Netooku Otoko no Tanoshii Isekai Boueki (WN)

Episode 52: Dewstores smell like anti-cotton

"Hi, I'm going to let you shop here from today, it's called Zillow. Best regards,"

Early in the morning, I greeted the store owners next door who were preparing to open the store, and store number one opened (open) in my different world (I mean, I've never even done a store in Japan).

Now it's still the only one, but there's as much to sell, and depending on the situation, I'm thinking about increasing it with the second and third stores. Well, there would be limits to saying that I would make money from an outdoor store, and not if I really wanted to make money doing this (I'm sure the inquiry industry would make more money), but you kind of admired having your own store.

The store itself is a little overwhelmed by the fact that it opened (opened), and it's really a simple outdoor shop with a table in the corner of the market, cross laying and arranging products. The table and all that, Rebecca has been purchasing for me and dating me today because I'm "worried".

I don't usually experience selling on the inside of a stall, and what a heartbeat. Feeling festive or turning to the running side of the festival......

Do you feel like running a mock shop at a school festival, if you like? You just resell what you bought in Japan?

Products sold on the market have been newly purchased in Japan since yesterday's flea market (free market) ended. Sometimes there is a steady tender for the products that I serve to Netook, and I have made a few thoughtful purchases.

I dare say, a product that seems to have a lower profit margin than the yarn sold at the flea market.

- In a state of scarcity of funds like now, even if it's really somewhat dangerous, I guess it's better to bring something more gutsy and lucrative... I don't know.

But that's probably too bad noticeable. Even the amateur knife I made turned out to be 10 gold coins, so if you really had something from Japan that was going to be gold, it wouldn't be impossible to have 1000 gold coins in a month. However, it is likely that it would be dangerous to bring and sell such a lucrative product from Hoi Hoi Japan at once.

A young man with an elf that sprinkles pieces of rare, incredible items that he has never seen on a special offer......

In the first place, I'm noticeable at the time I'm taking the elf (although saving it seems like no one realizes Deanna is a slave because of the tattoo), and I'm not sure I can stand out any more weirdly.

So that kind of big mouth business, if you can make a trustworthy rich acquaintance, you just have to do it with that kind of person.

You don't have to rush to get rich at all. You've already got more than half of what you want.

So on the market, it was decided to make the main product, which is not evil noticeable, but to the extent that it is profitable there.

The story goes back to yesterday.

When I opened up at the flea market, I lined up the yarn I bought in bulk at the 100 yen store a few days ago.

Last time, it sold out in an instant, and these materials seem to make it easier to get rid of the source, so I thought, "This is an easy product to sell" and purchased it.

Even if I say yarn and a bite, I don't know if I would call it acrylic or strictly yarn from 100% hair (wool), but there are also cotton (cotton), hemp (linen), and silk yarn (silk).

In the market, I am thinking about doing it as a store selling yarn in general. I bought it at the 100 yen store this time, only 100% hair (wool).

It was decided to offer the price at 30 el per ball (equivalent to 4,500 yen).

Last time I sold acrylic ones for 10 el and hair (wool) ones for 30 el, just a little strong.

If you sell all 50 balls, that's it, worth 225,000 yen. If that's all you can make in a day (and at the flea market), you can say it's breaking money.

Ha ha. It's too lucrative and horrible to see what happens when you start shopping in the market...

But when I opened the lid, the yarn was hard to sell.

No, I can sell it, but I can "sell it to fly and sell it out only in the morning! Ugh, I'm gonna eat the eel from noon!" That's why I couldn't. Sometimes, a wealthy lady says, "Nmah! You're cheap," to the extent of buying 3 or 4 balls.

I'm saying it's cheap, and I don't suppose pricing is bad, and I'm not sure what caused it not to sell. Last time, the first lady to come bought it all up......

Oh, well, we simply don't have this wide demand. It's not a necessity, and there's nothing you can do without the skill of knitting if you buy yarn.

But from the people who knit, I definitely want cheap yarn. That's just it.

But then, it also matches my desire to make money in plain sight, so I can say it's the result. There are many wealthy ladies who seem to buy yarn, and they will buy it regularly if they grab it as a fixed customer.

If we grow those customers as "royal customers," we can say that our business at Eliche is on track as well.

- - Royal customers are customers like "fans" in soft terms and "believers" of the brand if you say it in a tight way......

Buy it regularly, tell me it has to be here, and they will recommend products around. Royalty is the English royalty [loyalty] (often written as royalty, apart from [royalty] which means copyright), meaning "loyalty" ….

Well, by the time we get there, prospects - customers - repeaters - royal customers - and, well, we'll have to go through the stages, but once you become a royal customer, you'll contribute to sales in a stable manner, and do your best to favor the store.

Use Japanese-style customer service to reach 1000 customers!

About noon ago, I asked the lady who bought me 8 balls of yarn about the actual demand for yarn.

Apparently, the knitting technique itself is basically the only inheritance from mother to child, so fewer people do it than in the past (just because there are a certain number of vocational knitters (knitters), they are not completely obsolete), and the yarn of the material is higher -

So, I'm glad that the yarn I sell is cheap but a little inferior in terms of quality, I was told in a modest way.

It's good for everyday use, but to use it as a gift or something, it's a little...

Yeah...... Yeah?

... was cheap in that direction? Even the 100-yen shop from Earth is of good quality, and this quality makes it cheap! I thought you meant...

I mean, it's cheap to sell for 4,500 yen, but the quality is a little bit, the quality is good. How expensive are the yarns and the yarns bought and sold here...?

When I asked the lady, she replied, "I wonder if it's about 150 el."

TAKEEEEEEE!

22,500 yen! Just one ball of yarn!

Make a muffler, but how many balls do you need? Soaring is not a level that costs less than 100,000 yen to make a muffler!

Uh-huh. If not much yarn is a luxury material, does that make it necessary to change it?

To be honest, I want to make money selling a bang, but it's not good to make too much money.

If this is how you make money, is it safe? I also feel that, in Japan, would it feel like an outsider lad is bringing some yarn of vicuña (a camelid animal that is said to be a jewel of fiber or something) for sale on the side of the road?

I shouldn't do this.

I'd like to go a little more kossoli if possible. Even for 4,500 yen a ball, I thought it was too bold...

For example, if you bring good yarn from Japan and sell 50 for 100 el, which is cheaper than the market, that's five gold coins. 750,000 yen in just one day. That's a level where it's not strange to be targeted by a robber. As things stand, it's unlikely we can counter robberies and opposition if they target us, and whatever the city where the gendarmerie is, there's nothing we can do about it if they attack us across the road to the mansion.

Because it's too lucrative, I stopped selling paper, and I'm worried about something else.

- - Because of the circumstances, my shop on the market became a "sewing supplies specialist", a shop that deals relatively inexpensively with sewing and embroidery threads, cotton and hemp yarn (which I call yarn even in materials other than hair, which is very manifold), buttons, and fabric (...) as the main product. I also arranged just a few handicraft items.

Prices are set at about 70% of the market by researching local prices.

Wool-based yarn was also placed, but this was priced to an extent slightly cheaper than the market, to the extent that only small quantities were handled. Instead, I want to keep track of only good customers with everything of good quality.

The reason I changed the main product to fabric is because the yarn was unexpectedly expensive - there are other things I would like to do with the fabric main anyway. At least for a while.

Later, it was a flea market sale yesterday, but ended up selling about 20 yarns.

Still, 30 El's sold 30 at a time and 900 El. It was 135,000 yen in Japanese yen, so nothing is wrong.

I let the customers who bought it know where the market was opening, so if it worked out, they would be repeaters.

For the record, there is "hemp (linen)" in cheap materials in Japan.

When I hear hemp, I tend to associate hemp bags filled with coffee beans, and I have a strong image of cheap materials, but when I actually try to buy hemp stuff at a handicraft supply store, it's something that's so expensive and surprising. Cotton is much cheaper than blah blah blah.

With that situation, I was worried about whether to put the hemp product down, but I also thought it was unnatural that there was no hemp product at all, and I kept it all together for once.

Well, you don't have to sell it, it's a kind of camouflage.

◇ ◆ ◆ ◆ ◇

On the first day of opening (opening) an outdoor store in the market, my selection of products showed good sales.

After all, few people wanted yarn (although it was arranged in a corner), and the fabric - in short, the cloth - was always in demand for more than a certain amount, or about half if they realized it.

Referring to it as an opening sale, customers who bought it will receive this Mathi Needle Set! I was wondering if it would have been a good idea to do something like that.

... Oh, my God, I really know why.

All the cloths sold in this corner are handwoven. Plus its pre-woven yarn, hand spinning.

What I brought you was a mechanically spinning yarn, a cloth made of mechanical weaving.

The fineness of the eyes, the good touch and the suppleness are incomparable.

The net story, when it comes to which cloth is more valuable in Japan, is the more hand-woven one looks like an asshole in comparison. Something I've heard a lot about "organic cotton" lately could be in this category.

The hand-woven ones are coarse in weaving, and the fabric itself is thick and coarse. But, in a good way, even though the "texture" is good, it's a favorite thing for the good guy.

"Is it good to sell such a good product at such a low price," or "Where is it from? Hey, where's this coming from?" Some customers asked, "but consistently said," It's just a story here, it's a specialty in the elves... You had a bit of a twat and you were able to make a special contract... "he explained, lowering his voice.

Deanna looked like she had something to say again, but since Deanna's presence is a source of persuasion, I want you to forgive her husband's mouth.

Though I suppressed the price, at about 2pm, it sold 80% of the time, so I decided to withdraw it, buy ingredients, go home to the mansion and eat my maid's hand cooking.

The market closes a lot early, so closing at 14: 00 is never early.

If you're going to want a constant sale like this, you might as well just open it in the morning. That way I can make a lot of time in the afternoon, and I fished products for netocks, put them on the market, and played with Deanna and Marina. You want to practice horses and swords.

First day sales, 1680 el.

Convert to JPY…, 252,000 yen.

I found myself making a little too much money along the way, and I was offering one suggestion to my customers.

"If it is a used garment, fabric or yarn to a good extent, we will also accept the withdrawal," he said.

Now you might be able to get quality products from different worlds.

Either way, the used clothes and clothes are just fine because I was going to buy them. From the point of view of efficiency, you can make a lot of money and buy a new cloth or clothes, but when the destination is Netook, "Hand woven cotton cloth, new" and "Vintage cotton cloth, beauty (or dead stock)," the winning bid price is often the same.

Well, withdrawal is only a consistent service (I do well in the men's clothing store, I take down the suit! like). In fact, it won't be that much for those who want to take it down, and if it does, you just have to go for a little discount if it's of low quality, and you just have to feel as lucky when the good stuff comes.

All the suppliers of this product are large local handicraft supply stores, and there is not a single item in the 100-yen shop.

Naturally, the purchase value was not comparable to buying it in a 100 yen shop. For example, in the case of 100% cotton (cotton) cloth with white blanks, it feels like 110 cm wide and 60 yen with 10 cm long. 600 yen for a meter long, 6000 yen for 10 meters long. "Cloth is so expensive..." it's even more amazing now.

But I bought it.

It was expensive, but "because we sell it properly as a business in the market......" and I was excited.

In Eliche, the colors related to Le Baraca, or "red, blue, white and green", were popular colors, so these were 30 meters (backlash) at a time.

The truth is, I wanted to put in some velvet that seems to be very popular in different worlds (although I only imagine it)......

Sometimes it was simply expensive (more than 2,000 yen at 1m) and couldn't be bought in large quantities, and when it comes to selling it, it seems like it would be better after a little more position in the market.

The cloth was sold in meters.

I brought my mother's cutting scissors that were in the house and lightly thought, "I wish I could cut a scar with this one," etc., but in reality there was no way Zub's amateur could have done it, such as cutting a good 110 cm wide straight with scissors.

Still, when I tried it out of my mind, it became more and more oblique, completely straightforward and disgraceful.

After we all practiced, the unexpected dexterity allowed Marina to do it best, so I appointed Marina as a cutting clerk. But "I don't want you to touch the Turks." There were a lot of customers out there.

Eventually I practiced (I wasted cloth there) and managed to respond by cutting straight.

The price was lost quote, put out at 1m 10el.

Because the purchase value is 600 yen and the sales value is 1,500 yen, it would be a realistic place. Given the way the yarn is made, it's a real tunnel.

Well, don't say "lose and get" for a long time... I didn't hurt anything.

No, it's about 70% of the market value at this price, so maybe it's a store that's damaged from a citizen's perspective.

Well, anyway, there was such a frivolity, but the cloth sold 80% anyway. The fact that white and red are popular and green unpopular doesn't make me feel connected to reality.

Now, if we are to sell at this pace in the future, we will definitely run out of money in Japan. We need to do more and more product fishing for netocks.

If you save some money over here, you can buy items like pure gold statues and gold accessories. Then it's easy to redeem money in Japan (if you hit a gold purchasing center, it'll be a pretty good amount), so it might be a good idea to even make money over here until you reach that amount...

It might even be more realistic that way than just Netook.

Back at the mansion, Olica said, "Welcome home, sir!" He welcomed me.

... What is this, a man's dream? A maid of honor will welcome you.

But there's only one thing missing. But I got it right, I got it!

And, besides, give the maid clothes to Orica.

This classic style is old-fashioned but dark blue long piece with even a white apron. It didn't come with a headdress, so I bought it separately on purpose.

If you get dressed, that's Peach Origin.

There's an elf in the mansion... there's a dark elf... there's even a maid... we all ate dinner and stuff...

What are you gonna do, what am I gonna do, what am I gonna do with this inspiration?

... In the meantime, I took a photo.