Richard wrote:Good feedback Perry -- you were certainly someone I hoped would offer some thoughts. A lot of what you've said is what I was thinking about initially when developing the site. I'd say it's certainly not intended to be a magic solution but rather part of the mix for luthiers who are already doing the right things.
I've spent a lot of time on the sites you listed and many others over the past couple of years. For the most part I see cluttered, outdated and confusing sites that don't really offer anything by way of a user experience. While the directory is one component of the site and has indeed been previously with limited success, the core offering to luthiers -- the ability to put together a fully indexed/categorised portfolio -- I think is a unique one with merit.
A sales section may happen down the track. I left that idea out early on because I think it's been done before (though again, not terribly successfully) and would dilute the core idea with bells and whistles that exist for the sake of it.
Thanks Wayne too -- and thanks to the handful of folks that have signed up. Can't wait to see some guitars other than mine on there!
I would say that sales may lead to issues. EG: a guitar is listed up, forgotten about, sold off the web, and it sits there... for sale... for a long time. That not only hurts the luthier "Why cant he sell a guitar?? Must be something wrong with it!", but makes your site look like it isnt the fresh and respectable portal it could be. Not to mention what would happen if you brokered a deal that couldnt go through.
However, that doesn't mean you can't offer a premium service, above and beyond the free service, which generates an income. That could be by giving paying members a priority on searches, listing them on the front page, blogging about their stuff, or allowing them the ability to post and share more stuff. Maybe premium members get videos included, or a higher quality of photo (or simply more of)... email links... social media plugins... more 'words' to discuss their stuff, etc etc etc etc etc. There a numerous ways to do it, but you need to work with what your comfort levels are.
Then, you'll attract a larger type of business (or maybe "serious" is a better word than "larger"), which is searched for more often, and will increase your traffic, which in turn drives more people to the luthiers, which in turn encourages them to upgrade, etc etc.