What's playing in the workshop?

I have a long history of listening to audiobooks. What started has a habit during my morning commute has followed me into the workshop. Recently that habit has transitioned into listening to podcasts while I work. I'll be honest, I'm really not a big fan of the listening-to-two-strangers-yammer-on (get to the point already) format you often hear, but the revived tradition of radio drama is really appealing to me. So I've compiled a list of some of my favorites for you to check out.

 

The Black Tapes

Spooky! If the hosts of NPR were to join the X Files. The first podcast I really got into. Join Alex Regan has she she explores the paranomal and tries to unravel the mysteries of the Black Tapes.

 

Lore

" Because sometimes the truth is more frightening than fiction. "

Author Aaron Mahnke explores to dark sides of our history. Ghouls in Irish graveyards, globe trotting serial killers, the monsters inside us all. It's all here and all true.

 

LifeAfter

A new podcast about what happens to our social media presence after we die. A really outstanding cast of actors and a great plot had me finding busy work around the workshop just so I could stay and listen to another episode.

Reply All

Not an audio drama but one of my favorites. Alex and PJ are like the Lewis and Clark of the internet. They explore the weird and mysterious while producing a show that is a lot of fun to listen to.

Maker's Broadcast

The newest podcast on the list. At the time of writing there are only two episodes released. Each episode features a visit to the workshop of a maker in England. There is no narration, music, or ads. Just one person talking about their work and why they do what they do.

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What's Playing in the Workshop

Kick out the jams and dance like you know what you're doing.

Sometime around puberty I felt the need to add a soundtrack to my life. Music has been a constant companion for me ever since. These days it's more Raffi than Radiohead, but one of my favorite parts of the day is stepping into the workshop and losing myself in my work while bobbing my head along (and occasionally singing poorly) with my current playlist.

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The Downside of Aspirational Living

Can we just talk about this for a minute. During a recent conversation with a good friend about marketing yourself as a small business I was given the well intentioned advice that I need to sell an aspirational lifestyle. I've thought about it a lot. I just don't think I can swing it. Here is the truth of it. This is the first fancy latte I've ever ordered. It got cold while I took pictures of it. I'm only sitting in this coffee shop because I'm meeting a customer that wants this knife. I was up until 1:30 last night trying to figure out what a media kit is and how to make one. Then my website went down and I lost what progress I had made. I'll be up until 1:30 tonight to try to fix it. I'll get up 5 hours later to take care of my son for the day. I'm not complaining. I'm just trying to point out that my life is just as good/crappy as yours. The flip side is that someone is about to pay me actual money for doing what I love. All this aspirational living is bringing everyone down if you ask me. It's good to want to aspire to more, but don't let the coffee get cold in the meantime.

Jordan LeeComment
The Little Moments

It is the little moments in a journey that can define it for you. When I was 24 I went to visit my family living in Ireland. Last night over dinner we were talking about our favorite memories made there. For me it was smoked salmon, raw onion, and fresh sweet butter on a slab of brown bread. I had just gotten off the plane and we had stopped at a pub for a bite to eat. It was around 5 o'clock in the evening on a cold, wet day in February. As we walked up the hill to the pub the air started to smell like peat smoke as people got home from work and started to warm their houses. Every time I smell chimney smoke or sip on a little smokey whiskey I'm standing outside that pub, smelling the warm fires of home and about to eat one of the best meals I've ever had.

Jordan LeeComment
Bravery, Aspirations, and Noise

You can spend your time getting 10,000 new followers or getting one of them to buy something. 

One is about business while one is about your insecurities. One is about aspirations, market positioning, and status. The other is an actual result. One is about possibilities the other is what is possible. A business is a means of being paid for your work. You can't pay your rent in Likes.

Jordan LeeComment
Go Quote Yourself

I was followed by a new business on Instagram yesterday. I checked them out to see what their story was. When I looked at their profile I saw that they were a new leather goods lifestyle brand. They had been around 6 weeks or so. The had 42 posts. 3 of which were their own pictures. I think the regram will be the nail in the coffin for Instagram. It was the only social media platform where you were required to share new material. Pinterest and Tumblr have become about curating existing material. Facebook and Twitter have the share and the RT. 

This got me thinking about the scarcity of original material out there. It's time we spend less effort curating and more creating. Create something to be shared. It doesn't have to be groundbreaking or entirely new. It doesn't even have to be that great. This post isn't the best ever written. It will be ingonored or forgotten by most who read it. Some little part of it will stick with someone though. 

Put something out there. A new picture, sentence, thought, anything. Some point to be referenced later, even if it is only by you. Become quotable.

Jordan Lee Comment
Stand in the Place Where You Live

It started with tote bags. Or was it German hand-planes? I don't remember. There was this sneaking bit of discomfort that I found lurking in the dusty corners of Instagram. A seething Mathmos clinging to all of my Pinterests. This gray sameness. No wait, it started with beer... If you are a beer drinker in this modern age I'm sure you have encountered it. A new local brewery opens up in your town. You stick your nose in, hoping that they've got something good on tap, and suddenly you have a moment of déjà vu. Your eyes glide down the beer list. The super hoppy IPAs. The token porter or stout. A wheat. Something else that is really just another IPA, but with a different name. Maybe a Belgian or two. A Black IPA or Session Ale so that you know how cutting edge they are. There it is. The sameness. The fact of the matter is that this small town brewery could be anywhere.

So what does any of this have to do with running a business? Go to Etsy and you will see what I'm talking about. Log on to the websites of a few different independent leather goods makers. Do they have a key ring? A minimalist card wallet? How about a tote bag? Are any of them really all that different from each other? Does the guy in Utah produce anything that different from the guy in Texas? Is there a Houston style of making things?

In the world of modern communication creativity has gone viral. All at once everyone's good ideas became accessible to everyone else. Contrary to what you might expect this has really stifled ingenuity. Because now when you start a leather goods business (or graphic design, ice cream, jewelry, food truck, wooden furniture....) and you want to make a tote bag, you log on and search for images of tote bags. Now you know how to make a tote bag. You will have a tote bag just like everyone else except yours will be, you know... different (special/unique/artisanal/rugged/folksy/please-buy-my-bag).

My point is this, once upon a time there was a bookkeeper in England. Every day he had to lug the day's ledgers from his client's office to his. He needed something to carry them him. So he had a local leather maker make him something that would hold English style ledgers. Elsewhere in the world there was a rice framer in Vietnam. She needed a way to get the rice to the warehouse so she made a reed bag to carry it. At the same time a young Shawnee was fashioning a deer skin sack to hang from his belt to hold his fire starting materials. All of these folks used what was available in their region (materials, knowledge, demand) to craft something they needed. These became archetypal trends and now we have tote bags, bucket bags, and possibles bags.

Start by solving a problem. If you have a brewery you don't have to have an IPA. If you are a brewery in Cleveland make a beer that goes with pierogi, or to pair with a local cheese business, or really good plain English ale (seriously, someone do this). If you make jewelry you don't have to make geometric frames and half-dip them in pastel paint. Make jewelry that you can wear while shoveling snow. For God's sake stop drawing bison (or stags or arrows) in chalk on things for people's logos. If you are going to make a tote bag don't start by looking at what everyone else has made. Start by thinking about what needs to be carried around and build a bag around it. Clevelanders carry different things in their bags than people in L.A. Walk down the street and look for inspiration when working on your graphic design. When you shrink the vast world of possibilities down to the world around you, you begin to create new possibilities by limiting yourself.

How Much is Your Time Worth


If you are starting an independent business one of the most valuable productivity tools you can develop is an accurate hourly rate. Not only will it help you establish a proper price for your goods or services but it will also help you figure out how to best prioritize your time.
So what should your hourly rate be? That is something you will have to figure out on your own, but here are some helpful guidelines. Do you need specialized equipment? Did you have to learn how to operate that equipment? Did you go to school or have to study to acquire your skill set? Are you proficient? Do you provide a level of service that goes above the standard? If you could answer yes to most of these questions then you qualify as a tradesman. You studied to use a specific set of tools and skills that apply specifically to your field. So if you need a starting point think about what your mechanic/plumber/electrician/web-designer charges for labor. Then comes the big debate and a little honesty. Are you a novice at your trade? Do you work at or above the level of your peers in your trade? How much overhead is required for you to do your job (overhead = cost of rent, insurance, equipment, packaging materials, branding... anything you have to pay for that doesn't directly go into the product you are making). Adjust your rate accordingly. This is not set in stone either. Hopefully you are getting better as you gain experience and your rate should reflect that. This also assumes that you are selling all that you make. If you are making a bunch stuff that isn't getting sold you need to reexamine your product and pricing (to be covered in a later post).


So now you have come up with a number. Great, you made up an imaginary number. What do you do with it? Your hourly rate can be used as the fixed variable in any number of situations. It's the difference between a+b=50 and a+25=50.


Here are some examples. For arguments sake let's say that you set your rate at $30 per hour. Say you need to order some supplies. You find them online but shipping is $12. You can go pick up the supplies from a specialty store on the other side of town and save on shipping. It takes you 1.5 hours to drive to the store and back. You just saved $12. What if you had just stayed in your workshop and had it shipped? In 1.5 hours you should have been able to produce at least $45 worth of labor towards your product. So by driving to the store to save on shipping you are actually losing $33.


Here is another good one, and a pill that most of us really need to swallow. You need to update your website. Nothing complicated, you just need to update your product listings and event schedule. So you spend the day fixing up your website because you are a boot-strapper and you wear all the hats in you business. At the end of the day you spent 8 hours getting everything sorted out. Had you spent that time in your workshop you could have produced $240 worth of labor. That is a ton to spend on such a simple task. Had you paid a friend or freelancer to do it (at $15/hr) you would have ended the day ahead $120 and not spent the day zonked out in front of a computer screen.  Had you hired someone that knows what they are doing they will also get the job done in less time so your profit would have been greater.
Knowing your hourly rate is also useful when pricing your work and when collaborating with others. Let's say a couple asked you to make a bench out of a tree that fell in their backyard. What do you charge in a situation like that? If you priced your goods based on cost of materials you would be working for free. If you set your prices based on gut feelings (it happens a lot) you would have to try to figure out how much you might sell a bench like that for and then go from there. If you know your hourly rate to be $30 per hour and it's going to take you 20 hours to make the bench then the bench costs at least $600.


Having a solid hourly rate can be used in a myriad of other situations. What price you charge for your final products, what products are worth producing, when to hire employees and how much to pay them, and when to invest in equipment just to name a few. Also, being able to assign a value to your time can provide you with a little bit more confidence and a little solid footing in a your decisions as a business owner. A position that frequently calls on you to make choices based on your gut.
 

Jordan LeeComment
Unfollow Your Dreams

Finding the right kind of inspiration can be tricky. After years of thorough investigation I have concluded that the worst place to go looking for it is on the Internet. If you want true inspiration stop looking at the work of your peers. Do it right now. Log into your social media accounts and unfollow anyone working in your medium. Why? Because what you are gleaning from them isn't inspiration, or at least it's not your inspiration.


You know how when you get a paper cut and it hurts for a minute but then you don't feel it anymore? I think inspiration works the same way, that little paper cut is sending information to your brain over and over again until your brain is like "Yeah, I get it. Shut up".  If you are constantly bombarding your brain with other people's signals then your own will get lost.

So a few weeks ago I did a little inspirational detox. I unfollowed everyone that works in my medium (I left a few that I enjoy reading because of the material they post not their work). I stopped reading the product catalogs that arrive at my door step. In general I have dropped out of the community around my medium. The result is that I'm coming up with my own answers and better ones at that. Inspiration is not Plug-and-Play. So stop taking a little bit from here and a little bit from there. Cut down on the noise so you can hear your own voice. 
 

Jordan Lee Comment
The Only Answer That Matters

I was at a large family gathering over the weekend. While sitting around and talking about life in general one of my in-laws asked what was the hardest part about running my business. I thought about it. My response was "deciding to keep doing it every day." I could see the look of confusion cross their face. Why not production, time management, budgeting, advertising, or something more mundane? What do you mean deciding to keep doing it every day? Does your job suck that bad? Your business must not being doing so well.

My father has a saying. "Working for yourself is easy. One day you get out of bed and decide to not go work for any one else. The hard part is that every day after that you have to get out of bed and decide to not go work for any one else."

Production times get better as I do. Time management is something that will sort itself out. Budgeting and advertising are all problems that can be solved. The plague of questioning yourself is something that will never go away. Am I doing the right thing? Is this worth it? Wouldn't it be easier to just get a normal job? Should I feel guilty for not just going with the flow? Could I be doing better?

I love my job. I love what I have done so far. I love all the possibilities it presents for the future. I also have days where I wake up and think, "am I really going to do this again today?"

When you are your own boss you have to learn to be your own cheerleader. You have to learn when to give yourself a break or cut yourself some slack. You have to learn how to keep going. You have to learn to remind yourself that today you took a step forward from yesterday. Tomorrow you will take the next step forward again. Every morning when I wake up my business is failing until I get up and get it working. I have to ask myself, "am I really going to do this again?" Then I get up and do my best to make sure that when I have to ask myself that question again tomorrow I can think "Look at what you did yesterday. What can you do today?" Because if you are your business then without you there is no business. Take pride in your work and keep one eye on tomorrow. The future is filled with uncertainty and questions with out clear solutions.  The only real answer is, "Yes, I'll try again today."

Why Buy Local (No Really)

I get to hear a lot of justifications about why people should "Buy Local".  Some of them are actually quite good. Tax revenue, keeping money in your neighborhood, supporting a growing community. Sometimes it's just a bullshit reason to drive up the price of something. Let's be real here, I love to support local businesses, but I don't think that the $7 I just spent on some fancy cheese is going to repave the potholes out front. I am notoriously practical and I have a slightly different view on why someone should make their purchases from a local business. Let's start with the total opposite. You know those late night ads you see on TV? The ones for the kitchen gadget that can deep fry a turkey and then turn it into a low calorie smoothie that the whole family will enjoy? Do you know what their business plan is? To successfully sell a product. Think about that sentence. They don't have to sell a successful product. It doesn't have to be well made. This is because they know a few things about you. A) If you buy their patented Turkey Smoother you will only ever need to buy one. B) If you buy the Turkey Smoother and hate it, statistically, you will not go through the hassle of returning it. C) You will realize the pointlessness of a Turkey Smoother after the return period has expired. They don't need to sell you five Turkey Smoothers. Just one. They don't care if you ever buy from them again.

Let's look at my business plan. My reach is not global. My reach is local. My reach is about as far as I can stick my hand out to shake yours. That is how I met most of you. I handed you my card. You have a friend that knows me. I was recommended to you by someone else. If my plan was to just sell one thing to each person I met  I'd be out of business in a year. By staying a local business I am holding myself accountable to those in my locality. This is because I can't afford to loose customers. I have to make a product that you are happy with. I have to make something so good that the kid bagging your groceries asks where you got it. I have to make something so good that you will tell him. That you will remember my name. That you will come back and buy again. That you will bring your friends with you when you do.

So that is why I buy local. It's not just to add to the revenue stream of a local community. It's because I know that the person I'm buying from really cares about what they are making. They care because they have to. They care because they want to still be selling them next year.

More than Service with a Smile

A long time ago in a galaxy far away, when Wright and Rede was still just a twinkle in my eye, I read a fair amount of business planning books. There is one that still sticks with me to this day. It contained, by far, the worst piece of business advice I have ever read. The book was one of those you-will-write-a-business-plan-while-you-read-this-book books. Part of the writing process involved supplying the name of your CFO, attorney, and accountant. The author then went on to proclaim "If you can't afford to pay people to fill these rolls then you can't afford to start a business." You know what I did? I finished reading that book and took notes. I often refer back to these notes when I am trying to decide how to not run my business. I wish I had written down the title of this opus so I could contact the author and tell him what an asshat he is, but justice cannot always prevail. That being said there are three things that you really must have in order to have a successful business. A solution to a problem, a strong message (back story, motivation, good images), and excellent customer service. I'll talk about the first two in later posts but, having experienced some lousy customer service today, I think I'll go ahead and address it before all the steam finishes venting from my ears.

Customer service is not about dealing with customers that have a problem. It is not a skill you use only when something goes wrong. Look at those two words. It is the way you provide service to your customers. The fact of the matter is that unless you are selling the cure for cancer (and the only one selling it) people have a choice to buy from you or not.

Have you ever been to a hot new restaurant where the staff thinks they are God's gift to the service industry? Maybe they were wearing ripped jeans, too much pomade,rolled their eyes because you didn't realize the draft list was written on a postage stamp by the front door,  and were looking down their nose at you because you didn't want to try the fried eel testicle appetizer? I don't care how good those eel's nuts might have been, I'm not going back. This doesn't just apply to the restaurant industry. No one wants to hire an electrician that doesn't show up to work. They won't donate to a charity that can't get their name right. Time Warner Cable. Seriously, Time Warner Cable.

I think this problem is so endemic because it is so hard to scale and requires such a huge investment. It is an invisible investment too. If you own a shoe company, and spend a ton on R&D for a new shoe design, when you are done you have a new pair of shoes. When you spend a ton of effort on customer service you end up with a bunch of people who are willing to continue to do business with you. Which is why so many companies are huge one minute and forgotten the next. If you can't do customer service right then you have a steadily shrinking pool of available customers who are willing to do business with you. No matter how tasty your eel testes are.

So what should customer service look like? Do you have any regular customers? Do you know their names? Do you ever find yourself saying, "Hi Randy (or Rick, Lori, Walter, Frank, Phoebe, Joe, Troy, Brian, Jesse or Nathan)" Do you know what is going on in their lives? Do you care? Because that is what real customer service looks like. A failure in this arena isn't that you couldn't provide something they were looking for and don't get a sale. A failure is when you start to treat them like a number. The customer isn't always right. Sometimes you just don't have what they are looking for or your business doesn't provide a service that they need right now. That is fine. If you are doing your job right they will come back later.

Because ultimately, until our iPhones rise up and become our automaton overseers, customer service is about people. I know that sounds like some crap the manager at your first job shoveled at you, but it is true. When you start to see your customers as people (people who are willing to part with the money that they worked hard to earn, people who are trusting you to do your job right, people who are willing to let you occupy some tiny part of their lives) then you are starting to provide some real service to your customers.

So where to start? If someone asks for your business card (or about your business), shake their hand and tell them your name. Hopefully you will get theirs in return. Remember their name. Write it down if you have to. Get to know them. I do this using normal human means of communication such as "How are you doing?" Go through the trouble of remembering what they say.

Avoid giving canned answers. Yes, if you meet a bunch of people in a day you will start repeating yourself. To avoid this, think about the words that are coming out of your mouth.  I know this guy who sells pies at a local market. He is the master of canned answers. He has one for every situation. I occasionally buy a pie from him. If he weren't there I'd buy a pie from someone else. Because he is just some guy that sells pie. I know another guy named Hunter. He sells almond milk at the same market. When I first met Hunter he shook my hand and asked about my business. We have since talked about owning our own businesses. When he isn't at a market I'll check his Facebook page to see where he will be selling next.  I've known Hunter for years. I've watched his business grow. We have had beers together. I give a shit. See the difference?

In the same vein, never use a form letter. Nothing pisses me off more than a form letter. Take the time to use real human thoughts when writing an email. Your customers can tell the difference. I don't care if you have answered the same question a thousand times before. Put it on your F.A.Q. then, but take the time to give everyone a little consideration. There is no short cut for customer service. Expect to invest one third of your effort in it. There is no way to become more efficient at it. By it's very nature it is an investment of time and consideration.

It's okay to tell someone "no". This is a hard one. If you aren't the right person for the job you are doing your customer a disservice (and abusing their trust) by telling them you can do something that you can't. When you tell them "no" use real human thoughts while doing so. See above. Also, always offer a real explanation as to why. They don't need the gory details of your life but explain, for example, that the type of material you use wouldn't work well for the job. They'll come back when they need something you do offer.

If you have to hire employees that will be interacting with your customers take the time to educate them properly. That way they can give intelligent answers to peoples questions. The worst thing you can do is tell an employee that there is always one right answer to a question. I take that back, the worst thing you can do is give them a script. It's demeaning to your employee and your customer. Train your employees to act like humans.

Finally, always remember that you are a real human being interacting with other real human beings. Treat them the way you would want to be treated. Give them your attention. When you start doing that you  stop having customers. You have people that will help hold your event tent down in a thunderstorm, recommend you to a shop that could carry your goods, cheer you on when business is hard, tell you that they'll wait until you are happy with your bag design to buy one (instead of buying from someone else), be your ambassadors, your marketing department, bring you a beer after a long show, and proudly tell people that they knew you back when and still know you now. Because people, unlike customers, have more to offer than just the cash in their wallet. Customer service is the act of investing in your people. When you invest in your people what they give back is priceless.

 

 

The Poverty of Inspiration and the Richness of Want

There comes this strange time in the growth of a business. You have hit your stride. You are building momentum. Things are starting to make sense. The time has come to grow but you can't because the resources you have available do not match up to the need in your vision. When your side gig becomes your main squeeze there is no extra income. Every dollar I make I have to decide, is this dollar for me or does it go to the business? A growing business is a hungry baby and a good business is always growing. While I find this unimaginably frustrating, I have also come to see this as a boon. Bootstrapping is a cerebral art. There are never any easy answers. When you learn how to make do with what you have you distill what you are capable of. When there are no obvious solutions you are forced to come up with more unique answers. Answers that only you could have arrived at. A strong business is built with novel solutions rather than just following the well traveled path before it.

I can't begin to tell you how many times I've decided that I needed to buy a new piece of equipment in order to get something to work. Then I've gone on and figured out a better way to get by without it.

Here is a real life example. I'm ready to start producing bags. I've spent the time designing them. I've built the perfect bag in my head. I made a prototype. It works the way I wanted it to. When I tried to get them into production I discovered that hand-stitching the way I was hoping to do was not going to be feasible. I came to the obvious conclusion. I will have to buy an industrial sewing machine. But honestly, the money I'd have to spend on one could be used in a million different ways. A growing business is a hungry business. That also doesn't account for the investment of time and patience required to master the thing. Not to mention a machine stitched seam is not nearly as strong as one done by hand. So my lack of available resources has driven me to abandon that design and try to come up with a more novel approach.

I started to redesign the bag with no stitching. While I'd like to claim this concept as my own, I have to give credit to some of the forebears of leather working. Machined thread is a newer creation and stitchless bags are an old design. I had passed on this idea a long time ago because all the versions I've ever seen of it were really poorly made. In my head stitchless bag equals shoddy craftsmanship. With industrial scale stitching out of the question I took another look at the design. I began to see ways to improve it. I began to see how easy it would be to repair over time. How nice of a shape it makes when it comes together. How it makes a stronger seem than one that is stitched. So now I have a better bag. I truly feel that it is a much better design than what I was trying to push into production before. More importantly it is held together by a bunch of novel little solutions I was forced to come up with. Little novel solutions that will make the design my own. If I had the resources that I wanted I'd be machine stitching bags at this very moment. Yes I'd have a finished product, but it probably wouldn't be very interesting. I'd have spent all that time and money to create something just like everyone else.

So next time you feel the like the only way to grow your business is to make a big investment take time to decide what type of investment you are going to make. Are you going to throw some money at it for a quick fix or can you tap into the resources you already have and come up with something better? Sometimes the really valuable answer requires an investment that you must make of yourself.

An Honest and Open Accounting of My Second Year in Business.

Somewhere around November 6th of last year I hit the two year mark for Wright and Rede. Only I didn't notice and I'm just now realizing that I never did my end of the year round up. I think that is a good example of what this second year in business has been like. The first year of starting a business is all about moments. The series of firsts that keep driving you on to the next milestone. The second year is a steady slog uphill. Not that I don't like the slog. I love the slog. I eat slog every morning for breakfast and love it. Slog is what makes you feel like you are starting to get a grip on what you are doing. Slog puts a little ground under your feet for the first time. It's also kind of sloggy. What use to be a major milestone last year is just another task to be completed this year.

The second year heralds just a little bit of normalcy. I have a general idea that I can actually make a living doing this. I have a reasonable grip on how much work it is going to take and how much material I need to have on hand. The days of stumbling around in the dark are fewer but strangely missed.

I had some hard lessons learned and a few roads blocked. In 2014 I decided to stop seeking out wholesale business. After sitting down and doing a little math and some serious soul searching I had to conclude that my work is too labor intensive to sell at wholesale prices. Maybe someday I'll be able to produce enough that it is an option again. Right now it is just noise that is distracting me from the work that needs to get done. In April I pulled out of my last consignment shop as well for the same reason.

I also succeeded in having my first truly public failure. I spent six months promising and promoting messenger bags that would be ready for the holidays. Then the holidays arrived and I discovered that hand stitching bags at a production level is a superhuman task no matter how many extra hours I throw at it. I had to come to the conclusion that for the amount of labor I put into each bag, I'd have to charge a price that I didn't feel they were worth.

There were some great moments in 2014 as well. The good folks at Cleveland Magazine were kind enough to put a nice big picture of my goofy mug in their publication. The article that went along with it made my mom proud and (hopefully) everyone who ever picked on me in high school green with envy and self-doubt. There was the morning I woke up to discover that my website had sold out over night. There was that weekend where I sold an entire season's worth of stuff in three days. There were all the people I had to apologize to when they came looking for a bag I didn't have who responded with “We can wait.” There were trips to cities I've never been to before. New products were stumbled upon. Things were made and sold. Blood spilled. Tears shed. Acquaintances were turned into friendships over pints of beer. Burdens were lightened and gossip was dished. The second year has fewer milestones but the more I look back on it the more I smile. There is something to be said for the quite happy moments. They might pass by unnoticed but they have added up to a life that I'm happy to live, which is the point of this whole venture anyway.

The biggest (and best) moment waited until after my season was over. He is currently napping right next to me while I (quietly) type. While he was asleep he went from being four weeks old to a five weeker this morning. Nothing has provided more clarity to my life than this little guy. You can gain a lot of confidence when it is required rather than volunteered.

Social Media:

First, before I rattle off some numbers here, the biggest social media milestone is that I stopped giving a flying fig as to how many likes I have received. I have been witness to too many social media juggernauts putting out crappy (and over priced) work to really care any more. The simple reality is this: some people will get me, some will not. I'd rather have 200 people that are really interested in what I'm trying to do than 5000 anonymous followers.

Facebook followers: 360

Instagram followers: 734

Pinterest followers: 101

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What's Up For 2015?

That is the big question. January is always the time of year when I sit down and do all my planning for the year. Mostly I just ask myself if this is the way I want my life to be going and if not what can I do to change it. The little guy is going to change a lot of things. Working from home makes childcare a lot easier. It also makes getting any work done much more complicated. I foresee many late nights in my future. I'm also going to have to scrap a few of my more labor intensive products. While that's a little sad, it's also a chance to try new things. The bags (once again....) are on the drawing table. A new design that requires a lot less stitching but is much stronger is in the works. Hopefully this pony will make it to the finish line this time. A couple of side projects have turned out to be a big success. I hope to spend more time working on special one offs and experimental projects. That is one of the benefits of not courting wholesale accounts. I think the biggest change for 2015 will be in the way I do business. Last year I didn't have a weekend off from April until October because of all the events I do. It's a lot of fun getting to talk to everyone. It's a lot less fun having your livelihood dependent on whether or not it is windy that day. So starting with the website relaunch I did back in October I'll be devoting much more attention to the internet side of my business. Also, I have plans for some interesting collaborations, but that will be a discussion for another day.

Finally I want to take a moment and thank everyone for all of their support in 2014. I was talking about how the milestones fade as the time passes. This past holiday season was one that not only broke records but sent them packing. It is rare that I am left speechless (imagine that), but that is exactly what happened and on more than one occasion. What all your support really means to me is that right now, during my slow season, I can take time off and sit here and watch my son sleep and daydream about what he is going to be like when he grows up instead of worrying about paying bills. It blows my mind that I've gotten myself to the place I am at right now. I could not have done it without all of your support. So thank you.

This will be a hell of a year. Hope to see you out there.

The Great Weathered Leather Experiment Results: Different Strokes for Different Folks

 

 

A little over a year ago I had an idea. Give away twelve bracelets to twelve people. The bracelets would be as raw and natural as possible. The instructions were to do what ever you want to it, just take a picture every month and send it to me.

In the following year we have learned a lot. Oil and sun will darken the leather. Oil more so than sun. Some bracelets got zero conditioning. Some were soaked in oil. We learned that natural oils (coconut or olive) worked well. Mineral oil or other petroleum based treatments tended to do some harm in the long run. Natural oils and fats age. Mineral oil breaks down into solvents and destroys the natural fats in the leather. Coffee does not stain leather as much as we thought (or hoped) it would. Chicken poo and grape jelly just add to the character.

Lastly I was able to demonstrate my favorite thing about vegetable tanned leather. Leather is a natural material. It changes and ages just like we all do. As you carry it through the journey of your life, it will carry the story of what you've experienced.  Twelve bracelets all identical, given to twelve people. One year later each one is completely unique. Pretty cool.

 

 

While our documentation of this experiment is over the Great Weathered Leather Experiment continues in every item I make. If you are interested in following along, check out the board I've started for Wright and Rede in the Wild on Pinterest.

Cultivate Strength over Momentum.

Starting a business isn't easy. There are no paths to follow. There is no right way to do it. There are plenty of people out there who are more than willing to talk about how they succeeded. Who doesn't want to sit around and talk about their accomplishments?  A few people are willing to talk about the hard parts, mostly in the context of how they overcame them.  Almost no one talks about the day to day struggle of starting or owning a business, mostly because it can be kind of boring and ugly. I also think that in part it is because our brains like to block out the bad parts and only remember the good. It's a defense mechanism. This is why I've taken to writing it all down. For the first year of my business I dutifully wrote down every fear and worry I've struggled with. I'm now well into my second year of being an independent business owner. I have gained a lot of experience and I'm much more comfortable with the risks associated taking the path less taken. I've also learned a very hard truth. The second year is much harder.

Year one is marked with highs and lows. I had lots of sleepless nights because I honestly had no idea what I was doing. There was the first time I disappointed a customer. The first time I got into a really big show. The first account I had to cut ties with. The first time I got mentioned in the paper. The first time I made a dumb call that cost me money. The first time I ran into a stranger who had a friend that bought something off me. The first time I was asked a question I didn't know how to answer.

It's all those firsts that helped get me through it. Even the bad ones were some sort of new horizon. There is a lot of momentum created when everything is new and people hear about you for the first time. All you have to do is stay on top of that momentum; just stay ready for anything.   I've found the second year is all about hard work because the momentum has to come from within me. I think that is why a lot of business don't make it out of the honeymoon phase. At some point you have to stop drawing on the energy from around you and start drawing it from yourself. It's exhausting and it is constant.

I can see now how successful business fail. You keep pouring your energy into it. The bigger you get the more energy you pour into it. Your reserves run low. Something goes wrong, and because this is real life, lots of other little (and usually completely unrelated) things go wrong a long with it. So you reach this weird juxtaposition. Where you've kind of made it to your goal (or at least you are making progress on the path to it) but the part of you inside that was driving you dries up.

Now that I know what to look for I see it constantly. A new business is suddenly everywhere. Their Kickstarter funded. They're getting lots of press. They can't make new stock fast enough. Then the updates start getting farther apart. Then the orders start to get more and more backed up. Then they just walk away and no one understands why. There is this new television show. The plot is great, characters gripping, and the critics love it. Then suddenly two years later they've jumped the shark, quietly get canceled, and no one will ever know the ending (I'm looking at you Heroes). Boy meets girl. They fall in love. They move in together. They annoy the crap out of their friends and disappear into their own little world. Then one day they have nothing to say to each other anymore. They part.

This is the reality of the second year. Sounds horrible right? It's true. There are some moments that can really suck. There are days when it's hard to keep showing up. The dream is still there but it's so hard to keep reaching for it. I'm in one of those moments now. This is why I’m writing this now because later my tricky brain will whitewash over this. I am, however, not willing to walk away.

Fortunately I've learned a few tricks. First, realize that newness is like a steroid. It can build you up quickly and provide a lot of strength, but it is false strength. Real strength comes from within. There is a big difference between the professional athlete that gets carried off the field because of a bad hangnail and the one who finishes the quarter with a broken thumb. One of them is strong and the other was just big.

Cultivate your strength. Sometimes the best way to do this is to walk away. Get some exercise. Go for a run. Hit the gym, hard. Hike in the woods. Play tag. Get away from your work and work your body instead. You'll live a longer and you'll give your mind a break.

Do something unproductive you've never done before. Take a pottery class. Go to a museum and look at art, not because you are looking for inspiration, but because it is freaking beautiful. Drive to a nearby city that has nothing obvious to offer and spend the day exploring. Volunteer somewhere.

Talk to someone that is in the same boat as you but does not love you. This is important. Your friends and family care about you, which is great, but their primary concern will be to make you feel better. Finding a good peer to talk to will give you a good place to vent to someone who actually knows what you are feeling. You'll also probably discover that they are going through the exact same shit as you and for some reason that will make you feel better.

Put down your phone and walk away from your computer. Because the internet is the devil and here to make you feel like you are being productive when really it's just sucking your life away. There are no answers for you on the internet. So stop looking. Strength comes from within. You can't find it on someone's blog (this one included). So put the phone down. Not for an hour. Not all morning. Put it down for as long as it takes. What ever happens while you are not there will be waiting when you get back. Right now it is just sucking up the little bit of energy you got left.

Most importantly I try to remind myself that my life is about more than the business I have created. I'm more than my job. If my business implodes tomorrow I'll still be here. Those reserves I was talking about before are there because of the richness of the life I have lived up to this point. If the life I'm living outside of work is dull and grey then of course the energy I'll have to devote to my work will be lack luster. When I take some time and live a little a can see that my business is just a little part of me.

Will I feel better when I'm done? Will the problems go away? Will the day to day struggles become less of a burden? Nope. What I will have, however, is a new coffee mug, a healthy heart, a new gallery to check out, a greater appreciation for Hudson, Ohio, and the strength to take another step forward. That is what owning a business is really about; finding the strength to take the next step forward.

Fair Weather Followers; Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Aplomb

As an owner of a small business I've had to learn to tackle the world of social media over the past year. While it is a powerful an effective tool for any fledgeling entrepreneur, I also worry that it is doing as much harm as good. In the interest a clarity I'm going to break this one up into three posts. Here is part One and part Two.

Part Three: Fair Weather Followers; Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Aplomb

Establishing the real impact and value of your business is important. Especially if it is a business that you have built yourself. If you have poured your heart and soul into a company, and that company is a reflection of your self, you want to know that people value what you have built. If you do any kind of business online this value is almost always measured by a series of customer interactions. This day and age your quality is measured by the number of "likes" (or follows/retweets/shares/upvotes/repins/or favorites) you can bank in a given day. When people try to establish the importance of their venture they might start by saying "I've got 120K followers on my Facebook page." Which sounds impressive. When they speak, over one-hundred thousand people will listen. That's power, right?

This actually reminds me of a phenomena that has started to die out recently. Up until the late nineties when two business persons met at a conference (kind of like the internet but with worse coffee) they might introduce themselves by saying something like:

"Bob Dallas, I own a sprocket factory in Boise that employs over 5000 people."

"Hi Bob, I'm Frank Newhart. I own a cog  franchise with 130 locations in the Tri-State area."

Theses numbers sound impressive when you hear them, but when you really think about what they are saying it's pretty meaningless. Are those 130 locations profitable? Are the 5000 people working for you doing good work? Do they care about their jobs? Take this example:

"Hi, I'm Bob Dallas. I have a company where 5000 people are doing work that could have been done by 1000. We are very inefficient and 4500 of them are just working there while they try to find something better."

A little less impressive, right?  Recently, internet industry gurus have caught on to this problem and have introduced a new set of metrics. It's called "conversions". A conversion basically means, I ask/you do. If I post a message, you share it. If I offer a coupon, you buy something. If I tweet something humorous you favorite it. The iGurus assume this to mean that your customers are engaging you and that all those Follows are adding up to dollars. This is the fundamental idea behind social marketing. It almost makes sense. Until you start to look at comparative analytics.

Analytics are a set of tools that let me see how the conversion process (gee, that sounds kind of menacing) is going. When I say "check out this page" how many people actually do? When I send out an email I can see the percentage of people that opened it (kind-of-but-not-really but that's another story). You can also set some comparative analytics whereby you identify as an industry and you can see how your rates compare to others in your field. That is when the truth really starts to set in. In my industry, an average mailing list blast has an open rate of 24% and a conversion rate of 4%.  That is the rate set by industry leaders that have office buildings full of people who's sole purpose is to figure out ways to get you to click a link. That's pretty weak.

So 120K followers might sound impressive, but when you break it down it's not so great. Of those 120K followers 91K will ignore what you have to say completely. 115K of them will not be willing to use your coupon, click share, or comment on something you've posted.

So enough of the hypotheticals. Let's take a look at my Instagram account. At the time of this post I have 533 followers. Through my extensively insecure, self-doubting research I have concluded that this number is less than companies of equal mass in my field. If I further break that down, using common sense analytics, I can safely assume that  I can subtract a given percentage of those people right off the bat because they will never buy anything from me. These are people who will scroll past my pictures without reading what I wrote. People who are my kinda-friends but don't want to buying anything right now. People who followed me because I followed them.  (I see the follow-for-a-follow technique as the equivalent of bailing water into each others sinking ships.) People who are looking to copy my designs, ideas, or dumb jokes. People who need a little inspiration and are just looking at pretty pictures. People who don't speak my language. People who set up an Instagram account, followed my feed, and then never logged on again. And finally perverts (because any given population on the internet is at least partly kinky weirdos). I feel it's safe to assume that about 10-15% of the people that follow me will actually commit to buying something. Which, according to my analytics account, sets me well above the industry standard. So all that work for about 50 people. Why even bother?

Here is why I bother. Of those 50ish people that are willing to be "converted"  two of them saw a post on Instagram, showed up at one of my events, bought what I had posted, and then hung around (literally) to act as human ballast for my tent while a wicked storm blew in. (You know who you are if you are reading this. Thanks again!). Another one of those 50 people saw something I had posted and drove from Akron to Cleveland (30+ minutes) so that he could pay me in cash and therefore save me the credit card processing fees. Of those 50ish people well over 90% are returning customers (I still use restaurant lingo and call them my regulars). I know this because I know their names and faces.  I've met them. I've engaged in actual human interaction.

Sure, I could inflate my numbers by posting vapid lifestyle photographs in my feed. I could repost unoriginal material because it looks good and will earn me some likes. I could conduct surveys where I don't bother reading the answers so long as I can count a higher number of interactions. I could offer give-aways and gain (and then promptly loose) 100 followers in the hopes that a small percentage will stick around.

I don't though. Not just because it makes me feel cheesy, not because I'd rather be making stuff than posting about it, but because I'm not concerned about growing the percentage of fair weather followers on my feed. I'm more concerned about finding that 10% that will stand around in the rain with me.

My take away from all this. Be honest. Work hard. Make good shit. Of all the people in this world only a small percentage will get what you do. If you focus on staying true to what you do they will find you. Everything else is just noise and worry.

 

(P.S. Bob Dallas and Frank Newhart are just figments of my imagination and weren't harmed during the making of this post. If you are actually named Bob Dallas or Frank Newhart I'm not writing about you it's merely coincidence, but seriously, you should check out my Pinterest account. You might find something useful there.)

 

Down the Rabbit Hole: Don't Believe Your Own Hype

As an owner of a small business I've had to learn to tackle the world of social media over the past year. While it is a powerful an effective tool for any fledgeling entrepreneur, I also worry that it is doing as much harm as good. In the interest a clarity I'm going to break this one up into three posts. Part Two: Down the Rabbit Hole;  Don't Believe Your Own Hype

In part one I discussed social media as an alternate reality. The idea being that by continually witnessing a series of notable moments (staged or otherwise) you are hampering your ability to advance your own purpose. In part two I'm going to take this idea a bit further and look at what this alternate reality does when you become part of it.

When you really boil it down social media (and branding in general)  is all hype. You are basically taking your message (look at what I make, I like cats, I'm important, here is something that needs attention in the world, high school was awesome, high school is over...) and putting it out there in the hope that other people will be affected by it (they read it, relate to it, like you more, take action, buy something). There is nothing good or bad about this. As a business person it gives me a unique opportunity to educate people about what I do and why I do it. Obviously, hype can be used negatively. Like how the burgers in fast food advertisements don't look anything like the sad lumps of green/grey proto-meat you get at the pick-up window.  Don't get me started on the negative impact social media is having on our collective self-image.

As I have gotten more into the business of doing business I've started to tackle the hype hurdle. I'm focusing on better pictures, sharable nuggets about my business, packaging, my story and visual identity. Like everything in life, this will be a perpetual work in progress. What I'd like to look at is what happens when you get so caught up in nailing this one aspect of your business that you forget what it is you are doing. I'm going to do this via a real life case study.

The Bandana Bandito (not the actual name of this company BTW)

So I have been following a graphic designer on Instagram for a while. He has started his own line of of screen printed clothing and accessories. His message is one I enjoy. He has a really clean aesthetic. Lots of pictures of campfires, mountain sunrises, old trucks, making things with your hands, and quality old stuff. He got me; I moseyed over to his website. The website is solid too (lots of stories about travel and foreign places, Kinfolk-y pictures) and really well designed. I went to the store and looked over the products. They look pretty cool. I'm a big fan of bandanas (pocket sized functional artwork), so I picked one up.

A few days later the bandana arrives. Again the branding is spot on. The envelope it comes in is custom made, a nice linen bag with custom graphics, a cool looking free sticker, and a screen printed bandana. The bandana is lame.

The design isn't bad, but it is really poorly printed. More importantly the material it's printed on is plastic-y and see through.  Why is a company that markets itself as rugged and outdoorsy sending me this lame-ass man doily?

I don't think he is a huckster. He is not lazy. Clearly a lot of very hard work and long hours went into the message. The bandana was fairly priced in comparison to its competitors (about $20). I think he got lost in his own message. I hear the expression a lot "I'm not selling a product. I'm selling a lifestyle."  This is the new battle cry for branding on social media. I think that is a bunch of crap. I'm selling leather goods first and for most. Yes, my message is important, I want people to get what I am trying to do. First, however, I have to start by executing everything I make to the best of my ability. I constantly ask myself if what I am making lives up to the hype I'm trying to create for it. If the answer is "no" then it goes back to the drawing table. Because ultimately my message ends in your hands. My message will speak every time you use something I've made.

A solid website, engaging posts, jaw-dropping photographs, and perfect staging can be essential to elevating your brand. If what you are producing doesn't live up to the promises that you are making then you aren't "selling a lifestyle" you are shoveling something else entirely. Let your work speak loudest. Everything else can follow after.

Alternate Realities: The Dangers of Social Media for a Fledgling Business

As an owner of a small business I've had to learn to tackle the world of social media over the past year. While it is a powerful an effective tool for any fledgeling entrepreneur, I also worry that it is doing as much harm as good. In the interest a clarity I'm going to break this one up into three posts.  

Part One: An Alternate Reality.

The primary threat to a new business social media presents is one that usually starts doing damage before the business is even started. It is also a plague on any business that is still trying to find it's footing.

If you are anything like me, or if you are reading this on any social media platform, you probably spend a fair amount of time looking at other people's lives. If you are a small business owner, or are thinking about becoming one, you probably follow a lot of other business owners in your field. Their feeds can be very inspirational. Photos of well crafted leather goods perfectly staged on one hundred year-old barn wood that has  "I *heart* Judith 1911" carved into the bottom corner are part of what got me into this gig. Photos like that are also why I almost didn't start this business and why I have to reaffirm my desire to keep with it on a regular basis.

Okay now, stay with me here. There is this thing called the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle which basically states that by observing an experiment we alter the results of that experiment. The way I see it, every business is an experiment. We come up with a theory of how to reach a goal (How do I make money?), come up with an experiment (make leather goods) and alter the procedure based on the results (write more blog posts).

Now we assume that we are accurately witnessing the results of that experiment by following along on social media. Pictures don't lie after all. This is the heart of the problem. Ignoring the fact that some of these pictures are painstakingly constructed by a staff of stylists/marketers/photographers/set-designers to look natural, the fact of the matter is that this reality is being presented by someone who is part of the experiment and has a vested interest in the results.  Assuming that the person running that feed is genuine and trying to be honest about their business, they are still making a decision that something is notable enough to be worth mentioning.

The result is that as a fledgling business owner, in a best case scenario, you are being bombarded with other people's notable moments. In reality most moments are not notable. Every hour isn't perfectly lit and surrounded by perfect decor. The people in your life are not always influential. Your kids are sometimes weird looking or boring. You have to sit there and write your return address on all your utility bills and sit on hold with the cable company. There is no lake with a tire swing in the backyard. The backyard needs to be mowed and the neighbors have ugly lawn ornaments.

The damage comes when you look at your life of relatively un-notable moments and feel like you are missing out on something or that your aren't in a position to be a real competitor.  It gets worse when you start thinking things like "I need move to Portland, rent a cool studio space, and then I can start my business the way it should be."

I had to come face to face with this a few weeks ago. I'm planning on relaunching this website sometime soon and as part of that I had a photographer come over and take some pictures in my "workshop" (read this with fully intentional air quotes around it).  At first I really didn't want to shoot here because the reality is that it is located in my sad, crappy basement. There is no golden hued light streaming in through barn windows. I've got glass block and fluorescent bulbs. There is laundry I haven't gotten to yet in the corner. My tools are not family heirlooms oozing patina. They are the cheapest ones I could find that would get the job done. For some reason I felt like I had to hide all of this. Like I wasn't legit unless I had a shop-dog napping next to a freshly baked blueberry pie cooling on the window sill complete with antique silver server.

Then I realized that is a bunch of crap. I started this business a little over a year and a half ago with $150. I turned that into a business that I can do full time. I have waded into the deep water and painstakingly hauled my life back on to shore. I've done it all in my crappy basement with my ugly tools.

You don't need perfect lighting, artsy tattooed friends, a rehabbed industrial studio space, a white washed house in the country, or a set of tools that look like they were last used by Noah while building the ark.

People do amazing things every day with what is available to them. Most of them don't even live in the Pacific Northwest. All you need is the desire for change, the will to take action, and the determination to keep moving forward. It may not always be pretty, but it is pretty damn notable.