SomethingGoodAustin
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2012
- Messages
- 94
- Reaction score
- 23
I make a dog shampoo bar. It's one of the products with which I am most pleased--I've even used on myself, because I love the smell and because it's very gentle! I sell this bar on Etsy and it does fair-to-middling well, but not great. All of a sudden, though, I have this repeat customer who likes to purchase in large quantities. Her first order in August was for five bars, which was an order I couldn't completely fill (large for me is actually pretty small at this point). I explained this, apologized, and offered her two cured bars and three two-week-old bars. I advised her that the fresher bars needed to be cured at least another two weeks and included a best by date on the labels so she would know when to use them.
After I sent them, I realized that "best by" might be confusing--it sounds too much like an expiration date--so I contacted her again to clarify. She said that was fine and that she would "correct the labels." Hmm.
In mid-September, less than a month after I shipped her her first order, she ordered another five bars. Curious, I looked her up and found that she owns a dog grooming business. She's also a dog rescue enthusiast (I looked up her email and it came up in connection with a Dog Rescue page on Facebook--I know, I know, this sounds stalkery). OK, I thought, so maybe she has five dogs.
I contacted her again and let her know that I would again need extra time to fill this order. I also asked whether she was buying for private use or giving them as gifts. She said she just used them on her dog--her one dog--and loved them because they were so good for his skin. She was fine with waiting. Yesterday, I messaged her to let her know her bars were still curing, and to offer her some irregular bars--same formula, same batch as the ones I sold her last month, same weight, just not as pretty due to stamping issues. She wants to wait for the pretty ones because now she's giving some as gifts.
SO. Perhaps I'm just overly suspicious, but I wonder whether she's either using them in her business or possibly reselling them (why correct the labels otherwise?). And I wonder whether this could possibly cause other problems down the road for me--I don't know what those could be, but I'm pretty new at this.
Should I be concerned? Should I ask her straight up whether she's reselling and risk offending her, cut her off, attempt to cut a wholesale deal, or just gratefully assume/accept that I have a semi-reliable customer (with a really clean dog) who likes my product and wants to keep it around always? Any thoughts?
After I sent them, I realized that "best by" might be confusing--it sounds too much like an expiration date--so I contacted her again to clarify. She said that was fine and that she would "correct the labels." Hmm.
In mid-September, less than a month after I shipped her her first order, she ordered another five bars. Curious, I looked her up and found that she owns a dog grooming business. She's also a dog rescue enthusiast (I looked up her email and it came up in connection with a Dog Rescue page on Facebook--I know, I know, this sounds stalkery). OK, I thought, so maybe she has five dogs.
I contacted her again and let her know that I would again need extra time to fill this order. I also asked whether she was buying for private use or giving them as gifts. She said she just used them on her dog--her one dog--and loved them because they were so good for his skin. She was fine with waiting. Yesterday, I messaged her to let her know her bars were still curing, and to offer her some irregular bars--same formula, same batch as the ones I sold her last month, same weight, just not as pretty due to stamping issues. She wants to wait for the pretty ones because now she's giving some as gifts.
SO. Perhaps I'm just overly suspicious, but I wonder whether she's either using them in her business or possibly reselling them (why correct the labels otherwise?). And I wonder whether this could possibly cause other problems down the road for me--I don't know what those could be, but I'm pretty new at this.
Should I be concerned? Should I ask her straight up whether she's reselling and risk offending her, cut her off, attempt to cut a wholesale deal, or just gratefully assume/accept that I have a semi-reliable customer (with a really clean dog) who likes my product and wants to keep it around always? Any thoughts?