Handmade Hustle: Pick and Price Your Products for E-Commerce Success | Holly Rutt | Skillshare
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Handmade Hustle: Auswahl und Preisgestaltung deiner Produkte für den E-Commerce-Erfolg

teacher avatar Holly Rutt, Founder The Little Flower Soap Co

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Einführung

      1:57

    • 2.

      Erste Schritte

      3:22

    • 3.

      Plane deine Zukunft

      5:52

    • 4.

      Wähle dein Produkt

      7:47

    • 5.

      Lege deinen Preis fest

      9:31

    • 6.

      Gewinnschwelle erreichen

      2:39

    • 7.

      Schlussgedanken

      0:28

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About This Class

Starte das kreative E-Commerce-Geschäft deiner Träume mit finanziellem Erfolg im Hinterkopf, indem du das richtige Produkt auswählst und die richtige Preisgestaltung dafür vornimmst.

Bevor sie The Little Flower Soap Co. gründete, fühlte sich Holly Rutt in einem seelenlosen Firmenjob gefangen und suchte nach einem Ausweg.  Holly betreibt jetzt ein „handgefertigtes“ E-Commerce-Unternehmen in Vollzeit und macht auf Etsy, Amazon Handmade und Shopify einen siebenstelligen Betrag pro Jahr. 

Jetzt verrät Holly alles, was sie in der Wirtschaftsschule und in 14 Jahren Erfahrung im Online-Verkauf darüber gelernt hat, wie man ein E-Commerce-Geschäft mit handgefertigten Produkten gründet und ausbaut. In diesem Kurs lernst du, wie du das richtige Unternehmen und Produkt auswählst und wie du den richtigen Preis dafür festlegst, um genug Geld zu verdienen, um als selbständiger kreativer Unternehmer einen erfüllten Lebensstil zu erreichen.

Mit Holly als deine Kursleiterin wirst du:

  • Eine Vision schreiben: Mach dir mithilfe einer magischen Technik namens Visioning klar, welche Zukunft du dir wünschst. 
  • Ein skalierbares, profitables Geschäft und  Produkt finden, das dir hilft, deine inspirierende Vision zu verwirklichen.
  • Deinem Produkt einen angemessenen Preis und eine gesunde Gewinnspanne geben, um sicherzustellen, dass jeder einzelne Verkauf dich in Richtung deines Traumlebens bringt.
  • Deine Gewinnschwelle berechnen, um genau zu wissen, wie viele Einheiten du verkaufen musst, bevor du deinen ersten Euro an Gewinn machst.

Außerdem wird Holly Arbeitsblätter zum Herunterladen bereitstellen, die dir helfen, deinen Geschäftsplan weiter zu festigen. 

Ob du bereits ein Unternehmen gegründet hast, der weitere Weg dir aber einschüchternd erscheint, oder ob du noch nicht begonnen hast und dir nicht sicher bist, wo du anfangen sollst, du wirst diesen Kurs mit einer klaren Vorstellung davon beenden, wie du mit jedem Produkt und Preis, den du wählst, erfolgreich sein kannst. 

Du brauchst keine Business-Vorkenntnisse, um an diesem Kurs teilzunehmen. Alles, was du brauchst, sind dein Laptop, Papier und Stift, eine Stoppuhr (z. B. auf deinem Handy) und die Tabellen, die Holly in den Unterrichtsressourcen bereitgestellt hat. Um deine E-Commerce-Kenntnisse weiter zu verbessern, erkunde Hollys gesamten Lernpfad.



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Holly Rutt

Founder The Little Flower Soap Co

Kursleiter:in

Join Holly Rutt, the founder and lead designer of The Little Flower Soap Co. for a foundational guide to growing your handmade business. Geared at crafters who want to turn their creative hobby into a successful e-commerce business, these classes will guide you through your journey from crafting independently to scaling up and what it means to build a team.

Jump into this three-class series where Holly shares:

Using a magical technique called "Visioning" to get clear on what business to start to have the lifestyle and finances you dream of. How to tackle common "stuck" spots from choosing your business name and branding to picking a platform and listing your first product. Smoothing the road ahead for your existing business by Identifying and eliminating risks and divers... Vollständiges Profil ansehen

Level: Beginner

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Transcripts

1. Introduction: For many of us, working in the corporate world does not feel like a fit. So wouldn't it be so cool if the thing that you enjoy doing where time flies by when you're doing it, could also pay your bills. I'm Holly Rutt, a multi-passionate, creative entrepreneur that once struggled to decide which business to pursue. Now I am the founder and creative director of an e-commerce handmade business that does seven figures a year selling on Etsy, Amazon Handmade, and Shopify. What does every seven figure handmade business you find online have in common? They picked the right product and priced it properly. I'm so excited to teach this topic because I know a lot of creatives who want to start a business. If they could just wrap their head around how to make enough money to justify doing their craft part time or full time, they would have a better life. I believe it's completely achievable with just a few little tricks that I learned in business school that I have used in my own creative journey. In this class, we're going to use the magical power of harnessing both your right brain and left brain. We're going to work on our vision, how we want our life to look, and then we're going to flip that around and use that to inform what our product should be and what we should charge for it. To follow along, you will need a laptop, paper, and a pen, a stopwatch like the one on your phone, and the spreadsheets I've provided in the project gallery. This class is for you whether you've already launched a handmade business but the path forward seems unclear or intimidating. If you have a product you're already making, but you're unsure how to price it. Even if you have not started any business and you're trying to decide which business to start, this class is for you. I am so excited you decided to join me for this class. Let's get started. 2. Getting Started: If you really want to be gainfully self employed, making something by hand and selling it online, you can do this, and I have a path that can help you succeed. I can remember from middle school wanting to have my own business. Like at the age that you would think of a lemonade stand as a business, I was thinking about all kinds of other businesses I could have in my front yard like a restaurant or a coffee shop. It seemed like going to business management would be the right move for me. But then when I got into school, my teachers said, don't start a coffee shop. You're going to work 80 hours a week to make zero money. So I wasn't sure what to do and I ended up becoming an office manager for some engineering firms, which was not a good fit for me. I felt really stuck in my corporate job behind a desk, in a room with no windows. I was unhappy as a creative and I was looking for a way out. Meanwhile, I had these side hustles, making caramels, doing wedding floral design, making soap. I felt way more at home with my hands on a bar of soap or working with flowers than I did sitting at a computer. So I knew that I needed to hustle and figure out how to make these creative passions my full time day job. I take my finances pretty seriously. I'm a numbers girl. I love just knowing on paper that I'm going to have enough to pay my bills at the end of the month. As I was working in my corporate day job as an office manager for an engineering firm, I would spend my lunch hour, nights, and weekends writing client proposals and estimates for my wedding floral design business and making soap and selling at craft fairs. But the whole way along, I was calculating what my break even point would be, what kinds of profits I was making per bar of soap that I sold, and I was figuring out how many bars of soap I was going to need to sell before I could really quit my day job. I had a target number in mind that I wanted to save up before I gave notice and I was really motivated to work hard nights and weekends and make sure that every bar of soap that I sold was inching me closer to that goal. So setting the proper pricing and knowing what my profits were and when I would achieve that goal was like the light at the end of the tunnel for me, that one day I would get to do that creative work for myself full time. You could say that I have two passions. I am creatively passionate, but also I am passionate about good finance. Because money, which we sometimes don't love to talk about, can purchase for you freedom. Freedom to create, freedom to work in your own studio space and wear what you want and surround yourself with what makes you most comfortable. I love spreadsheets because I love turning a profit because I love the freedom that turning that profit gives me. You could spend years dabbling in different businesses, unsure which one will make you the amount of money you need to quit your day job like I did. But if you don't have 10 years to spend stumbling towards enlightenment, then take this class and let's figure out the right business for you to start today. 3. Visioning Your Future: I'm going to teach you how a process called visioning can work like magic to help you achieve your heart's desire in business and in life. Using the definition from Ari Weinzweig's book, A Lapsed Anarchist's Guide to Building a Great Business. A vision is described as a description of success at a particular point in time in the future. Described with enough richness and detail that it becomes emotionally engaging and meaningful. This is the idea that completely changed my life. In 2013, I attended a Zingerman's Zing Train Visioning seminar that was led by one of the founding members and he taught this technique where you use a method called hot pen to quickly get your thoughts onto paper kind of like a brain dump, but you're writing as though it's present tense, but it's a time in the future. I did as he said and wrote my vision and wrote and wrote for the 20 minutes that we had set on the timer. At the end, he asked, were there any volunteers willing to stand up and share their vision with the class. I had been surprised some of the things that I confessed onto paper after I got the first few obvious things out of my head, there were more things that my heart had wanted that had not admitted to myself. Because it can be scary to admit to yourself what you want. What if you don't get it. But I raised my hand trying to be courageous. I shared with my fellow aspiring entrepreneurs this vision I had to leave my house and walk to a barn and renovate it into a studio, passing rows of lavender that were growing on my flower farm. Meet up with an employee who would support me in preparing the farm for a farm to table dinner that night and in packing my online orders. I shared it and got goose bumps because it just felt like a possible real future for me. Before long I was attracting to myself everything I needed to realize that dream. In under three years, I had achieved everything that was in that vision and then some. I do this exercise anytime I have an interesting project I'm working on or something I'm nervous about. I even wrote a vision for the success of this skillshare class, which you can read in the download section. Writing a vision can be a little scary because getting very specific about what we want can be scary. Once we admit to our heart's desire there's always the chance that we don't get that. Once we tell someone else, what I really want is to quit my day job and do this creative passion full time. We even feel like maybe it would be embarrassing if we don't then achieve it after having shared that we wanted to. But it's time for us to get really honest about what we want so that we can start having that life. Not being honest with yourself and pretending you don't want those things, that's not the path to the life that you want. Effective visioning will help you get clear on things like lifestyle preferences. How big or small do you want your business to be? Do you prefer to work from a she shed a home office from a shared space downtown or virtually while you travel the world? Do you want a small business that only you work in or do you want to hire a team that supports you in growing your business? It will also help with your financial picture. Is this something that's going to help you put your kids in a sport, help you retire early, get out of debt, or maybe travel the world? Is this going to support just your income? Or maybe you'll have a team of five or six employees like I do now. First we're going to write a list of points. Take five minutes and write down a bunch of past positive achievements this will get your brain in a positive headspace. We're going to use a technique called hot pen. The idea is to keep writing as fast as you can without stopping. Even if you can't think of something to write, just write blah, blah, blah until the next thing comes to you. This is going to help override that part of your brain that wants to fix grammar, punctuation, sentence structure forget about that for now. The idea here is to go quickly writing as fast as you can. You want your true unguarded thoughts to outpace any self editing. Insights, dreams and desires might emerge that you have never fully confessed to yourself before. Get into the future but write in the present tense. It's gonna sound like this, it's August 15, 2028, and I'm leaving my house walking past beautiful flowers to meet my employee at the barn. Go for something great. This should be an inspiring vision. Get personal. Include your passions and dreams. Describe things that you see, smell, and hear. This should be a vivid description of your preferred future. Let yourself go. You do not need to figure out how you're going to get it just write what it will look like. As an example, let me share with you a little bit of the vision I wrote years ago. In my original vision I wrote, it's July 15, 2018, I'm leaving my house walking past bees buzzing and rows of lavender on my way to meet my team at the barn turn soap studio where I will work to get ready for tonight's farm to table community dinner. I feel the sun on my skin, I smell the lavender I hear chickens. I feel nervous but excited. It's your turn. Take 20 minutes. Pause this class, go and write your vision, and then come back and I'd love for you to share it in the project gallery. Or find a safe person in your life, a friend, who won't be critical to share it with. Now that we have worked on creating your vision, let's move on to picking your product. 4. Picking Your Product: You've created your vision. Now what? In this lesson, we will use your vision to help determine your product. Deciding what you will make also determines how this business will affect your lifestyle. You may choose to make something that you can only produce three to five units of a week. This might never be a full-time job for you. This may be your passion, something that you do out of the love of it, and let me help you price that product so that you can continue to buy all of the art supplies that you want. Maybe have a she shed that's fabulous, or work a few hours less at your job. You may have written into your vision that this is your full-time job. If that's true, I want to help you pick a product that is scalable, profitable and will move you in the direction of that dream faster. A scalable product is a product that you don't necessarily have to make all by yourself. For example, with this bar of soap, I came up with the original recipe. I picked the beautiful packaging, I designed the label and printed it. I took a light airy photo, I wrote the product description. But now I was able to train somebody else to make this bar of soap. Someone else makes it, another person wraps it, another packs and ships it. It's still my design. It's still handmade, but it's scalable because if at the holidays I start selling 5,000 units of this item a day, I can totally ramp up production to keep up with demand. Let's think through some examples of how you could take what you're already doing and make it into a scalable product. For example, if you're a potter, maybe you could make a farmhouse-style Christmas tree ornament. Say it's a cookie-cutter star shape. Something that you can design to be cute and true to your aesthetic, but you can train somebody else to make it for you. Maybe they can produce 100 a day easily with your guidance and oversight. Or if you are a knitter, you could design a gorgeous pattern, knit one beautiful hat, and then possibly sell the pattern for that online, we started making this lip bum 25 at a time with a rubber band around using a pipette to fill each tube. But as demand increased, we needed another way. We found someone who produces a tray that we could click 225 tubes into, flip it over, and pour the whole batch at once. This eliminated the need to clean the outside of the tube and it went from an hour to make 25-50 lip bums, to less than an hour to make over 200 lip bums. My vision revealed that I wanted to hire a support staff, have a firm, build a beautiful studio outside of my house. In order to achieve all of those desires, I knew I needed a product that was scalable. I was going to need to find something that I could make from my three or four Etsy shops I currently had going. I was making caramels, but this was not something that was profitable enough, and I didn't have a full-scale kitchen to produce it en mass. I was making jewelry, but it really had to be me that was making it. Because I was sourcing all of these unique parts all of the time, and it was not easily reproducible. I was making boutonnieres for people, for their weddings, and the story I was telling myself was that I couldn't really train someone to do it just the way I was doing it. But the soap business, soap was something everybody needs. It had high profit margins. It was easy to give someone else the recipe and show them how to make it the same way that I was already making it. This stood out as a business that had scalability and potential to grow. This was the business that was going to help me achieve that vision. Imagine you design a product that's starting to go viral. You're selling 2,500 units a day on Etsy or Amazon Handmade at $5 profit per unit. That's $12,500 a day in profits. Say this is happening for the two weeks leading into the holidays. That's $175,000 in profits. Dream realized, right? You definitely have enough to hire a support staff, build your beautiful She Shed studio, or start a lavender farm as long as you're able to ramp up production enough to meet demand. This is where picking a product that's scalable is so important. It's great to have something so incredible that it goes viral, but you have to be able to reach the demand. Let's say that in your vision, you wrote about something that you love making, that you're passionate about, an art or a craft that you enjoy doing, but you don't want to put pressure on it to pay your bills. I totally respect that. Let's assume that this is never going to be your day job. This class can still be helpful to you. We can help you decide how to price that product so that you can always make at least enough profit to buy all of the craft supplies or art supplies of your dreams and maybe even work a few less hours at your day job to free up more time to work on your art. Finally, take concrete steps to turn your vision into action. Share a vision with your friend. This is not a step that you skip. This is the part where the magic happens and it becomes really real. Sharing your vision out loud, especially in person or maybe over the phone, but definitely not in a text or email. You want to share confidently with someone who can be trusted to be supportive and not critical of your vision. Once you have written your vision, let's make a visual representation of your vision. Find pictures on Pinterest that represent what you have already written down and print them out. Put them on a pinboard and place this pinboard somewhere that you're going to walk by it multiple times a day. Our brains are bombarded all day with information from all over. Our RAS filters that information for what is most important and what we should focus on. Clearly defining your vision tells your brain this is what's most important and should take priority. Your RAS will start searching for people, opportunities, and information related to what you have decided is most important. Your vision. When I wrote my vision in that class and felt the goosebumps all over, I realized I wanted to get my two existing businesses, wedding, floral design, and soap making out of my house, out of my basement, out of my kitchen, and my living room, and into a studio across the driveway. I didn't want to work off campus, but I didn't want to work in the house anymore either. This meant I was going to have to move. Hopefully, buy a place that had an outbuilding that could be renovated and this was all going to require money. I needed to pick between my two businesses and focus on the one that had the potential to help me purchase that larger property, that larger home with that outbuilding, and pay for the renovation. The soap-making business would go crazy at Christmas sometimes I had family and friends coming over to help me keep up with packing orders in December. I knew that if I put all my time and focus on this business, I could realize that vision. I started to turn away from wedding floral design and really put my focus on creating more products for this business and growing it to fulfill my vision. Hopefully, writing your vision gave you a little bit of clarity around what your product should be. Choosing your product and getting clear on what you're going to make will help you take action to move forward to the next step. I would love to share with you my vision board from my original visioning. It's linked in the project resources. I would also love to see your own. So please share it in the gallery. Now that we've written an inspiring vision of the future and use it to decide what product we will produce, let's switch to our business hat and make sure we're pricing our product right out of the gate. 5. Setting Your Price: Next we're going to dive into some math and make it less scary for you if that's how you're feeling. The thing about pricing your product is that you do not need to guess at this number. I can walk you through some simple steps to determining the appropriate price that will make sure you're always turning a profit every time you sell an item for the health of your business. Over the next two lessons, I will teach you some simple formulas to figure out: A, how much to charge for your product, and B, when you break even. For many creative makers, I hear that deciding what to charge is really challenging. I read this in the forums, from Etsy sellers and all over the place. This is something that does not need to be a mystery. We can use a spreadsheet to calculate, based on the cost of your supplies and ingredients, the time that it takes you to produce your product, and how much you want to make per hour. So many creatives I know have been overheard to say, I am not good at math. If this is the story you're telling yourself, I want you to flip the script and start saying, knowing my numbers is important to me as a small business owner. Trust me, you can do all of the math you need to succeed. Start thinking of your numbers as a game that you can win. We're going to use a formula designed to make sure that your margin is healthy. A healthy margin is key to a successful business. This is the money you will need to grow your business by investing in equipment and marketing, and this is the money that you will need to incentivize yourself to keep going when the work is hard. If you have better than a 50% profit margin, then you have wiggle room for paying referral fees to platforms like Etsy or Amazon Handmade and for pay-per-click ad campaigns should you need to run them. Let's start with some basic definitions. Cost of goods sold is all of the materials that went into making your physical item. If you're a baker, this is flour, sugar, and butter. If you're a potter, this is clay and glaze. Sales is the total dollar amount received from your customers. Profit is the amount left over after you deduct the cost of goods sold and your expenses from your sales. Expenses are all other costs, not the physical item, but things like your wireless Internet bill, your printer, your paper, your toner; things that you need to run your business, but they don't ship to the customer as part of your item. All we need to worry about for today's lesson is using these numbers to determine the right price for our item. Now let's figure out your numbers. The first thing we're going to need are your receipts for any supplies or ingredients, anything that you've purchased for your business. Hopefully, you can find these in your email. Maybe you have a paper copy. We could also just look up what you paid if you did not keep the receipt. If you haven't made your item yet, look up what the supplies and ingredients are going to cost you and do the math to figure out how much of that supply or ingredient you're going to need. The next thing you need is a stopwatch: I want you to use this to calculate exactly how long it takes you to produce one unit. I do not want you to guess at these numbers at all. This is not conceptual, this is concrete. Use your phone calculator, use your phone stopwatch, go to your receipts and figure out to the penny what you paid for every ounce of bees wax or every yard of yarn, however you measure it in your industry, and exactly to the second, how much time it took you to produce that item. Now for the moment we've all been waiting for, I'm going to give you a behind-the-scenes look at my exact numbers and how I come up with the price that I should charge for my product. Here is an example. This pretty much lays out a recipe including each ingredient, the container I'm putting it in, the label that's going on the jar, and the labor or the time that it takes me to produce one batch. In my example, I'm making one batch which is 10 units of balm. I need 10 ounces of beeswax. I know from checking my receipt and using my calculator that beeswax costs me $0.33 an ounce. Same for coconut almond oil. My jars cost me $0.65, and the lid costs me 25. The label costs me 12. I do not leave out something that only cost $0.12. I want to know to the penny, how much is this product costing me to make. My labor for one batch is one hour. I've chosen the number $20 per hour as my desired wage. This is how much I want to be paid and no less. I recommend choosing an aspirational number somewhat above your first instinct. Now this spreadsheet is going to do the math for you. The amount that goes into your batch times the price you pay per unit equals, and you can see this is a formula. On the form that you will fill in for yourself, the cells that are purple, our formulas, don't type into those cells. As you can see, if I put Quantity 1 costs per unit, $5, it will automatically fill $5 in for you. Then for your second ingredient, say it's Quantity 2 costs $10, not only is it filling that in, but it's also totaling them down here. In my example of balm 10 units, the total cost, including all supplies, ingredients, and labor is $35 per batch. Each batch produces 10 units. This you will need to fill in, but the rest will fill for you. The magic number is $3.50. That's how much it costs me to make one balm. I multiply that number by two to get my wholesale price of $7, and multiply that number by two to get my retail price of $14. If you're not planning to sell wholesale, you could use this as your retail price, but I recommend considering this higher number if possible. A lot of people know already about selling retail direct to the consumer on Etsy or on Amazon Handmade, for example, or through your own website. Not everyone has thought about the opportunity to sell wholesale to gift shops in your town, or to gift shops in towns all over the United States, where that retailer will select your item as part of their curation and then resell it to their customers. This is another income stream for you, if you have enough margin in your product to be able to market up times four. You might sell it to the wholesale customer for $3 a bar, and then they'll turn around and sell it to their customer for $6 in the case of this soap, or for our lip balm, I might sell it to them for $2.50, and then they may sell it to their customer for $5. I have enough margin in these items to be able to market them up times four, and so that broadens all of the places that I'm able to sell to. Let's talk about what to do if the price you came up with seems unreasonable. If it seems too low, that's great. You can charge whatever your competitors are charging, or a little more. I suggest charging a little more. People often have a bias around perceived value, which means that the more that you charge, the more valuable they will perceive your product to be. A lot of people are distrustful of low-priced products and they actually won't buy it because they'll think maybe there's something not right about this product. Well, a higher-priced product that has been selling, well, they'll think something must be awesome about this product. I need to try it too. When I first learned soap-making, the lovely woman who trained me said, I should charge $5 a bar, or five bars for 20. I thought you must be crazy, who would pay $5 for a bar of soap, but I was wrong. I came home and did a craft show, and not wanting to be disrespectful to my teacher, I charged $5 a bar. Not only were people willing to pay $5, but they all bought five bars for $20 and I sold out. Selling out of soap at $5 a bar made me realize that it was possible to charge more than what I was comfortable of paying as a starving college student taking the bus. I wouldn't have paid $5, but I realized I'm not exactly my own target customer. Maybe this person has a little bit more money than I have now as a starving college student who cannot imagine paying $5 for a bar of soap. Maybe this is me in the future after I've made a little more money and I can afford that essential oil soap for each bathroom in my house. That helped me to up my prices on Etsy as well confidently. Then seeing those products sell at the higher price I didn't think was possible, just propelled me forward with confidence that what I'm making is worthwhile, it's handmade, and people are willing to pay more for it. As we just learned, the basic equation for calculating your price is the cost of the supplies and ingredients that go into it plus the cost of your labor times two, if you plan to sell only retail, or times four, if you're planning to sell wholesale on places like Faire.com, for example. Now download the worksheet and use that sheet to calculate your price. Bonus, calculate your margin in Tabs 1 and 2. Amazing job so far. Now that we've determined what to charge for our item and calculated our profit margin, next up, let's figure out how to break even. 6. Hitting Break Even: Now that you've defined your vision, determined your product, and set your price, let's figure out exactly when you're going to break even. When I was a little girl, my grandpa introduced the idea of break even to me this way. We went to the park together and we saw a man selling hot dogs. When we got home, he sat me down on his knee, got out a pen and paper and said, okay, Holly, say that the man selling hot dogs purchased his hot dog stand for $300. He needed to buy 100 hot dogs at $0.50 each and another 1,000 ketch up packets and mustard packets at $0.05 apiece and some napkins of course, maybe 1,000 of those for $0.05. How many hot dogs does he need to sell to break even on his initial investment? So if you do the math using this spreadsheet that's provided, you see that the total he invested in his business upstart was $500. He's selling each hot dog for $5 a piece. So the number of hot dogs he has to sell to break even is 100 hot dogs. When I started my business, I was thinking about my grandfather, who had started many businesses before and I wanted to use his example of break even to make sure that I was actually profitable and had recouped my initial investment in supplies and ingredients. You can see on this example here that when I started, I spent $200 on essential oils like lavender and lemongrass. I spent $15 a piece to have two custom molds fabricated for making soap. I bought knives and spoons and cutting boards, and of course, olive oil and coconut oil and things as a soap base. My total investment was $500 the sale price of each bar of soap was around 450. The number of soaps that I would then need to sell to break even on my original investment of $500 was 111 bars. Knowing this number is so powerful, I knew that if I went to our craft show and took 111 bars and sold out, that's it, I was in the black. I had recouped all of the money that I originally took from my personal bank account and invested into my business. Knowing exactly how many bars I needed to sell to break even gave me a smart goal. A smart goal is specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, and time bound and I want you to be smart. Now it's your turn, go into Tab 3 of the spreadsheet I've provided, and below my examples calculate your break even point and then share that with us in the project gallery. 7. Final Thoughts: You made it to the end of the class. Congratulations. I hope you found this useful. You now know what to make, how to price it to accumulate profits, when you'll start making profits, and exactly how much. I am so excited to share this process with you. I hope it helps you to succeed too. I would love to see your progress and your products. Please share them in the project gallery. Thanks for watching. Goodbye.