"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
With everything that is coming down the pipeline with regards to technology and Amazon and other "giants" it really is the time to find your niche market. And become really freaking good at it.
You are correct ot this point. Someone will get it right though. Watch.
Big corporations and those with a ton of capital have discovered something we have known all along, and that being there's potential enormous profits in the t-shirt business. The core product is low in cost and can be sold embellished at high margins. All thanks to Al Gore who "invented the internet?" The internet is both a blessing and a curse for the small business person. Back in the day, when I started in 1977 and for decades thereafter there was very little competition and gaining new clients was like shooting fish in a barrel. Today however, the ability to comparison shop and eventually being hidden by those with tremendous resources can be problematic. I can see it myself with the sheer number of big players who are buying my software. I recently sold 6 licenses to Walmart if that's an indicator.
Quote from: UltraSeps on March 31, 2016, 05:32:31 PMBig corporations and those with a ton of capital have discovered something we have known all along, and that being there's potential enormous profits in the t-shirt business. The core product is low in cost and can be sold embellished at high margins. All thanks to Al Gore who "invented the internet?" The internet is both a blessing and a curse for the small business person. Back in the day, when I started in 1977 and for decades thereafter there was very little competition and gaining new clients was like shooting fish in a barrel. Today however, the ability to comparison shop and eventually being hidden by those with tremendous resources can be problematic. I can see it myself with the sheer number of big players who are buying my software. I recently sold 6 licenses to Walmart if that's an indicator.Probably (hopefully) meant as a joke from you, but of course, helps cement an untruth (or at least major exaggeration) into our American legend. As he boasted of accomplishments made by the Congress in which he served and took credit thusly..."During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet. I took the initiative in moving forward a whole range of initiatives that have proven to be important to our country's economic growth and environmental protection, improvements in our educational system." At the time, and in the context of the answer given to Wolf Blitzer, his meaning was clear, whether worded well, or not.Just for the record, one of the true fathers of the internet happened to be one of my best buddy's brother, Jon Postel, who I met when we moved to Berkeley back in '68. I had absolutely no appreciation of just how big a thing he was involved with.Like you said, it has changed the face of our industry, and I hold it against him as, a few years back, I really thought that my business was going to slowly die away and I would be happily retired by now. But suddenly, folks found me online even before I had a website! Curse you Jon!, And damn that Yelp!I do realize that I am in a minority.