How My Simple Flower Farm stand brought in $125k A Year

Profitable Farm Stand Bouquets

Over 13 years of farming, I’m not going to say I’ve done it all, but I certainly have sold to every type of customer out there. Farmers markets, which were never my cup of tea (great for getting your name out there, but for most of us, the cost/benefit doesn’t pan out in the long term). Sales to florists and small wholesalers (such a great way to move more product, but tricky for a tiny farm in California where all the huge flower farms are able to produce and sell cheaper - oh the ole ‘economy of scale!’). CSA’s, deliveries, workshops, and weddings - lots and lots of weddings.

But my humble little shack of a farm stand turned out to the the best, more gratifying, and by far most profitable thing I’d ever done with my farm. I shrunk my farm down, grew only about ten crops, worked a really minimal schedule, and was able to build to $125k in sales through the stand alone. On about half an acre.

Flower Farmstand
 

I did it by:

  • Diving in deep and not letting any detail slide

  • Devoting all my resources to it (though the business continued to bring in another $120k or so through other flower sales)

  • Believing in slow and steady growth

  • Investing in targeted marketing

  • Being strategic with my pricing

  • Employing master design schools

  • …and being lazer focused on margins

To learn my specific tips and strategies, download my Farm Stand Tips guide.

Sales started at a trickle, but I built the following slowly, hosted a few ‘farm stand parties’ to spread the word, and made more and more street signs that begged people to turn off the main drag to stop and shop. There were some ups and downs, like when the huge old oak that we specifically build the stand under had to be cut down so it didn’t fall down. That was a hot summer for the stand flowers, who downright withered.

But the real magic happened when I moved the stand to a new, better location. My lease on one field had ended so I had to move anyways, and I knew there wouldn’t be enough traffic at my new field itself. So I drew a circle on a map and posted it on Instagram, and asked if anyone had a lead on a ‘shady spot with a pull out on a busy road’. And guess what - that very day a friend of a friend of a friend sent me a DM, saying “This is weird, you described our house and drew a circle around it. Let’s talk.”

And the rest was history. My stand was hyper efficient for me and my team. In the later years we sold an average of 15 bouquets a day, for $35 each, for 35 weeks, on the honor system, accepting Venmo and cash in a safe. The bouquets were gorgeous, and they had about 8 - 10 stems. I fiercely marked up each flower 3x from its wholesale (to florist) sales price. It took us 30 seconds on average to make a bouquet and we didn’t have to stick to complicated recipes.

And the stand was magic. The honor system is downright charming, and I made sure that the stand was cute and inviting and unexpected and had just enough decoration and just enough information for those who wanted to learn more.

Check out all the love we got. It still warms my heart. Now that we’ve moved the farm to Oregon and are essentially starting over, we’ll eventually rebuild. It just might look a little different.

And the follow-up story for another day: I was able to sell the farm stand business and recoup some of the hard earned sweat and money we put into it over the years. A win-win.

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