| Really appreciate you sharing your perspective. And I'm really glad to hear you are doing so well with your approach! > If you can make the type of Art that someone is willing to actually pay whatever you charge for it, you have a chance to go up market because you've overcome the first obstacle of picking the right product. 95% of people on Etsy will not or cannot achieve this based on what they sell (or know how to do, or enjoy doing), but many can still be successful. Such a good point. Most artists I see work from their own beliefs outwards rather than seeing what the market will bear at different price points and targeting a higher rate. They think things like, "I wouldn't spend more than $X00 on a work of art" and so end up charging the same or less. > I make over 6 figures selling an average order value of $20. Just curious, is that 6 figures of profit or revenue? The nice thing about the $3k to $5k sales is how high margin they each can be. > We'll do craft shows and sell $20 items like hotcakes all day, while the depressed folks in the booth across from us selling expensive art make maybe 1 sale a day, and usually not for an expensive piece. Our $475 item that takes a week to make will turn heads and bring people in all day and we might sell one of them, and 5 other folks will just say they can't justify the cost, despite how unique and big and amazing they think it is. On the other hand, we'll sell wedding invitations that take 10 minutes to print for $500 and people won't even blink when we name the price, and then they'll re-order again because they changed the date. It's shocking. Yeah it's interesting at these kinds of events I see little mistakes or points of friction that artists selling high ticket work introduce that reduce their sales. Things like, sitting on a chair way back in their booth reading a book or their phone, not having an assistant standing out in the flow of foot traffic saying hi and drawing people in, displaying pricing, having too large a range of pricing, not asking questions about the person and their desires and instead "talking at them" about the art versus "talking with them", etc. Again it takes learning a communication / relationship building style that works great if you don't accidentally get in your own way. > There are tons of digital download shops that makes 10k-100k sales a year on Etsy at $3-$15/sale and they only need to do the work of producing an item once. Those are amazing businesses and 100x times easier to run than trying to convince someone to buy a $x,000 item via social media and paid channels. I could see once you identify your niche, write your copy, optimize the SEO, and set up all the other tech required, and you have a product that really resonates with your niche, this could be easier to manage once up and running than the social media / high ticket approach—at least for some people. That said, it sounds like it could be hard and unpredictable for non tech savvy art folks to initially set up. There are definitely multiple paths that work for sure and there's no one magic ninja hack or silver bullet that doesn't require personal development, learning new skills, mindset shifts, etc. Again, really glad to hear about all your success and I hope your businesses continue to serve your life and goals well in the future! |