Rat Rod
Owner & Founder
Thanks for the input everyone...very much appreciated. :wink:
I will most likely continue offering merchandise because it seems to be where the money is...that and the Ebay ads. Just to give you an idea of what can happen with a shirt sale....I had 200 of the latest design printed and after a month of having them in my hands I have about 5 left. Where I run into problems is keeping inventory after the initial burst of orders. The only way I can offer these up is by running the pre-order system which enables me to drop $1800 on an order of shirts. After I sell all of those, I get sporadic emails and PMs from people saying...I wish you had an XL or an XXL left. I guess that's just the way it goes with this stuff. I don't really have the space either to store large quantities of shirts so keeping 200 of them around is usually about all I can handle.
Justin (Porkchop) and I have discussed the idea of offering a line of RRB branded parts with me basically giving him licensing rights to use my brand, but it seems like it would take a long time to see enough sales to offset the cost of production. When he orders tires, he has to buy them by the container load and might have to spend upwards of $20k just to have them produced. :shock: To me it just doesn't seem like the RRB market is strong enough yet to support that kind of investment.
It's funny, I watched the BMX Museum offer a "Pro Membership" feature on the site which gives you the ability to sell items in their for sale sections at $20 a year and I think they had over 1700 people become pro members in the first couple of weeks. Do the math on that and try to keep your eyeballs in. :shock: Granted, they have a huge following and vintage BMX is the hottest segment of bicycle collecting right now, but it just shows what a site can do when people enjoy it and use it a lot.
In regards to raffles....it's against the law in the state of Texas to hold a raffle unless you are a non-profit organization. I looked it up one time to see about that option and found out real quick it was a no no.
I will most likely continue offering merchandise because it seems to be where the money is...that and the Ebay ads. Just to give you an idea of what can happen with a shirt sale....I had 200 of the latest design printed and after a month of having them in my hands I have about 5 left. Where I run into problems is keeping inventory after the initial burst of orders. The only way I can offer these up is by running the pre-order system which enables me to drop $1800 on an order of shirts. After I sell all of those, I get sporadic emails and PMs from people saying...I wish you had an XL or an XXL left. I guess that's just the way it goes with this stuff. I don't really have the space either to store large quantities of shirts so keeping 200 of them around is usually about all I can handle.
Justin (Porkchop) and I have discussed the idea of offering a line of RRB branded parts with me basically giving him licensing rights to use my brand, but it seems like it would take a long time to see enough sales to offset the cost of production. When he orders tires, he has to buy them by the container load and might have to spend upwards of $20k just to have them produced. :shock: To me it just doesn't seem like the RRB market is strong enough yet to support that kind of investment.
It's funny, I watched the BMX Museum offer a "Pro Membership" feature on the site which gives you the ability to sell items in their for sale sections at $20 a year and I think they had over 1700 people become pro members in the first couple of weeks. Do the math on that and try to keep your eyeballs in. :shock: Granted, they have a huge following and vintage BMX is the hottest segment of bicycle collecting right now, but it just shows what a site can do when people enjoy it and use it a lot.
In regards to raffles....it's against the law in the state of Texas to hold a raffle unless you are a non-profit organization. I looked it up one time to see about that option and found out real quick it was a no no.