Knitting Success Stories
By Liz Raad
Knitting success stories can be relevant to a personal accomplishment or a professional success and the level of your success is solely dependent on your skills and your personal goals. One of the beautiful things about working in arts and crafts like knitting is that success is relative to your personal likes, abilities and not subject to arbitrary views of other people. What may be subject to the views and thoughts of others is what you do with your knitting success to benefit from it financially.
Obviously, you can sell your finished products once you have knitted them. That is certainly one of the most common ways to profit from your work and start building up your knitting success stories. However, if you are working all alone this may be a rather slow way to build up to any viable income opportunity of any real means. While it is not at all impossible if you are already good at knitting, it is not the easiest one to accomplish on a regular and recurring basis if you want to replace or even supplement your current income substantially.
If you have reached that stage already that just opens up even more markets for you to monetize your work and create your personal knitting success story. First of all, if you are that good … and there are many people that are, you should have a vast amount of information to fill up a knitting blog or a knitting website and let other people know what you have learned along the way. Your knitting website can serve as a platform for opening up many different types of opportunities for making money with your knitting knowledge and skills.
You could also put all of your knowledge into a book format and sell it as an e-book or electronic book or have it published. When you go to get your knitting book published you still have a couple of different options depending on what works best for you. For most people, self-publishing is the quickest and easiest way to get any book published. The relative ease and cost of self-publishing make this an excellent venue for books about arts and crafts like knitting.
Finding a publisher may also be an option but this generally takes anywhere from six months to one year even after your manuscript has been accepted. You have to understand that many book publishers receive many hundreds of thousands of manuscripts and publish ten to twenty titles each and every year. The numbers alone make it very difficult to get your knitting book picked up by many of the regular publishing houses. Given the popularity of crafts like knitting, there is both a larger audience and a larger number of people submitting their knitting books making it even more difficult to get picked up by a publisher.
It really is one of the most rewarding factors when it comes to knitting, that just like the crafts that you create, your actual success cannot be measured by anybody’s standards but your own. Much like that sweater or those socks that you knitted that way because you wanted them that way, nobody can tell you what is right or wrong about your knitting success story. The only thing that you need to do once when you are knitting, is to find other people to share your knitting success stories with.
Liz Raad is a small business coach and author of the exciting new E-book “Knitting For Profit – Your Step-by-Step Guide To Making Money From Knitting and Crochet”. Liz also runs a popular blog on the topic of making money from knitting and crochet. Visit her blog at http://www.knittingforprofit.com/blog where you will find tons of free information, practical advice and ideas about how to successfully knit or crochet for profit. In her blog you will discover:
-How to get started in your own knitting business
-How to easily sell your knitting and crochet online
-Copyright free knitting patterns that you are free to knit for your own profit
-Real success stories and interviews with women who make cash from their favorite hobby
-How much to charge for a knitting job
-Advice on making money with knitting websites
Article Source: Liz Raad == Knitting Success Stories