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#+title: S01|02 - my ai print on demand business strategy
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- [[../../toc.org][TOC - ecomm clubhouse]]
2026-03-20 03:17:56 +02:00
- [[https://jellyfin.ronnyabraham.com/web/index.html#/details?id=036b22dd5af1cc52f98e9418a6fadb08&serverId=99488804638e465693eed17924c57b60][video]]
2026-05-04 19:34:06 +03:00
* Transcript
#+begin_ex00:00
Hey, everyone, and welcome back to another video in this
00:02
course. In this video, I am gonna be explaining
00:05
what exactly my AI print on demand business is, how
00:09
it makes money, and how it utilizes AI tools from
00:12
start to finish. I'm going to explain how I use
00:15
AI to make the products I sell and how I
00:17
use AI to drive free traffic to them. Because these
00:20
days, because of the new AI era we're living in,
00:23
you don't actually need to pay for advertisements
00:25
if you don't want to. Plus, in addition, I'll also
00:28
explain how I'm using AI tools to run this as
00:30
a solo 1 person business
00:33
requiring
00:34
0 employees.
00:35
And my hope is that by explaining my business in
00:37
a nutshell, that it will make other video lessons in
00:40
this course make more sense. So let's get started. And
00:44
basically, in a nutshell, what I do is I use
00:47
AI tools to generate art for me and I also
00:49
use AI tools to turn it into high definition digital
00:53
art files that can then be printed onto clothes in
00:56
high definition,
00:57
which is actually kind of crazy for me if I
00:59
think about it. Because before AI, I used to have
01:02
to hire graphic designers and artists to draw specific pictures
01:05
for me if I couldn't find any clip art myself
01:08
to use for it. But now I can literally get
01:11
exactly the image I wanted within seconds. But of course,
01:15
having these digital files isn't enough. To actually sell them
01:17
onto clothes, I come to print on demand tools. And
01:20
of them all, Printify is the biggest and most popular.
01:23
And by the way, if you aren't quite sure what
01:26
print on demand is, it's basically a product fulfillment method.
01:29
So you take t shirts for example, the most popular
01:32
print on demand product with customers by far. Well, there
01:35
are 2 ways you could make and sell t shirts.
01:37
1 way is you could literally get a bunch of
01:39
t shirts printed in advance by a printing company from,
01:43
say, China and store them in, say, your garage and
01:46
then list them for sale online. And if somebody went
01:49
and bought a t shirt from you, then you in
01:51
your house would package it up and then ship it
01:54
out with the postal service manually.
01:56
So that is 1 way. The other way, of course,
01:58
is that you could use a print on demand service
02:01
like Printify. What these services do is they let you
02:04
upload your t shirt prints to the website. They'll then
02:06
give you a product mock up photo of what the
02:08
t shirt will look like printed. You can then advertise
02:11
online your t shirt for sale and if somebody buys
02:13
it, Printify's print shop will see the order. They'll then
02:16
print the design onto the t shirt, package it up,
02:19
and ship it out to the customer for you. So
02:21
for me, since I'm running a 1 person business, print
02:24
on demand is a great way to do it because
02:27
to scale, I don't have to hire any employees to
02:29
be running a print shop for me or managing a
02:32
warehouse for me. The print on demand app is the
02:34
1 managing that. And the way that you profit with
02:36
this is that you have a markup price on your
02:39
products. So you take t shirts. Right now on Printify
02:42
with a premium account, they cost about 6 to 10
02:44
dollars to buy and sell. And then most sellers, myself
02:48
included, will charge the customer the shipping price as a
02:51
separate charge. Well, most t shirts online sell for about
02:54
17 to 23 dollars with a medium price being around
02:57
20 dollars So that's how print on demand stores like
03:00
mine make money. We add a markup to our products.
03:03
And most print on demand stores these days that I
03:05
know are usually after transaction fees and printing fees left
03:09
with a profit margin of, on average, around 20 to
03:13
50 percent. And for me, my profit margin these days
03:16
is generally sitting around 30 percent on average. And for
03:20
me, as I show in step 3 of this course,
03:22
I've chosen to sell my products on 2 platforms.
03:24
Firstly, I set up Shopify stores and I list my
03:27
products for sale myself online. If you've never heard of
03:30
Shopify, it's basically an AI powered online store builder. You
03:33
can build your own online store that you host on
03:36
your own domain name that you own and it has
03:39
a great integration with Printify.
03:41
And then secondly, I list and sell my products on
03:43
Etsy. Now, Etsy, if you've never heard about it before,
03:46
is 1 of the biggest online marketplaces in the world.
03:49
The only ones that are bigger as far as I'm
03:51
aware are Amazon and eBay. And honestly, if you want
03:54
to sell your products on those marketplaces too, you can
03:57
as all 3 of the big marketplaces
04:00
have integrations with Printify. For me though, I've picked Etsy
04:03
to focus on over those 2 because I prefer the
04:06
customer base. Because unlike Amazon and eBay, Etsy doesn't allow
04:10
most mass produced products on the platform.
04:12
All products require some form of human creativity,
04:15
and print on demand products, including designs made with AI,
04:19
fall under the design section of their allowed product categories,
04:23
which is why, of course, Etsy has a direct integration
04:26
and close relationship with Printify.
04:28
But basically, by not allowing most mass produced products on
04:32
your platform, it means that the customer base that Etsy
04:34
attracts is usually happier to pay higher prices
04:37
because they know the products they're buying are individually made
04:40
to order, which also means that Etsy has become popular
04:43
as a place to buy gifts on. People like the
04:45
fact that the items you find on there are unique
04:47
and not mass produced in China. So every month, Etsy
04:51
attracts hundreds of millions of visitors, and every year, Etsy
04:54
brings in billions of dollars in sales and products sold
04:57
through their marketplace. For example, in 20 24,
05:00
Etsy sellers like me sold over 12600000000.0
05:03
dollars of products on there combined.
05:06
But because mass produced products are not allowed, it means
05:09
then that there is a lot less competition
05:12
for these sales, which is a big reason why a
05:15
lot of print on demand sellers such as myself, like
05:18
to use Etsy. But, of course, the question a lot
05:20
of people often have at this point is this. Okay,
05:23
Sarah. I see what you're doing. You're using AI to
05:27
create InDesign products that you then list for sale online
05:31
in your own stores.
05:32
That's great and all. But having products, whether they're AI
05:36
generated products or not, is not a guarantee for success.
05:40
For example, if I set up a lemonade stand, that's
05:43
great. But if no 1 buys my lemonade, I won't
05:46
make money. Right? You actually need to convince people to
05:50
buy your lemonade.
05:52
Now most people assume that to sell lemonade, you would
05:55
need to spend a lot of money to advertise it.
05:57
But let me ask you a question. What if you
05:59
opened your lemonade stand on the side of a busy
06:01
street on a hot day with lots of people walking
06:04
past it already?
06:06
And even better, what if those people couldn't get access
06:09
to water so their only good easy option that they
06:11
could see to quench their thirst was to buy your
06:14
lemonade?
06:15
Chances are people would just buy it from you. No
06:18
advertising required. That is my approach. You see, many people
06:22
don't take this approach. They open their lemonade stand on
06:25
a cold, empty street and they try to brute force
06:27
their way to success with advertisements.
06:30
For me, I call this the advertisement first strategy whereas
06:34
I instead, of course, try to open my lemonade stand
06:36
on a hot, busy street so that it can sell
06:39
itself.
06:40
And I like to call this the product first strategy.
06:44
And the way that I do this, the way that
06:46
I open on a hot busy street is I focus
06:48
on finding this, a gap in the market. A gap
06:51
in the market is a phrase in the business world
06:53
that means that you identify a product or service that
06:56
people would like to buy that doesn't yet exist or
06:59
that it does exist, but that people would like more
07:02
of or better options for. For example, in 1 video
07:05
tutorial I made, I identified that a popular style of
07:08
t shirt was 1 where you have a retro style
07:11
anime painting of, say, cats eating ramen and that this
07:14
was very popular. So what I did was I created
07:17
the same style of t shirt that is popular on
07:19
Etsy and Amazon. But this time, I had it feature
07:22
a cocky dog eating the ramen and I used AI
07:24
tools to create this. And so this is an example
07:27
of how I look for gaps in the market that
07:29
I can fill. I call this the cross niche formula.
07:32
By doing this, I had taken a proven popular design
07:34
concept of cat seeding ramen but now made it available
07:38
to an entirely new customer base, corgi owners. And so
07:42
this is what I do. I spend most of my
07:44
time looking for these gaps in the market and then
07:46
trying to create a good product to fill that gap
07:49
rather than spending my time creating ads and testing ads.
07:52
Because from my experience,
07:53
creating great products is a traffic strategy in of itself
07:57
thanks to AI. You see, this is a slide from
08:00
1 of Etsy's investor meetings and this slide is very
08:03
interesting. It shows how previously Etsy's recommendation
08:06
algorithm,
08:07
which would recommend products to customers,
08:09
used to heavily favor products that were already popular. And
08:13
this is how most people seem to assume,
08:15
in my experience,
08:17
how these algorithms work. They assume that these algorithms are
08:20
designed to keep popular things, well, popular,
08:24
and so they often actually get quite defeatist.
08:27
They say, if I open up a new store, Sarah,
08:30
no 1 will know who I am, so I will
08:33
have no sales and I will have no reviews.
08:35
Because I am a nobody, surely the algorithm is just
08:39
going to ignore me. And that used to be largely
08:42
true, to be fair, but there was a big problem.
08:45
When algorithms only favor things that are already popular, people
08:49
get bored, And for Etsy, this was bad. People saw
08:52
the same items over and over again and they got
08:55
bored and they stopped buying new things. And so what
08:58
the slide was showing was that Etsy was announcing a
09:00
change in direction.
09:02
Rather than favoring items that were already popular, they were
09:05
now going to be shifting gears to try and identify
09:08
new products that, while were not widely popular, were potentially
09:13
more specific
09:14
to an individual's own wants. And this all happened around
09:17
the same time as the TikTok algorithm revolution.
09:20
This pretty much changed the game for the Internet. The
09:23
TikTok algorithm was the first to do this concept. TikTok
09:26
is famous for the fact that random people with no
09:28
followers
09:29
can become viral hit sensations overnight, and it's because TikTok
09:32
figured out that rather than just showing the most popular
09:35
videos over and over again, it's much better to take
09:38
all videos that get posted to the platform and give
09:41
them all a small amount of views as a test.
09:44
And if that test goes well, the algorithm will keep
09:47
showing the video to more and more people. Well, this
09:50
is exactly what Etsy's algorithm is designed to do too.
09:53
It now gives all new products what is often called
09:56
test impressions.
09:58
So for example, do you see this homepage here? You
10:00
can see that Etsy has showcased a bunch of products
10:02
to me as part of its recommendations.
10:05
Well, Etsy can now pop new products in its recommendation
10:07
slots like these to test if anyone will click on
10:10
a new product or even better, if they'll actually go
10:13
and click and buy it. And so if people do
10:15
click on your new product that they test with these
10:17
test impressions,
10:18
the algorithm will keep showing it to more and more
10:21
potential customers. And here's the thing. The AI is getting
10:24
better and better at choosing who to recommend your products
10:28
to as part of its test. Etsy has announced that
10:31
they have integrated AI machine learning into the algorithm, and
10:34
it is now even better at anticipating
10:36
what unique, interesting product
10:38
might be best suited to specific individuals
10:41
to recommend and promote on their Etsy home feed and
10:45
their search results.
10:47
Basically, AI is incredibly good at figuring out just by
10:50
looking at your product listing which customers in its database
10:54
based on their data that they should match it to.
10:57
They figure out basically who they should show your products
11:00
to. Not only this, but increasingly, more and more people
11:03
are finding products to buy through AI chatbots themselves such
11:06
as ChatchePT
11:07
by asking it to recommend products to them too. So
11:11
with all this in mind, this is why I believe
11:13
that in our new AI era that a product first
11:16
strategy is a fantastic way to get traffic because with
11:19
AI algorithms,
11:20
the goal isn't for them to find the most popular
11:23
product. Instead, their goal is to find and identify the
11:26
most specific product that can meet their users' individual needs.
11:30
It is hyper personalization.
11:33
So when I was talking earlier about opening your lemonade
11:36
stand on a hot busy street, this is what I
11:38
mean by taking a product first approach and designing niche
11:41
products that fill gaps. I'm creating exactly
11:44
what the AI recommendation
11:46
algorithms want and what they're looking for. So the AI
11:49
recommendation
11:49
algorithms,
11:50
they are the busy street with hundreds of millions of
11:53
users who are utilizing them, looking for unique gifts to
11:57
buy, and my niche products are the lemonade.
12:01
And if you think about it, right, before AI generation
12:04
tools, making all of these products would have been very
12:08
expensive.
12:09
Because you think about that Caughey Ramen t shirt, to
12:12
make it previously, it could have cost you hundreds of
12:15
dollars because someone would have had to have drawn it
12:18
by scratch.
12:19
And, well, that is slow, and you would have had
12:21
to have potentially waited a week for them to draw
12:23
it and then to send it to you. But now
12:25
I can literally come up with a product idea, make
12:28
it, and then list it for sale in less than
12:30
10 minutes because the AI generates the art and it
12:32
upscales it for print and then it even generates the
12:35
listing text for me. And by using AI, I've been
12:38
able to grow a large selection of niche products that
12:41
I've been able to use to grow and scale my
12:44
sales. And of course, because I'm choosing to use print
12:47
on demand apps to print and ship my products, it
12:50
also means that adding new products to my store is
12:53
very quick too because I can skip the traditional slow
12:56
process of having to produce t shirts in bulk and
12:59
then ship them all the way over from China. It
13:02
is this incredible combination
13:03
of AI combined with autonomous
13:06
print on demand stores, which has just been absolutely game
13:10
changing for
13:11
me. However, where people go wrong, in my personal opinion,
13:15
is that when they see an AI powered business, they
13:17
go, ah, it should just be run entirely
13:20
with AI and with no human ideas,
13:23
no human creativity,
13:25
nothing like that. But I tell you what, at least
13:27
for now, I am not approaching my AI powered business
13:32
like that at all. Nope. And that's because there's actually
13:35
a very important human part to a successful business, and
13:39
it's this part here, finding a gap in the market.
13:42
Right now, the truth is is that AI is not
13:45
very good at identifying these. If you ask Chat GPT
13:48
to find gaps in the market for you, it is
13:51
unlikely to do a good job. And that's because
13:54
identifying a gap is all about spotting what is missing,
13:58
whereas AI is all about looking at information that exists
14:02
and noting patterns within existing data. But us humans, well,
14:06
we're actually pretty good at spotting gaps because our brains
14:09
don't just analyze data. Our brains let us experience things
14:14
like wants and desires.
14:17
And so honestly, the easiest way for me to spot
14:20
gaps in the market is to create and sell products
14:23
in a niche in which I am a customer in.
14:26
Because that way, I can identify product gaps by looking
14:29
at what is for sale already in the niche and
14:32
thinking,
14:33
what product would I like to buy that doesn't yet
14:35
already exist? And then I can use AI to help
14:38
me create that product. I tap into my own wants
14:42
and my own desires.
14:43
And so because I think that this is really important,
14:46
I've decided to make step 1 all about how I
14:49
choose a new niche for a store. Because by choosing
14:53
a store niche, it lets me do 2 things. 1
14:55
of those, of course, being the opportunity
14:58
to build a store around something of which I'm passionate
15:01
about, which then, of course, makes it easier for me
15:03
to come up with product ideas because I can think
15:05
to myself, okay,
15:07
well, what product or design would I like to buy?
15:10
But that I can't because it doesn't currently exist. But
15:13
secondly, as I'll explain in another video in this module,
15:16
by starting a new store focused on a niche customer
15:19
base, it makes it easier for algorithms to figure out
15:22
who to recommend my products to. So yes, that is
15:25
my AI powered print on demand business in a nutshell.
15:29
And remember,
15:30
this is just an overall look at how my business
15:33
works. All of these ideas that I've talked about, picking
15:36
a niche, coming up with product ideas, optimizing them for
15:40
AI recommendations,
15:41
These are all topics which I talk about more inside
15:45
of the course. So don't worry if there is an
15:47
idea that you thought to yourself that sounds really interesting,
15:49
but I don't fully understand it yet because
15:52
I will be going more in-depth into these ideas in
15:56
dedicated videos.
15:57
And speaking of other videos, now that this video is
16:00
over, it is time to go and watch the next
16:03
video. So go ahead, open up my next video, and
16:06
I will see you in the next lesson.ample
#+end_example