One of the biggest mistakes vendors make at markets is focusing only on the sale happening right now.
Yes, today’s sales matter. But the vendors who steadily grow their handmade businesses over time understand something important:
The real value of an event often happens after the market ends.
Every person who visits your booth is a potential future customer — but if they walk away without following you, joining your email list, or remembering your business name, there’s a good chance they may never find you again.
The good news? Building a customer list at events doesn’t have to feel awkward, aggressive, or salesy.
The Biggest Mistake Vendors Make With Social Media at Markets
Many vendors assume:
“If people like my products, they’ll follow me.”
Unfortunately, most customers don’t.
Not because they dislike your work — but because markets are overwhelming. Shoppers are seeing dozens (sometimes hundreds) of booths in a single day.
By the time they get home:
- they forget business names,
- lose business cards,
- forget which booth had what,
- or simply get distracted.
That’s why hoping customers “look you up later” usually doesn’t work.
The vendors who grow consistently make following them easy and immediate.
Instagram Followers Don’t Equal Sales
A large follower count looks impressive, but followers alone don’t guarantee income.
Many handmade businesses have thousands of followers but struggle with actual customer retention.
What matters more is:
- having engaged local customers,
- collecting email addresses,
- and building repeat buyers who actually show up at events.
An email list is often far more valuable than social media followers because:
- you control it,
- algorithms don’t hide your posts,
- and customers are easier to reach directly.
Social media helps people discover you.
Email helps customers remember you.
You need both.
Simple Ways to Collect Emails at Events Without Feeling Pushy
The best approach is to make signing up feel helpful — not forced.
Avoid:
- “Join my email list!”
- “Follow me!”
- “Scan this QR code!”
Instead, focus on why customers would want to stay connected.
Examples:
- “Want early access to holiday launches?”
- “We announce new collections by email first.”
- “Join our list for market schedules and seasonal releases.”
- “Our email subscribers get first dibs on limited items.”
This changes the interaction from:
“Help my business grow”
to:
“Here’s something useful for you.”
That’s a huge difference.
QR Codes, Giveaways & Sign-Up Sheets: What Actually Works
Some methods work far better than others at busy outdoor events.
QR Codes
QR codes work best when:
- they’re large and visible,
- customers can scan quickly,
- and the destination is simple.
Don’t send people to a complicated website homepage.
Instead, link directly to:
- an email signup form
- a giveaway entry page
- or a simple landing page
And test the QR code before the event. Every time.
Giveaways
Giveaways remain one of the easiest ways to collect emails naturally.
Simple prize ideas:
- a gift basket,
- a free candle,
- a market shopping credit,
- or a seasonal product bundle.
The key is keeping entry simple:
- name,
- email,
- optional phone number.
That’s it.
Avoid giant forms nobody wants to fill out while standing in the heat or wind.
Old-Fashioned Sign-Up Sheets Still Work
Especially at outdoor markets.
Technology fails.
Internet signals get weak.
Phones die.
A clipboard and pen are still incredibly effective.
Some customers actually prefer writing their email quickly instead of scanning codes.
The best vendors usually offer both options.
How Handmade Businesses Can Build a Customer List in One Weekend
Building a customer list doesn’t require huge events or viral social media.
It requires consistency.
If 20 people join your list at each market:
- that’s 200 people after 10 events,
- 500 after a busy season,
- and potentially hundreds of repeat customers over time.
Those are people already interested in what you make.
That’s incredibly valuable.
Some vendors overlook this because collecting emails doesn’t feel as exciting as making immediate sales — but long-term business growth often comes from the relationships you continue building between events.
Make It Easy to Stay Connected
One of the smartest things vendors can do is create multiple ways for customers to reconnect later.
Good booths often include:
- a visible Instagram sign,
- a QR code,
- business cards,
- a signup sheet,
- packaging with social handles,
- and clear branding customers remember.
Because the truth is:
most shoppers want to support handmade businesses.
They just need an easy way to find you again.
The Goal Isn’t Just Followers — It’s Relationships
The vendors who succeed long-term usually aren’t the ones chasing vanity metrics.
They’re building communities.
They stay connected with customers between events.
They create anticipation for new launches.
They remind shoppers where they’ll be next.
And they make customers feel like part of the journey.
That’s what turns casual market shoppers into loyal repeat buyers.

