Search our extensive article database


  Sitemap


  Current News

  Browse our free library of complete articles

Hiring for Your Craft Show Business

The nature of your craft show business and your budget will
determine whether or not you need others to help you with any
aspect of your craft show business. Needless to say, the
success of your crafts at craft shows will also have a
considerable effect on whether or not you will need to hire
employees.

On the "free" end, you can get help from friends and family to
produce your crafts and help with any business aspects. A tax
benefit for "hiring" your children under 18 is that you don't
have to pay social security or medicare taxes if your business
is a sole proprietorship or partnership owned solely by you and
your spouse.

Next, you can find students or apprentices to work on your
crafts for free, or at least inexpensively. Contractors, who you
would just use on occasion when you need extra help, would be
the next level. You also may have friends who want to pick up a
little extra pocket change working on your crafts from home can
do some production work for you. A bookkeeper who comes in once
a month to balance your checkbook and enter your income and
expenses is a contractor, and you don't have to deal with taxes.
Check with the IRS or your accountant to be clear about the
difference between independent contractors and employees.

If you feel you need employees as your craft show business
grows, you should consult an accountant or the Small Business
Administration for all the regulations. These might involve
registering with the Department of Labor, applying for Worker's
Compensation insurance and securing an employee identification
number (EIN) from your state and national government offices.
You'll need to apply for an EIN from the IRS anyway if you're
using a business name different from your own. When you use your
own name as your business name and you have no employees, your
social security number will suffice. You might also want to
check with your bank, because they may require an EIN to open a
business account, even if it's in your own name.

Finally, consider which professionals you'll want to have in
your line-up of support. An accountant and lawyer are good to
have at least to call when issues come up. Many crafters have a
good photographer they use for promotional photos and slides of
their work. Quality slides can make the difference in getting
accepted to juried craft fairs. You may also occasionally need
the services of a graphic designer to create brochures, hangtags
or other marketing materials and a PR person if you want to take
out ads or run press releases. All of your decisions concerning
using other people to help you succeed are based on your needs,
your own abilities and your budget. Everyone needs to make these
choices for themselves.

About the author:
Natalie Goyette shows you how to make your craft show
business profitable in her best selling ebook:
Craft Show Success Secrets. Visit her site:
http://www.craftshowsuccess.com




Written by: Natalie Goyette



eTopSites 2DCS.Com Best Coin

Health

Net Flix Civil War Mega Coins Cards Hypnosis
AUTOS CREDIT Coin Auction

WALK

TRAVEL Jim Crane Music Television ProSiteHits
Currency Best Thrift Honest Post Real Estate POKER Horse Racing eCoup.Com Movies USA
Software Click Bank Natural Cures e-Coin.WS e-Coin.US e-Coin.Org Don't Know Web Hosting Images
eTrends eZeitgeist Easy English Silver Dollars TeenaSpace Free Coins iTube FreeGold Coin Prices
Baseball Vitamins Awesome7 SavOnCoin Text Links LED Badges Free Deals Free IKEs Rich Dad
O.C. Health Legal Forms Fishing Cooking Golf Parents Pixel Ads Gaming Law Info
Crane Family EZ Webs Trains Harness Dom Financial Silver Eagles Free Money Cancer Hoodia
Gold Dealer Fishing Gear Horses Lawn Cards Free Legal 2T2 The Book Treasures Horse Gear Ingles Facil

Morgan Dollars

Gold Buffalos Ad Search Heart Disease Gold Coins Mesothelioma Key Words Google Words Toys
MMORPG Mixed Martial Arts Coin TV SEO Tools Kennedy Half PR Inspector NumisPrices Peak Oil Yerbamate

© 1992-2008 DC2NET™, Inc. All Rights Reserved