How To SELL on Zazzle - Create Products Consumers Want To Buy - Here's How

CreativeLeahG
Honored Contributor III

Seeing a lot of new sellers hoping to hit the big time which I fully support! To help them along here are a few tips to get the ball rolling with sales a little quicker than learning the hard way through trial and error, though there will always be a lot of that. 

My top 3 tips:

1. NICHE

Try to find a niche that is currently very underdeveloped (nonexistent) on Zazzle and develop that niche so you are the lead for that niche.

WHY do this?

Reinventing the wheel, copying the ideas, designs of popular sellers, swamping the marketplace with themes that have many thousands of competitors will make it very hard for you to be seen, and if you're not seen you're not selling. Even with your own marketing, with Zazzle showing off other designers works on your product page, you may find the competition still gets the sale. So be creative, devote time to consider YOUR niche, nurture it like a seed and watch it grow.

2. RESEARCH THE MARKETPLACE

Before creating a design SEARCH to see what already exists in the Zazzle marketplace for that design theme. Is your design equivalent to that design re visual quality or better? If NOT the same or better, why would a customer choose it in preference to the already marketplace-ranked item? How can you make yours better? Can you add text templates, create an improved design or do you have your own vehicle to promote and market your product exclusively?

Hard Pill To Swallow

Generally, the items that generate the best sales on Zazzle are those with a design quality that rivals those in the High Street, as created by professional Graphic Designers. Indeed Zazzle now has many GD's on board. Comparing can be daunting but if you're determined to compete in that niche, do not shy away from learning about graphic design and upgrading your skills or consider licensing art (ensure you're familiar with all the terms of doing so) but you will still need to learn about font pairings and placement. Alternatively, find a way to produce an item that requires less skill to execute in a professional manner.

3. Why Would A Consumer Buy Your Product?

Ask yourself .... "Why would a consumer buy this?

  • Is it for decorative purposes
  • Can it be given as a gift
  • Is it a collectible item
  • Does it have a practical function
  • Does it support a hobby or interest

When consumers are looking for products, they are doing so to fill one of the above needs or wants. As an example, a consumer will not randomly search for a rabbit postcard. They will only do so if they have a rabbit (they'll usually search by their rabbits own breed, color etc.) or want to send a note to a rabbit loving, owning, bunny mom or dad. It is also possible the consumer may not be looking for any rabbit products but might be looking for cute and funny rabbit memes and your product might then show up, especially if your postcard indeed has a funny quote or meme added to it as a text template!

Always consider what the consumer is looking for. Your products will not magically jump in front of their eyes, it has to be related to what they are searching!

There are my top 3 tips and I will update shortly with more.

15 REPLIES 15

Barbara
Esteemed Contributor

Some time ago, after having created a design that matched a specific interest of my own and having it end up being one of my top sellers, I deliberately looked at my other interests and designed for them also. It's in these areas that my sales are best. Admittedly not all my interests are the same for customers, so not all have been top sellers, but that's to be expected.

The above led me to understand that I had to be true to myself and personal style, that though feminine design seemed tops here on Zazzle, it wasn't my style and I'd end up failing. So maybe that's an additional point: If you make yourself happy, you're more likely to make your customers happy.

Colorwash's Home

CreativeLeahG
Honored Contributor III

Having passion for what you do is important as you say Barbara, that passion drives us to create better designs and enthusiastically research the niche. It is a pleasure not a chore. 

Thank you for your insight! 

KeegansCreation
Honored Contributor

Very good advice.

I want to expand on niches. Look to your own life for possible niches. That way your designs will resonate with other people who also have interest in those niches. You know the inside jokes, the specific slang, the shared aesthetic.

Some examples

  • your work
  • your hobbies
  • your faith
  • your geographical area
  • your political leanings
  • your aesthetic (goth? pastel feminine? rustic?)
  • your pets or favorite animals

My bestselling designs come from my work (microbiologist*), my geographical area (New England), and my aesthetic (vintage, it informs my home decor as well as my designs).

*Today I'm debuting a new avatar I made in Midjourney, a cat wearing a lab coat as a shout out to fellow scientists and cats. Midjourney is magic. Cast a spell yourself and see. (The first 25 prompts are free, 10$/month after that.)

KeeganCreations

PAZP
Valued Contributor II

Great job on the new avatar! 

KeegansCreation
Honored Contributor

Thanks 😀

KeeganCreations

Excellent expansion of the area of 'what niche'. 

Finding a niche that hasn't been covered yet may still be a huge success is perhaps the hardest part of this. Which brings me to the next tip!

CreativeLeahG
Honored Contributor III

TIP 4

DOMINATE AND SECURE YOUR NICHE!

Firstly, great additional tips re 'how to choose a niche' and 'how to approach the content for that niche' by KeegansCreations above! Have a read if you haven't already.

So what do I mean by dominate and secure your niche. Sadly, the nature of the beast means that if you find a wonderful new niche, it won't be long before other designers are exploiting that same niche. Ideas are not exclusive and they cannot be copyrighted, so to ensure you remain the dominant seller in your newly found niche, you may need to take a more proactive longterm strategy to ensure your success. 

T1. Start a new store for your niche with an appropriate niche-inspired title and url.

Why do this when you already have a high-zranking store?

Buyers may put more trust in a store that specializes in their niche interest. If you have no high ranking stores, you have nothing to lose.

2. Keep your store hidden and your creations hidden for as many weeks, months as it takes to create a large stock of inspiring, creative products. 

Why create for months and not even promote or share, you won't sell anything ???

To dominate and secure your niche, you will need to have the bulk of the products for that niche. These products will need to have great designs, popular memes, quotes, sayings, editable text templates and more. This is a LOT of work. But when your NEW store opens you will be ready to go with stock that covers a wide range of consumer wants and needs in that niche. 

You are starting off as the 'authority' for that niche.

If you release your new store ande niche products too early, you run the risk of others cottoning on to your idea and themselves dominating the niche. To succeed at a niche, you need more and you will need better products than the 'hot on your coat tails' competition.

You may also want to consider your price point to remain competitive when others begin to piggyback on your success. This is not about underselling yourself or talents, it is about remaining competitive and providing consumers with products that for them represent value for money.  Additionally copycats will push you into a corner to secure your niche. Hence all you can do is ensure you have enough products to survive and ideas for future products to keep you afloat and just hope other designers aren't that interested in your blue tarantula niche. 😅

 

Barbara
Esteemed Contributor

Copycats: I "dumped" a goodly number of designs and products into a niche and very quickly rose to the top, selling extremely well. And then others began to notice, one person even being "inspired" by my bestsellers. The only thing I could do was expand into tangents, creating new and different designs for the niche while also developing totally separate niches.

We have to be on the move, not expecting to remain settled in a single place and remain successful. I certainly learned my lesson there.

It's good to watch trends, not of the fashion sort, but those in society where people are reacting to the world at large. Think about all the gardening, canning, and preserving people were doing during WWII. That's the kind of trend I mean. (Glad we're not reacting to a world war right now.)

Colorwash's Home

Thank you for sharing.

snuffsy
New Contributor III

This thread is absolute gold. Following the same "personal interest" approach as you @Barbara . Working on stuff I would actually use/wear/place in my office.

 

The idea of launching a new store is scary though. Having a zero zrank made me have to work doubly hard to get initial sales. And I don't fancy it again. Seems I might have to.

 

@CreativeLeahGThanks for the amazing advice.

 

CreativeLeahG
Honored Contributor III

 Hi all

I have posted a more detailed article re this, can be viewed on my blog here, I am not copying across due to duplicate content issues, but it goes into a LOT more detail.

https://www.100xgifts.com/2022/12/how-to-make-money-on-zazzle.html

Can post questions here.

 

Barbara
Esteemed Contributor

I just found a synonym generator that helps when a person is stuck on a single keyword, not able to think of an alternate or related word. Synonym Finder is part of Word Hippo, the latter having more than just synonyms. Both are good for jumpstarting a stalled-out brain, something we all suffer with periodically.

Colorwash's Home

Thank you Barbara. Great resources!

CreativeLeahG
Honored Contributor III

Just a reminder that THIS is how to sell more faster in these challenging times!