Quote from: Strömkarlen on November 05, 2013, 09:52:23 AM
People just seem to prefer to shop directly from bands/persons with a following (you know "hey I got this from Mikko, RRRon...")
I think this is purely based on labels or people who are known to ship fast and treat customers ok. Reply quick, charge reasonable prices , etc. And have fairly large selection.
For small distributors, my suggestions are only:
-Niche selection of stuff YOU know and like.
-Reply when asked.
-Send stuff instantly when paid.
That's about all. Even in these days of fast & easy distribution of information, it may require looong time to really get trusted reputation and enough customers who buy more than once. Even if RRR and Freak Animal (amongst others) may appear to have "following", it didn't happen over night. Lets say these days it might not require 10-15 years of banging head against the wall, but it still requires something.
Potential mistakes:
-Selling stuff you don't know or care, ultimately making one work without true passion which often leads to:
-Not replying people in decent amount of time.
-Delaying sending orders.
-Doing poor packaging resulting items arriving heavily damaged.
For guys who think starting label on side is great, as you can trade stuff for mailorder, I strongly recommend not having this kind of utilitarian motivation as driving force of label. Label should put out absolute best of the best. In some genres (not necessarily noise) those who seem like putting stuff out just to have commodity called "trade item", often appear to be production line what never really reach listeners. Just items that travel from desperate distrolist to another. Item everybody sells, but nobody sold. I think distro should be started by person who ACTUALLY buys stuff. Still now. If you don't buy stuff, I think perspective of running distro might be lost. When you know that
this is what you'd pay for, and
that is what you could merely take for free or cheap trade, then you know what to sell.
I personally think despite selfish needs and semi-commercial elements, distributors with some sort of vague goal of contributing to culture is only way to go. What this contribution is, is something one would have to figure out.