5 replies
How much money do you guys invest in a FB Ads with a TeeSpring campaign?
Im in a sports niche and my goal is 100 shirts
#ads #teespring
  • Profile picture of the author MisterBaldHead
    TeeSpring is very oversaturated. Don't waste money on FB ads for TS. If already make up your mind, run your ads on FRI, SAT only.
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  • Profile picture of the author ewikk055
    Please don't tell me you're spending money advertising teespring without some serious knowledge of the game....and if not...pleeeeasse tell me where I can get some fb vouchers. LOL.
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    Can we sell these? hollar.

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  • Profile picture of the author miklanderson2
    I spend anywhere from $10 to $5K or more on advertising for a single shirt.

    Some shirts never make it out of the beginning stages where I'm dipping my toe in the water. I'll spend anywhere from $10 to $100 testing out a shirt, depending on how many different interests I want to target. If I don't make a sale or two in the first $10, I usually kill the design and move on. If I do make a sale or two, I'll continue testing it and try to make it profitable.

    Once I have a shirt that I think will be a winner, I start scaling up my advertising and testing different ads, different targeting and different demographics. If a shirt is selling like crazy and I'm able to get it really dialed in, I'll spend as much as I'm comfortable spending on ads. If it's chugging along making a few sales here and there, I won't scale it up as much.

    To answer your question regarding 100 shirts...It depends. I've had shirts that sold 100 shirts within the first $50 to $100 of advertising. There are others I could probably spend thousands on and never hit 100. Those campaigns get shut down long before I get anywhere near 100 shirts.

    As far as the naysayers go...If I would have listened to the people that were saying Teespring is oversaturated when I first started out, I would have far, far less money in my bank account than I do right now. It isn't as easy to sell shirts now as it used to be, but there's still a good amount of money to be made from selling shirts.

    Start slow, test the waters with small amounts of money and don't get stuck on any one design. Once you find something that sells, scale up.

    I can't speak for anyone else, but in my experience Friday and Saturday are two of the tougher days when it comes to sales. My CPC goes up a bit on the weekends and my sales tend to drop off. I still make money on my successful campaigns on the weekends, but if I only ran ads on Fridays and Saturdays, I wouldn't make enough to make it worthwhile.
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    "A bargain is something you don’t need at a price you can’t resist."
    -Franklin Jones

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  • well i never had much luck with teaspring. like the guy above me said about it being over saturated....
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