Originally Posted by
rrich
What you are describing has become rather common at woodworking shows.
A friend was going to take a job with one of the vendors for a woodworking show.
Basically he was to pay for all of his travel, lodging and food. His pay was a pittance plus 20% of the gross sales, split among the four working the booth.
The rental for booth space for a weekend is about what a brick and mortar can be rented monthly but the store is 8 or 10 times the square meters.
Based upon the above, being a vendor doesn't seem to be a lucrative proposition.
Then there is the Internet. We all shop the internet because goodies can be had for less on the internet. Most of the specialty (woodworking) retail stores have lowered their prices to match Internet pricing. This tends to cut the value of the woodworking show for most woodworkers and the show vendors.
In the Los Angeles area we used to get two or three shows a year. Now we're lucky to get a show every other year. The shows have decreased in size from two full barns (county fairgrounds) with the included alcove to barely filling a building half the size of a barn. A lot of the vendors have just stopped trying to sell through the woodworking show venue.
We used to have two competing woodworking shows. These merged into one smaller show. The ownership of the merged show seems to have passed through several hands. What I've heard is that an actual woodworker now owns the merged show. Some have said that this owner will make the show "fly" again. I have the opposite view based on the premise that your hobby should never be your business.
Also, times are changing and the woodworking show concept just doesn't seem to be able to adapt to the marketplace changes. I think that in 5 years the woodworking show as we know it today will die. If I could figure out how to change the show concept to fit the 21st century I could be the next Bill Gates. Also I could win the lottery if I buy a ticket. Personally I think that winning the lottery is better odds.
As for the sharing concept with the crafty types, the garden types and the extreme outdoor barbeque types has been a dismal failure at the AWFS show in Las Vegas. (Association of Woodworking & Finishing Suppliers) The inclusion of the crafty types created too much useless traffic in the woodworking halls. Everyone (Organizers, vendors and attendees) was screaming about the inclusion of the crafty types. The home and garden halls were a ghost town and were only there once. The Barbeque folks are tolerated because they are cooking outside in the parking lot.
The AWFS show has changed to be aimed at the very large shop owner and wood manufacturing companies. The little blokes like you and I don't really get a lot of benefit from the AWFS Fair. I generally go on the first day, accost vendors and get information about their products. In simple terms, educate myself. Besides, SWMBO loves to go to Las Vegas.
I guess the real message is: "Don't put your retirement savings into the purchase of the woodworking show business."