Tutor Tanith

CafePress Add Products Quick Start

To get the most out of your CafePress Shop you will need to take additional steps. But this will cover the minimum requirements. These steps assume you already have an account and a shop. If you don't have a shop this method requires that you open one.

  1. You can start by uploading an image to your Image basket, or do it later. I prefer to have the image already uploaded. From your account dashboard, on the right go to Shops. Then under Media Basket choose Image Basket. Use the upload button to upload your image. Later ideally you will create folders and upload directly to those folders. That helps organize your images.
  2. Go to your shop.
  3. Choose Add A Section.
  4. Choose I'd like to start customizing my section
  5. You should be on the Section Info tab. If not, choose that tab.
    • Type in a descriptive Section Name.
    • For the Section Description type in text that describes your topic area, your design, and something interesting about it - maybe what inspired it.
    • Choose your section image. You can use the same image you are going to put on the products.
    • Choose your default image - the one that will fit most of the products you will choose.
    • Choose your markup. Note this price will only apply to sales you drive to your shop. It will not apply to products sold through affilates or the CafePress marketplace.
    • Save
    • Choose Add A Product.
    • If you should see the default product image. You can change it if you wish. [Note: You are not required to apply an image at this point. If you remove the default image (or didn't choose one) then blank products are imported and you can apply the images afterward.]
    • For each product group choose the Make Selections link so you can see how the design actually fits on the product. A very ommon beginner mistake is to apply images to products that don't work well with the image. Make sure your image fits the product properly, and that it looks good. Don't be afraid, though, to add products that look good but you think people might not buy. People have different tastes. See the information on image sizing.
    • Choose Add these Products.
    • Done
  6. Click the Preview This Page button to see your shop.

There is plenty to learn and a lot to do. Your work and time spent will pay off best if you start with those things that will make the most difference in selling.

Setting up the defaults (Storefront Info tab) does not affect existing products but can save time creating new products. You don't need to fill in all the defaults. For example, you can just fill in the markup , product name and product description, leave the image blank, then choose the image as you are adding the products.

Understand the basics of trademark, copyright and rights of privacy/publicty. That will save time by not getting into designs that will end up getting pulled.

Make sure your graphics program is up to the task. Some people succeed with lesser programs but it costs them time and frustration. There are several free ones that are suitable. GIMP is not easy, but it is free.

Make sure you understand image sizing and color selection. Nothing like spending lots of time creating designs only to find out that they won't work and you have to redo them.

Your sales will depend on the text you write for the top of every page, product descriptions and product titles. The text should be descriptive, not a sales pitch. Write a word picture of what you are offering. You are on the telephone to your significant other. You want to tell them about this really great shirt you saw, and you want them to buy it for you. You don't know where it came from. Describe it so that they can find it for you. Skipping this is the same as hiding your products and saying you don't want sales.

A good product description:

Includes the exact text that is in the design
Includes the name of at least one product that the design is on
Includes the name of at least one of the objects in the design art.

Set aside shop customizing for while. Shop customization is fun but not as important to the customer as those other things. By the time you've gotten rolling on the critical stuff you will have had time to start getting oriented on HTML etc. 

 

         The "Shop" vs the Basic Shop

Eventually they hid the link for basic shops (although you can still create them) and the limited basic shop, leaving only Premium shops - then dropped the "Premium" from the name. So a "Shop" is now what allows html customization and sections, while a "Basic Shop" does not.


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