Tag Archives: Small business

Financial Records for My Creative Business: Keeping Track of Expenses

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Last week, we talked about how important record-keeping or bookkeeping is for your crafty business.

Today, let’s talk about what sort of information you should be keeping track of in your new “books”. The rule of thumb is that when it comes to recording your financial info, you basically can’t record too much. Everything is important, whether for tax purposes or for your own calculations.

The biggest category of info that you will spend your time recording will be your business’ expenses. You might not realize it, but your business probably has lots and lots of expenses. Let’s divide our expenses into two categories, product-related and non-product-related.

Product-related expenses:

  • Direct supplies and material costs – these are the items that directly go into your sellable products. For a sewist, that’d be fabric, elastic, or ribbon. These are probably the most obvious expenses, and not too difficult to keep track of.
  • Indirect supplies and material costs – these are items that go into making a product, but we can’t necessarily track exactly how much of it goes into each item because it’s either impossible or cost-prohibitive. These are things like glue or thread. I know I used thread to make that purse, but I can’t tell you exactly how many inches or feet went into each one. I know I used glue to make my yarn wreath, but there’s no way for me to be totally sure how many ounces or what-nots of glue went into it.
  • Tools, machines, and other items used to create your sellable products – they aren’t literally a part of your product, but you couldn’t make it without them. Examples are your sewing machine, scissors, pliers, or a cutting mat.
  • Expenses related to putting your products up for sale and selling them – all those little fees and charges you pay to list your products online or accept payment for a sale, like Etsy listing fees, Etsy’s cut of your sale, Paypal charges, credit card fees, etc.
  • Shipping and Packaging costs – including boxes, mailers, labels, envelopes, a postage scale, and decorative packaging items. This also obviously includes the actual price of postage.

Non-Product Expenses:

  • Craft show registration fees
  • Startup and legal fees for licenses, permits, etc.
  • Display expenses, like jewelry stands, tags, earring cards, racks, tables, pop-up tent, etc.
  • Photography expenses, like a light box, new camera, props, editing software
  • Promotional material costs (like printing) for business cards, postcards, stationery, custom stamps, labels, etc.
  • Advertising expenses
  • Design and web development costs for your website, web hosting, logo, banner, etc.
  • Research and development expenses for product research, prototyping, business education classes or e-courses, consulting services, books, etc.
  • The cost of gas for driving to the post office, craft store, craft fair, business meeting, etc., and lodging for staying overnight for any of these reasons.

I divide your expenses into these two categories mainly for pricing reasons, which we’ll discuss in the future. Let’s just sum it up by saying all your product-related expenses (and possibly even some of your non-product-related expenses) should be considered when it comes time to price your product. A lot of beginning crafters make the mistake of only considering direct materials expenses when pricing their product and then end up grossly under-pricing themselves; look how many expenses they’re forgetting about!

The main point is that your business can have a lot of different expenses. And you need to be recording them all! Thorough expense-tracking serves two main purposes:

  1. You’ll get a better picture about whether your business is actually making a profit or not, and
  2. You’ll be able to use most of these expenses as deductions when tax time comes around.

About #1, are you really making money at the end of the day? When you make sales, it might feel like you’re raking in the cash. If you’re only subtracting the cost of your supplies from that revenue, you may feel like you’re really successful, and then wonder why your bank account doesn’t reflect that. If you are truly tracking all of your expenses, you can get a good grasp on whether your business is profitable, how much so, and adjust accordingly. You will also get a better idea of where you’re spending too much money and where you can cut back, and whether your pricing formula needs adjusting or not.

As far as #2 goes, the important thing to remember is that you need to keep proof of all your expenses. Save those receipts, yall! Or star your emails and file them away. Just don’t expect the IRS to be cool with hundreds of dollars of expenses with no support.

Whew! That was a lot of ground to cover. You may be left wondering about the best way to organize all these expense types. That answer all depends on what works best for you. An accounting-based program like Quickbooks or Outright.com will sort your expenses into nifty little accounts for you.

If you use the spreadsheet method (like myself), create a tab for each category or subcategory. For example, I have separate tabs for my main jewelry supply components (crystals, beads, buttons, earwires, etc.), a tab just for shipping costs, one for jewelry tools, and the list goes on. I then have a summary tab where I can use formulas to capture all these different expenses in one place, to see my total spending. The easier your system allows you to capture all your expenses in appropriate categories, the better.

That’s enough left-brain for today. Time to take a break and give yourself a pat on the back for paying attention through this entire post. It wasn’t too painful, was it? Check back next time for more accounting tips for creative businesses!

If you found this post helpful, I recommend you read my post about overhead expenses, which can also help you accurately price your goods for profit, and my post about getting your creative business ready for tax season.

I’d love to hear from you! What do you think is the most challenging part about bookkeeping for your handmade business?

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Crafting a Business 101: Marketing Magic

marketing for small businessesSince it’s the beginning of the year, we’re rolling out all our newest series for Crafting a Business 101. Last week we debuted Creative Accounting, and today we’re revealing Marketing Magic!

The term “marketing” might seem very specific or conversely very vague to you. Or maybe you think that if you have no marketing background you can’t do it. To me, marketing involves all the many ways a potential customer can find out about your business. In the most obvious sense, marketing is advertising, but if you look at marketing like I do, then marketing relates to all the following:

  • Advertising (duh, I already said that)
  • Social media and networking (twitter, facebook, Etsy forums, teams, etc.)
  • Blogging
  • Printed materials
  • Your brand and your logo
  • The look and feel of your shop/website
  • Product photography
  • Listing tags, titles, and descriptions
  • SEO
  • Offline word-of-mouth
  • Customer service
  • Defining your target audience
  • Utilizing key stats to your advantage

Some of these things might not immediately fall under the marketing umbrella in your opinion. I like to look at it this way – if I’m working on bettering the appearance or appeal of my products, brand, or logo; improving my tags, SEO rankings, or product photos; spreading the word about my business via whatever method; or even just researching and learning about ways to increase my business efficiencies or better connect to my target customer, then I am marketing. It’s anything that either a) let’s someone find out my business or product exists, or b) encourages a potential or existing customer to make a purchase. That’s what marketing means to me!

If you haven’t already, take some time to look over the Creating a Business Plan series from last year. Several components of the creative business plan relate to marketing your business, including #2, Where can people find my product?, #4, Who will buy my product?, #7, How do I differentiate my product from the competition?, and #8, How do I successfully reach my target customer?

Through this series, we’ll discuss all the many ways you can make marketing magic for your business. As a creative small business owner, you’re probably working on a small (or non-existent) marketing budget. Luckily for us, we work in an age where there are hundreds of free marketing opportunities at our fingertips! So get excited because it’s time to improve your marketing!

What marketing tactics do you swear by? What marketing concepts do you think I left off the list above?

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Crafting a Business 101: Creative Accounting

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Welcome to Lazy Owl’s newest article series, Creative Accounting, brought to you as a (hopefully) weekly feature as part of the Crafting a Business 101 series.

You may or may not know, but by day I am a *gasp*…accountant! A certified public accountant, or a CPA, to be exact. I’ve also been the owner/designer/bookkeeper for a little jewelry shop on Etsy called Lazy Owl Boutique since early 2011. So, I feel pretty okay about talking to you about basic accounting concepts, how they relate to your business, and most importantly, WHY they should matter to you.

To some people, “accounting” is considered a four-letter word, but as a small business owner, it’s important to have a grasp on financial concepts and bookkeeping skills. If you ignore your financial responsibilities it will eventually bite you in the proverbial butt! Don’t be intimidated by spreadsheets, numbers, paperwork, or formulas. It’s time to make your business work for you. If you take the time to sit down and educate yourself and then apply your new knowledge to your business, you will learn all sorts of things – how to save on your taxes, how to properly price your items, whether or not you are actually making a profit, how to increase your profit…the list goes on and on! Mastering your creative business’s finances will take you from crafting as a hobby to owning a bonafide small business.

Let’s ease into this. We’re never going to talk about anything super complex or confusing, so you can exhale now. And I promise you will learn some stuff that you can actually use to make your business run a little bit more smoothly.

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I’d like to begin this series by talking about bookkeeping. Call it what you want – record-keeping, tracking expenses, saving receipts. Don’t let the funny term “bookkeeping” confuse you. I’m just talking about recording, in written or electronic form, your expenses (ALL your expenses) and your sales revenue. And I don’t mean stockpiling receipts in a shoebox (of which I may or may not be guilty).

20121121 NCR Class 160 Bookkeeping Machine

20121121 NCR Class 160 Bookkeeping Machine (Photo credit: Degilbo on flickr)

All good finances begin with good bookkeeping. You cannot possibly get a clear picture of your business’s overall expenses, profit, or just plain ole financial success if you are not recording everything. Can you imagine Apple not knowing if they even made any money in 2012? That is basically what you are doing if you aren’t keeping track of these things.

Check it out – we just began a brand new year 2013! The slate of shoddy financial record keeping has officially been wiped clean for you. Do yourself and your business a favor and come up with a bookkeeping system now that you can use for your business all year. Whether it be a software program, like Quickbooks, an internet-based application like Outright.com, a simple spreadsheet, or even a special bookkeeping paper notebook and a trust calculator, you need to find a method that will do what you need AND that you will actually use right now. That means don’t pay out the wazoo for something with so many bells and whistles that you don’t understand how to enter a simple receipt. Start small if you need to and you can expand your system as needed. To me, the best method to begin with (and honestly the method I still use today) is a simple Excel spreadsheet. So if you’re short on funds or time, just open up a new spreadsheet and get started.

Now’s a fun time (if you are a nerd like myself at least) to ask other Etsy entrepreneurs and small business owners what sort of bookkeeping system they use. You’re creative, right? Think of your bookkeeping system as an extension of the creative “fun” of owning your own business. You can “design” your system to be a reflection of you and your brand. Want a color-coded spreadsheet with fun fonts? Go for it. Want a snazzy painted file cabinet system to sort your receipts and paperwork? Do whatever works to keep you motivated to consistently update your financial records.

Next week, we’ll talk about exactly what you should be recording in your new bookkeeping system. So start savings those receipts and I’ll see you then!

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2013: Let’s Grow!

Everybody in the blogosphere lately has been talking about prepping your business for 2013, listing goals, making plans, filling out timelines, etc… It’s hard for me to think about beginning a new year with my Christmas goggles on, but there’s no use denying the inevitable (unless of course, the Mayans were right, then I’ve got nothing to worry about).

So, I agree. In the next couple weeks, I’ll be sitting down with pen in hand to think about my plans for next year, and more importantly, specific, attainable, and measurable goals for Lazy Owl. For me, 2011 was all about just starting. 2012 was about figuring things out, what worked and what didn’t work. My overall theme for 2013 will be to grow.

Are you ready for your creative venture to grow? Then come join me! Via our Crafting a Business series, we’ll explore both meaty detailed business concepts and motivational thoughts, giving you the research, tools, and inspiration you need to grow your business in 2013.

My goal is to grow Lazy Owl a little bit every month, every week, even every day. You can do it too with your Etsy shop or whatever your creative business may be. Small steps leading to big changes. Let’s talk about pricing methods, let’s really research SEO and tagging, let’s improve our photography skills and our customer service offerings, let’s explore our target market, let’s have more fun! You’ve already taken the plunge to going into business for yourself…now let’s really make it work! A creative entrepreneur should be willing to be constantly growing, learning, and improving.

I made myself the above print to hang in my crafting studio to remind me to do just a little something to help my business (and myself) grow a little bit each and every day! It’s a marathon, not a sprint, right?

Stay tuned for more articles, tidbits, worksheets, and printables for the rest of this year and throughout 2013. I welcome you to join us by subscribing to the Lazy Owl newsletter to get updates directly to your inbox! Just enter your email address in the little box to the right.

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