It depends on your definition of success. My answer is colored by the poor sales most of the vendors (and I) had. One insider told me the head count for Saturday was 160. That means the ratio of potential buyers to people behind the tables was anywhere from 2 to 4. Potential sales depend a lot of foot traffic and a high ratio like 20-50.
It also means on Saturday the most the club could make in gate receipts was $800. Not so hot considering the work that goes into organizing.
Sunday was worse. The majority of sales were between vendors. It’s nice to sell, but it’s kind of like kissing your sister. It’s a kiss but you’re not getting anywhere.
I didn’t hear of any of the Warther family showing up either and that was a disappointment. Especially considering it’s the Dale Warther Memorial Knife Show. It begs the question, is Warther Knife a spent force in the knife community?
Classic Warther Folders No Longer Made |
One insider told me that not only has production of Mooney Warther’s fighting knife stopped (Mooney stopped at the end of WWII, but nobody picked it up after he died), but so has production of folders. There doesn’t seem to be any interest in new steels or increasing the number of knife lines.
“Maybe when the kids graduate from college…” was the most optimistic statement I could find in regard to production or changes. Maybe. And just maybe the company will just be treated as a cash cow, you know, leave it alone and milk it.
It’s easy to bitch but difficult to come up with solutions but I’ll try.
It seem that increased foot traffic comes from advertising. This could be expensive, but there are some things to try:
Put a sign in front of the armory a week before the show. If that’s prohibited I’d stick a sign in the front lawn the day of the show and plead ignorance if confronted.
Create a Facebook presence for both WRCA and the show. I’m old, but social media seems to be the drug of choice of the younger set.
Get on community calendars on the different medias. I’d stress the collector and art aspects of knife collecting and pitch it as a public service.
Ask the vendors to advertise their presence at our show on their websites, blogs, tweets and Facebook. After all, it’s to their advantage to get their fans out to see them. And what about e-clubs? All those forums and clubs that have no physical reality other than people on their end of the internet. Surely we can generate some interest.
I’d collect e-mail addresses from everyone by having free door prizes drawn at the next WRCA meeting, winners to be notified by e-mail. I’d get the door prizes from the vendors and use the e-mail addresses to blast out updates and reminders about the next show.
The thing to remember is no one person has to be in charge of everything. Just ask someone to do one small thing like create a Facebook page for the show and help the officers update it.
I bet there are a lot of ideas I haven’t thought of. I also bet some will work better than we suspect.
To be continued!!!!