Q&A: Selling merchandise on the web

I’m a fan of Harto, aka Hannah Hart, whose My Drunk Kitchen videos are a hilarious counterpoint to traditional cooking shows and videos. Recently she asked me for advice about selling MDK merchandise, and since I’m often asked about online sales I got Hannah’s OK to share her question and my answer on the blog.

Q: I was wondering how one goes about selling/shipping their own promotional goods (t-shirts, mugs, etc.). Any thoughts?
–HH

A: How you go about selling online depends on what you’re selling and why you’re selling it.

I’m going to assume you will be selling shirts with the goal of making a small amount of money (it’s hard to make shirts a big revenue stream) and of raising awareness of the shows.

You have more options with shirts than you do with other products. You can:

  1. Have a batch made and then sell them. Choosing this means you have to front the money and guess at how many to order and in what sizes, so it’s a little risky. You also have to handle the shipping. And you need to store the shirts somewhere, which can be problematic if you have a small apartment/limited room.
  2. Let people pre-order and then have the shirts made and ship them. In this case, you get the money first, so you don’t need to come up with cash to start, plus you know exactly how many to order and in what sizes. And you don’t have to keep the inventory in your home – at least, not for long. Or you can order a few extra and sell or give them away as special limited editions. But people have to wait a little longer to get their shirts, since they’re not in stock. You still have to handle shipping.
  3. Use a service like http://www.spreadshirt.com/. You design the shirts and make them available on the store, people order and receive the shirts straight from the store. No up front investment on your part and you don’t have to handle shipping or worry about ordering too many, and customers don’t have to wait. But the service takes a cut of the price.

Mugs and other non-clothing are much the same except you don’t have to worry about sizes and colors. They tend to be bulky and may require a box to be able to ship, which adds to the cost. There are fewer services that do mugs on demand; CafePress is one, but I’ve heard complaints about their quality.

If you are selling just a few items, you can use the Buy Now buttons that PayPal makes and just put them on a regular page in your blog or website. If you’re selling 10 or more items, it would be worthwhile to look into a simple shopping cart.

If I were going to sell t-shirts, here’s what I’d do:

I’d have one design to start, and I’d offer it for 30 days. I’d let people pre-order, then when the 30 days were up I’d stop taking orders and have the shirts printed; I’d throw a shipping party and ask friends to help with shipping in exchange for beer/pizza/undying affection. Then two months later, I’d create a new design and go through the same process. Each design would be a limited edition, and I’d set aside a few to bundle together as a special premium prize for a future use or big fundraiser. I’d just sell them on my own site using a basic PayPal button, maybe with an automatic countdown thing to make it all a little flashier, and with a gallery of past shirts visible to make people wish they’d been around earlier. Maybe I’d bring back a really popular older design now and again in a re-issue.

The guys at United Pixel Workers do something along the lines of what I described: http://www.unitedpixelworkers.com/ They’re using a fancier checkout method, because they’re web programmers and have time & skills to set stuff like that up. But a PayPal button and a really big photo of the proposed shirt could work just as well.

What thoughts do you have on selling merchandise online, for a web video series or online comic or other work? Which services and vendors would you recommend?

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What’s the value of social media?

Today I spoke on a panel* on the topic of Media, for the current Leadership Butler County class. On the panel with me were Joe Taylor of ARMSTRONG, Scott Briggs of the Butler County Radio Network, and Keith Graham of the Butler Eagle, each representing their business and, to some extent, their media (television, radio, and print news respectively).

My brief was to represent “New Media” — kind of a big area. I decided to focus on three questions that people often ask me about social media and online networks:

  • Who has time for social media?
  • Which should my company/organization be on: Facebook or Twitter?
  • What is the ROI of social media?

Here are the slides that accompanied my talk.

* Yes, another one! This month has been crazy with panel presentations. (back)

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Follow Me: How to Use Social Networks to Build Visibility & Drive Sales

Today I’ll be speaking on a panel at the 5th Annual Business Technology Conference, organized by the Small Business Development Center at Duquesne University. Our moderator will be Betsy Benson, Publisher and Vice President of Pittsburgh Magazine, and sharing the panel with me will be the delightful Victoria Dilliott, owner of Affogato Coffee Bar.

Our session title: “Follow Me: How to Use Social Networks to Build Visibility & Drive Sales.”

Follow Me: How to Use Social Networks to Build Visibility & Drive Sales



View more presentations from Big Big Design.

My portion of the session will be an evolution of a session I gave at PodCamp Pittsburgh 5, “Blogging for Business.” I wanted to expand on the ideas I’d discussed at PodCamp, going beyond blogging to a more comprehensive social media communications strategy (and actually beyond social media to online communication as a general thing).

The slideshow includes lots of neat visuals from Flickr and elsewhere (all Creative Commons attributed), but there’s one particular visual I’d like to highlight: the “Killer Blog Strategy Mind-Map” diagram by Johnny Haydon. Communications — and social media/online communications in particular — act much like a loop system, and this diagram does a great job of visualizing the loops of causes and effects. A full diagram of the system would be much more complex, but sometimes the complete complexity obscures the core of what’s going on. If you’re trying to set out your plan to build communications (and community) online, this diagram is the place to start.

More notes to come after the presentation.

FOLLOW-UP:

Thanks to everyone who attended our session. What a fine discussion we had! Very big thanks to Victoria for sharing her story, and to Betsy for moderating the session.

Here is more information for some examples I mentioned during the talk:

Cooks Source controversy: Thorough summary write-up here, the main post by the blogger who first discovered her material had been reprinted without permission.

A sample of how Paper.li shows interesting content from a Twitter account and the users it follows: my Paper.li

Eat’n'Park using social media for last-minute promotions during the Stanley Cup playoffs: coverage in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (6/21/2009)

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Client site relaunch: J Compton Gallery

J Compton Gallery home page screenshot

We’ve just redesigned the online gallery for our client Jean Compton. Jean deals in Americana, folk art, and antique dolls and toys, and her website is both a way to connect with clients and prospects and a showcase for the fascinating objects she finds.

We had created her original website a few years ago, and Jean wanted to keep the same overall look but create new liveliness on the home page of the site. We suggested using a slideshow that features images of items in the gallery along with Jean’s detailed and engaging descriptions.

We also thought we could streamline the underlying architecture of the gallery, using WordPress’s new custom post types. The new site achieves both these goals, making it both more appealing and easier to work with.

And it’s already having an impact! Jean sent us this note:

I put up a fabulous folk art cane yesterday before noon, and sold it before the end of the day! It was a piece I had featured in an ad in Maine Antique Digest, which sends people to the website. I had three inquiries yesterday in a matter of hours and sold the cane to the third person who contacted me.

I’m confident that the combination of great items, targeted advertising and a great website is really going to help my business.

Take a look at the J Compton Gallery website.

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Women and Girls Foundation honors “Women in Media”

Women in Media event invitation graphic

Each year, the Women and Girls Foundation honors a group of women who are “engaged in dynamic work in exciting and challenging career fields in Southwestern Pennsylvania.” This year they are celebrating “Women in Media,” and I’m privileged to have been selected among the honorees.

The award ceremony will be part of the WGF annual gala on November 6 at the August Wilson Center for African-American Culture in Downtown Pittsburgh, from 6 – 10 p.m. It’s going to be a terrific occasion, emceed by Laverne Baker Hotep, Patrice King Brown, Eleanor Schano and Sally Wiggin.

WGF’s “Women in Media” event will feature a keynote address by award winning filmmaker and grandniece of media tycoon Walt Disney, Abigail Disney. Disney’s first film, the feature-length documentary Pray the Devil Back to Hell, which won the Best Documentary Feature award at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2008, tells the inspirational story of the women of Liberia and their successful efforts to bring peace to their broken nation after decades of destructive civil war. Disney will give a keynote address at the awards ceremony on the power of media and women’s voices to bring peace to the world, and her film will be screened after the ceremony.

Trailer for Pray the Devil Back to Hell.

Join us at the event! Get details, buy tickets, or become a sponsor at the WGF Women in Media event page.

I am thrilled to be part of this, and I want to congratulate the other honorees and Ginny Montanez, who has been selected for a Special Award of Distinction. I’m thankful to the event host committee for including me with these amazing women.

Find out more about the good work of the Women and Girls Foundation at their website.

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Online appointment scheduling made easy: YouCanBook.Me

I’m trying out a new service that makes it easy to safely show your calendar to a colleague or client and let them choose a time to meet — and reserve the time on the spot. It’s YouCanBook.Me.

To use it, you need to also use Google Calendar to keep your schedule. Enter your Google account info in YouCanBook.Me, and it creates a shareable calendar of your future available time slots. Here’s mine:

My current available calendar

You can adjust the length of time slots, start and end times for the day, which days are available, and more. This looks like a useful tool for any individual who has to make a lot of appointments — consultants, real estate agents, etc.

It would be less useful for those whose appointments overlap — a hair stylist, for example, who might be cutting one client’s hair while another client waits for a color process to complete. It also wouldn’t work for restaurant reservations, because you’d have to have a separate calendar for every table.

YouCanBook.Me has a counterpart service, WhenIsGood, which helps groups of people choose meeting times that work for all of them. I’ve used WhenIsGood for some time, and while it works terrifically well and is easy to set up and use, I’ve had mixed success in getting people to use it with me. That is, although everyone complains about how tedious it is to have to send emails back and forth to figure out a mutually-agreeable time, some people seem to be unwilling to try out a new solution — even one that’s dead simple to use.

But YouCanBook.Me seem even easier that WhenIsGood. I have high hopes. If you like, you can schedule a time to talk with me about it.

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MedExpress Ducky Derby: fun fundraising for a great cause

R U a winner?, originally uploaded by tamadhanaval.

Big Big Design is co-sponsoring a fundraising event next Thursday: the MedExpress Ducky Derby.

On August 5, we’re racing hundreds of rubber ducks by floating them down Sullivan Run in Butler. The backer of the winning duck will win $1000.

Tickets to rent a duck for the race are $5. Interested in backing a duck or 5? Contact us and we’ll help you get your tickets.

Proceeds will benefit the Moraine Trails Scoutreach Program, which helps find creative leadership for boys who might otherwise not be able to access scouting programs.

In addition to the title sponsor, MedExpress, this event has been put together with the support of several organizations:
United Way of Butler County
Butler County Young Professionals’ officers
Butler Downtown
Butler County Chamber of Commerce
Big Big Design

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Privacy, social networks, and our online selves

Two interesting discussions of personal privacy and online social networks.

First, this article about the permanence of online information and its implications for an individual’s reputation: “The Web Means the End of Forgetting,” by Jeffrey Rosen, New York Times Magazine.

We’ve known for years that the Web allows for unprecedented voyeurism, exhibitionism and inadvertent indiscretion, but we are only beginning to understand the costs of an age in which so much of what we say, and of what others say about us, goes into our permanent – and public – digital files. The fact that the Internet never seems to forget is threatening, at an almost existential level, our ability to control our identities; to preserve the option of reinventing ourselves and starting anew; to overcome our checkered pasts.

Second, a presentation about designing online networks: “The Real Life Social Network v2,” by Paul Adams. This is intended for designers of web properties, but I believe there’s value here for any organization that’s working to create an online community, including for customer interactions or referrals.

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Recommended: Pittsburgh SEO Workshop

Our friends at Lunametrics are offering a one-day SEO workshop this week, and there’s still time to sign up.

Want your site to show up at the top of Google but don’t want to spend a fortune to get it done? Here’s something most SEO consultation companies won’t tell you: You can do it yourself.

The workshop will be on June 23 from 8am to 5:30pm, at Left Field Meeting Space in Pittsburgh (across the street from PNC Park).

Find out more about the SEO workshop and register today.

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