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Notes From the Sidelines: Bracelets, Banks, Albums & More
September 25, 2007
Whatever a bookseller calls merchandise other than books -- sidelines, gifts,
or non-book items -- the effects are still the same: The addition of non-book
merchandise to the inventory mix can add significantly to a bookstore's bottom
line. Gifts buyer Judy Flam of Massachusetts' Brookline Booksmith said
that the bookstore's cards and gifts section has "grown enormously
to the point that, during the busier weeks of the fourth quarter, it has
been known to contribute up to 24 percent of the total gross income of the store!"
Flam and several other booksellers from around the country recently shared some
of their sidelines recommendations with BTW.
Just because
gifts are non-book items, it doesn't mean they can't be book related. Flam listed
Carolyn Forsman's Banned
Books Bracelet among customer favorites. The bracelets, in two sizes, feature
a postage stamp-sized "slide show" of banned book covers, including
titles such as King & King (Linda de Haan and Stern Nijland, Tricycle),
To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee), Howl (Allen Ginsberg, City Lights),
and The Color Purple (Alice Walker, Pocket). Between the book covers
are squares that say "I Read Banned Books." Bracelets featuring artwork
of famous artists, such as Frieda Kahlo and Salvador Dali, and images from nature,
ranging from horses and dolphins to bugs and flowers, are also available. Another
popular Forsman product line is bug, compass, and clock rings. (Flam generously
offered a number of sidelines tips that have been organized in
a list at the end of this article.)
In Tempe, Arizona,
part of the strategy at Changing Hands, which has an extensive sidelines inventory,
is to keep things new. Gifts buyer Nancy Zangari said one of the store's latest
bestsellers is a "silicone potholder made by a company called Fred."
The potholders, called Hotheads, are the heads of green frogs, pink mice, or
red dogs. "They have been extremely successful since their arrival about
three weeks ago," said Zangari. "I've already had to reorder them."
Hotheads retail for $10.
Changing Hands has always done well with wind chimes from MEE-sub
Enterprises, which draw attention hanging in the store's front window. A
new line of chimes, from Blue Handworks,
has also sold consistently. Pieces of beach glass hang from a driftwood rod
and retail for $18.50. "One is in the colors of nature, with the glass
pieces in the shapes of leaves, while the other is in blues and greens and the
glass pieces are long rectangles," Zangari said.
A new line
of retro metal banks from Blue Q is perfect for the current credit crunch. "Each bank has a different saying
and coordinating graphics," Zangari explained. "There is 'Saving for
Valium,' 'Saving for Therapy,' 'Saving for Jesus,' and lastly, 'Saving for Some
Good Weed,' which is our best seller." Banks sell for $10.
Karin Wilson from Page & Pallette said she has found the mother of all
sidelines. "No other sideline has ever come close," she said. Webkinz
are plush animals that come with a code that gives buyers access to an online
Webkinz World, where they can care for their virtual pets, answer trivia questions,
and play games. "We've sold thousands, and I've never seen anything like
these sales in my life with any book, toy, or sideline," said Wilson. "If
a publisher will make early readers (and young adult for that matter) books
tie into an interactive website, this would be bigger than Harry Potter."
At Brooklyn's
WORD, Christine Onorati likes the $10 Book
Owl book lights and uses one herself. "I stock the one-LED lights,
which come in many colors," she said. "Customers of all ages love
them. It's a great impulse buy."
In the notebooks and journals category, Moleskine products
are always a popular bookseller recommendation. Another source, said Onorati,
is Miquelrius. "This Spanish company
makes high-quality flexible notebooks in various sizes and colors, and I sell
them like crazy," she told BTW. "The pocket-sized journals
come in about six different colors, and I can't keep them in stock. They retail
for $4. I also carry a full selection of their spiral-bound notebooks in various
sizes and colors."
For hand-bound photo albums, Onorati raved about Rag & Bone. "This Rhode Island business produces gorgeous hand-bound books,
ranging from scrapbooks to photo albums to journals," she said. "I
requested a ring of swatches, which I display near the books so that customers
can special order their own fabric and style for just $5 extra. They are not
cheap, but they are a keepsake item of high quality and people often buy them
as gifts." Rag & Bone also offers a Digital Photo Album that comes with
100 percent acid-free inkjet pages.
For a bookstore with a large sidelines selection, one last important impulse-buy
recommendation from WORD were gift bags from the Giftbag Factory. The bags are "high quality with gorgeous artwork, hand-sewn
handles, and rip-resistant paper," Onorati said. "These bags are really
something special, and people love to buy them for their extra-special gifts.
Again, not cheap but worth it."
"Sidelines add another dimension to a bookstore," said Brookline
Booksmith's Flam. "Done well, they can add a different aesthetic and texture
to the shopping experience, make it possible to do more add-on selling and keeping
customers in the store longer, hopefully enticing them to buy more while they're
at it!" --Karen Schechner
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Judy Flam's Sidelines List:
Sidelines sources mentioned in this story:
Additional sidelines sources can be found in ABA's Booksellers
Resource Directory.
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Topics: Non-books, News - Bookselling, News - Vendors,
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