enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

read part four here.

I graduated college in May 2007.

Immediately after, I took a trip to Europe with some of my best girlfriends from high school and then spent rest of the summer hanging out with my parents and preparing to move to Maryland. I remember leaving them at the Sacramento airport. We all cried a bit. And then I stepped off the plane on the other side of the country and was with Paul and "boom!" – I was a grown-up.

After about a week of settling into life in Bethesda, I interviewed at Paper Source in Georgetown. It was a higher-end chain paper, stationery and gift store. Their mantra was (and is) "Do Something Creative Everyday." At my interview, I was asked to share how I incorporated the mantra into my life and I busted out the story of my current creative project, The Daily Card.

Surprise, surprise, I got the job.

This was the first time my blog helped me land a steady paycheck and the second to last time I ever printed out my resume.

I worked full-time (37 hours a week) for $9/hr as a sales associate. I had a one hour each way commute from our apartment in Bethesda to Georgetown that involved a car, a train and a bus. It cost me at least $11 a day just to park at the metro stop and take public transportation to work. It wasn't quite the post-college paycheck I had expected.

But this job, you guys, this job is what led me to everything.

Retail was fun in the fall of 2007. It was before the economy crash and you could tell. It was exciting to be in a store when people actually want to be buying and merchandise is rolling off the shelves. We had an absurdly busy holiday season and I remember we could not un-package inventory fast enough.

I learned A LOT in those years working at Paper Source. Merchandising and customer service, of course, but also about printing methods, paper stocks, book binding and color ways. I started teaching workshops. Within a few weeks I became a workshops coordinator (organizing the class schedule) and after about six months, a salaried assistant manager. I learned how to deal with tricky people. I learned how to set window displays. I learned how to read on the bus without getting carsick. I made some really great friends.

I also had a decent amount of time to work on and think about my own creative adventures. Etsy was just taking off in a big way and it was The Place to sell online. I don't remember how I decided that I wanted to join the hoard of sellers, I do remember exactly what I wanted to sell. I made envelopes out of old maps (using an envelope kit from Paper Source) and tucked white notecards inside.

Before I listed them, I used surveymonkey.com to gather feedback from blog readers about what they thought of the envelopes and how much they would pay. Within a few hours, I had maxed out the survey. 100 people had shared their thoughts about my notecards and I was shocked.

This was an incredible learning moment for me. People LOVE to share their opinion. Ask a question, especially in a situation where answering is easy and anonymous, and you'll get answers. The trouble is the responses will be so absurdly varied that unless you know what you're doing they don't mean much. (This post is one of my favorite examples of just how impossible it would be to please "everyone.") There is a reason that polling costs hundreds of thousands of dollars and is done by outside sources. It's COMPLICATED. It takes experts to wade through the data and pull something valuable.

But I went with my gut (that time and every time after) and listed the envelopes for a price somewhere in the middle and made my first few online sales. (Spoiler alert, there were not over 100 people clamoring to buy the item they had so willingly shared their opinion on.)

Once again, I found myself making and selling, this time online and, OH MAN, did I have so much to learn.

to be continued…part six here.

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20 responses to “this is my business story : part five.”

  1. Kelliann Avatar
    Kelliann

    Elise-I am loving this series-so fun to read about your journey!!

    Like

  2. Anna Avatar

    From a DC resident and WMATA patron… check plus for learning to read on the bus. 🙂

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  3. Leah Avatar

    Loving this!! I love how you are breaking it up into pieces, too.

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  4. lisa valinsky Avatar

    My husband and I always talk about the craziness of paying money to work. Lunch out? Costs money (unless you bring from home). Commute? Costs money. A late-day snack or coffee? Costs money. Work clothes? Costs money. Spending habits that start up out of stress from work? Costs money.
    We’re working on changing our lifestyle to avoid lots of these costs, and to work in a way that suits us better. 🙂

    Like

  5. Brianna Avatar
    Brianna

    It’s funny how things work out, isn’t it? I have friends who are still in their teens (18-19, but still), I swear sometimes they have their act together way than I ever did at that age. I was earning a paycheck on Fridays and spending that same paycheck on Saturdays. Would I go back for a do-over? No, because it all led me here, but man, I wish I’d saved.

    Like

  6. Shelbie Avatar
    Shelbie

    This is so fun to read! Thanks for sharing. Also wanted to let you know Paper Source is opening in the Fountains some time this fall! It’s out in Roseville. I know you come to Sac so thought you may be interested. 🙂

    Like

  7. Shari Avatar
    Shari

    I’ve been a long-time reader (I remember being inspired by your daily cards years ago) and half of the fun of reading your blog has been knowing you enjoy blogging just for the sake of blogging, you’re not writing to any specific reader or demographic, just sharing your life and creative inspiration. I am SO enjoying reading your business story and how your success has evolved over the years, looking forward to your next part and wishing you success as your business continues to grow.

    Like

  8. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    That’s AWESOME. I always through the Fountains would be perfect. I think they use the same site developer as anthro (or they used to) so it makes sense. 🙂

    Like

  9. andrea Avatar

    Well written Elise!

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  10. Liliana Avatar

    I love this series – everything seems to be falling into place! I wonder how my own career will work out… 🙂

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  11. JC Avatar

    I love how you end each of these section with a teaser I feel like I’m actually reading a book and ending a chapter. You always leave me wanting more!!

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  12. Beth Avatar

    I am so loving this series. I’m in the process of working on career 2.0, turning a passion/hobby into a career. While it’s completely different from yours (nutrition), watching your story unfold is exciting.

    Like

  13. Hanna Avatar

    I’m loving this series, Elise! Seriously, it’s the only reason I went to bloglovin today – to see if you’d posted (no, I don’t know why I didn’t come straight to the blog, I guess typing in bloglovin is just habit).
    Thanks for sharing!

    Like

  14. Denise Avatar

    I am absolutely loving this series, Elise. I am just starting out on my own creative online endeavor with a new blog. Your wisdom is beyond inspirational to me. It is so cool to hear the winding path that has brought you to where you are now. Can’t wait to read the next post!

    Like

  15. Traci Avatar

    I love “Do something creative every day” as a mantra. And this is the first part of the story I’ve caught, so I’ll have to go back and read the rest!

    Like

  16. Jess Avatar
    Jess

    You’ve mentioned working at Paper Source before, but it was just in reading this post, with the dates laid out, that I realized that you worked there at exactly the time I shopped there. I graduated from Georgetown University in May ’08 and it was my senior year of college I started crafting. I went into Paper Source weekly that year. I’m sure I saw you there!

    Like

  17. Erica Ambrosio Avatar
    Erica Ambrosio

    Whenever you want to take a poll again, I can work on the hard stuff for you aka data analysis. I’m your fan and read your blog since I was in High School. Now I just graduated from college majoring in Statistics. And since I’m your fan, of course it’d be free. 😉

    Like

  18. Riikka Avatar

    Please could you share the trick to reading in the car without getting sick? 🙂

    Like

  19. Cheryl Avatar
    Cheryl

    I love hearing your story. Thank you. I going into Paper Source in Georgemtown about that time period and falling in love.

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  20. Lee Avatar

    Reading this part of the story, I love the role Paper Source played. About seven years ago, while In a rut with my own job search, I applied for a job at the Alexandria store on a whim…thinking that, if I couldn’t find a job in my chosen career field, a job in my area of personal interest (paper crafts and scrap booking) would be a nice alternative while I assessed what was going on in my life.
    I ended up being offered a fantastic opportunity in my professional field right as I was being offered a position at Paper Source, so I never made it there…but I think it’s neat that it served a similar role for you.

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