Threadless – quotes from Ross Zietz

On Monday night I went to the Threadless in Conversation shindig in Melbourne.

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In truth I expected a bit more on the business side, and little less on the design fan boy love.

In the spirit of creating value I have written below some quotes I took from Ross which are in blue, and my thoughts are underneath which are in black.

‘We’d rather just have a conversation’

– Still largely one way. We listen, but to those who deserve to be heard.

‘Started in 2000’

– Another example of overnight success taking nearly 10 years.

‘We saw the idea for threadless and said what if we just did it?’

– Again ideas are free, ideas are everywhere, doing creates winning.

‘I saw a tiny little ad for it in a magazine & just submitted a design & got hooked’

– Action….

‘My interview was in an Irish pub on St Patrick’s day drinking green beer’

– Pretty cool, why do people sit in stupid rooms to conduct interviews, maybe alcohol should be at all job interviews?

‘My title (Art Director) doesn’t really represent what I do. I do all kinds of different stuff’

– Job titles are an outdated idea from the Industrial Era.

‘ Our prints are not selling well…’

– Even successful businesses have flops.

‘Interacting with the community is the first part of my job’

– They all say that. But I wouldn’t know as I prefer Neighborhoodies.

‘My eduction didn’t prepare me for it. It was on the job I learned.’

– Education is just a ticket to the ball game.

‘People want to win, so they tell their friends’

– Viral stuff is about them, it’s never about us.

‘We’re going back to American Apparel. Custom is too hard’

– They create the Illusion of customisation.

‘We’re good friends with the guys at Twitter’

– Collaboration and relationships win in business. Who you know matters.

‘They opened a store because it was a cool idea and people asked’

– Sounds like a diworsification to me.

‘Whenever we have a sale volume goes up like a 100%’

– Even cool brands have price sensitive customers.

‘We email voters to remind them when a shirt they voted on is printed’

– Sounds like a little like spam, er sorry, bacn, but it must work.

‘The oldest person in our company is like 35’

– Is culture age dependent? I’m really curious. Comment if you have the answer.

‘We had a CFO who was like 50 or something and he just didn’t fit in’

– hmm, Did you let him?

‘Our team at threadless has 32 people’

– Sounds like a reasonably tight organisation. We don’t need huge numbers of people to get stuff done.

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How to generate media for your startup

Here’s a recent Article I wrote for Anthill Magazine:

When aiming to generate media coverage for our start-up or business, we often get one thing wrong. It relates to our training as marketers. We are too targeted.

In fact, we need to do the reverse and cast the media net wide – as wide as possible. What needs to be targeted is ‘the message’, not the media organisations we aim at. The message needs to be written for the forum. But, in truth, most of us have way more messages in our business than we have bothered to think about, or even invent. Yes, we can invent messages.

The message or pitch needs to be all about them, their readers and their viewers. Never us or our start-up. So before you pitch, work out how many angles you’ve got and you’ll be surprised what you can dig up. In fact, you’ve got to give a bit before you get anything – especially for start-ups, who can exchange a few learnings from the battlefield.

Here’s an idea-jam for potential examples of media angles for Start-up X.

  • Altruistic – helping people
  • Business methods you’ve used
  • Helping people make money
  • Saving money by using your products
  • Productivity improvements of staff
  • Web news – first of its type
  • Start-up stories
  • Technology used
  • Ecologically sound (no, we don’t mean carbon offset)
  • Green message
  • Making the web-physical connect – going beyond virtual
  • Helping the financially challenged
  • Help people connect with customers
  • It’s über new
  • It’s the old world reinvented
  • Vicarious living….

There’s more, but you’re bored already. I’m just showing what’s possible. Stuff like this equals free media. Pages/slots have to be filled.

Frequency vs Depth

While we know we need advertising or media exposure, the thing we need most is frequency. Advertisers talk about depth and frequency. (Depth being how many people we reach on each occasion. Frequency being how often we reach them.) It’s great to let zillions of people know about our start-up as quickly as we can. We may even be lucky enough to get some kind of viral campaign working for our start-up – we may be featured in the newspaper, on TechCrunch or we might even be lucky enough get a TV spot.

After the event, here’s what happens: people cook dinner, pick up the kids from school, pay the bills, kick the dog and get on with life. Our start up doesn’t really matter to them… straight away.

Consumer awareness goes something like this:

Exposure 1: “That’s a cool idea/product/concept.”

Exposure 2: “Oh, yeah, I must remember to check that out.”

Exposure 3: “There it is again. Might be worth having a look.”

Exposure 4: “Hmm, Ok – I’ll check it out when I’m shopping/online next.”

Exposure 5: They finally act and go look at / investigate / touch / feel / try….

After many exposures we have “a chance” of selling to them. Sure some people check it out first time, some buy straight away, but the large majority need to be reminded, over and over again. This doesn’t mean you need to spam them or do terrible interruption marketing. It means you need to send frequent and relevant marketing communications to the people who might care.

It’s a lot like us never noticing an advertisement for a car until you are in the market to buy one. They’re always there, we just have selective perception.

This is why advertising frequency is king. No point having a big launch campaign if your prospective new customers aren’t looking on that occasion. For entrepreneurs, the big launch concept is a hoax. It’s unsustainable. We’re far better off being there all the time, in some way – then we don’t have to predict when people will buy.

And before you waste a shipload of money on a PR agency, the truth is the media aren’t listening anymore. Well, listening to PR firms…. Once upon a time, a PR agency had the secret access keys to journalists. That made them powerful. But things have changed. Now we can access anyone with a few Twitter messages and some Google magic. And the PR agency messages are very 1993. In an age of authenticity, we are far better off going direct. Developing a relationship with media contacts is far more valuable than wasting money on outsourcing PR. People want to talk to the person, and that person is you.

Want proof ?– check out the rentoid.com about page and scroll down to see the media we have generated – none of which has been paid for.

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1 versus millions

It’s easy for us to be taken by the one in a billion websites like Facebook, Youtube and the like and think we need millions to make what we do work. The reality for most of our businesses is that we don’t need huge crowds, just a handful of good loyal people who dig what we do.
Sure some of us do need the zillions, like my business rentoid.com does… but the large majority of us don’t. We don’t need global awareness and brand recognition. What we need is a small group of dedicated fans, much like what Kevin Kelly has espoused in 1000 true fans.

But it’s often hard to get our heads around this, to believe this could really be all we need in the social media millions focus. So here’s what we ought do. This about how long it takes to have a decent conversation with 1, 10 or even 100 people. To imagine lining up 100 people, all of which are interested in what you do. To imagine them all in your living room or backyard at a BBQ. Your house would be very full, very busy, and chatting to all 100 people individually would take a week or so. In the real world it’s a lot of people.

And the internet is ‘the real world’….

The real world we are doing business in, not a virtual one. The real world where each customer matters and is always the start of our journey towards potentially millions.

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Tom & Trent do rentoid

Here’s our latest bit of fun to promote rentoid.

The net cost of this was a Saturday afternoon of filming. Classic startup, bootstrapping. If it spreads we’ll be stoked, if it doesn’t we’ll have learned something. And before you ask – the only objective of the adv below is ‘Awareness’.

We’d be stoked if we got 10,000 views on youtube. We’ll keep you updated.

It’s pretty funny – Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_nQsSTM6eM&feature=channel_page]

iphone apps & mini-preneurs

Got an idea for an iphone app you can’t find?

Great – there’s like a zillion iphone app developers waiting for your business right here, and here and here.

iphone-apps

So write the brief for the app you want and can’t find, contact the developers and get it made. Get your itunes account up, choose a cheap ‘low barrier’ price, like a ‘dollar’ or so and sell that puppy. Remember it’s better to sell a $1 iphone app a lot of times than a a $5 or $10 one no times at all.

This micro-entrepreneurs opportunity is as simple as they come. Global distribution with an engaged audience – rare indeed. A classic ‘trend hijack’.

Go now – make it, sell it.

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The techcrunch crowd

You’ve probably read or heard about techcrunch. Which is one of the most popular – technology / startup / silicon valley style blogs. Many tech savvy web addicts trawl it daily if not hourly for the 15+ updates a day.

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Not sure if you’ve ever bothered to read the comments. But they are literally 90% negative. Sure, some or a large part of the ideas or start ups on there will disappear, but it’s not as if every success story only has positive comments either. There is no discerning between any of them.

Rentoid got featured over 12 months ago and got bagged big time. More than 12 months later we are still here, while the pundits are “still in their cubicles”. Calling it from the cheap seats!

The techcrunch crowd – ‘the commentators’, are the type of people us entrepreneurs should stay away from. Their disease of negativity, isn’t worth catching.

The point of entrepreneurship is the journey into the unknown and excitment of creating change, and maybe even proving a few people wrong. Nothing wrong with that.

Any entrepreneur worth his salt is way too busy making their stuff happen, to spend time citicising other peoples efforts. So when someone looks down on your startup, smile and ask them to show you theirs.