- Home >> Lifestyle: How
To Start A T-Shirt Business, Part One - Getting Started:
-
- How
To Start A T-Shirt Business
- Part Two - Case
Studies For Success
- by Darren Young
For MindTrix
the hardest part for starting out, besides money, was finding
a "nitch". Our first line of T-Shirts was all over
the map, so starting your own clothing company can be hard. I
had to do and learn everything on my own. I over came this obstacle
by going to tradeshows, surfing the Internet, and reading magazines
like Sport and Street, etc.
MindTrix has
grown beyond just T-Shirts due to the fact that everyone including
their moms have a T-Shirt company. When I would go into stores
trying to sell my T-Shirts, I would always get feedback, like
what makes these any better than the other 90,000 brands we have
in here, which most of these other brands people have heard of,
and that is why we graduated to cut and sew as well as any higher
end T-Shirts.
You have to stay
ahead of the pack to survive.
http://www.myspace.com/mindtrix
Advice for
Promotion:
Don't be afraid to advertise. Create buttons, stickers, give
them out and be sure people remember you. Tell people about it,
you'd be surprised how many people would be willing to help you
out.
Advice for
Designing:
When designing A T-Shirt, there are many points to keep in mind,
but the following factors are some technical stuff overlooked
by companies starting off: The Number of colors used and what
material will be used. Most screen printers charge in the $10-$40
range for every different color you use. It can get really expensive
for someone (Example: music bands) to get several T-Shirts printed.
They then have to sell the fans $36 dollar T-Shirts just to cover
the costs and make some profit.
The Material
used: Usually each material/brand/size comes with a set of colors
that they're printed on. There isn't one that provides you with
every single color in existence. It would be a great idea to
ask the client what material they can afford and then research
it, or familiarize yourself with the more popular brands that
are being printed on (Examples: American Apparel, Fruit Of the
Loom and Hanes). I've had several problems with this when I began,
so don't just go creating something that only looks good on a
red background that you can't easily fix, or something that looks
good on a T-Shirt color that's almost impossible to find. This
will save you so much time and trouble.
Lastly, but most
importantly, just be original. Keep the designs more personalized,
deeper and more meaningful.
http://www.myspace.com/deathby_santiago_
1. Vision. You
need to know who you are, what you're doing, why, etc. This will
define how you market your product, how it looks over all, and
all the little details within that you need to do. Yep, so figure
that out and then go nuts because you can't go wrong with a big
idea, as long as you know what the big idea is.
2. Marketing. It's
essential in today's design world. You might have a good product
but if its weak on branding, labeling, packaging, shelf appeal,
matching coat hangers, etc., it'll look bad. Consistency also
needs to be achieved across the spectrum including same font,
same style, etc. Designing is totally open to new creations and
ideas, so anything goes, but there are some boundaries that you
don't want to cross, while others you need to break through.
3. E-commerce. Yes, it's fully possible!
It will take some setting up though, but I've recently realized
how I can just pick up the phone and order a set of hoodies,
wait four days until they're on the doorstep, pay for them a
month later online, etc. Also, I can call up the fabric company
down the road, or one in wellington, get them to send me samples
of denim, call them back and order a set amount of denim to be
sent to my garment manufacturer, and then call him and tell him
how many of what I want right from my rocking chair at home.
4. Online
selling.
Totally possible if you use ebay or know how to set up an E-commerce
website yourself, but getting the credit card system sorted out
is a major cost. Lots of girls shop online now, you just need
to know how to market it right and get your products noticed.
5. Promo. Get it out there! Make
sure your friends buy your products or you could give out freebies.
Put stickers, advertising your shop, wherever you can. Be shameless
because designers are really admired (as opposed to being a 'salesperson'),
especially if your product is favorable.
6. Don't waste
your time on silly details. I'll let you figure out what those are.
7. Get your
accounts sorted out now. Segregate your personal and business spending,
so you can claim back GST with no problems. Make sure every transaction
(sales, purchasing, spending, etc.) goes through your account,
so you can see how well you're doing by looking at your bank
statement. Use the ATM machine for petty cash; your accountant
will love you one day for this.
8. Have fun! It's not the end of
the world if it doesn't work out. I was just thinking how involved
my life is at the moment with my T-Shirt business. My life revolves
around it, which is crazy, but if it all fell apart and closed
down tomorrow I'd be the same person and I'd find something else
to do! I make sure I take one day off during the week to do what
I love that doesn't involve my work. I love doing my work, so
I'm very lucky in that aspect, but sometimes it gets boring or
tedious so I make sure I stay fresh and focused.
9. Work hard. I still do after three
years. I work my butt off and hardly make any money off it, but
I know it's worth it in the long run and the things you learn
along the way are invaluable.
10. Give away
free stuff!
People love free T-Shirts and sponsorship goes a long way. It's
also your duty, being in business and generating wealth, to share
that with society in some way (Example: Old stock goes in recycle
clothing bins, etc.).
Check the story
out at involved... choice! http://www.involved.co.nz
About the
Author:
http://www.T-ShirtShowdown.com - The Ultimate T-Shirt
Website On The Internet. You can Rank, Vote, Comment, E-mail,
Visit T-Shirt Websites, Auction, Bid, Sell, Buy, Promote/Market
T-Shirts and more.
Source: www.isnare.com
|