What Craft Businesses Need to Know About Buying and Selling on Faire - Craft Industry Alliance (2024)

LaTanya Pattillo opened a brick-and-mortar shop in Raeford, North Carolina, Parliament Quilts and Crafts, earlier this year. She opened accounts with several craft distributors, stocking the store with bolts of quilting cotton, but she also wanted to experiment with selling other sorts of craft supplies. That’s when she turned to Faire, an online wholesale marketplace. “I wanted to test the market with different types of craft kits,” she says. “Bringing in a whole rack of embroidery floss and embroidery supplies, for example, was too much. Faire allowed me to dip my toe into embroidery.” She found an assortment of designers selling kits with low minimums and placed a few orders.

Pattillo’s use of Faire is not uncommon in the crafts industry. Many craft retailers now shop on Faire and craft brands sell their products wholesale on Faire. Now that the site has been around for several years, we checked in to see how Faire is working for craft businesses today.

The Vendor Experience

Faire was founded in 2017 by former employees of Square. It’s a B2B wholesale marketplace where small businesses can connect with retail buyers. The company has taken $1.7 billion in venture capital funding.

Joining Faire as a buyer and as a seller is free. When a buyer finds your shop through Faire and makes a purchase, you pay a 15% commission plus $10. If you have an existing relationship with the buyer and they use your Faire Direct link, you pay 0% commission. Product categories include apparel, paper, jewelry, kid’s products, home décor, pet supplies, beauty, and more. Faire is currently available in the US, Canada, the UK, and most countries in the EU.

Vendors set their own minimum order amounts, but Faire suggest a low minimum at $100-150 to encourage first-time buyers to make a purchase. Twice a year, Faire hosts special virtual “markets,” promotional events where the platform offers discount matching for vendors. At the upcoming July market, for example, Faire will match discounts of up to 5% off all orders.

Faire offers buyers 60-day terms. Pattillo says this was tremendously helpful for her as a new and small shop. Offering terms can be challenging for small vendors on their own, but on Faire, sellers can choose to get paid right away even though buyers don’t need to pay for two full months. Selling on Faire has other advantages. Faire gives busy retailers a single destination to shop for and discover new products, eliminating the hassle of Google searches and setting up accounts on the wholesale sites for each maker they find. Minimums and shipping costs are listed up front and reordering from multiple vendors is centralized and simple.

Melissa Galbraith uses Faire to wholesale embroidery kits for her brand MCreativeJ. She has a line sheet, but not a wholesale site of her own.

“Faire is convenient and it’s easier,” she says. “I don’t want to build a whole other website for wholesale.”

She likes that she can create invoices through Faire and that the inventory syncs with her Shopify site.

Relationships and Documentation

For sellers, getting retailers they have existing relationships with to shop via their Faire Direct link, which leads to 0% commission, is an ongoing challenge.

Galbraith’s main piece of advice for Faire sellers is to make sure you get documentation of your relationships and keep it. “If you go to a show, photograph people’s badges. Collect business cards. Take photos of their information. If the show has an app, scan badges and download all of your contacts to a spreadsheet. I’ve become a digital hoarder.”

She’s developed these habits after learning the hard way. The week before we spoke, Galbraith spent an entire workday trying to prove a pre-existing relationship to a Faire representative, showing emails and text messages as evidence until finally her case was passed along to a different representative who believed her. “It’s so frustrating sometimes,” she says.

Often, buyers are simply unaware of the importance of using a Faire Direct link. Faire doesn’t do outreach to educate them about how vendor commissions work. The onus of education about the commission structure and the Faire Direct link falls to the vendors alone.

Anne Weil has had her fiber arts kit brand, Flax & Twine, on Faire for about a year now after making the decision to expand her business into wholesale. She says she was pleasantly surprised after getting orders right away.

Weil also began doing trade shows and it was at one of these shows just a few months ago that she began to be really concerned about the impact Faire was having, not only on her own business but on the entire ecosystems of independent brands and retailers.

“It used to be that it was fairly easy to prove to Faire that you had brought in a new customer,” Weil said. “There was a checkbox and a place to describe the existing relationship you had. You could attach a screenshot of an email from them and that would count.” In recent months, though, Faire has made that proof process increasingly difficult for vendors. “Now, you have to provide your Faire Direct link to everyone and collect proof like a photo of their badge from the show to send to Faire. You need an email or text from the person plus a response and it has to have been within the last three months. They’re not honoring and respecting a handshake anymore.”

For Weil, this burden of proof feels onerous, and it’s leading her to question her investment in trade shows. “It doesn’t make sense for me to go to a show because I’m trapped by Faire anyway.” She says it feels like the only way to prove a pre-existing relationship is to continually market the Faire platform to her buyers. “Faire is undermining the potential of trade shows,” she says.

Galbraith points to a newly released Faire feature, a QR code vendors can show potential customers leading to their Faire Direct link. “I’ve tried this at shows with varying success,” Galbraith says. “Some buyers are all for scanning it. Other times, the person you’re talking to isn’t the one who uses Faire or they can’t log into the app.” As soon as the show is over, both Weil and Galbraith send emails to all of their new contacts encouraging them to use the Faire Direct link. Still, some don’t and they end up paying a commission to Faire for relationships they built outside the platform.

Discovery

“I find Faire to be really good for discovering brands I hadn’t heard of,” says Lisa Chamoff who puts together gift bags for the retreats she hosts through her indie yarn marketplace, Indie Untangled. Recently, she was shopping for items made local to Mount Rainier, for example, for an event there. For Chamoff, vendors with low minimums are more appealing. “A $250 minimum order is too high for me, for what I need. At $100, I can do it,” she says.

“It makes sense to me that Faire charges a fee for discovery. It’s like you’re paying rent in a shopping mall. If someone comes in and shops, the person who maintains the property deserves to be paid.”

Setting up and maintaining your own wholesale ecommerce shop is also a lot of work, says Chamoff. Faire makes it easy. She recommends that vendors do a cost-benefit analysis, taking all of the work and fees into account.

Recently, Chamoff attended Shoppe Object, a trade show in New York City. She found an earring maker who explained the importance of using her Faire Direct link to place orders. Chamoff used the link to place an earring order while on the show floor. She likened the Faire Direct link to Etsy’s Share and Save program where when a customer makes a purchase using a seller’s special link the seller saves 4% on Etsy fees.

What Craft Businesses Need to Know About Buying and Selling on Faire - Craft Industry Alliance (2024)
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