Business:
In the last Crafty Business post, I talked to Kristy Hall about making progress and how feeling like you’ve done “enough” can be elusive. I mentioned my progress report sheet and linked to the pdf. Today I’m going to tell you a bit more about it and why I’ve found it to be immensely useful.
For the last 4 years of Craft Leftovers, I have had ambiguous feelings of success and failure. In general it was, “Hey, I paid my bills and have a little left over” or “Hey my ad revenue is up. I must have more readers coming by the blog.”
After the mural, I was pretty sad about how much I had shoved Craft Leftovers to the side. I knew it would take months to get back up again. I didn’t want to feel like I was failing each and every month. I wasn’t at the same level of sales and readership. I decided that I needed an easy way to track my stats, deadlines, and goals. It’s the stats that really matter to me.
Here’s what I came up with.
Download the pdf file here and make it your own.
Monthly deadlines and goal setting
I’ve decided that instead of doing it weekly, I would go with monthly. It’s so easy to lose site of major deadlines, re-occuring deadlines, and goals in the craziness of day to day life.
So at the beginning of each month, I dig through my calendar and mark out all the major deadlines. Then I make sure to note all the repeating deadlines and goals. I plug in last month’s stats, then my goals for this month. I fill out the actual stats from last month in the previous month’s sheet and make notes about the month. This past month, made a lot of progress and met most of my goals, but I didn’t send out the monthly e-newsletter and I finished Craft Leftovers Monthly later than I wanted. I also only added 3 new things to the shop versus 4.
Set achievable goals
The focus is always on progress vs. leaps and bounds. Like I said, I knew it was going to take more than a month to get back to where I was last November. So, I try to add $50 in sales each month, 15 facebook fans and twitter followers, 20 RSS subscribers, and 200 unique visitors and 400 visits. If I crush the goals, all the better.
I actually look forward to the first of the month and am excited to crunch the numbers and see how I’ve done. This past month I met every goal for my stats, added new products to the shop (a new item every week, I got three out of 4 weeks), and met most of my recurring goals–which is up from, umm, none.
More than sales
As a blogger, there is a lot more than just sales and ad revenue to track. Here are the main things I look at each month to measure success.
- Income
- Expenses
- Facebook Fans
- Twitter Followers
- RRS Subscribers
- Unique Visitors
- Visits
What are the important stats for your crafty business? How do you define success?
Happy crafting!
Kristin
This is great! Smart way to keep track of progress, versus just how you're feeling about your business (as we all know, feelings aren't reliable!)
Fantastic! I am glad to see others using goal setting tools to help keep on track. It is the only way to keep from being caught up in the little day-to-day things that pull you off track.
Fantastic! I am glad to see others using goal setting tools to help keep on track. It is the only way to keep from being caught up in the little day-to-day things that pull you off track.