Using eBay

eBay allows the nonprofit beneficiaries using their ABC 15 day temporary
 license to sell wine online which would extend the Pop-Up live sales.  They 
have also incorporated another way of purchasing products--Best Offer-- which 
reflects the way the live silent auction will be run i.e., Name Your Price.  Best 
Offer allows quantities of the same wine to be offered, and permit bidders to 
avoid having to return repeatedly to the review the status of bids.  It must be 
used with Buy it Now which could be set at suggested retail or slightly below. 

Click on LEARN MORE link below for the eBay Giving Works.  Click on this link 

to learn more about eBay's wine sales policy.

Helping people support great causes
Through eBay Giving Works you can support the causes that matter most - to you - by buying and selling on eBay. We help nonprofits connect to over 145 million eBay community members to raise money.
Over$
500
,
000
,
000
raised to date

The History of eBay Giving Works

Integrated into eBay's regular buying and selling platform, eBay Giving Works makes it easy for people to support important causes, both in the U.S. and abroad. It enables sellers to donate a portion of their sales and buyers to shop while supporting their favorite charities — all the while giving nonprofits an opportunity to engage new supporters.

PayPal Giving Fund, eBay's nonprofit partner

  • Paypal Giving Fund + eBay Logo
At eBay, we think it's a whole lot easier to do good in the world when you have someone to help you out. We've teamed up with PayPal Giving Fund, to certify nonprofits for participation in eBay Giving Works and process the millions of dollars in donations given every year through the program.
Any nonprofit that wishes to be part of eBay Giving Works is screened by PayPal Giving Fund. The screening process includes:
  • Reviewing each nonprofit's mission statement to confirm that they do not promote hate, violence or illegal activity
  • Checking all nonprofits against an international database to confirm they are not connected to any terrorist groups
  • Verifying that organizations who apply are, and remain, in good standing with the IRS (any nonprofits that lose their tax-deductible status are removed from the eBay Giving Works program).
Thanks to operating support from PayPal, 100% of every donation processed by PayPal Giving Fund reaches the donor's chosen nonprofit organization. And because PayPal Giving Fund is a nonprofit itself, 100% of your donation amount is tax deductible to the extent allowed by law.

For more info on the sale of wine on eBay go to:
http://pages.ebay.com/help/policies/alcohol.html#additional 

Why a Pop Up?

Why You Should Launch a Pop Up Store
 by Chris Lake

A growing trend in the past few years has been that of the pop-up store. They often appear out of nowhere on our high streets and in shopping malls before vanishing into the ether.

Pop-up stores are popular with artists and designers, who create temporary boutiques and galleries, but they’ve also been used by big name brands such as Levis, Adidas and Nike, as well as retailers like Target, JC Penney, and Gap.

Pop-ups have also been set up by various online pureplays, such as lastminute.com and The Foundry. For these companies it is about experiential marketing, as much as anything, but they can also be used as sales channels.

I see a real opportunity here for more online brands to go multichannel, at least temporarily, by launching a pop-up store. If I worked for a pureplay retailer or travel firm I’d be seriously lobbying for a pop-up (or several).

So here are my 14 reasons for investing in a pop-up store:

1. Brand. Pop-ups allow you to extend your brand into the offline world, helping to put a face (or faces) to your online brand name. There is also scope to grow brand awareness among people who might not otherwise know about it.

2. Sales. You don’t have to sell anything, but you can if you want to. Some pop-ups are geared up to drive sales and can benefit from scarcity (of time / products) to drive demand. You can sell offline in the store itself or online, by allowing shoppers to access your website from within the store. Help them with walkthroughs and suggestions. Multichannel personal shopping FTW.

3. Buzz. Pop-ups can generate heaps of buzz from the crowd and the media. It’s the nature of the beast: the fact that they’re here today and (possibly) gone tomorrow means that there’s a short window of opportunity for people to talk about what you’re doing. By interacting with shoppers face-to-face you encourage them to talk about it to their friends and colleagues, and spread the noise via Twitter / Facebook etc. It makes for rapid - and relatively controlled - viral activity.

4. PR. The media loves to write about this kind of thing. The chances are that your competitors haven’t yet launched a pop-up so why not do it first? You should be able to attract journalists to visit and / or write about the store. It’s a good chance to network with the media, so don’t forget to send those invitations to your launch party!

5. SEO. Buzz and PR = links. Go figure.

6. Love your customers. Pop-ups allow you to get up close and personal with your customers. Make them feel special. Think about giveaways, goodie bags, competitions and special offers (all useful for your pre-launch marketing efforts). Your customers will love you for it, and it gives them a reason to visit the new store.

7. Get more from your viral marketing budget. The next time you think about spending a five-figure sum on the creation of a viral video, game or competition, consider what else you could be doing with that budget. Viral games and videos are oversaturated and most require a seeding budget, on top of the creative costs. Bloggers are swamped with ‘feel free to post this’ requests. It sucks. So it might be better to take that budget and do something special with it. If you want to go viral, then try a pop-up store.

8. Low rents. The fallout from the recession is that many retail outlets are now vacant. Rental rates have fallen dramatically and landlords are more open to short-term projects / leases. The commercial real estate sector is begging you
to launch a pop-Investing in a pop-up society

The Ping! London initiative scattered 100 ping pong tables across London this summer

Public and charitable bodies are starting to realise the potential of short-term space projects to develop community cohesion and regenerate areas. Sean Lightbown   explores 


Take CompARTment in Brighton. It is a non-profit collective of artists, photographers and others involved in crafts, and aims to transform empty spaces in the local area into places of interest.
“Pop-ups allows business regeneration. But for us, there must be some kind of social benefit.” 
Public authorities have also backed Ping! London, a project designed to get a million more people playing table tennis before the 2012 Olympics. To do this, 100 ping-pong tables have been placed across London this summer, as well as a pop-up café called the Ping Pong Parlour. The project will extend to other cities in the UK, coming back to London in time for the Games.

The emergence of these projects, supported by public and charities, suggests that there is a market for developing community spaces with mainly cultural intentions. But why pop-up?

Looking through the coalition government’s agenda offers clues. “It’s all very Big Society,” said Eddie Bridgeman, director of Meanwhile Space, a community interest company that organises constructive uses for temporarily redundant spaces. 
“It’s good to fill empty spaces and get small businesses on their feet.” 
“Pop-ups offer people the chance to try something different, raise their profile and try their own thing. It also allows business regeneration. But for us, there must be some kind of social benefit.”

This is also the case for Manchester City Council, which saw backing NOISELAB as a way to educate people and rejuvenate the city centre. “We support it in order for people to gain experience in the creative industries,” said spokeswoman Clare Donnelly. “It’s good to fill empty spaces and get small businesses on their feet.”


The local area can ride on the wave of a successful pop-up, as the CompARTment project gram demonstrates.

“Our space is next to the market, so the traders there are happy because having a colourful facility adjacent means that more people will browse the stalls. Derelict spaces are quite off-putting,” said Nic Blair, co-founder of the project. “People are more likely to come back too, and we try to promote other stores in the area through our work.” 
“The result [of using a social space] is that people are discovering the fun of table tennis and want to play more.” 
Creating a social atmosphere for pop-ups also helps. This is something that Ping! London has done, by running tournaments and quiz nights alongside table tennis at the Ping Pong Parlour.

“Public engagement and active involvement of everyone was the main aim of Ping”, said Hannah Schmidt, spokeswoman for Ping! London. “The result [of using a social space] is that people are discovering the fun of table tennis and want to play more.”

The short life span of a pop-up encourages people to spare time for it. “The temporary nature of our project means people are more willing to help out,” says Blair. “Artists, photographers and the like can come down, do their bit and then leave. A permanent space is less transient.” 
"It’s not about getting people in, but getting them to think differently" 
Temporariness can also add novelty. For Bridgeman, this taps into a person’s ingrained natural curiosity towards new things, and can be vital for pop-ups to attract attention. Meanwhile Space’s current job, The Seaside Project, epitomises this, aiming to promote the British seaside to a creative, urban audience
Test the multichannel-flavored water. In the next decade I reckon we’ll see lots more online brands open up high street / offline stores. Launching a pop-up store is effectively placing your big toe into the water to see how warm it is.

Top 10 Reasons to Start a Pop-up Shop

First, what is a pop-up shop? Is it the person at the mall at a tiny kiosk spraying you with awful smelling perfume? No, it is not! A pop-up shop can be defined as any short-term retail space either selling a product or promoting a brand.
Pop-up shops are quick, eye-catching and fun.
1. Cross-channel selling works. According to Forrester.com, “By 2016 44% of offline retail sales will be influenced by the web. Despite consumer behavior such as “showrooming” (inspecting items in person and purchasing them online), the volume of in-store sales resulting from web research — cross-channel sales — is significantly greater than that of online retail sales.” Having a quick pop-up shop can allow customers to “showroom” and visit your website to purchase merchandise.
2. Vacancy rates are double the history average. What’s with all the “For Lease” signs on Main Street? Vacancy rates are at 9.6% (www.danter.com), which is double the historical rate. Why not fill those open spaces with a pop-up shop? Add to your community and brand.
3. Get your brand seen. Starting a pop-up shop will allow you to reach an entirely new demographic of customers without the risk of opening a brick-and-mortar store.
4. Enhance the community. Cities like New York City and San Francisco are revitalizing their areas with new brands and products. This brings new customers and revenue to the community.
5. Local markets are flourishing. The number of farmers markets has quadrupled since 1994 (http://goo.gl/BbeiZ). What’s driving that force? People shopping locally! Start a pop-up store and build a better relationship with the people that shop in your area.
6. Big-box retailers are hosting pop-up shops. Storefront isn’t just for the Etsy shop owner; it’s also for big brands like JC Penny, Gap and Target. JC Penny is using a store-within-a-store model and revamping their merchandise selection by partnering with other smaller retailers. Pop-up shops offer big brands like JC Penny new market testing and a unique experience for their customer.
7. Sell limited-time inventory. Didn’t sell all of last seasons t-shirts? Starting a pop-up shop can help promote “limited-time” products. Also- try new pricing strategies. Will people pay 35$for your pot-and-pan holder? Find out!
8. Try a new business idea. Meet with potential investors, create buzz and launch your brand. Release butterflies. Make blue lemonade. Make cotton candy unicorns. Try it and see what people think!
9. Develop a more engaging retail experience. According to a projection by Jack Loechner with MediaPost, 75% of US retailers will be developing a more engaging retail environment experience. One option is pop-ups- a unique way to reach out to consumers and give them a very different view of your brand.
10. Now is the right time. Pop-ups benefit your bottom line, the community and your customers. We’ve just given you 10 excellent reasons to start a pop-up shop. What are you waiting for?

Are Pop-up Stores Here to Stay?

If old-time department stores were comprehensive, mom-and-pop store friendly and big-box always low price, what kind of message does pop-up retail whisper into the ear of today's customer?
"New, fun, something different," says Wharton marketing professor Barbara E. Kahn. "Innovation and intrigue," says pop-up leasing agent Christina Norsig, CEO/founder of PopUpInsider. Adds Wharton marketing professor Stephen J. Hoch:It's about trying to "get people there all at the same time to create additional excitement, because it's a pop-up, and it's not going to be there much longer."
As a concept, many industry experts say pop-up is here to stay, because it strikes both business owners and customers as a cure for the sense of retail ennui that has permeated the industry since the start of the recession.
Pop-up has several distinct manifestations, but the basic format is that a retailer looking to sell something with a short shelf life, launch a brand or build awareness opens a storefront for a few days or weeks. Displays are put up, product is stocked, business is conducted and buzz created -- and then it's gone.
A classic example of the genre showed up this month on Philadelphia's Walnut Street, the city's high-end retail spine. Vancouver-based online custom menswear retailer Indochino brought in sample swaths of seersucker and charcoal wool plaids, set up curtained booths and let loose a small army of genial sales associates and tailors. In a space left vacant years ago by Sharper Image but directly across the street from a bustling Brooks Brothers, young men and "fit specialists" together chose fabrics, lapel width and button placement while conferring about style preferences. The whole staging -- which Indochino has also taken toNew York, Boston and Washington, D.C. -- is designed to last just a few days. Four weeks after the fitting,
Sartorial splendor arrives in a box from Shanghai.
"People know we're just going to be here a short time, so there's a sense of urgency," says senior fit specialist Beth Watson. Walk-ins were welcome, but dozens booked appointments online for each day of the two and a half-week visit. At between $379 and $699 per suit -- generally cheaper than custom-made suits at a bricks-and-mortar store -- it all added up to some serious business. Meanwhile, those who miss the pop-up store can take a web tutorial and measure themselves. Says Watson: "Guys "Guys don't always like to go shopping, but they are increasingly comfortable [doing it] online, so once we have your measurements, you're al lset."
Scaring Up Sales Beyond Halloween
Superhero costumes and rubber witch masks are what many shoppers associate with pop-up because of the rash of temporary stores that arrive from late summer to just after Halloween. But pop-up began earlier, in London and Tokyo, before spreading to the U.S. mostly as a seasonal phenomenon. The sector is still green -- so much so that it's not yet tracked as a distinct sub-genre of retail.
The online publication Specialty Retail Report estimates the temporary retail sector as an $8 billion a year industry, although that figure includes not only pop-ups but also kiosks and shopping-mall carts. Research IBIS World found 2,380 pop-up shops in the U.S. in 2012, (68.1% of which were Halloween-themed), from 2,043 three years earlier.
But many say those numbers aren't capturing all of the activity, which now includes stores within stores such as the ones established by eyewear sensation Warby Parker. "Any brand you can think of is in a pop-up or temporary store," says Erik Eliason, co-founder of Storefront, a San Francisco-based startup that matches pop-up retail projects with landlords willing to rent out a space for a short period.
Halloween stores were followed by other, more diverse, pop-ups that filled the vacuum left after large chain bankruptcies and closings. "There's just a lot of inventory still out there," says Hoch, referring to excess retail space. "All construction has stopped; there hasn't been a major mall built in 10 years. We're malled out, but there is still plenty of real estate out there. Either it can sit empty or you can try to do something with it. A landlord would rather make two months' rent on a space than no rent."
One of the first big forays into pop-ups came not from one of the smaller, more nimble retailers, but from a behemoth. Well before the recession, in 2002, Target opened a Christmas store at the Chelsea Piers on the on the Hudson in New York. The temporary store received huge publicity and fired the imagination of other retailers who began to imagine pop ups in other sites never before exploited for their marketplace potential.
As Norsig wrote in her book, Pop-Up Retail: How You Can Master this Global Marketing Phenomenon: "If a pier by the river could work, how about a penthouse? A subway station? A parking space?"
Target has since done 20 pop-ups, mostly in the U.S. "As pop-ups have become increasingly popular, Target continually looks for ways to reinvent this concept with unique twists to ensure each experience feels unique and specialfor our guests," says a Target spokeswoman. After that, pop-ups began popping up all over -- shoe and computer companies, airlines, makeup manufacturers. American chef Thomas Keller brought a French Laundry pop-up to Harrods in London for 10 days in 2011, offering nine courses for £250 ($400).
Kahn likens the phenomenon to the psychology of luxury brands, in which an element beyond the product itself becomes a form of currency. "If too many people wear it, it's not a luxury anymore," she says. "There's a paradox if you sell too much ofsomething. Perhaps that is some of what's going on. It's a way to make it exclusive and special because of the time period."
Pop-ups have divergent business goals. They can be a good way to test a product, dip a toe in a particular location without a long-term lease, make a splash with a brand introduction in a new region, lighten overstocked product through a focused seasonal offering, or establish brand awareness during a special event such as a street festival.
Opera Companies and Orchestras
Non-profits have grabbed hold of the concept, with horticulturalsocieties turning plots of rubble into gardens for a growing season, and opera companies and orchestras engineering pop-up performances in train stations and public markets. These flash performances are typically edited into video pieces used to expand the organization's footprint beyond the regular constituency via social media.
What's in it for landlords? "It's actually very simple," says Peter Eizen, one of the owners of 1518 Walnut St., the Philadelphia building used this month by Indochino. "Most of these companies have a budget, and they come to you and say, 'This is what we can pay,' and you either say OK or no thank you. In this case, they are not paying market rate, but as a landlord, it's a good way to get something out of nothing."
"We've seen all kinds of arrangements," adds Eliason. "Some [landlords] take a flat fee; others take a percentage of the rent. Less common is a percentage ofsales, since we're still in the early days of temporary retail, and typically stores don't have the systems built for tracking sales."
The idea has evolved from stopgap to being a bona fide genre that many say is now helping to bridge the treacherous chasm between the worlds of online and bricks-and-mortar retail. Wharton marketing professor David Bell points to the promise of models like Bonobos, in which clothing customers do a certain amount of perusing and research online, but then come into a shop for the other part of the experience, like touching various materials and getting fitted.
"I think the idea of having a big, enormous four-story building where people come in and take something away is changing," says Bell. "It's a fundamentally inefficient system in some sense. It's very difficult from an inventory standpoint to make sure you have everything everyone needs all the time. People are just not searching for products the way they were 20 years ago. There is an awareness that everyone needs to be both offline and online.”
Many are sufficiently convinced of the symbiotic relationship between e-commerce and bricks and mortar to begin seeking new modes of interplay. Allison Berliner, who graduated with a Wharton MBA this month, has watched customers walk into a store, handle a piece of merchandise -- and then go home and order it online from someone else. The practice, called "showrooming," is an obviously troubling development for bricks and mortar retailers who don't also have an online presence. But Berliner and fellow student Shannon Pierce developed a business plan for the Pop Shop, a system that matches retailers and customers by featuring merchandise online and placing it in stores within stores. The Pop Shop, Berliner says, is essentially an online answer to the consignment shop with considerably more sophisticated bells and whistles.
"The balance of power is shifting," notes Berliner. "It seems to us that bricks and mortar is not going away, but its role is changing. If a store can't address those needs, or if online can't address them, neither is going to thrive." Berliner sees the Pop Shop as a matchmaker. Online brands register with the Pop Shop platform with information on their products and target customer. The Pop Shop recommends pre-existing stores in its network. The brand sets up a display, with product, in the store, along with promotional material that can be used to track sales. The display stays up for a short time, perhaps a month.
The proposal won a grant from the Wharton Fund for Innovation, and the Pop Shop will be testing its concepts as it pitches the idea to investors. Revenues are collected from participating brands and commissions from sales. Berliner envisions an opportunity to scale the concept across a broad spectrum, from smaller retailers who may not have the money to invest in online, to "Nordstrom, which is rethinking the in-store experience. If we can get really good at what we do, become really good at matching [brands with stores], there's no reason it wouldn't work for them."
"I really like what she's doing," says Wharton's Bell of the Pop Shop. "Entrepreneurs who are primarily ecommerce who get retailers into a physicalspace as a way to interact -- I think that's an idea that has some legs. Both parties have something to gain from this. You have a space that's not being used in the best

Administrative Regulations


OPTION I

FROM THE INDUSTRY ADVISORY ISSUED BY THE ABC CONCERNING THIRD PARTY PROVIDERS ON OCTOBER 11, 2011


The Department believes that licensees and Third Party Providers can form business relationships that facilitate lawful transactions for sales of alcoholic beverages over the Internet. Accordingly, the Department now issues the following advisory guidelines to assist licensees and unlicensed Third Party Providers in complying with California law:

For the purposes of this advisory, the term “Third Party Provider” refers to unlicensed entities that are involved with the promotion, marketing, and facilitation of sales of alcoholic beverages by licensees over the Internet. 

Third Party Providers are involved in one or more of the steps in the transfer of title of an alcoholic beverage from a licensee to a consumer, such as placement of advertising, making recommendations to consumers, directing consumers to licensees, receiving orders and passing them on to licensees, processing payments, and assisting with shipping arrangements.

Given that only licensees may engage in activities for which a license is required, all sales transactions involving Third Party Providers must ultimately be conducted by and under the control of a licensee.  This includes decisions concerning the selection of alcoholic beverages to advertise or offer for sale, the pricing of those beverages, and the ultimate acceptance and fulfillment of the sales transaction.

A licensee working with a Third Party Provider is ultimately responsible for any activities undertaken by the Third Party Provider on the licensee’s behalf.  Orders for alcoholic beverages solicited by licensees utilizing Third Party Providers must be transmitted by the Third Party Provider to the licensee involved.  The licensee responsible for the sale must be clearly identified and must ultimately control the transaction, including any decisions concerning  acceptance or rejection of such orders.  Licensees must also be responsible for,  and must control, the fulfillment of orders and the shipment of alcoholic beverages from the licensees’ licensed premises or other authorized shipping point (such as a licensed public warehouse).

The control of funds from a transaction involving the sale of alcoholic beverages constitutes a significant degree of control over a licensed business. As such, while a Third Party Provider may act as an agent for the licensee in the collection of funds (such as receiving credit card information and securing payment authorization), the full amount collected must be handled in a manner that gives the licensee control over the ultimate distribution of funds.  This means that the Third Party Provider cannot independently collect the funds, retain its fee, and pass the balance on to the licensee.  The Third Party Provider should pass all funds collected from the consumer to the licensee conducting the sale, and that licensee should thereafter pay the Third Party Provider for October 2011  services rendered.

Alternatively, the parties may utilize an escrow account, or similar instrument, that disburses the funds upon the instructions of the licensee.  So, for example, a Third Party Provider may accept consumer credit card information, debit the card, deposit the funds in an account under the licensee’s ultimate control, and, upon the licensee’s acceptance of the order and direction to the account holder, receive a fee from the account.  Given the nature of Internet transactions, the Department recognizes that such collection, acceptance, and disbursement of funds will often times be accomplished solely through computer-generated means.

OPTION II

The California Alcoholic Beverage Control Code sections 
affecting sale of wines for off site consumption:

24045.6.  (a) The department may issue a special temporary
on sale or off-sale wine license to any nonprofit corporation that is exempt from payment of income taxes under Section 23701d or 23701e of the Revenue and Taxation Code and Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. An applicant for this license shall accompany the application with a fee of one hundred dollars ($100).
   (b) This special license shall only entitle the licensee to sell
wine bought by, or donated to, the licensee to a consumer and to any
person holding a license authorizing the sale of wine.

Notwithstanding any other provision of this division, a licensee may
donate or sell wine to a nonprofit corporation that obtains a special
temporary on-sale or off-sale license under this section....

   (c) This special license shall be for a period not exceeding 15
days. In the event the license under this section is issued for a
period exceeding two days, it shall be used solely for retail sales
in conjunction with an identifiable fundraising event sponsored or
conducted by the licensee and all bottles of wine sold under this
license shall bear a label prominently identifying the event. Only
three special licenses authorized by this section shall be issued to
any corporation in a calendar year.

25503.9.  (a) Nothing in this division prohibits a winegrower or a
beer and wine wholesaler that also holds an off-sale beer and wine
retail license and only sells wine from giving or selling wine, a
beer manufacturer from giving or selling beer, a distilled spirits
manufacturer or a distilled spirits manufacturer's agent from giving
or selling distilled spirits, or an importer general licensee from
giving or selling beer, wine, or distilled spirits at prices other
than those contained in schedules filed with the department, to any
of the following:
   (1) A nonprofit charitable corporation or association exempt from
payment of income taxes under the provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code of the United States and Chapter 4 (commencing with Section
23701) of Part 11 of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code

The cost of the permit for temporary sales of wine by a non profit  is $100 and is valid for 15 days


Winetasting rules are set by the California Code of Regulations~Business

DIVISION 1. DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL
ARTICLE 9. SAMPLES

  § 53. Samples Used in Winetastings.  

A winetasting is a presentation of samples of one or more wines, representing one or more wineries or industry labels, to a group of consumers for the purpose of acquainting the tasters with the characteristics of the wine or wines tasted.

(g)(2) A [non profit] organization holding a temporary wine license may accept donations, charge admissions, and otherwise make charges for wine to be served at a winetasting, and may advertise such events, which may be open to the public. A winegrower or California winegrower's agent may give wine to such a temporary licensee only if such temporary licensee is a nonprofit corporation or association exempt from the payment of income taxes under the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 of the United States.

See also
24045.18.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this division, a
beer and wine wholesaler that also holds an off-sale beer and wine retail license and only sells wine may assist a nonprofit organization holding a temporary wine license in conducting a winetasting. The privilege granted under this section for a beer and wine wholesaler that also holds an off-sale beer and wine retail license and only sells wine shall apply only to wine produced for the donating licensee that is labeled with a brand owned exclusively by the donating licensee and shall include in the tasting only wine donated by the licensee to the event..