When in the course of human events man decides that he wants to make more money, he becomes an entrepreneur.
Further …
We hold these truths to be self evident that not all potential Entrepreneurs are created equal. The select few will succeed and many will fail, while many more will have mixed results with both successes and failures.
Rules to live by:
Always be honest. Never lie even to secure the biggest order of your life and make millions of dollars. Even a small lie will haunt you if when caught.
Turn away business if in order to secure the business you have do something unethical.
The Entrepreneur that fails to plan starves. So plan.
With success comes a big target on your back. Everyone is gunning for #1. The truly great entrepreneurs find a way to be successful and reach #1 while minimizing that target.
Always listen to what others have to say. But do not always believe and take as gospel everything you hear.
As an Entrepreneur you don’t know as much as you think you do. When you need help, get it from those that know more about how to deal with the problem.
Don’t build an empire on sand. It will sink.
Quick and dirty always makes a mess and causes problems in the long run.
Crap does as crap does. It sits there, smells bad and drives people away. Don’t ever settle for crap!
Past fortunes are not a sign of future potential.
Past failures are not a sign of lack of potential.
If you can’t think of something new, think of a way to do something old but better. People make a lot of money revising other people’s ideas and improving upon them.
If your rear end is sore from sitting in a chair all day, you are not taking care of business and keeping in touch with the important things.
As the boss, keep an open door and an open mind. But keep your brains in your head.
Delegate the tasks you must but never let go of the checkbook. Always know exactly what your costs are.
If you have to play with other people’s money you’ll wind up working for them instead of yourself. Even if your name is on the Company.
Creditors will rarely have as much patience as you do.
If you don’t trust your employees to keep the business running smoothly while you take a much needed vacation you haven’t done your job properly.
Find the best place for your money and invest it there.
20% of $3,000 profit is better than 0% of $5,000 profit. Sometimes you have to take what you can get. Or greed can take food off your family’s table if you let it.
If you have to get in a price war with your competition you haven’t convinced people why you are better than your competition.
NEW If you want to bag an elephant don’t spend too much time at sea. In other words go where the money is not where it is not!
WELCOME!




November 25th, 2006 at 1:09 pm
I’m really looking to get started but have no clue on how? I may need to have my hand held to start, with things like how much start up cash (i dont have much ) and if I dont have the space or time right now to make my own shirts how and where can I market someone else’s shirts. Please help I’m really in the dark and have a strong desire to get started a.s.a.p. Thanx MZ
November 26th, 2006 at 11:48 am
Marc, there are lost of articles and links here to help you get started selling t-shirts online for little if any money. Just take a look around and read. Check out Cafepress. If you cannot afford the monthly cost of just under $7.00 for a premium shop well … then you’ve got bigger problems.
February 9th, 2007 at 4:01 am
Hi,
I’m an MA student at the London College of Fashion and currently doing some research for an assignment and wondered if I could pick your brain? My topic is on consumer trends and my research is on the idea of technology being an enabler for consumers to play a more active role by producing their own content. I’m using the e.g. of the phenomenon of blogging and customisation facilities provided by sites like Cafe Press, Threadless and Spreadshirt.
Would really appreciate if you could provide some insights on:
a. why you think blogging has become such a phenomenon?
b. why you started a t-shirt blog and what do you offer and in turn receive from the virtual community?
c. why do you think people are getting into customisation especially with t-shirts? do you perceive its popularity and demand to change over the next 3 years?
Finally as a t-shirt entrepreneur can you provide insights on your experiences with the technology that has enabled you to do business online.
Would really appreciate your reply. Thanks for your time and apologies for the nerdy questions!
Many thanks,
lainey
August 20th, 2007 at 11:05 pm
I notice that there are millions of designs on Cafepress.com. How do you get your design in front of visitors to Cafepress? How do I find an individual’s site in Cafepress, or is that secondary to other marketing/traffic control techniques?
Thanks.
Mike
August 24th, 2007 at 9:11 am
Please accept my apologies for posting this message here, but the trust be told, I could not locate an email address by which to contact you.
My name is Simon Dance and I am contacting you on behalf of Polo-Shirts.co.uk who have been specialising in wholesale T-shirts for over 5 years. I came across your site whilst researching quality T-shirt resources and was curious as to whether you would be so kind as to put a link on your ‘Blog Roll’
I am currently trying to build our profile with good quality and reputable websites and noticed yours as an excellent fit.
We are passionate about our T-Shirts and have invested a lot of time into our website, which you can access at http://www.polo-shirts.co.uk
Thank you for your consideration and I look forward to hearing from you.
Have a nice weekend
Kindest regards.
Simon Dance
on behalf of Polo-Shirts.co.uk
August 26th, 2007 at 8:00 am
Mike,
You have to do your own marketing with respect to putting designs on Cafepress. CP doesn’t give a hoot about you personally - nothing personal, it’s just good business. The best way to get your designs in front of visitors to CP is to promote your products and sell them so they appear high on the list of popular items for a given category. Good keyword taggind is also important for people doing searches.
But generally speaking, the designs that sell the best are the designs CP is going to promote because they make more money promoting proven products.
August 26th, 2007 at 8:03 am
Simon,
The best way to get added to our blogroll is to become a good source for information on the internet and let us find you. We do not add sites to our blogroll by request. If you wish to link to us as a resource that is fine of course.
September 20th, 2007 at 2:49 am
It will be cool if we find these shirts in different colors and designs.
April 4th, 2008 at 9:36 am
Hi!!!
Please am student of institute of professional studies(IPS),Ghana. And a member of SIFE(student in free enterprise) in my school and we to take on a project and we are asked to bring up an idea as to how to go by it and i will be very happy to help me as to how to go by it. The project is called the SWITCH PROJECT and it is explain below;
PROJECT NAME: THE SWITCH
TARGET GROUP: CHILDREN BETWEEN AGE 11&13
INTRODUCTION / OVERVIEW
The nature of the Ghanaian economy is such that the public sector employs majority of the labour force. This is because people are unwilling to create their own jobs.
OBJECTIVES
The project seeks to equip people to change their old mentality of working for someone to being their own bosses.
The project also seeks to help target groups to develop an entrepreneurial mindset which will enable them venture into private enterprises and become great entrepreneurs.
The switch will help the target group to know that they can still become successful even when they drop out of school. This they can do by simply identifying problems around and solving them with an entrepreneurial spirit at a profit.
In addition, the current Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the Ghanaian economy is just (6.8) which mean that the economy still has a long way to go. For this reason, the SIFE -IPS team is hopeful that this project will help increase the country’s GDP by motivating the target groups to go into private business.
So please help with an idea or method to use to make this project a successful one. Looking forward to hearing from you very soon. Bye for now and thank you very much.
August 3rd, 2008 at 4:36 pm
I have been asked to design Tshirts for a clothing company. I have never done Tshirt designs for anyone, but myself. I was wondering if anyone knows how much I should charge? I was considering $200-$500 per design and $1 commission per shirt that sells? Any suggestions?
August 9th, 2008 at 9:55 pm
I started an online shop http://www.tat2ts.com a year ago using Spreadshirt as my printer. My designs sell well in the marketplace but for some reason my website sales are not going well at all. Would someone take a look and see what you think should be done differently?
The Spreadshirt marketplace has proven to me that I have a market. Thats why I won’t give up on the store. I know there is something I’m not doing right to get my conversions.