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SELLING RECIPES BY MAIL


During the past few years, a number of very enterprising housewives (and a few Men!) have established very successful businesses selling recipes by mail.

The idea is very basic. You create a new recipe and then you advertise it in the classified section of a magazine or newspaper which is read primarily by housewives. You advertise your favorite recipe for a dollar, and some dealers also request a self-addressed, stamped envelope. When you receive orders in the mail you mail them a typewritten copy of your recipe. Or a Xerox copy. Even handwritten copies are permissible, if the handwriting is very legible. Along with your recipe you include a list of additional recipes which you have for sale. The list should tie in with your original offer.

Let us imagine that you have advertised a secret recipe for Danish Butter Cookies. Your list should include other cookie recipes, as well as Danish recipes. If your customer bakes your Danish Butter Cookies and likes them, she will be in a good frame of mind to purchase more recipes from YOU!

In researching this article, I combed through the classified sections of dozens of magazines studying recipe ads. Here is a partial list of recipes that were being sold by mail:

Four Fabulous Christmas Cookies
Delicious Frosted Brownies
Red Velvet Christmas Cake
Old Fashioned Nut Roll
Greek Donuts with Warm Honey
Cinnamon and Sesame Cookies
Aunt Sarah's Original Turkey Goulash Delicious Coconut Cake
Italian Gravy
Texas Longhorn Bar-B-Que Sauce
Sparkling Burgundy (French Wine Recipes) Chocolate French Mint Pie
Quick Punch
Sugar Free Fudge
Homemade Cheese
Unique Plum Pudding
Twenty German Recipes
Russian Tea
High Protein Diet Candy
Italian Candies
Grandma's Old Fashioned Bread
Polish Recipes
Grandma's Fantastic Mocha Cream Cake Chocolate Pie (Superb Crust, Filling, Topping!) Hungarian Green Bean Soup
Molasses Donuts
Effortless, Bakeless Fruitcake
Vegetarian Recipes (Swedish Meatballs, Cottage Cheese Meat Loaf) Delicious Ambrosia Cake
Fantastic Frosting
Man Pleasing Chili
Sour Dough Starter Bread & Pancakes Wine - Australian Style (Authentic, simple - no yeast) Famous Pastry Shop Cheesecake
Sugarless Diet Desserts
Light Moist Coconut Cake
German Christmas Cake
Coldwater Dill Pickles
Old Testament Scripture Cake
Easy Delicious Cherry Cobbler
Beer Cake
Holiday Honey Balls
etc.

You will notice a lot of REGIONAL and NATIONAL recipes. If you collect recipes from a specific country, say Finland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, etc., they would probably sell very well. Also recipes from New England, the Deep South, or some other special area would do well. Also notice the number of recipes that contain words like DELICIOUS, TEMPTING, AND EASY! Further, recipes which are sugarless, or which feature Vegetarian specialties would seem to do very well.

Many housewives pay a great deal of attention to HOLIDAY recipes. If you can time your ad so that it appears about thirty days before Valentine's Day, St. Patricks Day, Easter, Mother's Day, the Fourth of July, Father's Day, Halloween, Thanksgiving, or Christmas . . . you will do very well selling Holiday recipes.

WHERE DO YOU FIND RECIPES?

Start by selling your own recipes. Ask your friends if they have recipes that you can use. Often they will be delighted to help you! Or you can go to the library and search through OLD newspapers and magazines. When you find recipes that look promising, go home and experiment with them. WRITE THEM IN YOUR OWN WORDS . . . otherwise you would be violating copyright laws.

To get an idea of what kind of recipes are currently being sold, it would be advisable to study the recipe section on the classified pages of the National Enquirer for several weeks. (Their advertising rates are sky-high, but they sell about four million copies of the magazine every week. I notice some ads in every week, and they couldn't continue unless they were getting stacks of orders!).

Below is a list of other publications which carry recipe sections in their classified pages. The list is by no means exhaustive. If you will write to these publications and tell them you are interested in selling recipes by mail, they will send you sample copies and their rate charts.

Capper's, 616 Jefferson, Topeka, KS 66607 (Small town farm paper)

National Enquirer, P.O. Box 10178, Clearwater, FL 34617 (Sold mostly to lower and middle income housewives)

Texas Farmer Stockman, 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, FL 32887 (A good way to reach rural housewives)

The Workbasket, 4251 Pennsylvania Ave., Kansas City, MO 64111-9990 (Many housewives ready this one!)

Progressive Farmer, 2100 Lakeshore Dr., Birmingham, AL 35209 (Large farm circulation)

Grit, 208 W. 3rd St., Williamsport, PA 17701

CLOSING THOUGHT
Give your customer their money's worth and you will be in business for many years to come! Good luck to you!


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Last Updated on January 29, 2000
A Richard Foxworth Publication
Copyright © 1997 all rights reserved!


Disclaimer And Product Information - The text documents contained herein and found on InfoCentral.com were compiled from different sources, representing many different viewpoints. There are no warranties expressed, and no claims of content Accuracy or other leagal issues implied. The information is "as-is".