Job Recruitment Website - Property management - I want to set up a stall in the community, but I'm new here and I don't know what to do.

I want to set up a stall in the community, but I'm new here and I don't know what to do.

The first point: watch the weather and discuss with the management office whether it can be taken and how much it costs. Time charges may be different in different communities and stalls. You can find someone else to partner, you can be the acting partner of your own team, and you can also find someone who needs to set up a stall.

The second point is the product we prepared. If the roads we observe are close to residential areas, and many of them are women, we can set up stalls to sell some decorations such as shoes, socks and jewelry, which are relatively easy to sell. Selling sandals in summer and warm shoes in winter is easy to make money. If the observation group often brings some daily necessities home, everyone can also set up stalls to sell daily necessities, which are also very easy to sell, because it is usually not easy to get daily necessities if you go to the supermarket to buy them. If everyone sets up stalls to sell them, you can walk a lot less, and it is still easier to sell and make money.

The more fully prepared, the better the result will be. Be sure to consult in advance, and you can explore slowly when you encounter difficulties. I think it's really possible to go out and push for an hour in the community every day and walk around the community with a cart to see what the effect is. If there is any way, you can really try more. Only by doing this can you know what suits you best, and you should get on well with the staff of the management office.

Finally, there are several types of street stalls: next to subway and bus stations, under overpasses, around universities, subway tunnels, outside large residential areas, outside vegetable markets and supermarkets, around squares, pedestrian streets, shopping malls and playgrounds, and so on. Each location corresponds to different consumer groups, and each environment also determines the consumer's stay time before the stall. Residence time before stall is the key word. The objective environment of stall shopping is noisy. Some comprehensive large-scale practice booths are better and consumers are relatively concentrated. However, most consumers in subway aisles or overpasses are in a hurry, mostly impulsive consumers. Most of them suddenly want to buy after seeing the goods.