KL Smith
CGF II, Certified Grumble Framer Level 2
I own a gallery in a fairly upscale tourist destination in which I only sell my limited edition canvases. Most of our visitors/clients are not locals.
There are two objections to art sales that I keep running into and I was hoping someone could offer suggestions in overcoming these.
The first is the "Can I have a card? Oh I see you have a website. Can I order online?" I must hear this comment 20 times a week in the gallery, and usually just as I am about to close the sale. Most often it is the spouse, or even worse, the dreaded "friend of the customer" who is going to "save them" that jumps in with the "Can I have a card?" question.
I have countered by acknowledging that they can order, but there may be a financial advantage to taking the art with them -- no shipping, no broker fees for out of country sales, etc. In the 1000 or so times a year I hear this, I might get 2 or 3 website orders. So clearly they are not dashing home and ordering. I have actually considered scrapping the entire website for all the good it does - but I know I won't.
The second objection is the "Oh, I have to measure my walls to see if it will fit". Of course once they are gone, they are gone. I have only ever had one person out of hundreds that ever ordered after "measuring their walls". I have even created a free service in which interested clients can simply email me a photo of the room where they might place a piece and based on certain measurements they provide, I will calculate the proper size of the art in question and return a composite photo to them showing my art in their room. Not a single person has taken me up on that.
I know that these are escape excuses, but there must be something I can do to salvage these opportunities. As someone who travels, I do honestly think some people simply forget all about their visit to my gallery once they get back home.
Any suggestions?
There are two objections to art sales that I keep running into and I was hoping someone could offer suggestions in overcoming these.
The first is the "Can I have a card? Oh I see you have a website. Can I order online?" I must hear this comment 20 times a week in the gallery, and usually just as I am about to close the sale. Most often it is the spouse, or even worse, the dreaded "friend of the customer" who is going to "save them" that jumps in with the "Can I have a card?" question.
I have countered by acknowledging that they can order, but there may be a financial advantage to taking the art with them -- no shipping, no broker fees for out of country sales, etc. In the 1000 or so times a year I hear this, I might get 2 or 3 website orders. So clearly they are not dashing home and ordering. I have actually considered scrapping the entire website for all the good it does - but I know I won't.
The second objection is the "Oh, I have to measure my walls to see if it will fit". Of course once they are gone, they are gone. I have only ever had one person out of hundreds that ever ordered after "measuring their walls". I have even created a free service in which interested clients can simply email me a photo of the room where they might place a piece and based on certain measurements they provide, I will calculate the proper size of the art in question and return a composite photo to them showing my art in their room. Not a single person has taken me up on that.
I know that these are escape excuses, but there must be something I can do to salvage these opportunities. As someone who travels, I do honestly think some people simply forget all about their visit to my gallery once they get back home.
Any suggestions?