Quote:
Originally Posted by Phil
Proof is in the Pudding once Again...
That any {Smart} Simple (type) product, business model, concept or Whatever...
Is fully, Twistable, Spinnable, re-workable etc., etc., [Creatively] into Fresh and Exciting new Ideas...
Create & Sell Custom T-Shirts with Zero Upfront Costs
No upfront costs, no risk. Buyers pre-order their tees online on your campaign page, so you don't get stuck paying the bill....
High-quality prints. We only use retail-quality screen printing (no digital prints) so you get a t-shirt you can be proud of.
Get started »
Quick prediction! ... WSO's, Hotsheets and other Digital [related] Connections to this Spin of Ideas being released [Hot] off the Press as of this Moment...
Teespring: How A “Kickstarter For T-Shirts” Did $800,000 In Sales ...
https://www.google.com/search?q=intr...-US%3Aofficial
More Quick info and ideas regarding you Guessed it, Teespring into Cash! ++
https://www.google.com/search?q=Tees...-US%3Aofficial
https://www.google.com/search?q=Tees...en-US:official
https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&....1.vI6_5QJBcp4
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Thanks, Phil!
This site explains Teespring and how it works...
http://momchalant.com/teespring-youn...roud-campaign/
At first I didn't understand how it was different from Zazzle or CafePress or any of the other similar websites...
I guess the difference is that you set a goal for how many T-shirts you want to sell in your campaign. Then, the T-shirts don't get printed and shipped (and your customers don't get charged) unless you reach that goal...
Kind of like how Kickstarter (or Indiegogo) works for funding projects...
I can see the great benefit of this idea! One problem with Zazzle, CafePress, and all the rest, is that the T-shirts are quite expensive. That's because they have to calculate everything based on just one sale. If you sell 100 shirts, the cost-per-shirt (and profit-per-shirt) is still the same as if you sold just 1 shirt.
However, with Teespring, if you make a goal to sell 100 shirts, and hit that goal, the cost-per-shirt goes down, and potential profit-per-shirt goes up...
Great idea!
Thanks for sharing that, Phil!
Best wishes,
Dien