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GOOD CHEMISTRY: Zazzle stalwarts
include Jeff Beaver, ’01, center, and from
left, Bobby Beaver, ’00, Matt Wilsey, ’00,
Gene Westerberg, Justin Dunscombe, ’01,
and Mike Agnich. The company’s niche blends
art, science and technology.
Peter N. Fox
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the photo of
our toddler posing as a policeman for Halloween was
meant for more than our family album. I wanted
my husband to have a T-shirt displaying our little
officer.
So
I logged on to Zazzle.com and pressed the “design” button.
I was relieved to see that the directions were pretty
straightforward. First, I uploaded a digital photo
of my son to Zazzle’s
design page. Then, using the arrow keys, I centered
the photo on an image of a shirt. Finally, I added
a headline—Who
Rules YOUR House?—and ordered my personally created
T-shirt for $20.64. The entire process took less than
10 minutes.
Four hours later, the T-shirt arrived at our Palo
Alto
front door. Was Zazzle giving me special treatment
because I was writing this article? No, the man delivering
it assured
me. It’s just that Zazzle staffers—none of whom
have job titles—occasionally drop off orders placed
near the company’s Palo Alto headquarters. “We’re
a little neurotic about customer service,” explained
Mike Agnich, ’00, one of the company’s first
employees.
Fast and personal: these are the aims of
Zazzle, which bills itself as the first Internet company
enabling users
to create, buy and sell images to be printed on T-shirts,
posters and other products. Thanks to a recently refined
manufacturing process, the company can deliver goods
within 24 hours, keep overhead costs low and generate
healthy profit
margins, its founders say. Buyers can obtain original
T-shirts and posters at affordable prices, even if
they want only
one or two, and designers can display their works online,
attracting customers—and earning royalties—from
around the world.
“There’s never really been a venue for making
money off the millions of artists’ images out there,” says
Robert Beaver, ’68, JD/MBA ’72, one of the company’s
founders. A lifelong entrepreneur who has started four
successful companies, he launched Zazzle in 1999 with
his sons, Bobby, ’00,
and Jeff, ’01, and a longtime collaborator, physicist
Gene Westerberg.
After an 18-month development phase
during which a few hundred users could access the site
by password,
Zazzle.com opened to the public in April. Although
the founders won’t
say how much money was invested, the company remains
completely self-funded and generates “very high gross
profit margins,” according
to Beaver.
Organized like a megamall of art galleries,
Zazzle.com hosts some 50,000 images sorted into categories
such
as “college,” “insults” and “fine
art.” Site visitors can create, buy or sell images—or,
as in my case, do all three. In addition to dreaming
up and purchasing a shirt for my husband, I submitted
my design
to the “kid” category, hoping that another user,
sympathetic to the ironies of parenting, might want
to buy it.
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Inventing
a new process for dyeing T-shirts proved frustrating:
hope literally washed away one day at the laundromat.
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Leticia Plate, a commercial
artist with displays on
the site, says she was pleased to have the opportunity
to “just
have fun” with her artwork, rather than conforming
to client requirements. Her fun, it turns out, has
also been profitable. Several months after Plate submitted
her first
images, a Zazzle shopper from a nonprofit organization
ordered a few hundred T-shirts bearing her “Forever” design
for a charity event. Zazzle pays designers, who grant
the company nonexclusive rights to their work, a 10
percent royalty
each time someone buys a product printed with one of
their pictures, and gives them a 10 percent discount
on purchases.
Offline,
personalized T-shirt businesses are mainly
mom-and-pop shops using screen printing and iron-on
methods on cotton shirts, says Beaver. But cotton
has drawbacks, he says. Because it is a strong fiber that
does not
bond
well with dye molecules, images printed by traditional
methods often fade or crack over time; they seldom
feel like part
of the fabric. And screen printing usually requires
high-volume orders to cover the cost of making separate
screens for each
color.
Still, the printed T-shirt business brings in
annual revenues of around $20 billion in the United
States, Beaver says. The size of the market—and its
fragmentation—pointed
the way to Zazzle’s niche. The founders conceived of
a T-shirt business that would rely on user-generated
designs and the Internet’s vast reach. But first, they
had to find a way to make T-shirt images last, and
make it cost-effective
to print one shirt at a time. Westerberg went into
action.
An MIT alumnus with a master’s degree in physics
and a former researcher with SRI International, Westerberg
had worked with Beaver before to develop a method to
bake
foods
like pizza faster than traditional ovens. But inventing
a new process for dyeing T-shirts proved frustrating.
After months of work, Westerberg thought he was close
to perfecting
a process for bonding water-based inks to cotton. But
hope literally washed away one day at the laundromat
as he watched
a popular detergent attack the molecules most important
to his dyeing process.
So Westerberg switched strategies and
started tinkering
with a sophisticated “dye sublimation” technology.
The trick to making it work for T-shirts, he explains,
is to use a special fabric woven with polyester on
the outside and cotton on the inside. The polyester bonds
with
dye molecules
when they are heated into a gaseous state, solving
the fading problem. The cotton lining provides comfort.
Next,
the company expanded to posters. Beaver figured
out how to keep several large ink-jet printers roughly
the size of refrigerators running up to 20 hours
per day, applying
digital images to satin-finish paper and heavyweight
canvas.
Posters by Gilles Tran, a graphic designer in Paris,
are among Zazzle’s most popular offerings. In the past,
Tran says, he turned down friends who wanted posters
of his modernistic designs because “it was too expensive
for me to find a printer and ship it myself.” Now,
he earns steady royalties from Zazzle.
From the start,
the Zazzle founders expected cartoons
and digital art to be popular with users, and they
are. But other types of illustration have drawn unexpected
interest,
such as historic maps and public-domain images from
the Library of Congress, NASA, National Archives, UC-Berkeley’s
Bancroft Library and the Hoover Archives, among others,
says staffer Matt Wilsey, ’00. For these, Zazzle uses
professional editing software to remove stains, tears
and rips from the
images. The company hopes to entice more institutions
to make their collections available to the public through
Zazzle,
Wilsey says.
As traffic to the website increases via
word of mouth, the company is ramping up staffing (there
are now 14
employees), office space and advertising. They foresee
a time when site
visitors can create and buy an array of image-imprinted
products, from coffee mugs to mouse pads. “If we get
our user base big enough, we can offer anything,” Beaver
says.
In the meantime, artists, shoppers and hobbyists—as
well as proud parents like me—continue to build up
the site. That T-shirt I ordered hasn’t faded one bit.
But, alas, I’m still waiting for my first royalty check,
preferably hand-delivered to our front door. |