Each month in the Longarm League membership, we discuss a topic relevant to longarm quilting and business. This month, we are bringing to the forefront various organizations and resources that exist to help small business owners. These are organizations that may offer business consulting, webinars and other online courses, and in some cases mentorship.Â
The Small Business Development Center (SBDC) provides free business consulting and at-cost or low-cost training to small businesses, entrepreneurs, and nonprofit organizations. The SBDC has been around since 1975, but its services have evolved over time as technology has changed the way people do business today. As a result of COVID, webinars, Zoom calls, and other online learning platforms have revolutionized the way we are able to learn regardless of our locale.
We chatted with Rebecca Mixson of the SBDC with the University of Georgia. Rebecca is a business consultant who works with business owners in all stages of businessâ...
The first question I'm going to ask is: Are you making it easy for quilters to hire you for longarm quilting services? What might be holding them back? How can we overcome objections to hiring you?
I recently asked my Instagram audience from my @threadedquilting account: If you're a quilter who has never hired a longarm quilter, why not?
I left the question open-ended and collected responses for the 24 hours the Instagram Story was live. I got some interesting responses!
The top reason given was that the quilter wanted to do it all themselves from start to finish. I was actually surprised that this reason ended up being the top response! But I also understand this thinking. Personally, I fall within the same category. I've never hired a longarm quilter because I have always really liked the quilting process myself and wouldn't want to "outsource" my favorite part!
The remaining reasons for not hiring a longarm quilter were varied but fell into another nine categories.
This is where I want...
I was so honored to be a guest on Elizabeth Chappell's podcast called Craft to Career. Listen to the episode here.
Maybe this makes me a monster, but I really liked this episode! Am I allowed to say that allowed without sounding braggy? There was a time where it made me really uncomfortable to hear a recording of my own voice, but I guess I'm over that now that I'm 40. đ I really liked the questions Elizabeth asked and how the conversation flowed.
As she mentioned in the episode, we met each other at QuiltCon in Austin, Texas, in February of 2020âright before the world shut down. At that point, I knew that we had memberships in common, so I immediately struck up a conversation. I had just started mine not quite 6 months prior and I was obsessed with trying to improve and grow the Longarm League (still am!). She had started the Quilters Candy digital membership by then, too, and so we quickly found ourselves comparing and contrasting our offerings, at one point trying to find a quiet...
You have a longarm quilting business and someone asks you to make them a t-shirt quilt. What do you say?!Â
Maybe you love tshirt quilts? Maybe you hate them. đŹ Feelings aside (but really, I would never tell you to put your feelings aside), does it make financial sense to add this service to your menu of offerings as a longarm quilting business?
Custom quilts or custom quilting can mean different things in different contexts. For the sake of this conversation, I mean "custom" in a start-to-finish way with specific materials (t-shirts) provided by the client. Custom here does not refer to a specialized kind of layout or that areas of longarm quilting are specific to certain areas of the quilt. Â
IÂ asked Longarm League member Kristen Lee of Mashe Modern for her perspective. Watch a clip from our call in the video player above.
Early on, when her hobby was just starting to morph into a business, Kristen made custom quilts for people. Then,...
'Business Builders' are members that have already started their longarm quilting business but are looking for ways to optimize their systems or grow their client base.
On the third Wednesday of each month, our Business Builders meet for a Group Call. We meet via Zoom so that it's interactive, but then we also record the calls so that anyone who is unable to attend the live meeting can watch later. Anyone who joins the Longarm League at the Business Builder level can access our whole library of previously published lessons and recorded calls.Â
Today was our one year anniversary of adding the Group Call feature. In the last year, we've covered the following topics:
We'd love to share a little bit about how we support longarm quilters through education and community. Updates typically go out on Wednesdays - we'd love to stay in touch with you!