enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

read part five here.

Sidenote : as I have been writing this story, I have been occasionally dropping back into the archives to get my timeline right (I am so off-base about when things happened it’s hilarious). And you guys, after a stroll through the archives, I find myself even more confused about how I became the somewhat professional that I am today. I mean seriously.

But let’s return to October 2007, where I had just had my first Etsy sale.

I don’t consider my first Etsy sale a turning point in my career because, well, setting up an Etsy shop is even easier than starting a blog. Getting momentum and KEEPING AT IT, that’s the hard part.

In fall 2010, after I hit my 2000th sale on Etsy and I summed it up nicely :

“I jumped into Etsy because I thought I had an idea with the map envelopes. I did not plan anything out or worry about what I would sell next. The shop has evolved as my taste and interests have changed which has kept it enjoyable.”

Yep. My career hit a turning point when I let my shop evolve. My style and interests have changed dramatically over the past few years and I have just let my shop and what I sell roll with those changes. It’s like the blog. I write what I like. I sell what I like. If you like it too : hey! BONUS! Can I interest you in my Instagram feed?

But there were two significant things that helped bolster my online shop career.

The first was that I invested in my business and took a letterpress class. I remember that it cost $215  for three weekends of lessons (nine hours total) and at the time that was a lot of money to spend. It was the first real investment I had put in my handmade career aside from the $4.95 I had been shelling out monthly to Typepad since January 2006. I took the class because I wanted to learn something new and I saw value in being able to make something that not everyone else could.

This class paid off big time for me. I ended up turning that class into so many prints on chipboard. I began playing with my own phrasing and experimenting more with my “art.” It was a really great time. I remember working in that letterpress studio and feeling so legit. Those were wonderful afternoons.

You really do have to spend money to make money. I spend more money now than I was grossing in 2010. Easily. But thankfully the amount I am grossing has increased as well (or this story would be headed for an unhappy ending).

The second was when I started thinking about creating product lines. For about a year, I was just making and selling on Etsy with stuff I had on hand or random things I could throw together. There wasn’t much thought to creating a “collection” or building products that fit together. I was content with a few sales here and a few sales there. It was just a trickle of income and that felt fine. But, obviously, a “trickle of income” does not equal a viable career. A trickle of income = a hobby.

What separated Elise-the-girl-with-the-Etsy-shop-on-the-side in 2008 and Elise-the-girl-with-the-rubber-stamp-business in 2012 is, among other things, a real vision. When I first started to think about “producing a line” – a big(ger) event that included kits, prints, journals and postcards, instead of “selling a product” I was able to get smarter about how I was spending money and how much time I was taking to make one item.

With a line of similar products (even though it was a TINY line), I could buy raw materials in bulk. I could produce in bulk. I could photograph in bulk. And most importantly, I could sell in bulk. I started to create demand for my product by making the focus a little less random and the collections a little more special. I began to build hype by setting launch days.

In short, I started to be more deliberate with what the hell I was doing.

By the fall of 2008, I was ready to cut back on my work hours at Paper Source. I liked my job and the people there, but I was excited about the money coming in from the Etsy shop and I felt like I had built something sustainable (I hadn’t yet). I went down to part time. For about a week, I felt good with my decision and then I hit the panic button. I shopped craigslist for a job and found a paid PR internship close to my house.

I dusted off my word doc resume, updated it a bit and printed it out one final time.

In late December 2008 I had my last interview ever (to date) and then in January I started that PR internship. Returning to a desk job, after retail was a completely different world (you mean I can just get coffee whenever I want? And I can check up on my email?) In PR, we billed by the hour and I realized immediately that I hate billing by the hour because it puts the emphasis on how much time a task takes instead of how successfully you do it.

Very quickly I realized that I had just traded one hourly wage job for another and that getting paid by the hour was not the way I wanted to work. I wanted to get paid by my output. I wanted my hard work to be increasing my bottom line.

My internship wrapped up in the spring of 2009 and I threw myself into my own work. I created my first online scrapbooking online workshop and had over 100 people sign up to take it. At $20 a person that was $2000 total which at the time felt like a ton. The class was a success and I was able to re-run it four or five times, each time getting a decent income boost without having to re-invent the wheel. I ran a second art journaling workshop in the fall and that helped too. This was becoming more viable. I loved teaching.

Meanwhile, I kept working part time at Paper Source, selling on Etsy and blogging with more consistency. I had posts going up every morning and while I didn’t yet have an editorial calendar, I was headed there. My audience was growing simply because I was writing and sharing so consistently.

In the spring of 2010, Paul and I moved back to Sacramento for a month and got married (we’d been engaged since March 2009). At the end of May we moved down to San Diego into the best apartment ever in Little Italy. We agreed that I could make a go at this working for myself thing. If I was able to make up for the lost retail income with my own stuff, I didn’t have to get a “real job.”

I was beyond excited to see what I could do with nothing but my own work on my plate.

to be continued…read part seven here.

Dottedline

Today on ELISE GETS CRAFTY I am chatting with Geoff & Lisa of The Goodness, about their photography business and working with a partner. Click here to subscribe or stream the episode from your computer here.

Posted in

27 responses to “this is my business story : part six.”

  1. Leah Avatar

    Loving, loving, loving this!! I’m at a point where I’ve got a day job but I really, really want to go out on my own. It’s so interesting and educational to see how you did it.

    Like

  2. Lexi Avatar
    Lexi

    I have a love/hate relationship with your blog this month. I LOVE reading your story, but every single time I get to the end of one of these posts I’m so sad that I can’t read the next installment yet. Since it will all be written, have you considered creating the entire story into an e-book so someone can sit down and read the entire thing in one sitting without having to click from “part one” to “part two” and so on, and so on?

    Like

  3. Jennifer D Avatar
    Jennifer D

    I love your blog and I have read it for years. You are funny, and you write both with interesting details and also “to the point”. But my favorite thing about your blog by far, and what has kept me coming back year after year, is that you blog consistently every weekday at the same time. I think it is the very BEST thing about your blog. And I think if more bloggers reading this made that one simple change, they would see the difference it makes. Because I know you’ll be here, I start my weekday reading your blog. 🙂

    Like

  4. megan Avatar
    megan

    I love your story! As a reader at a desk job I totally get billing by the hour, which is why I hope to make my own moves soon. I appreciate how real you are, it’s refreshing 🙂

    Like

  5. Mickie Avatar

    I agree with Jennifer D. The first thing I do (is that embarrassing?) every morning is check your blog and read the latest post. I love it, it is my little treat before I start the day, and I walk away inspired and with a little extra push.
    Thank you for this business series Elise, I really really really love it!

    Like

  6. Elise Avatar

    Maybe! By the time it’s done it will just be 12 clicks, so not too crazy. 🙂

    Like

  7. Leah Avatar

    So not embarrassing! Or if it is, then I should be embarrassed too, lol. Where I live, in Nova Scotia, her blog pops up at 9 am each day, and I get to work at 8:30. Well, no matter what I’m doing, I guarantee that I’m watching the clock and at 9 sharp I click on to her site and read voraciously! 🙂

    Like

  8. Leah Avatar

    Also, this post inspired me to look for a letterpress class, which I’ve been wanting to do for a while!

    Like

  9. Natasha Avatar
    Natasha

    For me (in the UK) it’s my lunchtime treat, every day, at 1 o’clock in the afternoon!

    Like

  10. Sarah Milligan Avatar

    Love reading these details! Thanks for sharing. 🙂

    Like

  11. Lisa Olson Avatar

    Just wanted to say how much I am enjoying your story, very inspiring!

    Like

  12. Casie Avatar
    Casie

    Oh my how much anxiety did you have about not having a guaranteed paycheck?

    Like

  13. Rachel Avatar

    I don’t usually comment here but I have just loved your business story so much. It’s like reading a ridiculously good book and you get to the end of the chapter and just want to go straight into the next one. Also, I feel like I’m surrounded by kindred spirits – I get the email around lunch every day and read your posts without fail! You’re quite possibly the only blogger that I’ve read consistently, as in every day, for the past almost three years since I stumbled upon it. So awesome.

    Like

  14. Krista Avatar

    Elise, I admire what you’ve done and the community of readers you’ve created here. I’m love love loving your story and feel inspired by your journey! Keep doing what your doing girl! You rock!
    p.s: your fam is pretty cute too! ;0 love seeing them in you instagram feed and here on the blog! Also, Ellerie may be a wiggly photography subject, but she’s also stinkin’ cute!

    Like

  15. Lauren Pittenger Avatar

    I’m going to echo everyone else and say that I LOVE your blog. I don’t know how I ever found it, but it’s a definite highlight of my day and sometimes I wish there was more to read than there is! Also loving this series. Love reading about people’s journeys.

    Like

  16. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    This is really interesting and I like in particular the statement that getting paid by the hour emphasizes how long you spend on a job and not how well you do it. I tell you, it’s even worse than that. Bc I have had jobs where they pushed me to get better at something and I rose to the challenge until I could do it quickly and competently. Only to then… Have my hours cut.
    Or in the latest case, lose my job entirely. So success is paid off with less income. I hate that so much.
    I guess the question that’s not answered for me is the mysterious, how to go from just your family and friends reading a fun blog you wrote to getting enough people reading that you could sell stuff on etsy to blog readers? I mean, just putting content out there isn’t enough no matter how consistently you do it. Did you promote your blog, before Twitter and Instagram? How?

    Like

  17. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    Not nearly as much in 2010 as I had in 2008. 🙂

    Like

  18. elise blaha cripe Avatar

    I shared this in one of the earlier “chapters.” I was active on a scrapbooking message board and a lot of people found me there. Once I had the daily card blog I had a “creative point” and people that found me from the sb site shared it which drove more traffic. I also had a link on facebook in 2006 which helped get more people reading too.

    Like

  19. Lori Wilson Avatar

    Me five? 🙂
    It’s my “coffee blog”, meaning I read it while I drink my coffee in the morning. I love starting my day that way! Thanks, Elise!

    Like

  20. Amanda Avatar

    Yes! When I lived in New Brunswick, I did the same thing! Now that I’m in Beijing, I check it every night at 8!

    Like

  21. Emi Avatar

    This is so great!! Thanks so much for sharing your experience!

    Like

  22. mchelle Avatar
    mchelle

    i think it was the card blog helping then cuz i had my blog link on 2peas and FB too but there wasnt much interest. i wasnt posting daily creative endeavors though 🙂

    Like

  23. Raven @ Magical Mugz Studios Avatar

    Elise, thank you so much for sharing your story. I’m having a wonderful time following along and learning little tidbits about your journey, I can’t wait for the next post!

    Like

  24. Traci Avatar

    I like the way you are doing installments. Reading shorter bits of information, or about distinct periods as you see them, makes it easier to put together in the end, with time to absorb. I should write one of these myself, just for my own use, to see what I come up with and where it leads me as far as my vision for the future. :] Thanks for sharing!

    Like

  25. Za Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your experience. I finally took time to read all of the posts together. You are inspiring in quite a lot of ways. I often catch myself thinking of something you wrote here.

    Like

  26. carlos Avatar

    Leah, did you find a class? I’m a year late but I’m loving this story too!!

    Like

Leave a reply to Traci Cancel reply