Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Some days it just doesn’t pay

Day346
Yesterday I started working on my Spring Break 2007 line and was really moving along adding products to my Back to School section. (Which I may have to rename to be more generic college now that I think about it. If anyone has an idea for a name for that section, feel free to leave a comment.)

Anyway, all of a sudden I couldn’t upload and then CaféPress’s site went down. I did other online things for the rest of the night, but although the site was up this morning, I still couldn’t upload. I was out most of today and evening, but it is no better tonight.

From the forums I learned CafePress suffered a DOS attack. According to Webopedia this is: Short for denial-of-service attack, a type of attack on a network that is designed to bring the network to its knees by flooding it with useless traffic.

It’s really messed things up and pretty much killed productivity for a couple million shopkeepers.

This is definitely not one of the joys of online store ownership!

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Thursday, November 30, 2006

Getting back into the swing of it.

Day327
I’m still trying to get caught up from being out of town for 5 days. (Actually, who am I kidding? I wasn’t caught up before I left!)

But, I have 2 newspaper articles to write, one I just finished and I had about 550 forum posts to read, expired ads to re-submit or renew, a couple more custom designs to add to my store, a couple more sales to celebrate (!) my AdWords to monitor,(it’s up to $4.27 so far!) And I’ve only made a dent in my emails.

So it goes…

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Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Long days

Day280
After about 10 hours on the computer today – I’ve done a little bit of everything!

I am determined to get my inboxes on my 4 email accounts down to zero! So much reading! And every 3 or 4 things I read seem to require me to do something suggested.

On one newsletter I get weekly the editor offered mentioning any shops people have in time for Christmas so long as we are both newsletter subscribers and forum members. I’m both, so I sent her a link to my store.

On the CafePress forum I saw an offer from another shop owner to put links on his shop. So I sent him an email too.

I’ve been looking around the Blog Traffic School forum and finally made myself ask the question, “Does my blog really need titles?” I got the answer I was afraid of – yes! It’s good for SEO. So as you can see I am on day 280 and now have to go back and figure out a title for each post!

Then I added another design to my store and cleaned up some sections.

The work of an online shop owner never ends!

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Sunday, June 11, 2006

pxl vision interview

Day162

http://www.cafepress.com/pxlvision?PID=4370506 is one of Randy’s sites.

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

I was always drawn to having my own t-shirt line. I thought it would be great as a test to see if my designs were good enough for retail. With the ease of CafePress.com it made it all the easier to start up too. I have been in the graphic design field for 6-7 years, so that obviously helped to make my own designs rather than pay someone to do them for me.

2. When did you open your store?

I opened my store, Fluo, on November 2005

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

The marketing. Oh boy is it harder than what I thought. Anyone can have a site, but it takes something more, something special to keep him or her there and or buying something.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

Not just having my designs on shirts and such, but also customizing the shop to my liking and showing that I am not just limited to simple little designs.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

How hard the marketing is.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you've tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn't?

Well I am using myspace.com for advertising and it has gone great. I have met people that I wouldn't have if I saw them on the street. And from that I also am starting to collaborate with bands to push my designs as well. Featuring shirts on the artists and sponsoring events. It has all worked really well.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

I also have another CafePress shop, it is HDP Tees at http://www.cafepress.com/hdptees?PID=4370506 for adult humor and just funny tees that don't fit in with my Fluo line. There is also a Fluo blog as well http://thefluo.blogspot.com/. And I also do freelance graphic design at pxl-vision.com (site under construction).

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Saturday, June 10, 2006

Baby Bird Productions interview

Day161
Today we are talking to Barbara about her online store.
Her site is called Children's Clothing, Stories and Family Gifts from Baby Bird Productions, and can be seen here: http://babybirdproductions.com?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?
Over the years I've been an art teacher, children's librarian, free-lance professional storyteller and puppeteer. I've always created artwork, stories and such and I was thrilled to finally see a way that I could share them with others anywhere in the world.

2. When did you open your store?

I opened our shop in January 2005.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

Optimizing the site to the point where it could be found in Google for my search terms. It's been a very slow, uphill battle, as I'm competing with some sites that have held top spots since Internet's infancy - everyone did and still does automatically link to them making them more and more entrenched. Waiting for income while persevering through Google sandboxes and other hurdles has been tough at times.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

The fun lies in creating things, whether it's inventing stories and artwork that are the products of my own imagination, or creating and developing the shop itself, or the satisfaction of building my own business from the ground up. I began by knowing NOTHING about home computers or Internet.
There's never enough time to do everything that I want to do, but there's also a great sense of satisfaction in doing it all - as my knowledge and self-confidence have grown.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

I wish that I had gotten in on Internet when it first began - when it was faster and easier to get a site noticed. Newer sites face swelling numbers of sites to compete with, sandboxes, well-entrenched older sites with thousands of incoming links and other difficulties. Also, if you are going it alone, you really need to do your homework about search engine optimization, how to use html code, how to get backlinks, how not to get penalized by Google for doing the wrong things, etc. A good product idea alone is not enough.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you¹ve tried so far (on or offline) and what has worked and what hasn¹t?

I've tried posting on: related forums - hits but no sales; writing articles - hits but no sales that I know of; Google Adwords - a complete waste of time; Craigslist - some sales; a couple of ads on other related sites - another waste of time; a few press releases - none have gotten picked up by the media; T-shirt countdown and other sites like it - hits but no sales, which is not a surprise as my shop is for children and babies and not for the usual T-shirt crowd.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

I have a blog at http://babybirdproductions.com/blog

Nancy’s comments – I feel the same as Barbara about what seems to work and what doesn’t in marketing, although I’m not quite ready to give a few of them up yet. I think the CafePress forums should be treated as sharing information or getting affiliate interest only, we shouldn’t expect a sale from posting there, I too get a lot of hits from Craiglist, but so far none have converted into sales. It is fun to watch the statcounter after putting an ad on Craigslist though! Only one person who’s tried Adwords thought it was good (for people who sell things with not much markup) I think you would have to have a high priced item to have that be beneficial. I write a fair amount of press releases and mine have gotten picked up and I plan on trying the article route. SEO seems to be the biggest thing you have to get right and then have your site set up to entice people to buy.

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Thursday, June 08, 2006

Busy Bodies interview

Day159
I blogged about these little people on Day 152 because they are about the cutest things I’ve ever seen! Heidi was nice enough to let me interview her.

http://www.cafepress.com/busybodies?pid=4370506
http://www.ibusybodies.com

1. What drew you to opening an online store?

After learning how hard it was to sell my designs “brick and mortar” style it just became the next logical step to try selling them on the internet. Discovering CafePress by accident led me to start thinking about it more seriously. They made my idea possible.

Were you in a related field?

Yes. I’m currently an illustrator and graphic designer and went to college for graphic design. While in college, I earned money in the summers drawing and airbrushing caricatures at ValleyFair amusement park in Minnesota. After about 5 years of doing that I decided to give airbrush T-shirts a try and painted tons of shirts my last summer at ValleyFair. I learned a lot about the T-shirt business: what kinds of designs sold, what prices people were willing to pay. I later opened up my own T-shirt booth at the Dakota County fair and sold my first BusyBodies designs there, each airbrushed by hand. They were the most popular designs at my booth.

2. When did you open your store?

August 27, 2003.
The “I Golf,” “I Fish,” “I Grill,” and Bride & Groom designs were the first designs in my store.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

Marketing and time. Making my shop visible to potential customers and realizing the hundreds of hours it would take to create designs, tag them, price them, organize them, etc.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

There’s so much I enjoy, but here are my top three:
• The global market. It’s incredible that I can sell my designs across the globe.
• The People. I’m so inspired and encouraged by the people I’ve met through my store. There are a lot of great people out there and I’m honored so many of them actually spend their hard-earned money on my artwork. I’m truly grateful.
• No Day-care. The best thing is that my CafePress income is just enough to enable my husband to work only on weekends so he can care for our baby during the week. That is truly priceless.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

That my hard work would pay off eventually. It’s easy to lose motivation in the beginning, working alone in the basement on hundreds of little stick figure people, wondering if anybody will even care. Persistence pays off. Had I known it would be this successful, I would have had my store open much sooner.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

•SEO! If you don’t know about it, read about it on CafePress. The best investment of your time is Search Engine Optimization. Have things labeled properly in your store and people will find you.
•FindGift.com. I continue to use them for advertising.
•Google AdWords. Easy to set a budget with them.
•Various free online listings and paid ads on interest-specific sites (with a niche market).
•Prompt, courteous responses to people’s emails always pays off. If you want your business to spread by word of mouth, you need to take good care of your customers!
•Early on I used web rings, forums & link exchanges to get noticed, but learned that those generally don’t convert to sales. These methods seem to just get traffic from other web designers looking for traffic. And they just don’t look professional on a store, so I’ve been removing them from my site.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

I currently have four more CafePress premium stores in the works that I’m really excited about. Hopefully they can all go live in the next year. Other than that it’s just BusyBodies Stick Figure T-Shirts & Gifts. Please stop by and check it out!

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Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Atomsart interview

Day157
http://www.cafepress.com/atomsart?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

I have not got such a great job at the moment so I was hoping I could sell some of my designs to help me get a bit more money. I also really wanted to show people my abstract art and get some feedback on my work in general and having the designs on t-shirts allows me to both make profit and show my art at the same time so I thought it would be a great idea.

I have also recently decided to make some designs in a fun way with things that people would probably want to wear on a t-shirt which is a change but I have enjoyed making the new designs, they can be found here -

http://www.cafepress.com/atom_world?pid=4370506

I currently have a total of 21 designs but I enjoyed making them all so I plan to open more stores at some point.

2. When did you open your store?

I have been a member since 4/15/200. I opened my first store on that day then later updated it to have separate pages for each design. The links to the different products can be found at the top of the pages for both stores.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

For me at the moment it would definitely be selling stuff, this may be because I’m currently using the basic shops service and a lot of people say the premium service sells a lot better so I will probably be trying the free 15-day trial CafePress offers soon and see how things go.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

I like getting good feedback from people about my designs. I’m sure I will like getting money when I finally start to sell stuff, but for me good feedback from others is definitely the best thing for me.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

Probably that there is not as much interest in abstract art as I would have hoped. Through the CafePress forums I have recently learned this. Also that basic stores can be quite hard to sell stuff with, as they don’t show up in search engines very well.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

I have added keywords to all my pages and designs, submitted my site to google etc, put links to my stores and posted on forums. I currently have not gotten any sales yet, but I have gotten some good feedback from various people.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

http://www.cafepress.com/atomsart

http://www.cafepress.com/atom_signs001

http://www.cafepress.com/atom_world


Nancy’s comments – I think when he gets his premium shop, it will be much easier for customers to navigate. I did really like the Fractal Greeting cards! See if you can find them!

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Monday, June 05, 2006

Sag Art interview

Day156
Our next shop owner has quite a few sites as you will see at the end of the interview, but here is one of them:

SagArt T-Shirt Designs

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

No, I was definitely not in a related field unless you count cleaning the porn off of my son's computer field related. Once I stumbled upon the Cafepress.com site (he must of got side-tracked) I was drawn to it from the
standpoint of their marketing strategy and the "dream" they offer to chart your own course and control your destiny via your own e-commerce business.

2. When did you open your store?

I seriously dedicated myself to this wonderful adventure a little over a year ago. Prior to that, I was busy learning how to turn the computer on and fiddling with a few designs for family and friends.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

The hardest thing for me to wrestle with then and now, was/is understanding all the "techie" jargon in the "how to" part of getting a shop up and on the right road. Due to my stubborn attitude, I didn't let that hurdle stop
me and jumped in with both feet and dog-paddled my way around the pool.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

Beside the accomplished feeling of making a sale, the best thing about being an online Cafepress.com shopkeeper is the community of shopkeepers I am privileged to rub shoulders with everyday. I would have drowned had it not been for the generosity of information and help I have received along the way. For me, that is as valuable as any sale I make.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

I would describe myself as a blank sheet of paper when I started this adventure, but it would have been nice to have a bit more knowledge under my belt or at least some concept of what e-commerce entailed in that first month of startup efforts. I, like many new shopkeepers, thought that throwing a few products up on a site meant I was "open for business." I quickly found out that the process to realizing a degree of success required much more dedication and effort than I originally believed.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

Sure! I've placed ads on various sites and some have produced well, while others have not. My best tip for marketing a site is SEO'ing it to the best of your ability. Nothing takes the place of that effort or produces better results for a shopkeeper. Because I am windier than a popcorn fart, I blog and have to say that it is one of the most pleasurable and productive marketing activities that effects my sales and affiliate sales than
anything else I do.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

You may be sorry you asked! LOL
SagArt Blog
Children's T-Shirt Teacher
Happy Birthday Zone
Watch Clock Wall Clocks
Breast Cancer Awareness Shop
Wedding and Wedding Anniversary Gifts
Christmas Gift Closet
Ballet Ballerina Dancewear Shop
Funny Bumper Stickers

And I attempt to maintain the following portals that include affiliate efforts:
SagArt T-Shirt Designs
Christmas Gift Closet
Children's T-Shirt Teacher
Happy Birthday Zone
World War II Shop
Wedding And Anniversary Gifts
Democrat America
Watch Clocks (under construction - when I find the time)
Kids World
With the additional MySpace, Squidoo, and other sites I endeavor to try and maintain.

I also maintain other sites, but they are not Cafepress.com related but are an offshoot of the skills and knowledge gained through my CP adventure.

Nancy’s comments - This is like visiting the Mall of America! For someone who started with a blank sheet of paper a little over a year ago, she has really come far! I especially like how she throws in tips for using items other ways and party and decorating ideas. The sites are fun – just like their owner. Sag-Art is always one forum post I know I’ll have a good time reading!

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Sunday, June 04, 2006

3 Girls and Us interview

Day155
Today we visit with Matt at 3 Girls and Us http://www.cafepress.com/3girlsandus?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

My partner is a fashion-junkie and very creative with it. She's also always been a huge fan of the simplicity of jeans and a T-shirt. And she's always talked about opening her own boutique "one day". So when I came across CafePress a while ago it sounded like the perfect outlet and when I went home that night we signed up right away. We've got 3 daughters so decided to theme our store around baby clothes and kids clothes, with a few designs for hip moms and dads. They also inspired the name of our store - 3 Girls and Us! As for me, my real job is in the technology side of marketing and I wanted the challenge of helping my partner build an online business with minimal outgoings - trying to build it with word-of-mouth-marketing and search engine optimization.

2. When did you open your store?

We opened at the end of May 2005

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

With virtually no budget for marketing, it's tough to build volumes of traffic - but it's also the challenge that I love! Our traffic numbers have steadily increased (we broke through the 1000 page views a day yesterday!) and we're now starting to see the real benefits reflected in our monthly sales figures. If you work out the hourly rate we're on for running the store it's terrible - I in particular spend a lot of time on marketing activities. I probably spend at least an hour a day promoting the store and so it's more time intensive than I originally thought. We're in a very competitive sector - there are lots of great stores selling groovy kids clothes, but our products are selling well so we feel we're definitely up there with the others.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

The solution that CafePress offers is great - the store hosting, manufacture, customer service, payment and so on is great. I love that all we have to do is come up with the great ideas and market the store. It leaves us doing what we're both best at. And when the "You made a sale" email comes through it still brings a smile to our faces knowing that someone out there will be wearing our creations.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

We started off in the first month using standard CafePress templates. It took a while, but taking the plunge to a custom-designed template makes our store standout I think. And I guess I wish I'd known how much time it takes to drive quality traffic...but then again if I had it might have put me off opening the store in the first place!!! The effort is well worth it now though!

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

We've tried one off-line ad in a parenting magazine here in the UK (we live in the UK), but with little success. (We're looking forward to CafePress changing their international shipping model so our products are more cost effective for UK customers.)

Most of our marketing efforts are focused online at the moment. I spend a lot of time on search engine optimization (SEO) and link building. Plus contacting key sites in our market sector and asking them for reviews (I send them product samples).

We also do monthly free product give-aways (to get our products out there and encourage word-of-mouth) and a newsletter.

I tried Google AdWords in the early days, but the return on investment was too low so I cut my losses and stopped, preferring to focus on SEO to get us in the natural search results.

I've bought ad spaces on a couple of sites just to see if that works, but it's too early to say at the moment.

I also have a blog which we use to announce new products and which brings in a bit of traffic.

I've dipped a toe in the water of online PR (using prweb.com) and I'm now starting to look at writing articles to create content and submitting those to article sites with a bio and link back to our store.

In summary, if I were to say what works best so far it would have to be SEO. Oh, and the CafePress marketplace too - so I make sure I tag ALL of our designs with great keywords!

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

We have a couple of other sites:
Our blog: Baby T-shirts, Tshirts for kids, moms and dads

Affiliate site: Funny T-shirts

Nancy’s comments – I actually won one of their monthly giveaways several months ago! I got my choice and ordered a toddler “I (heart) My Daddy t-shirt which arrived in about 3 days!

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Saturday, June 03, 2006

Jazilla interview

Day154
Today we visit with JaNell Golden whose shop is:
http://www.cafepress.com/jazilla?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

I've always doodled and come up with little poems and puns, and I have a degree in Advertising Art, although you couldn't tell it from my site, which is a standard CP template.

2. When did you open your store?

Fall of 2004. I think. I had a Basic shop earlier with a different name, but that's about when JaZilla started in its current form.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

The sense of frustration during those times when you're burned out both creatively and with marketing and networking. There's also keywording; I spent several months uploading photos to a few microstock photography places prior to re-starting at CafePress this past fall, and accurate keywords are important when doing that. It's a real brain stretcher, figuring out how many different ways people from different parts of the country (and world) would search for your photo or product. It's all about the synonyms, I think, and some understanding of colloquialisms...
Then the fun part, where you research and find out which of those word are searched most often, and throw out most of your list, and try again.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

I enjoy keeping my own hours and being able to work on the front porch of my favorite coffee shop while other people labor at the cube farm. The very best part, the part that would keep me doing this even if I had a regular job, is the satisfaction of having another person think that my creative work is good enough to spend hard earned cash on. That's really the truest compliment. All your friends can praise you, your family can compliment you, but the only way you know that you've succeeded with a design is when it's compelling enough for a total stranger to buy it.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

That I could, in fact, sell this stuff! I'd not have let years go by without adding products if I'd known that. There's also the keyword issue again; I was describing the designs very succinctly, which is my preference but WRONG. Now I try to cram as many variants of a keyword or two into the descriptions and still have it make sense. Sometimes I'm burning out and the descriptions end up surreal or even nonsensical, but they've got those keywords. I occasionally even deliberately miss-spell a commonly miss-spelled keyword to catch searches that way, too. All of that I learned in the last year from reading the forums and any SEO info that I could get my eyes on.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

Google ads didn't work well for me; I tried them after eComXpo because they offered a $100 credit. I couldn't get just the right ad going to make it worth it before that credit ran out. Yahoo gave out free credit, too, but their ad building and submission process was so frustrating that I never did use it. Yahoo free classified ads are much easier to work with.

Nancy’s comments – I really liked “Iced Gold” and “Sea Blossom” – look for them and see if you don’t too!

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Friday, June 02, 2006

vaniteez interview

Day153
Just in time for the wedding season! Check out Shannon’s interview and stores: http://www.vaniteezbride.com?pid=4370506 and http://www.vaniteez.com?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

It's funny, but I saw the Wall Street Journal's front-page article on CafePress in spring 2005. I liked the CafePress business model of offering a totally outsourced solution for its shopkeepers. I work in the financial services industry, so I thought this would be a fun opportunity to apply some of the marketing skills I learned in business school but don't get to use in my day job.

2. When did you open your store?

I opened my vaniteez store in summer 2005. I'd included a bachelorette party design at the suggestion of a friend, and it became my best seller. That success inspired me to launch vaniteez bride in the fall of 2005.

3. What is harder about doing this than you thought it would be?

I wouldn't say marketing is any harder than I expected, but it certainly requires the most thought and energy.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

I love the flexibility CafePress offers. It's easy to change the layout of the shop, add new designs, and mix things up.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then
that you do now?


Don't pay for Google AdWords!

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

I've had good results with my PR strategy- especially with submitting press releases to PRWeb. I've also learned that targeting particular niches (such as weddings and bachelorette parties) is much more effective than going after a broad demographic group. And the CafePress affiliate program has been a great source of traffic for me.

Nancy’s comments – If you are too late for the next wedding you are involved in, think ahead! The wedding items would make great engagement gifts and as one of the designs says – you can always start the “year of the party.”

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Thursday, June 01, 2006

Busy Bodies shop

Day152
I love these little people! This site is so much fun to browse through! I pulled some I thought were especially cute for Father’s Day gifts, but the store has everything: weddings, graduations, sports, hobbies and occupations. Check it out at: http://www.ibusybodies.com?pid=4370506



and my favorite:

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Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Pattinson Photo interview

Day151
Today we talk to Dave who's store is at: http://www.cafepress.com/pattinsonphoto?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

I am a photographer and had been looking to setup an online store for awhile, I had used several types but came across CafePress while surfing one day and really liked the fact that they would do all the printing for me as well as the customer service.

2. When did you open your store?

I opened it up in February of 2006.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

Initially the hard part was getting it designed the way I wanted but now the hardest part is getting the word out. I feel I have some very good photographic images but I have to let people know this and to come and visit my shop.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

It’s fun to work at something and then have others appreciate all the work you have done. It’s also great when you get an email saying you have made a sale.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

I wish I had designed it by design and not product in the first place. I am finally changing it over.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

I have used Craigslist, Froogle, bought some classified ads online and had a friend put an ad on his company Intranet. I have gotten traffic from most of these but no sales. I have to increase my products and designs. I think Froogle will be fun as I keep adding products every week. Also Craigslist does get you traffic.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

I have a blog at http://pattinsonphotography.blogspot.com/
and I highlight my latest products and sales.
I also have my own photography website at www.pattinsonphotography.ca
but it is currently under construction due to a move

Nancy’s comments – I LOVE the journals and greeting cards!! Dave, make more!

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Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Origami Dreams interview

Day150
Camy’s first store is at http://www.cafepress.com/origamidreams?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store?

I often feel frustrated when I go shopping and see the same designs repeated over and over again. I've always wanted to come up with my own apparel/merchandise line, but had no idea how or where to start. Then a friend featured her CafePress store via her blog and the whole process intrigued me. It basically started with me coming back to that idea, and I was already looking for a place where I can feature my designs
.
1.5 Were you in a related field?

I'm an executive assistant and illustrator for a Photography and Graphic Design Studio. The good thing is that although it may be a 9 to 5 job, they gave me time and space to do some freelance projects.

2. When did you open your store?

April 2006. I can say that it is still on the experimental stage before I can upgrade to the premium one.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

Stressing to come up with more designs. Ever since I opened, my brain's working all the time. I would be doodling in the train going home, writing notes as I walk, seeking inspiration from reading different books, listening to music and looking at gift wrappers.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

Flexibility in time and in design concepts and ideas. Also to be your own boss.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

That in any opportunity, there is so much that you can do, it's WHEN you're actually going to do it.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

I send emails, updates via cell phones and newsletters. I plug my store wherever and whenever I can. Best to start will be within your closest circle like your family and friends. That way, they can offer suggestions and are most likely to spread the word. Especially if they see that it has potential.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

My blog: http://origamidreams.blogspot.com which I update sporadically.
The company that I work for http://parallaxstudio.com.ph
And I just opened another basic store with my other designs. It's at
http://cafepress.com/papercrane

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Sunday, May 28, 2006

Keltic Kat interview

Day147
Today we hear from Joanne of the Keltic Kat. http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

I don’t remember exactly what prompted me to open my first basic shop. Most likely it was something in a long string of bad experiences at the worst job ever.

I had been thinking about the idea for months. I was very stressed-depressed-anxiety ridden from the bad work environment. - I had actually started to try ripping my hair out, and you thought that was just an expression.

I think, I just needed to do something positive with the creative side of my personality. Café Press has been outrageously fun for me, I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to shave some days off my work schedule but I’ll honestly be able to say I had fun trying.

I have a degree in architectural drafting and I use a cheesy, yet cheap and fairly simple, drafting program the make all of my geometric http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat/1144459
keltic http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat/1143889
arabesque or mandala - http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat/1172503
inspired designs. As well as for some of my ‘just for fun’ designs like Nora’s Boat -http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat/1144493

Other than that I don’t have any related experience or formal art training. I work in the computer support industry but I don’t have any training in digital art/image manipulation. I just learn as I go, “Hey, what’s this do?” has created some of my favorite designs, like Sunset Portal http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat/1152735

2. When did you open your store?

I opened my first basic shop in Feb. or March of 2005, I think. After 12-14 basic shops became too much to manage all at once I decided to go premium in Feb. of 2006. It was definitely worth the investment, it’s so much easier to manage and personalize my corner of CafePress with the premium features.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

Two of the important things I never considered were the marketing and networking. Search engine optimization (SEO), website presentation, copyright and trademark law are some other important things I had no clue about before I started on my Keltic Kat adventure. Everyday I learn something new and add it my lists of do’s, don’ts and things to research.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

It might be the only time in my life where being an opinionated, passionate, crusader for my beliefs has had a pay off. Usually that gets me into all kinds of trouble.
It’s also been so much fun and given me an outlet for my ‘pretty scribbles’! I’m always so excited when one of the purely artistic designs sells.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

I wish I had known more about HTML, search engine optimization (SEO) and promotion.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

Marketing and promotion are my weak points, I’m still learning. What I know for sure is that if people can’t find your products they can’t buy them.
As a micro businessperson, I target people who share similar interest as me. The designs that sell the best for me are the one that express something I feel strongly about. Free Democracy -ship in distress http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat/1143654 and the Birth ~a Universe is Born (http://www.cafepress.com/keltickat/1143866) are two of my best sellers and two I feel strongly express my personal beliefs.

If you are making designs you wouldn’t buy, can you really expect anyone else to buy them? That’s my advice to anyone thinking of starting anew shop.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

The Keltic Kat http://keltickat.net/ is sorely in need of an overhaul, but nonetheless I’m very proud of it. I did all the HTML (without an editor), writing and graphics backgrounds logos etc. Eccentric as it is, it’s me.
Random Writer-Wanna-Be Chick's BLOG @ blogspot http://randomwriterchick.blogspot.com/
this one isn’t getting much TLC lately either.
MySpace Personal Page Keltic Kat http://www.myspace.com/thekeltickat
& Perpetually in Progress (MySpace BLOG) (http://blog.myspace.com/thekeltickat)
I have way too many projects going at once, as always.

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Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Raw Tees interview

Day143
Eric’s site is: http://www.rawtees.com?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

Actually, I was shopping at a Wal-Mart one day and saw a bumper sticker that I liked on a car in the parking lot: "One by one, the penguins are slowly stealing my sanity." I desperately wanted this on a t-shirt, and after unsuccessfully searching the web for one I decided to just create my own (here: I remembered CafePress after having once used them to print shirts for a theatre company I worked for, and so decided to return there.) While working on creating the shirt for myself, my wife walked in and liked the design, too...so I figured I would offer it up for sale to the public (what could it hurt?). It took awhile before my first sale, but as soon as it came I was hooked, and I decided to create more designs and have a go at the t-shirt business.

2. When did you open your store?

September 4, 2005, at 12:37:12 am.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

Developing new design ideas and keeping my inventory fresh. One of the goals I have with my shop is to offer shirts that simply can't be found elsewhere, so I spend weeks developing and creating designs. As a result, I currently only have about a dozen designs in my store; however, they are a dozen designs that I am really proud of!

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

I most enjoy the scheduling flexibility. I don't have to sit at a desk for 8 hours a day and try to force ideas. I have the freedom that if an idea comes, I can sit down and work on it for 36 straight hours; whereas if my creative well is dry, I can take a break for a couple of weeks and come back to designing later on.

If I'm allowed two, I also very much enjoy thinking that people as far away as London and Melbourne are walking around wearing my designs. I'm fascinated by the global reach of the internet, and how small a world it really is that we live in.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

I really wish I had taken the time to educate myself more about marketing and search engine optimization, as I find myself now trying to play catch-up. Both of those things do not yield immediate results -- for instance, it can take 6 weeks or more to start appearing in search engines -- so the earlier new folks can get started on those things, the better!

6. Could you share some of the marketing you've tried so far (on or off-line) and what has worked and what hasn't?

At first, I was searching the internet for message boards related to my designs (for instance, finding a WoW board to advertise my Leeroy Jenkins design), joining the board, and posting links to my products there. I found that while this brought lots of hits to my site, it also yielded very few sales. Due to the amount of time it was taking to search out and post on these boards, and the relatively small amount of resultant sales, I no longer market this way.

Recently a marketing tactic, which has worked well for me, is to find blogs on the internet where people have added my shirts to their "wish lists" and such. From these, I pick a couple per month that I send a free shirt to. While this causes me to lose their potential sale, I've found that these folks subsequently give me great word-of-mouth advertising, including posting links to my site on other blogs, etc. (which also helps my search engine results). Also, these folks are more likely to return to my store and make future purchases. On top of everything, this marketing tactic is fairly inexpensive.

On the horizon, I hope to soon be launching a more organized affiliate program and beginning a banner ad campaign.

Nancy’s comments – Eric was part of the first Café Clash contest and while his 4th of July themed “Land of the Free” didn’t win, it was close, and may I say, I liked it better!

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Tuesday, May 23, 2006

April Marie Mai interview

Day142
April Marie Mai
http://www.cafepress.com/april_marie_mai?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related
field?

I am an artist with a degree from the Kansas City Art Institute, and I am constantly making artwork. I love being able to put my art to use in a way that people can easily purchase and enjoy.

2. When did you open your store?

A little over a year ago.

3. What is harder about doing this than you thought it would be?
Marketing is difficult, and I don't market enough. I'd much rather spend my time making things
.
4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

I love being able to sell things at all hours, and discovering that someone has made a purchase
.
5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then
that you do now?


There is a lot of time involved in starting, maintaining, and marketing for an online store.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you've tried so far (on or
off line) and what has worked and what hasn't?


I have an affiliate program available, and that's great, because it's an easy way to pay people to market for me, and an easy way for them to cash in on my products. I've also started placing some online ads, although I haven't seen immediate results from them. I have fun playing with my newsletter. I will be trying out a lot of other things as time goes on.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

Main site: http://www.aprilmariemai.com
Blog: http://aprilmarieart.blogspot.com

Nancy’s comments - April Marie has some really pretty designs. I get tired of all the vulgar and anti-Bush type t-shirts on the internet, so I found her site really refreshing. I was especially drawn to the Calm Ornaments section.

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Monday, May 22, 2006

Brandi Jasmine interview

Day141
Today we visit with Brandi Jasmine - Writer, Photographer, Illustrator
http://www.brandijasmine.com?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

I have been an artist and astrologer for over 15 years. I have tried working with corporate licensing, with mixed results. I did the 2003 American Media Zodiac Calendar, which was one of the more successful and positive experiences in that area, but corporate work is an art form all its own, one I am not really emotionally suited for. I am too independent, and it isn't really a good fit for my style. I was drawn to CafePress because I was doing hand-painted shirts, and it was too expensive for the buyers. Now I get to do a lot more art, and a lot less of the business stuff that I don't like. It's really a very elegant solution.

2. When did you open your store?

I opened a shop about 3-4 years ago. I didn't really do a lot of work on it at first, but as business started to pick up, I kept adding designs. I now have two premium shops, one for my astrology store and one for my artwork.

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

I can't say anything was harder than I anticipated. I was aware that building up consistent traffic and sales would be the hardest challenge. Marketing and sales is always the most challenging part of any online business. I guess maybe getting enough time to actually do more artwork!

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

Not having to deal with corporate types (you ever read "Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel"? ... 'nuff said). Seriously though, I love being able to focus my energies primarily on creation. I do as much marketing and public relations as I have time for. This isn't my primary business, no one of my businesses is really primary. When I get bored, I switch to another project. So I never get burned out. CafePress specifically provides me with customer support, sales and fulfillment and that part I really am glad not to have to do myself.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

Mostly silly back-end stuff ... nit-picky things for setting up the shop. Most of the initial problems I had have been resolved by upgrades to CafePress's backend. The sort of thing that tends to surprise people (judging by posts on the forums) was entirely expected by me. I have been in online marketing for 10 years, working with Tucows, so I knew it was more work than it looked like it would be, heh heh ... it always is.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

I have been lucky to have existing web sites with good traffic. I was a content producer for Look Interactive and Tucows.com, so I got a boost from that relationship at the beginning. Because my sites were linked to their portal, I received a lot of traffic. I have tried setting up newer sites, and they are much harder to get off the ground. Word of mouth is the best driver for me. I have not advertised much, because I see it hasn't really worked for the other shop owners for the most part. I keep building traffic though my blogs, sites, and some comes from participation in discussion groups that follow my areas of interest. Next to that, I think I do a pretty good job of optimizing my sites through the search engines, and I think it helps I have had these domains for several years. I write articles for magazines and when they are published I am usually allowed to post my URL and I do some give-aways on the Gallery site that have worked - patterns and "Do it yourself" things, they are bringing in good traffic numbers, and sales are up.On the down side, I have tried craft shows, some minor web advertising, and I even painted my URL on my car (http://www.brandijasmine.com/thecar/index.html) ... of all of them I'd say the car was the most effective at bringing in traffic, but it did not transfer into sales. It was a lot of fun to drive though! It’s off the road, can't pass the emissions tests, but I still have it in my yard and it gets a lot of attention. I'd love to do it again on a van next time.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

I run the following domains:
Jasmine's Gallery: http://www.brandijasmine.com/ (Artwork, writing)
Astrology.ca: http://www.astrology.ca/ (Horoscopes)
Jasmine Cats: http://www.jasminecats.com/ (Cats, cats, more cats)
Painted Treasure: http://www.paintedtreasure.com/ (Hand painted furniture, canvases)
Living With Your Psychic Gifts: www.psychicprotection.net
(For my book, Living With Your Psychic Gifts)
One day I may buy domains for these, for now they are sub-sites in the domains:
Staci's Place (anti-bullying): http://www.brandijasmine.com/web/staci/ (I am the Cyberspace bullying "expert" for Bully Police).
Jasmine's Carousel: http://www.brandijasmine.com/carousel/

I have four blogs:Staci's Blog: http://bulliesnomore.blogspot.com/
Living With Your Psychic Gifts Blog: http://lwypg.blogspot.com/
Gallery Blog: http://bjasmine.blogspot.com/
Astrology Blog: http://astrologyca.blogspot.com/

Nancy’s comments – Wow! Brandi is truly a Renaissance Woman! You could spend days reading her sites! As a freelance writer myself I enjoyed her writer’s tips and also the opportunity to list your syndicated columns! I’ve always loved carousel horses and her Armoured Carousel Horse is striking. Check out her faux stained glass section – a fascinating process she invented. I especially like her dove peace design in that section. I plan on spending more time on Brandi’s blogs and sites!

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Sunday, May 21, 2006

Nitsupak interview

Day140
I'm back to interviewing, today with Ilene: http://www.cafepress.com/nitsupak?pid=4370506

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

My husband, a graphic artist told me about CafePress and Zazzle. He was going to open an online store. After investigating both of these businesses, I chose CafePress because shop owners have more control over the markup and price of the item. Zazzle, at least at the time I looked, only gave a shop owner a percentage of what they wanted to charge.

I wanted an outlet for my creativity after being stifled (smothered) in the corporate world. I have been doing photography since I was in high school, but never had an outlet to show it. The funny thing is that even though my hubby showed me the stores, I'm the one who opened one. He since has lost interest.

2. When did you open your store?

I opened a basic shop in Jan 2006 and then my current one, in February 2006

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

The hardest part is marketing. I had been a software engineer for 20+ years, and basically never did anything entrepreneurial. This is a whole new ballgame.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

I like the chance to do something creative and see other creative works - yes, even some of the goofy t-shirts are creative.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

I wish I had a better handle on doing descriptions. They are tough to get the keywords into.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

I have started a blog

http://www.nitsupak.blogspot.com/

I have signed up on webring and am trying to find web sites, and forums that would be targeted to my area.

Nancy’s comments – I love Ilene’s watercolor flowers and pop art tulips! Also her painted yellow followers look really great on all the clothes!

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Thursday, May 18, 2006

Jon Baas interview

Day137
Jon Baas is at http://www.cafepress.com/jonbaas

1. What drew you to opening an online store? Were you in a related field?

Well, not exactly a related field. In real life I am a professional actor and artist. My job (beyond playing pretend and creating commissioned artwork for a living) is to market my creative talents and myself.In essence, I am my own brand. I already had a personal website where I promoted my work. Extending that site to include a store where I share my creativity with fans, friends, and new visitors alike seemed like logical thing to do.

2. When did you open your store?

I opened my store in the summer of 2002. I remember the days when CafePress had only the basic products available for sale. They've come a long way since then!

3. What is harder about doing this then you thought it would be?

Oh, probably finding the time to continue adding new designs and rotating older ones. CafePress has certainly made it a heck of a lot easier in recent years. But back when I first opened my premium store, everything had to be designed and added product-by-product. That took forever.

4. What do you like best about being an online shopkeeper?

I think, without a doubt, it's the unique CafePress business model where I do not have to maintain an active inventory. While I absolutely love hosting my shop and sharing my creative designs, retail business is not my primary calling. If I had to focus on maintaining a tangible inventory, printing my own merchandise, and shipping all sales orders, it's a pretty good bet that I wouldn't be a CafePress shopkeeper. Letting CafePress take care of all the hands-on sales elements in my store, allows me to continue focusing on what I do best; acting, art, and design.

5. During the very first month, what do you wish you had known then that you do now?

Oh, there are many things I'm sure, the details of which I wouldn't be able to relate here. But, as with any endeavor, there is always an element of learning involved. When I started my store, I was just beginning to learn the nuances of both hosting an online commercial presence, and familiarizing myself with CafePress's business policies. But, four years and a lot of experience later, I'm easily a CafePress veteran. It's all about growth, and learning what works and what doesn't. And, no matter what anyone says, that's always a personal journey one must take on his or her own.

6. Could you share some of the marketing you’ve tried so far (on or off line) and what has worked and what hasn’t?

I've probably tried almost everything that the marketing guru's have suggested over the years. In the end, though, it's all a matter of what works and what doesn't - for the type of success someone aims to achieve.

If I had one suggestion, though - for the newbies reading this - I would probably say, don't underestimate the power of word-of-mouth. If people like something, human nature is to share that news with others. That's just how we're "wired". The trick, though, is not to approach your store like a manager looking to make the most money possible. Rather, be generous, personable, share your knowledge, and above all, help the customer with their needs and desires first and foremost. Learn what those needs are, and fill them. It's as simple as that. Customers are the pegs that drive business. Ignore them, and you're out on the street.

You know that old saying, "It is better to give than to receive", right? Well, it's true. One hundred percent true. Volunteer to give more of yourself in your business ventures, and customers will take an interest in what you have to offer. Building relationships is far more important to running a business - even a CafePress shop - than merely sitting back and collecting a paycheck. Yet, sad to say, the majority of people who open a commercial presence on the web, fail to consider this. And that's why they don't succeed. Success in anything is hardly easy. You really do have to put more work into it then you receive. But, as those of us who have been successful with CafePress can attest, hard work pays off in the end. Just be willing to remain persistent.

And remember, it took Henry Ford -- the innovator of the American automobile -- two failed attempts before he founded his successful Ford Motor Company. Even American business legends have had lowly beginnings. Be a Henry Ford. Experiment. Be persistent. If at first you don't succeed, then pick yourself up, and try again.

7. What other sites, blogs, etc. do you have if any?

There's my personal online blog (journal) that covers my career pursuits in art and acting:

http://www.jonbaas.com/weblog.html

(Hint: Read back to the summer of 2003, and you'll find my personal 15+ day journal about my time spent acting on the set of a Hollywood movie!)

And, similarly, my main website:(filmography, art gallery, etc.)

http://www.jonbaas.com/

And, then there's a creative art project that may interest some of my fellow CafePress shop owners. It's called "Paint My Pixels", and exists as an art experiment that asks the question, "Can thousands of people work together to create a single painting, using only small blocks of colored pixels?"Not only does it allow participants to be creative in an experiment setting, but it might also be a clever place to promote your CafePress store. {Hint, hint!}

http://www.paintmypixels.com

Nancy’s comments – Jon’s digital landscapes are fascinating and beautiful! He even has the section set up so customers can send free e-cards of them!

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