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March 10, 2012
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So, you've got your comic all finished, printed, and ready to sell. You've spent years going to comic conventions as a fan and now you're ready to be on the other side of the table, peddling your wares on your way to fame and fortune. Chances are you've got a table in the Small Press section (or Artist Alley, depending on the show,) your book and your banner. Now what?

My first comic convention was Heroescon in Charlotte, NC. We had a Small Press table way in the back of the hall and we were ready to sell, sell, SELL! We did that for a few years with a book called GravyBoy and did fairly well. I think we sold 100 books one year at that show — for an indie book in the back of a convention, that's phenomenal.

However, we made our share of mistakes as we climbed the convention learning curve and witnessed others wrestling with their own peculiar brand of foibles. So how can you sell hundreds of books at conventions?

I really have no idea, we only did it that once (well, twice counting SDCC, but that's another world entirely) and there were many more shows where we sold 50, 25 — or none — and came away tired with boxes full of books.

Well, maybe it's not completely true to say I have no idea. GravyBoy has (if I do say so myself) a good hook. It was easy to sell because the pitch intrigued people. So I know that you need 1) a good hook (or pitch) and 2) a good story to back it up.

So, let's assume you have the comic version of Citizen Kane and you're sure people are going to be reading it well after your death. That is, if only you could get them to buy it. How do you rise above the din and stand out among so many other independent creators?

Okay, NOW I have no idea. But I can help you not become the bane of artist alley as you try to figure it out for yourself.

1) DON'T BE A USED CAR SALESMAN

I was at a show once where the guy next to me came in acting like he was in between shifts at Willy's Used Cars and selling watches on the corner of Broadway and 44th. The comic book community is small, and if you stick with it any length of time you're going to keep running into the same creators over and over. So, try not to annoy the guys and girls who end up being your convention neighbors.

This particular creator's tactic was as follows

- Make eye contact with everyone walking down the aisle, even if they're nowhere near his table.

- Start yelling his sales pitch well before they reach his table.

- Pitch his book to people who walk up to my table.

- Keep laying on the used car dealer talk as they walk away.

The last one is what began to wear on me since people wanted to simply get away from him as fast as possible, which meant they were not stopping at anyone else's tables, including mine.

Also, in the middle of all this he kept calling me "Bri-guy."

Look, I get it. I know you've got to get people's attention. But even when I walk around the convention halls now I have a tendency to keep my eye out for the used car salesmans and avoid their aisles altogether. Don't be that guy.

2) DON'T HAVE A LOUD CONTEST/ MUSIC/ SHOUT/ SING OR DISPLAY YOUR MUSICAL PROWESS

Yes, you're very talented. Thanks for sharing it with us.

People out on the show floor with booths can get away with a lot of noise. Back in the tables, however, it overpowers everything else and the other artists will give you the evil eye as they collectively try to light your head on fire with their stares.

We did a contest when we first started and it was loud. To everyone that was within earshot of it, I'm sorry. Please don't set my head on fire.

I guess ultimately what I'm trying to say here is be considerate of those around you.  Try to be personable, give the pitch to those who are interested, and avoid gimmicks.  If your book is good you won't need them and in the long run it's better to build solid relationships with those in the trenches with you.  Don't try to drown everyone else out.


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:iconsurfaceart:
~SURFACEART Mar 20, 2012  Professional Artist
good sound advice, I unfortunately have some friends that I worked on a series with who are the "salesmen" type...not overly loud but nonetheless agressive. I tend to only react when someone actually approaches my table and looks at my stuff...and then grett them casually and see where it goes from there....
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:icongravyboy:
~gravyboy Mar 22, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
Same here. Casual is the way to go.
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:iconmechangel2002:
=mechangel2002 Mar 10, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
SDCC 2006, you guys did great - you sold books to my friend Matt, which is how I ended up recognizing Gravyboy here on DA and getting to know you on here :D
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:icongravyboy:
~gravyboy Mar 10, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
That was our first time at SDCC. It spoiled me. I've never done as well there since. :D
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:iconmechangel2002:
=mechangel2002 Mar 10, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
Haha mannnn the only show I've done on that scale, sales sucked so bad across the board for everyone. Everyone in our aisle slashed prices but nothing was moving. I do pretty good at ECCC though.
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:icongravyboy:
~gravyboy Mar 12, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
I was in AA in SDCC last year and sales were horrible.
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:iconmechangel2002:
=mechangel2002 Mar 12, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
I did NYCC this past fall thinking it'd be really good.... big show.... at least reasonable sales compared to when I do mid-level shows.... it was a nightmare. I made $426, came home with the prints I'd spent $200 restocking for the show, and in the end the trip had cost me $1500 :( And that was without a hotel - we'd gotten an apartment rental since we'd be there a week, and the owner canceled it on us with just over a month til the trip. So we (my fiance and I) crashed on the couches of a friend in Brooklyn and took a 90 minute train ride to and from Manhattan every day lol.
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:icongravyboy:
~gravyboy Mar 12, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
Conventions are largely a crap shoot(Unless you're Adam Hughes.) I'm convinced there's some psychological thing going on that determines where people stop to buy and what they notice. Table/aisle setup, traffic flow etc.

I just haven't been able to figure out what the pattern is.
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:iconmechangel2002:
=mechangel2002 Mar 12, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
Yeah.... even weirder it was the first time I had an actual convention banner behind me. I used to have my Supergirl print as a minibanner with my name on it that I propped up on the table. But its from 2008 so I used last year's jungle girl (which proved as popular in my prints) as the big banner. People are drawn to it but they just weren't buying.

At NYCC, I had pro colourists with prints across from me in the aisle and we all slashed our prints to $5 each but still no takers. And we all agreed that having AA stuck in the back of a separate hall from the main comics exhibitors AND behind the video game section hurt everyone in AA. It was not a good show for any of us lol. There was hardly any traffic compared to the absolute CRUSH of the main hall (it took me 20 minutes to reach the DC booth).
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:icongravyboy:
~gravyboy Mar 13, 2012  Professional Traditional Artist
Oh yeah, I forgot they changed that. The year before last was the first year they did it. Weird.
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