The Art Marketing Podcast
Art Storefronts
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The Art Marketing Podcast helps artists and photographers improve their marketing strategies to sell more art. Hosted by Patrick from Art Storefronts, the show covers trends, expert interviews, success stories, and tactical advice for thriving in the art world.
Епизоде
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20 Ways to Grow Your Email List as an Artist (Online and Off) 29.05.2026 42минYou don't own your followers. You own your list. Every platform you're on is rented — the landlord can change the rules or close the door anytime. Your email list is the one audience nobody can take from you. The good news: it doesn't have to be huge. Three hundred of the right people is enough to run a real art business — which is exactly why you want three thousand, then thirty thousand, then three hundred thousand. This is the foundational one: why email matters, the creative ways to capture it, and the latest tradecraft. Almost no artists do this well. (We covered why the basics outlast everything in The Long Game — this is the basics, weaponized.) The unlock isn't new places. It's the places you're already standing — the booth, the bio link, the DM, the box you're shipping, the car in your driveway. Every one is a capture opportunity you're wasting. In this episode: The trifecta — phone, email, snail mail — and why email is the cheapest and easiest one to own Hobbyist or business? The honest cut, and why every opportunity is an email-capture opportunity The four online venues: your website (footer to popup to content upgrades), bio links, DMs, and comments The 11–15 second popup rule — the delay that converts at 6.45%, and why a zero-second popup kills it The Birthday Club, the new favorite opt-in: some people are birthday people, and if they are, they love it (3–4x) Just ask, then shut up — the DM play most artists never run The three offline venues: in-person events, the QR-code layer, and direct mail The clipboard and the fishbowl — $0 plays that are 150 years old and still work QR car magnets — the hero play nobody in art is running yet (about $35 a pair) Direct mail at $0.40 a piece — your art in 1,000 mailboxes around your gallery for less than a Meta ad The compounding math — how the basics become $800K–$1M over ten years Wyland and Gray Malin run this at the highest level — get on their lists and watch (see POD and Samples) This week's homework: pick three tactics. One online, one offline, and one you'd never have considered. Set them up by Friday. Then reply or DM me your three — I read every single one. Resources mentioned: Art Storefronts — the storefront engine for working artists Linktree — a bio-link service that turns your one link into a mini-website Sticker Mule car magnets — for the QR car-magnet play GotPrint — EDDM direct-mail postcards, ~$0.40 a piece Wyland and Gray Malin — get on their lists for the master class Related episodes: The Long Game — Why Your Website Will Still Be Working in 2055 POD and Samples — What Wyland and Gray Malin Actually Do The Gallery Test — Should Artists List Prices on Their Website? All Oars In — The Anatomy of a Sale So pick your three. A clipboard on the table, a real opt-in in your bio, a magnet on the car. You don't have to run every play — just start capturing in the places you're already standing. Followers are rented. The list is yours. All roads lead to email. Stay Up To Date With The Latest https://linktr.ee/artmarketingpodcast
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Should Artists List Prices on Their Website? The Gallery Test 19.05.2026 35минThere's one number that should end the price-on-request debate forever: artworks with visible prices sell 2-6 times more often than the same works with hidden prices. The data is in. The artists are still hiding the prices. This episode runs the gallery test on your website. A real gallery prices the work, frames it, lights it, and puts a checkout at the desk. Christie's, Sotheby's, Gagosian, 1stDibs — every serious art business does this online too. Almost no working artist does. Today we close that gap. In this episode: The gallery test — the one rule every digital decision should pass The 5 things almost every artist website gets wrong "Oooooh so mysterious" — why "contact for pricing" is the gallery with the lights off The shop is the signal: how a real storefront tells visitors they're welcome to buy Why the biggest art sellers on earth all do this — and the artists somehow don't The generational gut-punch: collectors under 40 don't tolerate hidden prices Mix the feed the way you'd mix an opening — killing the "art-only Instagram" sacred cow Why a gallery with the lights off on Wednesday loses every Wednesday walk-in The data referenced (with sources): Artsy, Dec 2019 — works with visible prices are 2-6x more likely to sell than identical hidden-price works Hiscox Online Art Trade Report 2018 — 90% of new art buyers say price transparency is a key consideration (n=831 international buyers) Art Basel and UBS 2020 Mid-Year Survey — 81% of high-net-worth collectors say it is "important or essential" to have a price posted online Artsy Art Market Trends 2025 — 69% of collectors hesitate to buy because of lack of transparency; 43% name "lack of visible price" as a top barrier; only 5% call the art market completely transparent Hiscox Online Art Trade Report 2020 — 96% of online art platforms agree price transparency is "key to building trust" (n=62 platforms) Art Basel and UBS Survey of Global Collecting 2024 — 71% of collectors under 37 bought art online in the last year Robert Read, Head of Fine Art at Hiscox (Oct 2022) — "Buyers would like more clarity around pricing" Resources mentioned: Art Storefronts — the website and storefront engine built for working artists Walk into a real gallery this weekend. Then load your website. Stand them side by side. If your site doesn't make a stranger feel welcome to buy, you have work to do. The basics in this episode are the same basics in 2055. Stay Up To Date With The Latest https://linktr.ee/artmarketingpodcast
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1 Image. 45 Mediums. 10% More Every Year. This Is What Print On Demand Can Do To An Art Business 07.05.2026 38минThere's a town in Texas called Round Top. Population eighty-seven. One square mile. And in that town, an artist named John Lowry sold a single painting for $141,500. (We toured his gallery on YouTube — link's right there in his name. Watch it before or after this episode.) That's the headline. Here's the part nobody tells you: he then sold roughly $60,000 more in reproductions of that same image. Same painting. Different mediums, different sizes, different price points. One image, two hundred grand. That is not luck. That is not a once-in-a-lifetime fluke. That is a system. And the same system is what Gray Malin uses to run a 4,156-SKU catalog with 221 variants of certain images. The same system is what Wyland — yes, that Wyland — uses to sell 972 products across 45 different mediums, raising prices roughly 10% a year for the last sixteen years. This episode deconstructs the engine that makes all of that possible. Print on Demand and the sample ladder aren't two ideas. They're one engine. The artists at the top of this business have figured that out. Most artists haven't. We're going to fix that today. But first — a quick rant about what gets in the way. In this episode: The $141,500 painting in a town of 87 people — and why the second sale is the lesson The knife salesman pivot: why Print on Demand is a sample tool first, a profit tool second Hobbyist or business? The honest question every artist has to answer The Drain — four ideas clogging up most art businesses (you can't run a business / you can't run sales or marketing campaigns / you can't be perceived a certain way / never discount your work) — and why every pro you admire threw all four of them out Why we study the masters: you studied Van Gogh and Ansel Adams in art school. Time to study the people doing it best in the business of art. Gray Malin, deconstructed: 4,156 SKUs, 16-year escalator, 221 variants of single images. What an artist with a real engine looks like under the hood. Wyland, deconstructed: 972 products across 45 mediums. The 10%-a-year price escalator that compounds for decades. The catalog as a museum gift shop. The Range Unlock: your catalog isn't N images. It's N images × M mediums × P price points. Most artists are sitting on 100x more inventory than they think. Same image. Every price point. Why this is the single most important sentence in your art business. The bottom rung IS the sample: a $20 mug isn't a giveaway, it's a customer-acquisition machine wearing a price tag The Buc-ee's flex: how the cheap stuff at the front door funds the expensive stuff at the back wall John Lowry, the customer mirror: an Art Storefronts customer in a one-square-mile Texas town doing exactly what Malin and Wyland do — at his scale. Proof this isn't a billionaire-only game. (Watch the full studio tour on YouTube.) "You don't sell JPEGs" — the Brooks rant about why a digital file is not a product, and what the pros actually sell How the Six Basics from The Long Game show up — receipt by receipt — in all three of these businesses The artichoke storage room (you'll know what this means by the end) This week's homework: audit your own catalog the way we just audited Malin and Wyland. Take your top 5 best-selling images. Count how many mediums you currently offer them in. Count how many price points. Now ask: could I responsibly add three more variants of each, this week, with Print on Demand? If the answer is yes — and it almost always is — you just found revenue you already earned but haven't collected yet. Resources mentioned: John Lowry of Humble Donkey Studio — the full video tour on YouTube (the original 2024 interview referenced throughout this episode) Humble Donkey Studio — John Lowry's website Humble Donkey on Instagram Gray Malin — the catalog we deconstruct Wyland — the other catalog we deconstruct Art Storefronts — the website + storefront engine built for working artists Related episodes: Why Your Website Will Still Be Working in 2055 — The Long Game (the parent episode this one builds on) Humble Donkey Studio — the original John Lowry interview, July 2024 All Oars In — The Anatomy of a Sale Nothing New Under the Sun — The Rules That Actually Sell Art So: which 78-year-old version of yourself wins? The one still asking what to post on social media, or the one running a real engine — same image, every price point, compounding every year? You don't have to be in a billionaire's neighborhood to do this. You can be in Round Top, Texas. Population 87. The engine doesn't care where you live. It cares whether you build it.
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Why Your Website Will Still Be Working in 2055 01.05.2026 48минThere's an artist I talk to every Wednesday. Could be 60s, 70s, 80s, even 90s. Brilliant. 50 years of work. Galleries gone. No website, no email list, no story they can tell in their sleep — just the same panicked question every week: what do I do on social media? I want to tell you about them before you become one of them. There's still time. That's the whole point of this episode. The macro is brutal — Iran, gas, frozen real estate, no photography demand, AI panic. That panic is real. But on a 30-year horizon? It's noise. The basics in 2013 are the basics in 2026 are the basics in 2055. Build on the part that doesn't move. In this episode: The 78-year-old artist still asking the question — and the version of you that's still mid-vine Why the macro doesn't matter on a 30-year horizon (the real estate parallel) The trinity of what's not changing: attention, business ownership, the basics The Six Basics — the list nobody wants to hear #1: A website you own — storefront, not brochure. Plus the SEO foundation: own your name before the next paradigm decides who's allowed in. #2: Print on Demand — sell what you don't have in stock. Unlocks the full pricing range. #3: Capture email every which way. The trifecta: email + phone + address. #4: Run marketing and sales campaigns. You are a business. The muscles compound — 1st campaign awkward, 50th a real machine. #5: A story you can tell in your sleep. Know, like, trust — and things in common. #6: Show up consistently. Do your measure best. Drop a tier when life happens. Just don't go dark. The wine vintage frame: some years fire on all cylinders, some go sideways. The vine doesn't care. The runway ladder: 45 → 40+ years still to come, 55 → 30, 65 → 20+. You are not at the end of anything. You are mid-vine. The tragedy of delay — not the tragedy of talent Why we built Copilot: a gallerist that keeps you consistent when life happens This week's homework: audit yourself across the six basics. Score 1 to 5 on each — website + SEO, POD and pricing range, email list, campaign rhythm, story, consistency. Pick the lowest score. That's your priority. Start today — not next quarter, not when rates drop. Today. Don't be the 78-year-old still asking the question. Resources mentioned: Art Storefronts — the website built for working artists Related episodes: All Oars In — The Anatomy of a Sale Nothing New Under the Sun — The Rules That Actually Sell Art ( The Algorithm Doesn't Care About Your Art The Coffee Shop Test — Why Your Social Media Is Failing You are not too late. You are exactly on time — if you start the basics today. Pick which 78-year-old you're going to be, and how many of the next 20, 30, 40 vintages you're actually going to fill. Pick. Then build.
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A Greek Warship, a Horse Named Sally, and the Mother's Day Sale You're About to Run 23.04.2026 40минMother's Day is 18 days out. At the end of the last episode, I promised you a refreshed anatomy of a properly run sale. This is that episode. Two things today: how a properly run sale actually works, and why omnichannel marketing is the whole game — today, 30 years ago, and 25 years from now. The rules are the rules. By the end, you'll have the playbook for Mother's Day and every sale you run for the rest of your life. In this episode: Why attention in 2026 is 15 tiny flashes, not one long read The Trireme: why coordinated oars beat more oars every time The 20+ marketing surfaces you already own (and the 3 you actually use) The Sale Equation: Incentive + Scarcity × Attention The 3-4 week calendar: warm-up, launch, reminders, 24-hour push, extend day, follow-up Why humor and memes charge the battery for the sale push The Mustang Sally walkthrough: one message, 8 coordinated channels The life-skill reframe: these rules work for bake sales, gallery openings, fundraisers — any promotion you'll ever run This week's Mother's Day homework: the 6 steps that start today The Omnichannel Campaign Prompt (copy into Art Helper, ChatGPT, or Claude): Act as my marketing strategist. I'm running [SALE TYPE] ending [DEADLINE] with [INCENTIVE]. I make [ART DESCRIPTION] for [AUDIENCE]. My voice is [VOICE]. My 4 hero pieces are [LIST]. Build me: (1) a day-by-day 3-week calendar with warm-up humor content, launch day, mid-sale reminders, 24-hour push, and extend day; (2) one 60-word core sale paragraph; (3) full asset set — 4 emails with subject lines, Instagram caption, IG carousel slides, IG Story frames, a Reel/TikTok script, Facebook post, SMS, and hello bar copy. Keep voice consistent across every asset. Put scarcity on every sale-phase asset. Warm-up content must be funny and human, not sales-y. Resources mentioned: Art Storefronts Art Helper ChatGPT Related episodes: Nothing New Under the Sun — The Rules That Actually Sell Art (Ep 10) The Algorithm Doesn't Care About Your Art. Let's Fix That. (Ep 8) The Coffee Shop Test: Why Your Social Media Is Failing (Ep 5) Spring Clean Your Art Business (Ep 9) The Nuts and Bolts of a Well Run Art Sale (#7) Things About Running a Sale Nobody Ever Told You (#45) This week's homework: pick your 4 hero pieces, write one 60-word sale paragraph, run the prompt above, build the 3-week calendar backward from Sunday May 10, and launch your warm-up memes this week — not next week. Happy selling.
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Art-Selling Holidays You're Sitting Out (Mother's Day Is First) 16.04.2026 28минStop chasing shiny objects. The rules of selling art haven't changed in a century — you've just been ignoring them. In this episode, I break down why artists who follow basic business fundamentals outsell artists who chase every new platform, and I lay out the art-selling holiday calendar you should be following right now. A buddy of mine sold thousands of photo books. Last week he texted me: "Sold two pieces for $65,000." Where did those customers come from? They bought books first. It's not some secret. It's just the rules of business. Nothing new under the sun. In this episode: Why "nothing new under the sun" is the most important business lesson artists ignore The difference between being an artist and having an art business The art-selling holiday calendar and why every holiday applies to you How Target's end-cap strategy is your playbook for selling art year-round Why Mother's Day matters even if you don't sell "mom art" The fishing analogy, the blackjack analogy, and the self-excuse trap Mother's Day is 25 days away. The fish are biting. Are your lines in the water? Related episodes: What Are the Biggest Art Selling Times of Year? The Next Big Art Selling Holiday: Mother's Day The Mother's Day Marketing Playbook Get Buyers to Act Fast: Impulse Purchases Merchandising 101 Selling From Now Through Father's Day Spring Clean Your Art Business (last episode)
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Spring Clean Your Art Business: Cut the Dead Weight, Double the Revenue 06.04.2026 33минYour art business needs a spring cleaning — and not the kind where you reorganize your studio. If the only thing you sell is wall art at $500+, you're leaving most of your potential customers on the table. This episode breaks down how to restructure your product lineup, why low-ticket items are your secret weapon, and why RIGHT NOW is the moment to act. In this episode: Why a $2,000 Facebook ad campaign got zero purchases (and what it teaches you about your lineup) The price ladder framework: three tiers every artist needs How selling a $40 phone case leads to a $5,000 original sale Americans check their phones 186 times a day — why that's your biggest marketing opportunity The 5-step spring cleaning action plan you can start this week Key stats from this episode: Average tax refund: ~$3,100 (that's a painting) 186 phone checks per day — Reviews.org, 2026 $26 billion US phone case market 84.6% of people check their phone within 10 minutes of waking up Related episodes: Get Buyers to Act Fast: Tips for Setting Up Your Art for Impulse Purchases Staggering Art Economic Trends, the Spring Selling Season Merchandising 101 The Importance of Print on Demand How Many Times a Day Do You Pick Up Your Cell Phone? Your homework: Audit your lineup today. Write down everything you sell and its price. If you don't have something under $50, add one this week. Easter, Mother's Day, and Father's Day are coming — the wind is at your back.
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The Algorithm Doesn't Care About Your Art. Lets fix that. 30.03.2026 31минMost artists treat social media like a gallery wall. Art, art, art, art. The algorithm doesn't care. It rewards shares, watch time, and laughs. This episode is about charging up your engagement battery with entertaining content so the algorithm actually delivers your art to people who want to see it. In this episode: Why the algorithm ignores your art posts (and what it rewards instead) What a meme actually is — and why artists are already halfway there How a 77-year-old museum curator got 9 million views with Gen Z slang The Marco Rubio couch meme: proof you don't even have to try Free tools that make meme creation embarrassingly easy Memes and accounts mentioned: National Gallery of Art on Instagram (@ngadc) — Alison Luchs viral Reels Marco Rubio Couch Memes on Know Your Meme Devon Rodriguez on TikTok (@devonrodriguezart) Freeze Magazine on Instagram (@freeze_magazine) — art world memes BarkBox on Instagram (@barkbox) Liquid Death on Instagram (@liquiddeath) Scrub Daddy on TikTok (@scrubdaddy) Duolingo on TikTok (@duolingo) Free meme makers (no design skill required): Know Your Meme — research trending formats and templates Imgflip Meme Generator — 1M+ templates, pick and type Canva Meme Maker — templates + custom layouts Supermeme.ai — describe it in words, AI makes the meme Kapwing — video memes, 2000+ templates Adobe Express Meme Maker — free, no experience needed Your homework: Make ONE meme about being an artist this week. Post it. Compare the shares to your last art post. If it wins — and it probably will — you just learned the most important lesson in social media. Related episodes: The Coffee Shop Test: Why Your Social Media Is Failing How to Know What Will Sell Before You Create It
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Your Messy Desk Gets More Likes Than Your Masterpiece: The Art Marketing Secret 5 Million People Already Know 12.03.2026 24минYou've seen their art — but have you ever seen where they make it? In this episode I break down why showing your creative space is one of the most powerful (and underused) content strategies in art marketing — and I give you the exact prompts, frameworks, and email copy to start doing it today. When we launched a "Where I Create" community inside Art Helper, something unexpected happened. Artists started sharing their real creative spaces — messy desks, kitchen tables, garage studios — and the stories came flooding out. It was the easiest on-ramp to storytelling I've ever seen. In this episode: Why workspace content is one of the most popular formats on the internet (5.2M people on Reddit can't get enough) — and artists are the last to figure it out The Mark Pincus "Proven, Better, New" framework — and why you should stop trying to reinvent the wheel The 4 types of "Where I Create" content: The Full Reveal, The Detail Shot, The Process Snapshot, and The Evolution Copy-paste social media prompts you can use this week A complete 4-email sequence to share your creative space with your email list Why showing where you create checks every marketing box: easy to make, invites engagement, differentiates you, and costs nothing Resources mentioned: Your prompts and email copy Mark Pincus on the "Proven, Better, New" framework r/battlestations (5.2M members) r/CozyPlaces (4.9M members) r/MusicBattlestations (334K members) Your finished paintings show your skill. Your workspace shows your humanity. People buy from humans they feel connected to. Take a photo of where you create this week — don't clean up — and post it. Tag us. We want to see it.
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The Artist's Guide to Instagram Live (Even If You Hate Being on Camera) 24.02.2026 39минIn a world where AI can fake everything, going live is the one thing you can't fake. And almost nobody's doing it. 100 million people watch Instagram Live every day, but the biggest studies in the industry don't even bother tracking it because so few creators use it. That's a massive opportunity hiding in plain sight. In this episode, I break down why Instagram Live is the most underutilized marketing tool for artists, how to get started with just your phone, and the advanced tools that let you level up when you're ready. In this episode: Why Live is the ultimate "proof of real" in the AI age The stats: 10x engagement, 3.5% post reach vs front-of-Stories-tray placement Why music's biggest artists are doing collabs nonstop (and how Instagram Live's guest feature is the same mechanic) The graduated fear ladder: Practice Mode, Close Friends, then Public Tactical: phone setup, pinned comments, scheduling, the 3-second hook The gear ladder from free to $36/mo How to go live from your desktop for free with Instagram Live Producer StreamYard and Restream for multistreaming and rebroadcasts Tools and resources mentioned: Instagram Live Producer (free — go to instagram.com, click Add Post, select Live) StreamYard (from $36/mo — browser-based desktop streaming + multistreaming) Restream (free plan available — multistream to 2 platforms, paid from $16/mo) Adam Mosseri on Instagram (@mosseri) Related episodes: The Artwork Didn't Change. The Story Did. (Jan 9, 2026) The January Reset: One Metric, One Goal, One Plan (Jan 17, 2026) Context is Still King. If You Use It. (Jan 27, 2026) 4 Prompts That Pull Your Story Out (Feb 2, 2026) Why Your Art Isn't Selling on Instagram (Aug 20, 2025)
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How to Know What Will Sell Before You Create It 19.02.2026 25минChris Rock performs 50 times in a room of 50 people before he ever steps on a Netflix stage. What if you applied that same system to your art business? Most artists post their work and hope someone buys it. That's like walking on stage at the Apollo with untested material. In this episode, I break down exactly how the best stand-up comedians in the world test, iterate, and refine their material — and how that same system tells you what will sell before you even create it. Plus a 10-week challenge to put it all into practice. In this episode: How Chris Rock, Jerry Seinfeld, and Kevin Hart develop material (and what artists can steal from their process) Why social media is your open mic night — not your gallery wall The 6 types of posts every artist should rotate (the "set list") How to read the room: what saves, shares, and silence actually mean Permission to bomb — why your worst post is more valuable than no post 6 tactical marketing moves disguised as comedy club techniques The 10-week challenge: from open mic to your Netflix special This episode builds on everything from 2026 so far: your story (Ep 1), your one metric (Ep 2), your AI context files (Ep 3), your story prompts (Ep 4), and the Coffee Shop Test (Ep 5). If you've been following along, this is where it all comes together. Resources mentioned: Comedian (2002 documentary) — Seinfeld starting from scratch Kevin Hart 60 Minutes Interview — how he develops material Harvard Business Review — Innovate Like Chris Rock Related episodes: 4 Prompts That Pull Your Story Out (Even If You Think You Don't Have One) Context is Still King. If You Use It. The Artwork Didn't Change. The Story Did.
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The Coffee Shop Test: Why Your Social Media Is Failing 09.02.2026 30минIf you sat down with a stranger at a coffee shop, you'd never just say "art, art, buy my art" for 30 minutes. So why is that your entire social media strategy? In this episode, Patrick breaks down why most artists and photographers are failing on social media — and it has nothing to do with the algorithm. It's because you're one-dimensional. All art, no human. In 2026, AI can fake everything on a screen. The only thing it can't fake is you. Your story, your scars, your weird hobbies, your real life. That's the competitive advantage now. In this episode: The coffee shop test — would you talk to yourself the way you post? Why Van Gogh's paintings didn't sell until his personal letters were published Brian Chesky (Airbnb CEO) on why "the opposite of artificial is real" The freeway analogy — why 95% of your content lands in one lane How to stop hiding behind the canvas (or the lens) Why AI makes your authenticity more valuable, not less "We're not anti-AI. We're just pro human." If you struggle with telling your story, the previous episode has copy-paste prompts that use AI to interview you and pull your story out — even if you think your life "isn't dramatic enough." Related episodes: 4 Prompts That Pull Your Story Out (Even If You Think You Don't Have One) Context is Still King If You Use It The Artwork Didn't Change. The Story Did.
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4 Prompts That Pull Your Story Out (Even If You Think You Don't Have One) 02.02.2026 19минA listener said their life isn't dramatic enough for a story. This episode proves them wrong — with 4 AI prompts you can try today. Every artist has a story. Hopper painted his loneliness. Morandi painted the same bottles for 40 years. Your story doesn't need to be dramatic — it needs to be yours. These 4 prompts use AI to interview you, pull your story out, and save it so every caption, bio, and email already knows who you are. In this episode: Why you can't see your own story (and why that's normal) Real artists with "boring" lives who became legends 4 copy-paste prompts to pull your story out How to save your story as a context file Prompt 1 — The Origin Story Interview: I'm an artist and I need help discovering and articulating my story. I want you to interview me — ask me questions one at a time, wait for my answer, then ask a follow-up that digs deeper. Start with how I got into art. Don't accept surface-level answers — if I say "I've always liked drawing," ask me WHEN and WHERE and WHAT I was drawing and WHY. Keep going until you feel like you have enough material to write a compelling origin story. Then write it for me in first person, in a warm conversational tone — not a formal bio. Something I could read on a podcast or put on my website. Keep it under 300 words. Prompt 2 — The "Why This" Interview: Now I want you to interview me about WHY I create what I create. Ask me about my subject matter, my medium, my style. Dig into why I chose these — was it intentional or did I stumble into it? Is there a personal connection to my subjects? Don't let me get away with "I just like it" — help me find the deeper reason. When you have enough, write a short paragraph (150 words max) I can use when someone asks "Why do you paint/photograph [subject]?" Prompt 3 — The Piece Story: I'm going to describe one specific piece of art I've made. I want you to interview me about it — where I was when I made it, what was happening in my life, what I was feeling, why I chose the composition/colors/subject. Then write me a short story (100-150 words) I could use as the caption or description for this piece. Make it personal and specific — not generic art-speak. Prompt 4 — The Bio Generator: Based on everything we've discussed in this conversation, write my artist bio in three versions: 1. ONE SENTENCE — for social media profiles and quick intros. 2. ONE PARAGRAPH — for show applications, website about page, email signatures. 3. FULL PAGE — for press kits, gallery submissions, and detailed about pages. Use a warm, conversational tone. Avoid art-world jargon. Make it sound like ME, not like a museum placard. Resources mentioned: ChatGPT Projects — save your story as context Claude Projects — save your story as context Know an artist who thinks they don't have a story? Send them this episode. Related episodes: The Artwork Didn't Change. The Story Did. (Jan 2026) Context is Still King. If You Use It. (Jan 2026) Steal These Prompts (May 2025)
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Context is Still King. If You Use It. 27.01.2026 28минThe most powerful skill you can learn in 2026 isn't Photoshop or marketing — it's typing what you want into a chatbot. Here's how to actually make AI work for your art business. Most artists get garbage results from AI because they skip one critical step: context. In this episode, I break down exactly how to create context files that turn generic AI into your personal assistant — plus a prompt that lets AI interview you to build the file automatically. In this episode: Why AI gives you garbage answers (it's blind, not dumb) The 15 context files every artist should consider building The meta move: using AI to create your context files Where to save them in ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini The habit that changes everything The "Interview Me" Prompt — copy and paste this into any AI: I want to create a context document about my art business that I can use with AI tools. Interview me by asking one question at a time. Cover these areas: Who I am as an artist (background, medium, style). Who my customers are (demographics, where they find me, budget). What I sell (products, price points, bestsellers). How I talk and write (voice, tone, words I use). My business goals for this year. After the interview, compile everything into a clean document I can save and reuse. Ask me one question at a time and wait for my answer. Context files to consider: Artist Bio — your story, background, philosophy Customer Avatar — who buys, demographics, budget Product Lineup — what you sell, prices, sizes Brand Voice — how you write, words you use or avoid Tech Stack — computers, printers, software, OS Collector List — past buyers, what they bought, notes Show Calendar — art fairs, festivals, deadlines Pricing Strategy — how you price, margins, why Marketing Channels — where you show up, what works FAQ Doc — questions people always ask Vendor List — framers, printers, suppliers Studio Setup — physical space, equipment Art Style Guide — medium, techniques, subjects Business Goals — revenue targets, 1yr/5yr vision Competition Notes — who else, how you're different Where to save your context files: ChatGPT Projects: chatgpt.com — New Project — Upload files Claude Projects: claude.ai/projects — New Project — Add to knowledge base Gemini Gems: gemini.google.com — Explore Gems — New Gem Related episodes: Context is King: Stop Having First Dates with ChatGPT Every Time (2025)
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The January Reset: One Metric, One Goal, One Plan 17.01.2026 25минINTRO It's January. Everyone's planning. But most artists are tracking the wrong numbers—followers, likes, email subscribers, website traffic. In this episode, we cut through the noise and focus on the ONE metric that actually predicts everything else in your art business: new customers acquired per year. We'll cover: Why this single number matters more than anything else The "lineup problem" that keeps most artists stuck at 7-8 customers per year The 10x challenge: compete against your 2025 self, not other artists The compounding math that turns 70 customers into 1,500+ over 10 years Why "tending the garden" is the marketing shift you need to make A copy-paste AI prompt to build your entire 2026 plan in minutes THE PROMPT Copy and paste this into Art Helper, ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Grok: I'm an artist planning my 2026 business growth. Help me create a customer acquisition plan. Here's my data from 2025: - Number of NEW customers acquired: [X] - My current product lineup: [list what you sell - wall art, prints, cards, originals, etc.] - Average price points: [list your price ranges] - How I currently get customers: [social media, art fairs, gallery, website, etc.] Based on the 10x framework: 1. Calculate my 2026 goal (10x my 2025 customers) 2. Break it down into monthly targets 3. Identify gaps in my lineup that could help me acquire more customers at different price points 4. Suggest 3-5 specific actions I can take each month to hit my target 5. Create a simple tracking system I can use Keep it practical and specific to my art business. I want to treat this like a real business, not a hobby. SOURCES Statistics cited in this episode: Repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time buyers — Gorgias/MobiLoud Only 27% of first-time buyers ever return — RevolutionParts/MobiLoud 75% of purchases happen within 24 hours of discovery — Nielsen Norman Group/Guiding Metrics After 12 days, 90% of your conversion window is gone — Guiding Metrics 70% of online carts are abandoned, 80-90% never return — Baymard Institute (50-study average) Increasing customer retention by 5% increases profits by 25-95% — Bain & Company/Harvard Business Review Repeat customers account for 48% of all ecommerce transactions — SalesLion
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The Artwork Didn't Change. The Story Did. 09.01.2026 23минIn 2026, everything is fake — fake content, fake influencers, fake engagement. But here's what's always been true: story is what takes "not selling" to "selling." Van Gogh died unknown with 900 paintings worth nothing. Frida Kahlo was overshadowed by Diego Rivera for decades. The Impressionists were literally mocked. Same artwork. Different story. In this episode, we look at what changed — and how you can apply the same framework to your art in the age of AI. Links Mentioned: Lulu Meservey's "Standing Out in 2026" The woman who turned Van Gogh from worthless to $10 billion
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Artist Terry Sauvé 10.12.2025 1ч 1минNorthern California oil painter Terry Sauve joins the Art Marketing Podcast to share how she's crushing it in what many are calling a tough economic year. Terry breaks down her path to a record-breaking $276,000 in sales — including $28,000 from her website alone and $23,000 in print sales. She talks about starting over at 29 after her mom said "I always thought you'd be an artist," training at the Academy of Art in San Francisco with masters like Brian Blood and Craig Nelson, and the slow-and-steady grind that replaced her decade-long wait to "be discovered." Terry gets real about selling $25 matted prints that brought tears to collectors' eyes, saying yes to more shows during uncertain times, and why the path to success isn't a meteoric rise — it's doing "the next right thing" over and over again. --- Links Mentioned - https://superwhisper.com/ — AI-powered voice-to-text for Mac & iPhone. Offline, private, and works anywhere you type. - https://willowvoice.com/ — Voice dictation that actually works. Speak naturally, auto-formats text, removes filler words. - https://www.instagram.com/terry_sauve/ — Follow Terry's luminous landscape paintings - https://www.terrysauve.com/ — Terry's official website with originals and prints
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Artists: The Hogans 21.11.2025 35минIn this episode, we sit down with the creative powerhouse couple Jency and Aaron Hogan, who've built a thriving art business from their Louisiana home. Discover how these two artists balance their individual creative practices while supporting each other's artistic journeys. From Jency's vibrant mixed media paintings that explore themes of mental health and personal growth, to Aaron's stunning wildlife photography captured across the country, learn how they've created a sustainable creative life together. Connect with The Hogans: 🎨 Jency Hogan (Mixed Media Artist) Instagram: @jencyghogan Linktree: linktr.ee/jencyghogan 📸 Aaron Hogan (Wildlife Photographer) Instagram: @eyewanderphoto 🛍️ Shop Their Art: Website: hoganart.shop
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The Instagram DM Feature That Automates Your Artist Marketing (While You Sleep) 14.11.2025 28минou know how sometimes you discover something so powerful, so game-changing, that you almost want to keep it to yourself? That's exactly what I've been doing with today's topic. But recent developments have made it impossible for me to stay quiet any longer. Look, if you're an artist who's tired of posting on Instagram and feeling like you're shouting into the void... if you're frustrated with how hard it is to get people to actually click that link in your bio, or start a real conversation, or – heaven forbid – give you their email address... then you need to hear what I'm about to share. Ok, This is the link so you can experience whats possible inside of the ManyChat flow. Bonus... you will also get a free Instagram Audit out of the deal. https://ig.me/m/art_storefronts?ref=w46857600 Youtube Links I found that explain this feature https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgXkOQQExOA&pp=ygUVbWFueWNoYXQgaWcgZm9sbG93ZXJz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=afYr7eQJ21w
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From Spam to Priority: The Email Strategy Nobody Talks About 07.11.2025 23минYour emails are landing in spam. Or worse—the promotions tab where they go to die. You've tried everything: better subject lines, different send times, smaller segments. Nothing works. But here's what nobody's telling you: Gmail doesn't care about any of that. They care about replies. And today, I'm showing you exactly how to get them 100+ Email Reply Ideas - your sandbox https://blog.artstorefronts.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/100-Email-Reply-Questions-for-Artists.pdf Get an Instagram Audit - I will be sure to be gently https://arttipsdaily.com/instagram Speech to Text Ai Apps - take the voicepill & you will never look back Wisper Flow - most call it "Flow" https://wisprflow.ai/ Willow https://willowvoice.com/
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