Adjusting to Change Selling Jewelry in These Challenging Times |
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By Carimé Lane Selling jewelry during the pandemic has required shop owners to roll with unpredictable circumstances. They’ve boosted sales using online platforms, but each of the shops profiled here have curated their online presence in different ways. Owner Debbie Klein of Art+Soul Jewelry & Fine Art in Boulder, Colo. In the current climate, Klein said selling jewelry is a matter of cultivating a strong online presence and maintaining personal relationships.
Klein suggested shop owners reach out to clients they’ve established a relationship with, doing so “with sincerity.” She’s been reaching out to clients via email. Locally-made mugs from Joy Craft & Design. The owner said she had a “great weekend” when she opened the store with reduced hours for Memorial Day weekend and manned the shop herself. Photo by Jaymie Shearer©jmeshe
“I think that that will continue to be our bread and butter for the next couple of years,” said Klein. “In challenging times, people often say: “Why should we wait?” Molly Rahe, owner/artist at Elizabeth Jewelry in Lake Oswego, Ore., has been in the jewelry industry since 1988. Rahe’s best-selling wares before the pandemic were sterling silver landscape pendants of nature in its raw, essential form: for instance, the air, mountains, trees, fire and water. Pendants portraying the mountain and the moon had a particular resonance with customers. Through Rahe’s decades of experience in the jewelry industry, she’s learned that buyers feel an emotional connection with the jewelry they purchase. She said the simple scenes on her pieces may remind the purchaser of events–like camping with a grandparents, or going to the beach with a cousin. “We like a small talisman in our hand that has some resonance with experience and memories,” Rahe said. In addition, Rahe said purchasers may find a circular shape–the shape of most of her landscape pendants–to be appealing, as “circles are a unifying symbol.” Joe Stein, owner, Joy Craft & Design in Springdale, Utah. The store is located just outside of the Zion National Park boundary. Photo by Jaymie Shearer©jmeshe
Before the pandemic, 80 percent of her business came from live art shows, so Rahe said the biggest challenge for her has been exposure. To meet that challenge, she quickly transferred her business online, and purchased a professional microphone, lighting and a camera for a live stream show every Thursday. She films a dozen one-of-a-kind items during each live stream, and said the shows have proven to be moderately successful so far. Bloom Jewelry’s Stacy McElhany-Rodgers photographed with jewelry displays. Wrap hoops and rings and toggle necklaces are best-sellers for the store.
Rahe has also changed her jewelry cleaning routine slightly. Before the pandemic, she used to clean jewelry with 99 percent isopropyl alcohol after customers had tried pieces on. Now, she’s created a more organized system, where she asks customers to place the jewelry they touch in a mirrored tray, so it’s easier for her to see what needs to be cleaned. Wilde advised jewelry shop owners meet clients where they’re at during the current climate. She suggested owners market via the online platform–whether it’s Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, or email–their target demographic uses. Wilde has focused her efforts on Facebook, where her target demographic–clientele who are bit older, and are more likely to have the stability to pay a higher price point–are likely to use the platform. The pandemic has left Wilde with time to develop a new line of crystal jewelry and expand in to ready-to-wear pieces. “The new line of jewelry has taken off really well for us,” Wilde said. Lindsay Bloom Backman, founder and head of design at Bloom Jewelry based in Denver, Colo., said one of their best-selling pieces is their triple wrap bracelet. Lindsay Bloom Backman and Christina Argo of Bloom Jewelry working with jewelry. The store’s merchandise is also sold at boutiques nationally.
The magnetic clasp closure makes it easy to put on yourself, and it comes in many colors, widths, prints, with or without gemstones. The bracelets look “organic, yet refined,” said Bloom Backman. Their signature wrap hoop is another of their stronger sellers. They are “artistic and detailed, yet understated to be worn as an everyday hoop.” Other best-sellers, said Bloom Backman, include their toggle necklace, which can be worn at 17 inches or 34 inches, and wrap ring, a “conversation piece and a fun and unusual cocktail ring.” Owner Joy Stein in her store Joy Craft & Design. Stein thinks her affordable, yet high quality, jewelry pieces may be helping to sustain sales. Photo by Jaymie Shearer©jmeshe
“Through social, email, digital and via phone and FaceTime, we just want to be present and there to help however we can,” Bloom Backman said. A triple wrap bracelet sells well for Bloom Jewelry. Shown is a staff member working with jewelry.
When they closed due to the virus, Stein “initially hit the panic button.” But then she recalled the one thing her loyal customers and international visitors had frequently requested: a more substantial online presence. Staff members from Bloom Jewelry of Denver, Colo., are, from left to right: Sophie Firethunder, Christina Argo, Marni Hudson, Lindsay Bloom Backman, founder and head of design, Stacy McElhany-Rodgers, Emily Fritz, Clara Thompson and Linda Padilla. The store’s jewelry is handcrafted in a 1,000-square-foot studio, and customers can shop at the studio by appointment.
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