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A how-to guide for creating and promoting your own online marketplace for selling your art online.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Sunday, December 9, 2012
FREE Backlink Opportunity for Artist
Attention All Artists... FREE Backlink Opportunity
A great SEO tactic is to work on increasing the number of
backlinks you put out in the World Wide Web each day, so today I invite you to
include a link back to your online storefront or artist website in the comments
section of this post. (This opportunity
is for ARTISTS only and all other links will be deleted).
This should help you build your link portfolio and give the
readers of my blog a list of artist’s websites to visit, so… link away!
I’ll start with my Original Perspective Zazzle Store which
is home to my collection of artistic gift ideas for the holiday season!
Be sure to post live links... There is another post on my blog about how to post links that explains how...
The Importance of Links and How They Work
Be sure to post live links... There is another post on my blog about how to post links that explains how...
The Importance of Links and How They Work
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
The Importance of Links and How They Work
Generating Links Are SEO Tactic #1
When you search for something using Google, Bing, or any
other online search engine, the results that appear are a direct result of a
complex algorithm (or formula) comprised of many different factors, some
weighing more heavily than others. While
each search engine’s formula is slightly different, the most constant of these
factors (and more often than not, the most heavily weighted) is the number of
links (or backlinks) on the internet that connect directly to each site. Since most people who shop online primarily
use search engines to do so, it is imperative that you build an extensive, and
diverse, link portfolio. In addition to
eventually cultivating new customers from online search engines, each time you
place a link somewhere that leads back to your online storefront is an
additional opportunity to make a sale!
Because links are so vitally important for the success of your SEO (search engine optimization) efforts (resulting in the success of
selling your art online), it’s important to understand how they work. Like everything else you see online, links
are rooted in an internet programming “language” called HTML. Below you’ll find the basic HTML code
regarding links that you’ll need to know in order to effectively use them in
promoting your online storefront.
The basic layout for a link looks like this (the ***s and
everything in between them are to be replaced with the actual information)…
<a href=”***URL***”>***anchor text***</a>
EXAMPLE
The URL (“universal resource locator” or internet address) for my online storefront is http://www.zazzle.com/originalperspective and I want my anchor text (what people will click on to get there) to read “Visit the Original Perspective Zazzle Store”, so my link will look like this…
The URL (“universal resource locator” or internet address) for my online storefront is http://www.zazzle.com/originalperspective and I want my anchor text (what people will click on to get there) to read “Visit the Original Perspective Zazzle Store”, so my link will look like this…
<a href=”http://www.zazzle.com/originalperspective”>Visit
the Original Perspective Zazzle Store</a>
And what people see as a result of that code would look like
this…
Before you begin plastering your link all of the internet,
it IS important to note that another factor in online search engine algorithms
is anchor text matching keywords from the site it links back to. For example, my online Zazzle store is called
“Original Perspective” so I not only use that phrase repeatedly in my store’s
title, description, and content but in the anchor text for all my links as
well.
Labels:
backlink,
backlinks,
google,
HTML,
HTML code,
link,
link portfolio,
links,
selling art online,
SEO
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Business Cards Are Not Dead
Most of my blog posts from this point on will deal with how
to promote your online marketplace. The
first thing you should do is inform EVERYONE you know that you've decided to
sell your art online and how to get to your online storefront.
We’ll discuss all the ways to do this online in future
posts, but don’t underestimate the power of informing people in person about
your store. Getting some business cards
is a great way to start this process.
Vistaprint offers FREE business cards, and if you want to
get a bit fancier than the free products that are available, you still can’t
beat their prices. It’s an easy process
to create and order them online and they’re shipped directly to your home.
Make sure to include the website for your online storefront,
as well as any other information you want people to know about your business.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Creating Products for Sale & Using Keywords
Once you've selected a venue for creating your online
marketplace, the process of uploading your image files and creating your
product pages begins.
As you go through this time consuming process, you’ll need
to start thinking ahead… about promoting.
While you must create this online storefront before you can promote it,
be mindful of keywords as you create each product.
From this point on, you MUST THINK LIKE A CUSTOMER! For each product you create, think about what
keywords you would type into a Google search in order to find it online if YOU
were in the market for this item. Then
use those keywords repetitively in the product title, subtitle, description,
category listing, and keyword tags. That’s
the first step towards having your products found by potential buyers.
Here’s an example…
I recently created an iPhone case on Zazzle with a skyline
photo of Seattle. If I were searching
for this product online, I would type in “Seattle skyline iPhone case” into a
Google search. THESE became my keywords,
which I used repetitively in the title, subtitle, description, category, and
keyword tags. Click on the phone to
bring up the product page and notice how many times you find those keywords
repeated.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Choosing an Online Marketplace
Once all of your files are digitized and organized, it’s
time to begin uploading them, but first you have to choose an online marketplace. Eventually, you’ll want a portfolio of artwork
on several different sites, but since building an online marketplace to sell
your art is very time consuming, start with one, develop it, then branch out to
others. I have an account on all three
of the sites listed below, but the one I've had the most success with is
Zazzle. Granted, I have spent more time
promoting my Zazzle store than any other, but that’s only because I feel that
Zazzle offers the widest variety of available products on which you can sell
your art, while still protecting your original artwork.
You can, of course, create your own site to sell your
artwork, but the following online marketplaces allow you to simply upload
images, which can then be sold on a variety of products. These companies do all the production,
shipping, and billing, while making the processes of designing and promoting
your online store much easier than starting from scratch:
Cafepress.com – Free to sign up, sell your art printed on a
large variety of items, site does a decent job of advertising itself to new
potential customers, does very little, however, to protect your original
artwork from being downloaded.
RedBubble.com – Free to sign up, mainly used to sell high
quality prints, posters, and wall art (including canvas) – although recently
branched out to iPhone cases, a GREAT online community of international
artists, options available for protecting your original artwork from being
downloaded, site does NOT advertise itself well.
Zazzle.com – Free to sign up, sell your art on a large
variety of items, site advertises all over the internet in order to attract new
customers, protects your original artwork by not allowing images to be
downloaded AND places watermark over hires views of your images to prevent screenshots
being taken.
There are lots of these types of sites on the internet. If you have had a good (or bad) experience
with any of these sites (or any others), please share your story with us by
commenting below.
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Before You Can Sell You Must Prepare
First things first… If you’re going to sell your art online,
you’ll need to digitize your portfolio.
If you’re a digital photographer or graphic design artist, you probably
already have a collection of digital images that you can use. If you’re a painter or sketch artist,
however, you’ll need to spend some time scanning or digitally photographing
your artwork in order to prepare your files for selling your art online.
HELPFUL HINT: If
you’re taking photographs of a painting or other works of hand-made art with a
digital camera, make sure to shoot the image from directly above the center of
the piece and with diffused light on all four sides. This will ensure the image is captured with
minimal warping to the perspective and prevent unwanted shadowing or
overexposure in the final digital image.
Whether you end up selling your art displayed on objects or
as individual prints make sure your images are of the highest quality
possible. This means bright vivid
colors, no noise, good composition, and creating high resolution images.
I use, and recommend, Photoshop as a means of editing and
preparing digital images, but there are other, less expensive, programs on the
market you can use. A word of advice for
people that aren't versed in Photoshop – don’t spend hundreds of dollars on
this program if you don’t also intend on investing a fair amount of time
learning how to use it. While the latest
versions are fairly user-friendly, it is capable of doing so many things that
it takes a great deal of time to learn how to use. I've been using Photoshop consistently for
the past 8 years and still don’t know EVERYTHING about the program. If you’re willing to make the investment of money
AND time, Photoshop is THE BEST program on the market for creating high quality
digital images.
If the program you’re using to edit your files allows you to
embed keywords into the file as metadata, then you should do that for two very
important reasons… 1. It allows you to organize your files, and 2. It helps
people scouring the internet for art to find YOURS! You should keep these keywords simple and
include both broad and specific information.
For example if you have a photograph of the Seattle skyline, then you
should list as your keywords for that file: architecture, skyline, Seattle.
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