Friday, July 4, 2008

Creative Idea On Starting a Scrapbooking Business

Creative Idea On Starting a Scrapbooking Business

If you have a strong passion for scrapbooking, your passion can actually lead you to business opportunity. It’s even more convincing if you have the flair for business, you will very possibly converting your hobby into a money-earning asset.

THE SCRAPBOOKING BUSINESS MARKET:

Before starting a scrapbooking business, you should make studies on how you can harness prospective customers when you start your own system of putting up a scrapbooking store. Of course, you will waste money on a weak strategy and set-up. Where will you put up a store? Will you operate it online or you will rent a place and hire people? The latter is big deal because it will involve overhead cost. Prior to that you will first consult an accountant and a coach before you can finalize on spending money for the store. But given the motivation of unique selling point, you can do all the concepts you want to reach the edge of your desired business.

Starting a online scrapbooking business from home is another option if you want to cater to global market. Put up a nice paid website and maximize the use of Internet to optimize your visitors whose hobbies are centered in doing scrapbooks. Remember that you are selling happiness and a placeholder of memories, which people can keep for many years. It establishes closeness to families and close clans.

For an online scrapbooking store, you can do what it takes to use search engine optimization. You can hire a website who can put up e-commerce sites and help you with the payment scheme methods, flow and traffic in your site, and most of all marketing. The website itself is the marketing medium of your business, although it operates virtually. Expect to be spending costs on domain name, web hosting, contents, and some freebies.

The disadvantage of online store is when traditional customers are not yet open to the idea of getting stuff ordered online. Others would prefer the touch of textures of paper and materials than just browsing through images, which will more likely be affected by the network connections.

Given all the creativity and strong will to starting a scrapbooking business either from home, there is nothing impossible. If you have skills in computers, you can even put up your own web design and do the graphic arts yourself. Basically, those who plunge to online stores are those who are computer savvy enough to do the basic tasks rather than depending on hired people alone. If you are cost constraint, you can start your scrapbooking business free from a blog first.

As soon as the scrapbooking business flourish on its own, one can hire and even train people on how they can create scrapbooks for business. Of course, this will go to another category and phase of scrapbooking store. Now the question is: are you going to put up a merchandise of goodies, or are you going to render services?

Once you brainstorm with your scrapbooking teammates, you will realize the scheme will adjust depending on what all of you want to render to people. But when it comes to creativity, the options are endless. It will always be the question of how much your customer would want to spend in indulging with scrapbooking.

Anyway, this will all be studied first before diving to the idea of starting a scrapbooking business. You can directly sell goodies in a rented space and provide other items like a typical bookshop. Customers can combine thoughts for scrapbook making, and you have a counter with a creative crew to help customers make up their minds. Just remember, scrapbooking is all about creating memories.


About the author
Edmund Tai
Tips and Ideas On Starting A Scrapbooking Business


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Monday, June 30, 2008

Starting a scrapbooking business: Creating a Holiday Scrapbook

Starting a scrapbooking business: Creating a Holiday Scrapbook
By: Audrey Okaneko
Throughout the year we have both religious holidays and also secular holidays. I remember as a kid our family always spent the fourth of July with some friends of my parents. I have very fond memories of this family and actually remember their home and some of the various years we spent with them.

Depending on how many photos you take, you can either create a few small 6x6 albums, one for each holiday, or you can create one large 12x12 album and call it “Holiday’s of (fill in year)”.

I have found many stickers, diecuts and even pre-made kits for every holiday. I love to add these items to my holiday scrapbooks. I also love to color theme holiday books, such as red, white and blue for the fourth of July, or orange and brown for both Thanksgiving and Halloween.

If you buy invitations or receive an invitation to a holiday get together, save the invitation for your scrapbook.

I also love to put recipes into the holiday albums. Many families have family recipes they serve only for specific holidays. Capture those in your scrapbook pages and share them for generations to come.

Of course, people make the celebration. Take plenty of photos of the people attending the celebration. Take both group shots and also individual shots. Take photos of the buffet table before everyone eats.

If the holiday is a gift giving holiday, or gift giving celebration, save a little bit of the wrapping paper and ribbon to add to your scrapbook.

Today, preserving memories is as simple as attaching photos and memorabilia to a scrapbook page.
Article by:
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for several years. If you are interested in starting a scrapbooking business, she can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at www.scrapping-made-simple.com
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Stay at home moms business opportunity and ideas at this blog here.

Starting a scrapbooking business: Create Your Own Envelopes For Your Scrapbook Pages

Starting a scrapbooking business: Create Your Own Envelopes For Your Scrapbook Pages
By: Audrey Okaneko
Often times we want to store items in our scrapbooks, yet we don’t want to glue the item down on the page, and we don’t want the small page protectors bought in the store.

The solution is simple. Make your own storage envelopes for your scrapbook pages. These envelopes can range from very simple to very detailed.

Here are a couple of suggestions on how to make envelopes:

1. Take an envelope in your home. Choose any size, large or small. Unfold the envelope and lay it out on your paper. Choose a paper that will coordinate with the scrapbook pages you are creating. Trace the open envelope. Cut out the shape and fold into an envelope. You may need to score the fold lines with a ruler or other straight edge tool. You now have an envelope the exact size of the one you unfolded.

2. Coluzzle makes both an envelope template and a library card template. Both templates come in many sizes. You trace the template on the paper of your choice with an exacto blade, cut out and then fold into an envelope. This technique can allow you to have a few envelopes of the same pattern, but in very different sizes.

3. Take the sheet of paper you wish to use for your “envelope”. Cut that sheet of paper in half diagonally. Match the straight edge of your envelope with the straight edge of the bottom of your scrapbook page. Attach the envelope at the three points. You now have an “envelope” right on the page that you can put items into. I almost always use cardstock for this technique, as cardstock is stronger and will hold up better on the page.

All of these styles of envelopes can be decorated with embellishments, stickers or rubber stamps. These envelopes make great additions to your scrapbook pages.
Article by:
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for many years. For more ideas on starting a scrapbooking business, she can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at www.recipe-barn.com
Learn how to make money coin collecting at this blog here.
Stay at home moms business opportunity and ideas at this blog here