The Crafter
You're a Crafter if you love making things you can hold in your hands.
Crafters make stuff. Real, physical stuff. Things you can pick up, wear, eat, or use. A Crafter feels happy when they finish making something — that happy feeling is the reward, before anyone even buys it.
This is your superpower: you keep making even when nothing is selling. Most people give up. You won't. But it's also your weakness — you might spend too long making one perfect thing, forget to show people, or feel shy about selling.
You probably think your work is "not that special." It is. The thing that feels easy to you feels like magic to other people.
Signs you're a Crafter
- ✓You've made something with your hands in the last month, just because you wanted to.
- ✓You can tell when something is made well or made cheaply.
- ✓Making things feels fun. Selling them feels like work.
- ✓When someone compliments your stuff, you say "oh, it's nothing."
- ✓You'd rather work alone than in a group.
- ✓You have a pile of half-finished projects somewhere.
Real examples
- →Sara Blakely cut the feet off her tights, made one product, and built a billion-dollar company called Spanx.
- →Jenni Kayne sewed t-shirts in her apartment. Now her brand is in stores everywhere.
- →Tyler the Creator started a clothing brand called Golf Wang from his own taste.
Business models that fit you
Make a product and sell it online
Pick one thing. Make a small batch. Sell on Instagram, Shopify, or Etsy.
Make things to order
Wait for the order, then make it. Better for cash flow.
Sell food you make
Sauces, baked goods, snacks. More rules to follow, but people love a good food brand.
Sell digital versions of your craft
Patterns as PDFs, recipe books. Makes money while you sleep.
Mistakes to avoid
Trying to make it perfect before selling it
Ship a "good enough" version in three weeks, not a perfect one in three months.
Charging way too little
Real buyers pay 3–5x what you'd guess.
Hiding behind the product
"My work speaks for itself" — it doesn't. Show your face.
Trying to grow too fast
Grow by charging more, not making more.
Your 90-day plan
Weeks 1–2
Pick one thing. Make 10. Take good photos.
Weeks 3–4
Sell your first 3 to people you know. Prove real people pay real money.
Weeks 5–8
Open your first shop. Pick ONE platform. Aim for 10 sales.
Weeks 9–12
Do more of what worked. Raise prices. Aim for $500–$1,500 this month.
Six months in
$2,000–$5,000 a month is normal if you keep going.
One year in
$5,000–$15,000 a month if you build a real brand.
Your personalized starter guide
Now that you know your type, here's exactly what to do with it.
You just found out something most people never figure out. You know your type. You know what fits you.
But knowing isn't the same as doing. The next step is actually building something — and that's where most people get stuck. Not because they don't have the type. Because they don't have a plan.
That's what this guide is for. It's a 30+ page personalized starter guide built specifically for your type. No fluff, no theory. Just the exact week-by-week steps to get from where you are now to your first paying customer.
What's inside
- ✓The exact products to start with — what to make first, what sells, what to avoid in week one
- ✓Your 30-day path to your first 10 sales — platform, pricing, photos, posting, all of it
- ✓The right mindset — how to think about this so you actually finish, not quit at week three
- ✓Your daily structure — the exact routine that turns a few hours a week into real progress
- ✓Real case studies — three people just like you who took this exact path and made it work
Founding price for the first 100 buyers
100 of 100 founding-price spots left
Get my Crafter starter guide — $49
Delivered instantly to your email after purchase. No subscriptions, no upsells, no recurring charges.
30-day money-back guarantee
If the guide doesn't give you a real path forward, you get your money back. No questions, no friction.
Quick questions you might be asking yourself:
$49 for a PDF? Is it actually worth it?
A bad PDF costs $9. A good one saves you 6 months of trial and error. We made the kind we wish we'd had when we were starting. If it doesn't, you get your money back.
How is this different from free YouTube content?
YouTube tells you what other people did. This guide tells you what to do — based on your specific type, in the right order, with no guesswork.
What if I take it and never use it?
That's the real risk, and we won't pretend it isn't. The guide is built for action — 30-day plan, weekly checkpoints, specific tasks. Use it, and the $49 pays back fast.
Ready to actually start?
Get my Crafter starter guide — $49