Quote:
Originally Posted by PeachyKeen
I going to be breeding probably in the next 2-3 years and I have ideas for names, logo, community let outs. Would be awesome if I could message someone, who's familiar with the breeding business, about the ideas I have and how to go about them. Multiple people is fine I just don't know where to start or wait or what. I have been learning about breeding of course, I just need help with the business side of it.
I have kik, skype, and other forms of communication.
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I helped Mike Fedzen albinomilksnake.com username: kingpinreptiles on faunaclassifieds.com set up his site back when we were just teenagers talking on AIM 12-15 years ago. I remember when he was keeping ringnecks and some other REALLY off the wall stuff back then. He managed to turn it into a full fledged business. He actually contacted me about a year ago after we had been out of contact for a long while which was kind of neat.
I'll actually be entering the same foray next spring after my snakes breed for the first time. For me, it seems like a culmination of years in the hobby, but I'll only be doing this as a hobby. The money from the breeding might go to a new cage for Ricky or something but I'm hardly gonna be in the green on either of these animals and I'm OK with that.
If you're just gonna be a hobbyist level breeder you probably don't need a logo or anything like that. Just a few posts on facebook and faunaclassifieds every now and then aught to clear you out to start depending on what you are breeding.
If you want to make a living from it your going to have to prioritize things a little differently than you might think.
1. Proper accounting and costing: 9/10 restaurants fail in the first year, most of them fail because they have no idea what their costs are. Literally anything can be costed, for example you can estimate heating element cost per month, water changes if you have city water, new enclosures etc. Find out what your true costs are and how to mitigate them without it affecting the level of care you offer your snakes.
2. Proper shipping procedures/record keeping/customer service: One bad review can seriously injure a new business, this is especially true when you are considering the shipment of live reptiles because many people are nervous about it even now when we buy so much stuff offline, therefor shipping procedures are right up there. In regards to record keeping, I think it is REALLY awesome when a breeder can pull up lineage information months or years after I've purchased an animal from a breeder sometimes the original parents just come from x-breeder but if you have holdbacks and such this can become important in the future. That record keeping will also help you if you include who it was sold to, when, for how much, etc. That same record keeping will come to use if someone ever does post a negative report.
3. Care of your snakes, breeding selection: I say this under the assumption that you are going to be keeping snakes, snakes are easy to care for. If you have a manageable collection keeping them all taken care of shouldn't be that hard. Just look at them and change water bowls for the most part. If you can't handle that then your collection is too large for where your business is at.
A consideration: If your dream is to be a pro breeder I would consider the first few years of it to be a part time 2nd job in addition to your regular job. As an aside, I would go be an accountant, if I was 18 and doing it all again that's what I'd do. Salary to buy reptiles and the busy time of the year for them is during hibernation season so it kind of makes sense.
Logos, business names all that stuff is way down the list. Look back at Mike that I mentioned to start. He won best new breeder from ReptileReport.com a few years ago and he was using an old freewebs site and has a successful business he makes a living from. Most breeders don't end up like the BHB dude, for most it's just a passion based side-hustle plan on that being the reality.