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5 Things You Don’t Need To Sell Your Art (And 5 Things You Do)

We’ve all been there. Staring down the barrel of some crazy, ambitious goal, some dream, wondering how the heck we’re ever going to pull it off.

A trend I notice in my own life is a lot of amazing artists and creatives doing awesome work dreaming of someday making a living from it. We want to get started, but we’re missing a lot of important pieces. We look at everyone that’s making it and think we need what they have just to get a foot in the door.

That’s not actually true.

There are all kinds of things we could have before we start selling our art, but the reality is that we don’t actually need most of them. They’re just barriers that we put up to keep from taking a risk and doing what’s really important – actually selling our work.

Here are the top 5 things that you absolutely, positively do not need in order to sell your art (and the top 5 things you actually do need).

Image by *eddie

1. Business Cards

What I really mean when I say “business cards” is any of those standard office items that act as a barrier to getting out there and starting. This could be a printer, a fax machine, an assistant, anything besides your art, really.

Sure, eventually you’re going to need a few things, but they should come as an answer to an actual problem rather than a prerequisite for doing business. Heck, in most cases, you don’t even need a business license to get things going.

You don’t need business cards or any of that other junk, but here’s what you do need: intense focus on your art and simplicity. When you’re trying to get off the ground, you don’t need the self-inflicted resistance that comes with all the business gadgets.

Focus on creating your art and finding people who like it. That’s all that matters right now. Besides, the less you need to run your art business, the less you have to sell to keep running your art business.

2. An Art Degree

Here’s something really important that we should get out of the way. Education comes in so many different forms, and even though a classroom is a valid one, a degree is completely unnecessary if you want to start your own business and sell your art.

There are very few people outside of the corporate world who care if you have a degree and, dare I say, those people are a waste of your time and energy anyway.

Here’s what you need instead: A burning desire to learn and change.

No one who buys your art cares if you have a degree, but they do care that you have an education and an opinion about what you create and sell.

Luckily, those two things are easily attained for a lot less than the cost of tuition. If you have a hunger to learn, you’ll find all the education you need for free.

3. An Agent

Someday you may get to the point where you need someone to look out for you and help make good business deals so that you can focus on creating, napping, and taking exotic vacations.

Today is not that day. In fact, that day just might never come.

There’s nothing wrong with hiring someone to keep your best interest in mind, but always remember that no one cares as much about your art or your business as you do. Learn how to take care of your art business yourself before you outsource it.

You don’t need an agent, but you do need basic business aptitude.

Don’t worry if you haven’t got it now. There are all kinds of ways to pick it up.

The fastest is to just get out there and start doing business everywhere you can. You’ll screw up, lose money, get burned, and learn a lot of hard lessons. But if you keep at it, you’ll fail forward.

The safest way is to read every art and business blog you can, take business classes and start as small as possible.

The best way is probably somewhere in the middle. You’ve already got a great start reading Lateral Action (you smarty).

4. A Masterpiece

If there’s one thing that aspiring artists continually destroy their businesses with, it’s their own self doubt. This is a topic for a whole other discussion, but the thing to take away is that you do not need to create the world’s greatest masterpieces in order to make it as a professional artist.

There’s a market for every type of art and you don’t have to be the very best in the world to sell yours. You just have to be the best in your customer’s world. That means being the best thing available to them in their own sphere of influence.

Think of the last piece of art you paid for. Did you buy it because it was the most technically amazing piece of work you’ve seen or did you buy it because it told a story you liked?

People like art that looks good, but they buy it because it makes them feel good.

Better technique comes with more practice. Practice telling better stories and the technique (and money) will follow.

Here’s another secret the pros don’t tell you. No one paid attention to them when they started either.

People pay attention to things that their friends tell them about. When you’re starting out, your job is to be persistent and tell stories that people want to share.

5. Permission

No one can give the permission you need to sell your art. I totally understand the need for approval – I’ve been there many times myself – but it’s a dangerous rabbit hole to go down.

You see, asking for permission and waiting for approval is a carrot on a stick. Once you decide to chase it, you’re forever grasping. Every step you take is on the back of someone else’s approval and the further you go, the more of it you need.

Not a good place to be.

You don’t need permission or approval to be you and do what you do.

Without doubt, it’s the hardest thing to overcome, but the rewards for doing it are endless. You’re not good enough the day someone tells you that you are. You’re good enough when you’re tired of waiting for that day.

At this stage, skill and aptitude have nothing to do with it. Hard to believe, I know. Truth is, everyone starts out “not good enough.” Only the people that actually start end up becoming good enough.

My Confession

Here’s a little confession: I’m pretty new to the writing world, myself. I’ve got no credentials beyond my award winning book report on Oliver Twist in 10th grade and if we cross paths tomorrow, I’ll have no business card to give you.

Do I write the most beautiful prose you’ve ever read? Heck no. But every day I try to tell stories that connect with people that are like me and it seems to be working.

That’s why I’m writing this post for you. You’re not going to come find me just because I’m here, so I’m out finding you.

The most important thing you can do when you start selling your art is anything. Sure, you’ll get a lot of things wrong, but then you’ll get a lot of them right.

Think of everything you wish you could have before you get started and then imagine how you’d begin if you could never have it.

Start there.

Over to You

Can you think of anything else you don’t need to start selling your creative work?

About the Author: Tyler Tervooren helps extraordinary people improve their lives by doing really scary things at his site, Advanced Riskology. He’s currently on his own quest to join the top 1% of the world.

Tyler Tervooren:

View Comments (60)

  • Fauve said:
    "I wonder if where you live makes a difference but here in Canada if you don’t have a degree and follow a certain path your work is not taken seriously and the galleries wont show you first and second the your value will never be set for collectors. I think in New York and paris is the same."

    I say:
    That's another thing you don't need to start selling your art -- a gallery!

  • Thanks for the awesome post!

    I totally agree with you - many times artists get caught up in waiting for the right moment, or the big break, or the newest artist toy, when really all you need is an intense drive to make it, and the willingness to pursue your dream no matter what anyone else says.

  • I do think it is necessary to have a certain spot where you can do your art (especially if it requires an easel or some other piece of furniture) but a lot of art-making is really pretty portable, (sketchbook, notebook, camera, etc.) but I see what you're getting at with having to have a studio. I've never had a formal studio, just a corner in a room that is also used for something else.

  • A studio, good one Murlu.

    Whatever space you have available to do your thing, there's your studio.

    • My "studio" is the dining room our family of 5 shares! I use the Pub height table and I have a desk that keep my supplies. When we join together for a meal it's Dinner in Mom's studio LOL :) The kids all give great advice, critiques and encouragement. It is true though....at some point I need to be ready to share my paintings with others. It has been a year of painting and so far I have not given a painting away to anyone but my immediate family. This is the month I venture into waters unknown and try to get one up in a cafe, gallery or friends businesses. They have offered but I am a little nervous! Thank you for your great article....it was very insightful and encouraging!

  • Great stuff. Yes, it is so easy to get caught up in the "I'm not good enough" loop, sell yourself short, or decide to just take another month to *really* work on your skills.

    Not worth it. I'm not good enough by miles, but people dig what I'm doing and I figure I'll learn stuff along the way.

  • Well, reading this post has certainly come at an appropriate time for me. I'm feeling completely stuck trying to make a start on selling, while worrying about creating the perfect branding and logo and worrying when I'll actually have time to make the art .... you know how it goes. I had [yet another] idea last night which doesn't fit in with the advice I've had so far ...

    Thanks for the blogging equivalent of a gentle slap around the face ... maybe I'll get things straight in my head now.

  • Good post Tyler, and grats on the guest post spot here.

    I have businesses cards, but rarely use them. The people that want them don't need them (we're connected somewhere else, be it Twitter, Facebook, email, etc). I've got a website that functions just fine as a business card.

    Like what you said about not needing a masterpiece...a lot of pressure built in to that concern.

  • Hi, I found your website on the list of the 50 Best Blogs for creative thinking. Congratulations. I'm always interested in creativity of all kind. Great site.

  • One of the best things I've ever read...and I can vouch for all of it thru my own experience. I've been pretty successful at what I do, and I can tell you that I still don't have a business card, an agent or a college degree. I also don't have a masterpiece yet, but I'm still working on that!

    Selling my art has been one of the hardest things because you totally put your ego on the line...you're just ASKING to be rejected! But when people write to me about how my stuff has changed their lives, it gives me fuel to keep pressing on.

  • Some advice I just read that was really good was to just shoot (photography) and show. Keep doing that over and over and you will not only get better at your craft, but you will sell, eventually. It might take time, but just continue that shoot and show.
    Thanks for the further encouragement in your post. Cheers

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