on factories: why respect is more important than craft

industrial ad pop art by frozen time photo

industrial ad pop art by frozen time photo - click image for more info



There is a fundamental problem with the idea of buying “handmade.”
Chiefly that the vast majority of things we buy are made by hand.

The hands don’t look familiar, though. They maybe a different color. They may be rough, cracked. They use tools & machines we don’t understand. The hands that made your bookshelf, sofa, or television may be thinner than yours – achy from lack of food.

Those hands have never had much of a choice in how they earn a living. Nor have they had much choice in how they live, where they live, or who governs them.

Those hands get no respect.

Yes, those hands work in factories. But factories aren’t bad. This handmade movement isn’t about factories. It’s not about mass production, it’s not about luxury vs austerity. The handmade movement is about respect: for ourselves, for our goods, for others, and for our community.

The factory system as we know it now is about subjugating workers, concentrating power, and maximizing profit at the expense of quality. In this system, people – and their hands – are merely pawns in a game of profit. Respect is not a consideration.

In recent years, we have rediscovered the ties that bind us together as humans. The digital age – coupled with crippling consumerism – has helped us see each other as equals and not human steps on a ladder to higher status. We recognize the respect due to all of those around us.

Including makers of all ilks.

Is it possible that striving to create a business model that generates respect is as valid as a business model that generates profit?

When I look around the blogosphere, Etsy, eBay, and other marketplaces, I see many individuals, makers, and mom & pop businesses that don’t respect themselves, let alone those who are buying from them. I see makers underselling, I see coaches apologizing, I see designers ceding power, and I see potential visionaries wearing blinders.

I see petty conversations. I see back stabbing. I see values out of focus.

As the handmade movement has grown, it has adopted its own limiting set of expectations.

Instead of creating new rules, we have a tendency to apply old rules to a new paradigm. This is a moment in time where that won’t work. The rules are being rewritten and reimagined – we can choose to be a part of it or not.

I propose that we codify an expectation of respect throughout craft culture, microbusiness, and personal consumption. If you’re an entrepreneur, respect yourself in your prices, your product descriptions, your conversations with cooperititon [definition coming!], and your use of the marketplace. If you’re a consumer, respect others – all of them – for the value they add to your life through the products they produce – whether lovingly handcrafted or mechanically constructed.

As the contemporary handmade movement grows, matures, and scales, we will learn to create factories, collectives, franchises, and chains that embody the respect we have rediscovered in ourselves & those around us.

We can build a system that promotes respect instead of denying it.

How are you working today to promote respect in business & in life? What businesses around you – or around the world – promote respect in innovative ways?

the art & business of crafting your online self.

who are you online? who do you want to be? how do you want others to perceive you? i spoke at my alma mater on tuesday afternoon about my personal journey to an online career and about the theory behind making a name for yourself online.

if you search around the “social media guru” blogs, you’ll find plenty of 7 ways to this and 5 tips for that. but not nearly as much in the way of theory. and this was college, right? so i wanted to really consider the deeper workings of social media. why it works – how it works – and how we communicate the essence of our selves & personalities to a network of thousands of strangers. in short, how we form our online identity.

since my mission at scoutie girl is more about telling the stories behind the stuff, i think this information fits here. this is the story & the theory behind what i put into scoutie girl:

the art & business of crafting your online self

how do you communicate the “essence of you” to people who’ve never met you before? if you create a persona that you will ultimately tire of or that you cannot maintain, you’ll lose interest and so will others. you life “wired” must be a true representation of the person you are and hope to become.

for me, i lost touch of my “true self” while i was working for “the man.” i lost touch with my love of learning, the part of me that loved to read & write. i rediscovered that when i took time off when lola was born. that’s the identity i choose to share online. a positive, successful, optimistic, and driven self.

i hope that’s the person you know.

you are what you share

you online identity becomes the sum total of the information you share online. for me, it’s sharing beautiful handmade goods, connecting artists, finding helpful blogging resources, & recapping special events. i immerse myself in this online community so that i can have access to the best information to pass on to you as readers & followers.

once i started to share, my value & influence grew by sharing the most interesting & helpful information i could find. that cultivates authority. as authority grows, my network – and my online identity – grows because of the value you provide to the community.

greater authority + larger network = more people exposed to the information i share

the sum of the tidbits – information, art, people, beauty – that i share creates an image of the virtual me. the “person” that you know.

the space between those shared bits, the juxtapositions, and the connections complete that virtual image. you probably don’t know me as a “person” – you know me as the words i write, the information i share, and the people i introduce you to. i am all those things, put together, and examined.

but i am nothing without relationships

if its not for you, the people who i work hard to cultivate relationships with, i am nothing. scoutie girl is nothing. my online self may be built by the information i share – but it’s propelled by our relationship.

i don’t know exactly where my own journey is headed, what new challenges & opportunities await me. in the end, my success – my ability to maintain this life that i love, hinges upon my ability to maintain my “wired” self image and my relationship with you.

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if you enjoyed this post, please check out my personal blog at taragentile.com. you can find more of my musings on social media, blogging, and the more “theoretical” side of indie biz.