun 2009
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- Elizabeth Bay / Oberon NSW
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- 76
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- 934
Each of my three children sought my advice when choosing their subjects for the Higher School Certificate. They were all asked the same thing. What are you good at? What do you like doing?
You have a full set of personal resources. The way to success is to use them wisely.
Good luck with your new venture.
mick
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1st January 2021, 10:16 AM #7Novice
- Join Date
- Dec 2020
- Location
- Northern NSW
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- 13
Thanks for your feedback everyone, much appreciated.
(Sorry Albert, I accidentally clicked on the "pictures please" thingy, meaning to hit "like this post". Thanks again for your post.)
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1st January 2021, 12:07 PM #8Novice
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- Mar 2012
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- South Australia
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- 16
Register it as business, get an ABN, then get tax write off on equipment.
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1st January 2021, 12:29 PM #9Senior Member
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- Sep 2016
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- Bentleigh East
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- 50
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- 423
I haven't done it myself but from observing other people it seems easier for a small business to offer the service rather than the product. People typically turn to smaller businesses when they want something bespoke they can't find at the shops, like Delbs said. Usually something to do with specific dimensions or features. If you choose what to make and then try to sell it, it becomes one more of a million other available products. Not impossible to sell, but harder.
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1st January 2021, 01:01 PM #10.
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- Feb 2006
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- Perth
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- 27,792
At the budget end of things, long term you will never compete with the likes of Ikea. I've seen this often at the mens shed, where people come in expecting something to cost less an "Ikea price". I've lost count of how may times Ive said "I cannot even purchase the materials for the price you can that (item) bookshelf at Ikea"
This leaves the full service approach.
My experience is to succeed at the latter either you have to be the best of the best (eg Sam Maloof) where you can adopt a "take it or leave it' approach, or have good interpersonal and negotiating skills to determine together with client what the final products will be. I'm far from the former and have tried the latter a few times and found I was pretty poor at doing this. Either I'd argue myself out of the job or end up doing the job for $5 an hour. In other words I reckon you need to be a people person to operate in the is space - maybe even more so to certain extent than a quality woodworker.
Good luck with whichever approach you take.
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1st January 2021, 01:58 PM #11Senior Member
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- Sep 2016
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- Bentleigh East
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- 50
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- 423
Hi Bob
The correct answer to the IKEA argument is to show them this photo and tell them "Sorry, we don't make things out of paper here"
Don't get me wrong, I have nothing against paper furniture and it does have a place in my house for certain things, but I do understand what I'm actually buying. Those people need to be told when to go to IKEA and when to come to you, and that's your job unfortunately.
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1st January 2021, 02:24 PM #12.
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 27,792
Sure but when some folks are just after something like, a solution to a storage problem, they don't really care what its made of, it just needs to last them a couple of years and then they'll move onto something else.
Don't get me wrong, I have nothing against paper furniture and it does have a place in my house for certain things, but I do understand what I'm actually buying. Those people need to be told when to go to IKEA and when to come to you, and that's your job unfortunately.
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1st January 2021, 03:03 PM #13Senior Member
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- Sep 2016
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- Bentleigh East
- Age
- 50
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- 423
If we could stand dealing with people we wouldn't be doing so much woodworking
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1st January 2021, 03:39 PM #14GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Aug 2011
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- bilpin
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- 3,559
One can waste an awful lot of time preaching to the great unwashed. This is how you end up on a rate of $5 per hour. You cant spend half your time in deep and meaningful negotiation when you have wood on the bench awaiting your creative genius.
Most professional woodworkers have spent their formative years learning their trade and perfecting what they have learned for the rest of their working lives. Often, you find yourself up against a fiesty little cuss who has the people skills and subtleties of a brick hurled underarm but his work is magnificent!
Bespoke work is time consuming at all levels (but I love it.) Making for the masses, in my opinion, is dead boring unless you are producing arty stuff that keeps your creative juices flowing.
Now add to all this the state of the Nation and the number of people with reduced incomes and you are pushing the preverbial up hill. It is a buyers market at the moment. That is, of course, if there are any buyers.
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1st January 2021, 04:59 PM #15
I personally think the problem is saying "no", not finding the business.
Once they find you they wont leave you alone.
The prime problem is people are genuinely unaware of how much gear is needed to do a "good job". I find it is part education and showing lots of examples.
I've never had a person ask for something like Ikea but cheaper. Come to think of it I cant recall ever not getting a job after advising the price.
Price, at the end of it, is a secondary consideration. Focus on quality and you'll win every time.
Put up a decent site showing a FAQ and examples.
I miss my studio
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