Why I Love Selling My
Own Perfume To Gift Shops

By Alexandra Bristol
© 2004 Alexandra Bristol

Imagine walking into a gift store and seeing on the shelf beautiful bottles of perfume, filled with a fragrance you developed, bearing a label of your own design!

Imagine this happening in not just one gift store but in one gift store after another!

Imaging getting reorders regularly.

Imaging taking your perfume to a national gift show and getting cash orders from gift stores in places you've never heard of!

Then imagine what it feels like to be the one people start coming to for fragrances for special promotions ... businesses and organizations that would like to use a perfume made by you as a gift for new customers or as a unique fund raiser.

Imagine the thrill of knowing what your clients don't know — that for every dollar they pay you for a bottle of perfume, you are pocketing from $0.80 to $0.90 (or more) in profit!

And, if you are ambitious, this could be just the beginning.

The more time you spend working with perfume, the more respect you develop for the quality of the perfume you are producing. At the beginning it is a thrill to simply get the "juice" in a bottle, slap on a label (and perhaps a few ribbons and bows!) and watch people give you money for it!

Watching people cheerfully buy something you created is an enormous thrill.

Watching your bank account grow substantially while you pursue your new craft makes the thrill even greater.

Developing a True Love Of Perfume

As you gain more experience with perfume, you'll find your tastes, and your perfume making ability, becoming more sophisticated. You will learn by sampling as many fragrances as possible from "tester" bottles at the mall. You may also find yourself indulging in an appetite for more unique fragrances — fragrances sold by leading "small" perfumeries and, even smaller, by people like yourself who have started at the bottom of the ladder but are now a few rungs ahead of you.

The cost of these experiments? Not at all cheap — but it is one of the most delightful business expenses you are likely to encounter.

Can you do it? Why not give it a try!

The way I got started (I had to get up my confidence because I wasn't at all sure I could do it!) was to read "Developing A Profitable New Perfume On A Budget Of Less Than $200". I bought the book, smelled the fragrance that came with it (very nice! My husband is on his third bottle and he hasn't a clue where it came from!) and said to myself, "If that guy could make money selling these simple, plain boring looking bottles of fragrance, I've got to be able to put something even better together!" I did (in my opinion!) and, when I showed it around to my friends, several wanted to buy it right away. That's what got up my confidence for approaching gift store owners. In doing so, I found that many of them were women just like myself and they were happy to try out a new "hand crafted" product.

That's how I got started.

Then I joined the Perfume Makers' Club. You don't have to do this but the resources they have are a help. And a lot of the stuff is truly inspirational and makes you feel like you are really a part of the fragrance business. (Guess what ... you are!) New stuff that you might not find out about is constantly getting added to the members' section.

By the time I jointed the Club I didn't mind the fact that I could have gotten the full text of "Developing A Profitable New Perfume On A Budget Of Less Than $200" as part of my $21.95 membership fee. I was already on a roll.

Sticking To Business

Some of the sources I use for my perfumery supplies are also suppliers to candle and soap makers. Some friends have asked me why I haven't branched out and included these products in my line. I just tell them, "I'm not ready for that yet" but the truth is that I've done the math (my daughter is in AP math and she's worked these numbers too and agrees!) The "numbers" say to me, "stick to perfume ... let Proctor & Gamble sell soap."

By the way, you might want to check out some of the larger small perfumers websites ... and some of the smaller ones. In time you'll want to compare your products to theirs. Meanwhile it's good to know that you are not alone in making and selling your own perfume outside of the mall and "big box" stores.

Have fun with it!

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Smaller Perfume Makers

If you study the websites listed below, you will get some idea of the wide range of people who are making and selling perfume today, outside of the world of the mall and "big box" stores.

Some of these companies have long histories; some are quite new.

Some of the perfumers have had years of training; others "picked it up" as they plunged into it.

Some of these companies are backed by considerable financing; others were started on a shoestring.

Some of the individuals behind these companies came from prominent social backgrounds; others clearly did not.

Somewhere in this list is a story you can relate to ... a story that will inspire you to make and sell perfume!

France

United Kingdom

United States

Sultanate of Oman

Dubai (UAE)

Ireland

Canada


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