The first offer I sold online was far from perfect… actually, the best thing it had going for it was just that it was done.
At the start of this challenge I shared a story about the literal first “product” I sold to an existing client years ago, but was kind of accidental (which of course is how a lot of great ideas happen).
Fast-forward a few years, and I’d love to tell you about the first time I deliberately built a product to sell online, following more of a process.
I’d been selling design services for over a decade, but it was always custom proposals with sales meetings – never something that was listed online that a person could read about, then decide to purchase all on their own – that was what I wanted.
There was this big list of business and product ideas I’d been adding to for years, with lots of frankly dumb ideas, but a few decent ones. I picked a decent one, and committed to building it in a month.
Knowing that I’m not super organised and not a great planner, I knew I couldn’t just wing this.
If I was going to launch this in 30 days, I needed to rough-out a list of absolute minimums to make sure I’d finish it.
Those things were:
Everything here was experimental – I was guessing that ticking these things off would lead me to a product I’d be very happy to sell, and ultimately deliver.
That product became BrandPocket: a service where I take the established PDF Brand Guidelines from an organisation, and turn them into digital guidelines making them centralised, sharable, and always-up-to-date.
I created a “good enough version 1” for everything from the list above.
I created it under 30 days by keeping everything minimal and simple. But it’s constantly evolving.
Version 1 was sold off a Google Doc. I sold maybe the 5th one from the landing page, and after every few sales I make tweaks to include whatever new thing makes it clearer or better in some way.
The message today: Perfect is the enemy of done.
Stuck on something? Let me know.
For self-employed creatives, normal business traps are easy to fall into and overcomplicate things - but they’re totally avoidable when flying solo.
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