Running a successful vintage jewellery business on the internet.
This is a blog "warts and all" about selling vintage jewellery on the internet. The pros and cons of buying and selling second hand and where is the best places and best practice. How successful you will be will mean putting in plenty of time and a whole lot of energy and enthusiasm. Getting frustrated sometimes, and really annoyed when people lie (not delivered, broken in post, parcel opened and only have the one, not two items) - I have had all the excuses for theft over the years. But this is what you have to come to expect if you are selling anything that has to be delivered. So you become a little more cautious. Send items tracked to all countries outside the UK. track items to universities, company and college addresses - including to doctors at Oxford University. Even the elite can be thieves! But also enjoying the nice emails received when people are pleased with their purchases, the knowledge that it is our website and it looks good enough for people to assume that we are a large company. Then the small profit we get at the end of the day for a few extras in life.
Over the years, I have seen other vintage jewellery websites come and go. But after several recessions, we are still up and running, evolving and continuing.
The start and why I choose to run my own website - Jewels & Finery.
I have been selling vintage jewellery on the internet since 2008. It is just part-time and more a hobby than making tons of money. But it is something that I enjoy and have been successful at. Before that, I sold books on a well-known website that sells both old and new stuff and hated it. Why? There were far too many people trying to scam you. I also did not like the extra high charges that occurred. Charges for listing each item (even if it did not sell) as well as charges to Paypal on selling something. When you work out the total costs. Many smaller priced items, were only giving me pence in profit and not actually worth the effort involved."Scam email from on Ebayer I sold a book to - "My parcel was surcharged £5 by the Post Office because it had no stamp. Reality -Mmmm No, my husband actually gave the parcel to your wife in her hands. As you live about 15 minutes from us in a big expensive house. 8 hours after you ordered it! And no money was charged extra for delivery!" Some people will try to scam you - even if they come from an affluent area. So beware.
I also sold on Amazon with a business account. This was successful at first - but over time I sold less and less. Then noticed that I seemed to be only selling books on certain days! When I checked the listings on Amazon. Mine did not appear in the ones for sales? So I closed the account. Very angry that they were streaming my sale items to certain days and times. Not a shock really. To show all their so-called items for sale - including the ones that are no longer available!!!! They must have a really infinitive and huge server space - which would be forever increasing and of course be too costly to run all the time!!
Setting up your own jewellery website.
Eventually, I decided to set up my own jewellery website. Book sales were declining due to the big booksellers around, kindle and other book downloading devices, the lack of space taken up with books was getting me down, the rising postal charges and the fact that I was reliant on 2 big faceless American businesses. So I turned to sell something smaller and easy to store. Knowing very little about jewellery, I first tested the water by selling vintage jewellery on one of those American auction websites and was quite successful. So I signed up to an English website provider (EKM) and have been with them ever since.By trial and error, I worked out how to make a website look good. Even managed to learn some coding. However, as time has gone on - the company have provided more and easier features to use. So that I don't need to change the HTML very much now.
For setting up a jewellery website you must first:
- Get a good name for your business. One that no one else has
- Choose a domain name - one that has both the.co.uk and .com available.
- Do the legal stuff - like sort tax and insurance, etc.
- Learn about SEO (search engine optimization)
- Take photographs and learn to edit - including the sizes needed for showing photographs on the internet that load quickly.
- Work out what categories you want.
- Sort out how you intend to market your website and its overall niche look.
- Work out what you want to sell and to who.
- Set up your website - this takes a lot of time and energy to list enough items.
- Sort out a business bank account.
- Get a payment gateway set up to take credit and debit cards.
- Get a proper email address - not a Gmail one! It doesn't cost a lot a couple of pounds a month.
- Work out do you want to use a phone. I pulled the plug out on ours over a year ago. It was taking too much of my time to answer the huge number of calls unsolicited to companies/people who just wanted to sell you something.
- Work out how you intend to pack your jewellery.
- Buy in packaging materials.
- Get business cards and other materials you want to include in the packaging.
- Work out how much postage is going to cost to the UK, Europe and worldwide.
- Work out when and how you are going to fit in the time to take the items to the post office. (Unless you sell a huge amount, then you can have a pick service up by Royal Mail).
Buying vintage jewellery.
I started out buying small amounts at jumble sales, table tops, church sales, off the internet (though this was more expensive) charity shops and other places. I get offered jewellery via email, but rarely buy as it is not worth my time now. There are also auctions, but this is not worth my time for the costume pieces. It works out too expensive with all the additional auction costs.Over the years, I have been offered "auction lots" by people who thought it a good idea to buy and sell the jewellery. However when they realize the time and cost to resell just one piece. They look to offloading it on me, which is sometimes fine! What I do not like is the lies that some tell me about where it is from! - "Its from a friend at work's loft" - "Its been handed down to me by a relative" - I am not an idiot and can tell lol. But that is what you sometimes have to deal with! The auction is good only for the more expensive jewellery like gold and antique silver now.
I don't buy gold or silver jewellery, so are less likely to get items offered to me that are stolen. But as a dealer in second-hand goods this is something that you have to be aware of as well.
Once you have brought jewellery:
- Document where and cost of each purchase.
- Sort out each piece, identify the materials used and clean well.
- Discard broken and damaged items (I now have a huge amount of broken jewellery and beads)
- Number each for identification.
- Decide how you want to photograph pieces and get jewellery stands and models to use.
- Buy a camera and photograph lighting.
- Learn about taking photographs and lots of experimenting here.
- Photograph and edit photographs (not easy with some jewellery that reflects the surround)
- Identify what you are listing and a price. Will come to jewellery knowledge in the next part of this blog.
- List each item.
- Add photographs, make sure SEO is right.
- Wait for a sale - which can sometimes be a long time and maybe never!
- We had 6 months of a few sales before our website started to sell properly and regularly at the beginning of our business.
Identifying the vintage jewellery you have brought to sell.
This is not easy at all. When I first started I had very little knowledge. I have now a huge library of books. However many are about vintage designer jewellery in America, little has been written about the great costume jewellery companies here in the UK. Many books are good and some are just plain awful with errors in the text. I joined an American vintage jewellery forum. There were some nice people on there initially, but quite a few nasty trolls.I eventually got banned, as I said that there was too much backstabbing and it was getting out of control. However I did learn a lot at the start - but it had to be taken into context, and then translated into the second hand jewellery that is available here in the UK though.Jewellery that can be identified by a name on the back is easier to identify sometimes. However many pieces are unsigned and knowledge can only come after years of handling costume jewellery and research.
Be aware that you must take an overall price on the internet for valuation with caution, and also you must be aware that that may be the price that it is on offer for. But has it ever sold at that price? Is it overpriced/underpriced? Is it a fake? (yes there are some around and increasing)
Then there are all the extra bits you have to do:
- Blog
- Social media
- Watch how your website is performing on Google.
- Advertise on the web and off.
- Keep listing new items.
- Keep buying new items.
- Tax returns.
- Continually updating your website and checking for errors.
So is it worth selling vintage costume jewellery on the internet - for me, it is yes? I can choose my times to work and I do not have to get dressed, travel and have all that workplace stuff that interferes with your time/life. But it is a full-time job for a part-time wage. Because you are selling one piece at a time and its very time consuming to do. To make any real money, you need to sell more items in a wider range including vintage clothes, etc (spending 24/7 on your business to do this or have more staff!) or antique & vintage gold/silver jewellery or new items that can be sourced in bulk.
This summer, I took some time off to sort out my house and garden. It has shown in our sales, so having a jewellery store on the web means that you have to work at it all the time. We have continued to tick over though because we are established and had over 1800 pieces available. We now will be adding more fabulous jewellery in the coming weeks and months.
Bye for now Sue.
Interesting that you don't buy at auction. I also deal in vintage costume jewellery, have been doing it now for over ten years, and 50% of my stock comes from auction! I buy mixed lots that have obviously come either from house clearance or are probate sales, and I find it a great way to buy cheaply, especially for older, more unusual pieces. Anything that's no good just goes back through auction again and tends to go to the car booters.
ReplyDeleteThank you Azura for your comment.
ReplyDeleteThe bags and boxes of jewellery sold at local auctions are too pricey for the few and far between better costume pieces here in Birmingham. So it is not worth any effort. Also do not have the time to attend - could do it by web viewing, but I like to have a look and examine what I buy first. Good luck with your dealing Best wishes Sue