Start smaller: Any local business can be your incubator

Are you starting a business that could use retail space, but you can’t justify renting a storefront? Find a tiny space inside another business that can be your incubator. Who could display This can work for all kinds of physical-display businesses: Artists Crafts Authors Resellers Photographers Shelf stable foods and beverages Small manufacturers Agri-products like […]

Clothing displayed on one wall, with a salon in the back.

Are you starting a business that could use retail space, but you can’t justify renting a storefront? Find a tiny space inside another business that can be your incubator.

Who could display

This can work for all kinds of physical-display businesses:

  • Artists
  • Crafts
  • Authors
  • Resellers
  • Photographers
  • Shelf stable foods and beverages
  • Small manufacturers
  • Agri-products like beeswax candles or goat milk skin care

Who could host

And any kind of bricks and mortar business could host:

  • Retail stores
  • Lodging
  • Coffee shops and restaurants
  • Services like insurance or legal offices
  • Cultural spaces like museums

The host business doesn’t have to be related to the pop-up. In fact, when they’re not related, both sides benefit from exposure to both sets of customers.

Many small town businesses struggle to keep enough merchandise on display to make the store feel full and vibrant. Adding a pop-up business can help fill out the interior.

Together, you’re creating an experience for your customers that they can’t get anywhere else.

See also: How do you get merchants to host pop-ups inside their business?

Start with one wall, one shelf, one square foot of retail space. Here are some pictures to inspire your creativity.

Photography in a clothing store

photography in shared space in Gowrie Iowa

It’s tough for retail stores to fill the space  near the ceiling, and any empty space makes a small town business look sparse. Solution: local photography display. Photo by Deb Brown

 

One square-foot retail

Beauty salons are natural business incubators. Salons always have other little businesses growing inside them because they have great foot traffic. This is an opportunity to do more with the same amount of space.

Probably the smallest pop-up I’ve seen is this stack of headbands, crafted by a local high school senior raising money for her mission trip. It fit into one square foot of the retail counter.

headbands for sale on a counter in a beauty salon

You don’t need much to start small. Even one square foot of space may be enough. Photo by Becky McCray.

 

The One Wall Bookstore

I love the one-wall bookstore idea! How many times have people said your town is too small for a bookstore? You’re not too small for anything if it only needs one wall!

Inside courtyard

One wall of shelves made a flexible pop-up space inside The Village shops in Washington, Iowa. Photo by Cathy Lloyd

 

A building of tiny shops

Besides the one-wall kids’ bookshop, this building is divided into many different small retail shops.

A wall of books outside two small retail gallery spaces

Another one-wall bookstore, this time for kids books. Photo courtesy of Walker Mercantile, Woodward, Oklahoma

 

Local art and photography

Every local business (retail, service, office…) needs art on their walls. Every local artist needs to get in front of new customers. Put those together, and you have an amazingly easy local art project.

Coffee shop with local art displayed on the walls

Coffee shop Gathering Grounds displays local art on the walls in Avon, Minnesota. Photo by Deb Brown

 

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