I remember when i started out and only had a small range of soap. I was going to limit my range to some regular fragrances that people would come back for.
I had about 12 or so that I kept in stock:
Beer Soap
Karma Chameleon ( my Lush dupe)
Oat Milk and Oatmeal
Pumice/scrubby/gardener soap
Seascape ( ocean scene and scent)
Lavender and Liquorice
Lime and Coconut
Love Spell
Rose
Pink Musk
Cactus Flower
Ione Swirl ( always some floral scent - varying )
Confetti Soap - varying scent ( chance to try out new FOs)
Charcoal Swirl ( Black Currant Absinthe FO)
Black Raspberry Vanilla
Fig and Rhubarb.
I would sell out of these within a few months of having them, and have another batch on the go ready to sell.
Now, I just did a quick count and found that i have 45 different soaps on my website. 45!! How did that happen? I believe this is why I still have 3 bars of Karma Chameleon sitting on my shelf that are a year old now, some Rose, Beer, Lavender & Liquorice and Fig & Rhubarb that are coming up to 11 months , AND 5 bars of BRV that are well over 6 months old. I mean - who ever heard or BRV not flying off the shelves? I've even stopped making the seascape because the last lot sat around so long that I thought I wouldn't bother making it again as it had obviously fallen out of favour with the customers.
So my question is - have I spread myself too thin? Should I stop being silly and trying all the FOs ever made to find the 'magic' ones that sell best? Shall I pare it back to just the basics again and allow myself one or two alternating new FOs per month? If they turn out to be a hit I can add them to my range and perhaps delete ones that are not so popular anymore?
I think my problem is that I'm a creative type. I'm driven by creating new things, and this has led me down the garden path. Don't get me wrong - I'm selling more soap now than I ever have, but to me it seems a little out of control. I worry that if someone buys a bar that is too old, that it could lose its scent quickly our worse - go rancid! I don't want to have have a ton of soap sitting here that is nearing the year-old mark especially if it's only one of those and two of those. If it was all bars of the same scent then I will know that it's not worth making again, but these are (or were) popular soaps that people would come and ask for by name.
A li'l help here would be greatly appreciated.
TIA
I had about 12 or so that I kept in stock:
Beer Soap
Karma Chameleon ( my Lush dupe)
Oat Milk and Oatmeal
Pumice/scrubby/gardener soap
Seascape ( ocean scene and scent)
Lavender and Liquorice
Lime and Coconut
Love Spell
Rose
Pink Musk
Cactus Flower
Ione Swirl ( always some floral scent - varying )
Confetti Soap - varying scent ( chance to try out new FOs)
Charcoal Swirl ( Black Currant Absinthe FO)
Black Raspberry Vanilla
Fig and Rhubarb.
I would sell out of these within a few months of having them, and have another batch on the go ready to sell.
Now, I just did a quick count and found that i have 45 different soaps on my website. 45!! How did that happen? I believe this is why I still have 3 bars of Karma Chameleon sitting on my shelf that are a year old now, some Rose, Beer, Lavender & Liquorice and Fig & Rhubarb that are coming up to 11 months , AND 5 bars of BRV that are well over 6 months old. I mean - who ever heard or BRV not flying off the shelves? I've even stopped making the seascape because the last lot sat around so long that I thought I wouldn't bother making it again as it had obviously fallen out of favour with the customers.
So my question is - have I spread myself too thin? Should I stop being silly and trying all the FOs ever made to find the 'magic' ones that sell best? Shall I pare it back to just the basics again and allow myself one or two alternating new FOs per month? If they turn out to be a hit I can add them to my range and perhaps delete ones that are not so popular anymore?
I think my problem is that I'm a creative type. I'm driven by creating new things, and this has led me down the garden path. Don't get me wrong - I'm selling more soap now than I ever have, but to me it seems a little out of control. I worry that if someone buys a bar that is too old, that it could lose its scent quickly our worse - go rancid! I don't want to have have a ton of soap sitting here that is nearing the year-old mark especially if it's only one of those and two of those. If it was all bars of the same scent then I will know that it's not worth making again, but these are (or were) popular soaps that people would come and ask for by name.
A li'l help here would be greatly appreciated.
TIA