Only 2 reasons 1. The platforms are saturated . 2. The items are way over priced, so if you had a design you liked you would just print it off and go to your local printer.
Because there's like too many people selling. Like millions of sellers. Anyone who has a computer or ipad now thinks they are an artist or designer. There is so much crap on these sites now, there's just so much junk to sift through. This is why the quality of designs in the art industry has dipped over the last 10 years. Every monkey and dog or cat is trying. lol.
Another outstanding video that deals with a very important point and gets right to it in the clearest possible way. This is one of the best channels on RU-vid and I'm a happy subscriber. Do I have any suggestions? Yes, a miniscule one. I think the reference to the "warishellstore" at 1:21 should probably be pronounced "war is hell store."
I've read on redbubble about tagging that you shouldn't repeat same word in different combinations (funny woman, funny girl) as all combinations will be automatically split by search machine and it will look for each word individually anyway. So it would be an unnecessary repetition and cluttering of tag space.
Only just watching this now but with the tags, do you need to keep repeating the same word, eg funny t-shirts, cat t-shirts, etc all for the same design? Won't it be enough to just write, for example, t-shirts, funny, cat (etc) and it will automatically pick up any combination of those words? Thank you for your amazing content btw!
About theming your store. I sent Redbubble a support request if I can open multiple store accounts, to cover different themes, in late November when I joined. But they never replied. So aren't the collections supposed to segregate multiple themes into easy to find categories? For example my range of designs cover text, Christmas, 2020/ New year, pets, occupations, countries, etc. So what I do is I gather these different themes into their own collections. I think this is the best approach besides opening up separate accounts.
Are tags still taken into consideration if they are added later, when you click edit, or on another day? Or is it like instagram where only the first 5 minutes matter?
Hi brother ZEN i really thankyou for ur interesting to teach as step by step .GOD BLESS YOU MORE.but yesterday Redbubble closed my account , My design was saying Death is defeated .I saw many design showing evil .
When I upload a design. there is only one text box to put your tags in. Where are these "T-Shirt Tags", "All Product Tags", and "Other Products" tag boxes?
@@zenwatercooler Ok so it looks like the All Products is the only one that I am able to enter, but the T-Shirt and Other Products are generated from what you put in.
hi, how can i understand that the low result niche has demand and people are searching it? does that happen someone is searching exactly the kyeword like vintage canada?
Yes you won't really know for 100% certain - you would need to type in the keywords that you think are popular enough, and see if the niche has designs that you feel you can do better than.
Can anyone tell me how do the 2 different tags types appear? All product tags and the product tag, how do you list those. I have the all product tags but I have no idea how to individually tag each product. Please Help!
Redbubble is really a headache when dealing with tags, the site allows 50 tags, but they also recommend no more than 10 (or 15) as that can somehow lower your visibility, what do you think about that?
It's a good question and I don't have a definitive answer. I can only suggest that you look at successful designs and see what tags they are using. So search for whatever design like "funny cat t-shirt" and the first few designs will be the most successful. Tags are at the bottom.
@@zenwatercooler That's also a problem, some have even more than 50 tags, and others less than 10, there is no consistency at all. However, i noted that you have a lot of chances to appear on page 1 if you name your product correctly and people uses the exact text to search, it seems to have more weight than tags!
@@artsyuniverse9102 So you should see How could that design showed up like that? Maybe its designer was able to advertise that product well in social networks. or something else.
whats the difference between T Shirt tags, all product tags and other products? All Ive seen is the tag section on the products upload page. Are there other areas to add tags?
Once you add tags and the design is published, Redbubble adds more tags (based on what they think is related). There is just one area to add tags but RB has their own section too.
I just started a RedBubble with my nature photos. Have a ton of other tshirt designs in my head and written down so working on it as soon as I can. But tagging photos are hard. You can use the location, maybe season and what's on the photo, but how can I think more around that? Tried to google images and nature and snoop for tags, but don't find many
There are websites (like Insight Factory) where you can do niche research - they weigh the supply and demand (searches) and can often be helpful: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5mId0uEFDB4.html
Yes I had that problem when I first signed up. I would recommend emailing the Teepublic support team and ask them. For me, they had to turn something on in the background. Just make sure your designs are legitimate (not violating trademark) because if you reach out and they see a bunch of Superman designs, they may cancel your account.
I have enough designs, I made quality designs, I did my tagging well in Redbubble but i did not have any sales, dose anybody can help me and tell me what to do ?
I am guessing since I don’t have access to your store or designs, but one possibility (guessing) is you are operating in a niche that either has low demand or high competiton.
It took me forever to understand what tags are and also how the title and description work in the search engines. What I still don't know is whether there is such a thing as too many tags. I hear different things, some say no more than 15, another thing I heard was that 20 to 25 is the sweetspot. Anyone have a definitive answer?
I don't know if this is a definitive answer, but I feel strongly about this and here is a video with my opinion: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dDzAbHPeyzU.html
Hmm....I'm not sure what to make of this. I searched "model t Ford t-shirt" on Google and the RB result was a Model A Ford t-shirt even though there are many Model T Ford designs on RB, including a few dozen of my own. There is no "model t" in the tags for that design. Here's a question for ya, how do you determine if a niche has enough demand to be worth your time?
Yes I believe the first result for RB is an ad - so RB might have certain designs that they mark for ads over less popular designs (guessing). The first “real” Google result is Model T Shirt on redbubble (not under Google shopping or ads). SEO is a bit of a mystery (especially because Google is so smart and always learning).
I usually look at the niche, size up the quality and bang out 5-10 designs and see if they sell quickly (like any sales in a month). If yes, then I try to dominate the niche (have more than 20% of the total designs in that keyword). I like really small niches (100 designs or less)
@@zenwatercooler thanks for the reply. Unfortunately I can't seem to look much beyond my own personal interest (automotive mostly) which seems to be saturated, (good demand but very high supply.). I do make sales but not nearly enough to make this worth the time. I do have several designs under "Model T Ford" that do show up on the first page (my RB handle is "DK Digital") but sales are not exactly robust.
If I have a few themes in my mind that do not work well in one store, shall I open another store/s for the other theme? Problem is I have about 5 different types of ideas/theme
She is presumably the person who is buying the shirt. So the idea is you make 300 (or more) similar designs so 300 different people can buy that design with their own name on it.
@@otorishingen8600 Because it doesn't happen to everyone? I've been with Teepublic and Redbubble for over five years and still going. Never got my account suspended or anything, hopefully never. It could be what you have uploaded that is suspect to them