Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Are you sure you want to do this?

This is always the first question I ask when I'm starting a new venture. This is the question I should have asked myself when I started my custom sewing business back in 1981. It wasn't so much that I made a decision to open a custom sewing shop. More like, I had one foot in the hole, and I gradually lost my hold on reality and fell in all the way. I grew up sewing. It was a craft I could do pretty well, and I learned how to do it better and better with each project. But there were some pitfalls that only became apparent in hindsight. That means, if I'd known then what I know now, I might have made a different choice!

Welcome to the Seamier Side of Sewing for Survival! Here is where I will share with you what I learned when I was self-employed as a custom clothing designer. Or you could call me a seamstress, I don't care. And I will share what I've learned about business, marketing, and customer service. Now I teach business, marketing, and computer classes at a career college. I will use examples from my own venture to help you with yours. In other words, don't do what I did! I made every mistake it is possible to make, I think.

Here are some mistakes I made. You can find solutions to (some of) these problems on the Before you begin page.
  1. I had no business plan.
  2. I had no advice from professionals.
  3. For an embarrassingly long time, I didn't have a business bank account.
  4. I had no bookkeeper, no accountant, no personal banker, just a bunch of maxed out credit cards. (This was back in the day when I was thrilled to have a 16% interest rate on my Visa card.)
  5. I had no recordkeeping systems (those were pre-computer days, too).
  6. Believe it or not, when I started sewing for money, all I had was a used Singer 503A machine I had received for high school graduation. (I won't tell you how long ago that was, but I will say if that thing hadn't been stolen, it would still be running, that's how great of a machine it was.)
  7. I worked out of my boyfriend's garlic-filled kitchen until I could find a studio space I could afford. The first place I found couldn't be found by any of my customers, it was so inaccessible. The second place was next door to a massage parlor (more on that later).
  8. And worst of all, I hated to sew.
More on that later, too. For now I'll just say that my ten-plus years of sewing for a living gave me a rich, somewhat fetid body of experience to share with you. Now I know what not to do. I can save you money, time, and tears. And probably blood and sweat, too, but that will cost a little extra. Kidding.

So, stay tuned as I attempt to fill in these pages with information you can start using right away. I'd say “Happy sewing!” but I wouldn't really mean it. Instead I'll just say, “Here there be dragons! Abandon hope all ye who enter here, the Seamier Side of Sewing for Survival!”