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GIMP merchandising

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GIMP merchandising Dave Neary 19 May 13:32
  GIMP merchandising Jay Cox 20 May 10:11
   GIMP merchandising Dave Neary 20 May 10:47
  GIMP merchandising Simon Budig 20 May 11:58
   GIMP merchandising Dave Neary 20 May 14:22
    GIMP merchandising Simon Budig 21 May 17:28
  GIMP merchandising Sven Neumann 21 May 00:28
   GIMP merchandising David Neary 21 May 09:10
    GIMP merchandising Sven Neumann 21 May 15:32
     GIMP merchandising David Neary 21 May 15:47
   GIMP merchandising Eric P 21 May 18:20
  GIMP merchandising Eric P 21 May 01:56
  GIMP merchandising Carol Spears 21 May 18:12
  GIMP merchandising Carol Spears 21 May 18:42
GIMP merchandising William Skaggs 20 May 16:53
Dave Neary
2005-05-19 13:32:29 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi all,

As many of you know, we have an informal merchandising arrangement with Sourcewear.com which has raise a few dollars this year (not much, though).

I would like to improve on this relationship, and I know that Federico at sourcewear feels the same. For my part, I'd like to see better products, and more products, as well as formalising the cut we get from merchandising (this is currently an informal arrangement, I think that we should get an engagement on paper).

For their part, they would like to continue having their logo on the arm (which I'm OK with), and they would like to be our official merchandiser - that is, have a place in the sidebar on every page, and a place of prominence on the front page.

That's why I'm writing here. Is this arrangement OK with people? I will firm things up quickly with Federico if it is, but I didn't want to start negociating something without running it past the communtiy that has stuck with the GIMP.

Lazy approval is in effect - if you haven't replied in 3 days, I'll assume everyone's happy with this.

Cheers, Dave.

Jay Cox
2005-05-20 10:11:48 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

On Thu, 2005-05-19 at 13:32 +0200, Dave Neary wrote:

Hi all,

As many of you know, we have an informal merchandising arrangement with Sourcewear.com which has raise a few dollars this year (not much, though).

I would like to improve on this relationship, and I know that Federico at sourcewear feels the same. For my part, I'd like to see better products, and more products, as well as formalising the cut we get from merchandising (this is currently an informal arrangement, I think that we should get an engagement on paper).

For their part, they would like to continue having their logo on the arm (which I'm OK with), and they would like to be our official merchandiser - that is, have a place in the sidebar on every page, and a place of prominence on the front page.

That's why I'm writing here. Is this arrangement OK with people? I will firm things up quickly with Federico if it is, but I didn't want to start negociating something without running it past the communtiy that has stuck with the GIMP.

Lazy approval is in effect - if you haven't replied in 3 days, I'll assume everyone's happy with this.

Cheers, Dave.

I have no objections to adding some tastefull merchandising links to the gimp website, but I think we should be carefull about the product we promote.

Has anyone here seen the quality of their shirts? Are they screen printed or heat transfered? I prefer screen printed tshirts, but gradients like the ones we have in the gimp logo dont usually screen print very well.

They seem like a good company and I have no reason to doubt their quality, but if I were making the decision I would want to know beforehand.

Jay Cox
jaycox@gimp.org

Dave Neary
2005-05-20 10:47:15 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi,

Jay Cox a écrit :

Has anyone here seen the quality of their shirts? Are they screen printed or heat transfered? I prefer screen printed tshirts, but gradients like the ones we have in the gimp logo dont usually screen print very well.

I'll let Federico answer the question about whether they're screen printed or not - I seem to recall that he told me that they are.

And there is a Wilber without gradients.

They seem like a good company and I have no reason to doubt their quality, but if I were making the decision I would want to know beforehand.

And rightly so.

Cheers,
Dave.

Simon Budig
2005-05-20 11:58:47 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Dave Neary (dneary@free.fr) wrote:

For their part, they would like to continue having their logo on the arm (which I'm OK with), and they would like to be our official merchandiser - that is, have a place in the sidebar on every page, and a place of prominence on the front page.

Well, I am OK, with the Logo in the arm (although It would prevent me from buying this shirt), but I am definitely not OK with placing them on each and every page of our site, effectively turning www.gimp.org into a advertisement platform for sourcewear.

And what is involved with being the "official merchandiser"? How would we handle other companies trying to sell Gimp merchandise and want similiar exposure? Do we need an official merchandiser?

Frankly, making www.gimp.org a platform for a single merchandiser, so that he can ship Gimp-T-Shirts which also serve as a platform for said merchandiser does sound like a bad deal for me. Also the stuff currently available does not catch my fancy. Assuming this holds for others as well I don't expect much for us from this deal. I believe the hassle which will come up when other merchandisers become aware of this deal is not worth it.

Bye,
Simon

PS: Full Disclosure: Good friends of me do have a small company that also does merchandising stuff, you might remember the Gimp-Pin they made. To my knowledge they have no interest in becoming the official Gimp merchandiser.

Dave Neary
2005-05-20 14:22:55 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi Simon,

Simon Budig a écrit :

And what is involved with being the "official merchandiser"? How would we handle other companies trying to sell Gimp merchandise and want similiar exposure? Do we need an official merchandiser?

Essentially, this is what it comes down to ("de we need an official merchandiser?"). Or more to the point, do we want a GIMP store. Clearly we don't *need* anything.

Currently, there is next to no GIMP stuff, and what little there is is not profiting the GIMP project at all.

This agreement would be a formal agreement whereby sourcewear gets exposure from gimp.org, and in return we get money, and a variety of other nice stuff (t-shirts printed at cost for sale at conferences, for example). So what is involved in being the official merchandiser is that they would be the only company with a prominent presence on gimp.org.

Other companies who want to produce GIMP merchandise can do so (with the permission of the copyright holder on Wilber , namely tigert) independently of gimp.org.

If the project as a whole decides that we don't want to have a relationship like this with a merchandiser, then fine. We won't, and we will continue not to have GIMP stuff for sale which will generate money to pay for stuff. Right now, we're not paying for mych stuff as it is, in spite of my recent mails on our financial situation.

But as I also said, the relationship in its current state is a non-starter. Federico is selling almost no GIMP t-shirts, and until there is some link bringing GIMP fans to sourcewear, that's not going to change. Which means we continue to sit on our high horse, and people who want to buy t-shirts don't know where to go to find them.

I would love to be able to buy GIMP stuff online, and know that for every €20 that I spend, the GIMP is getting €5.

Frankly, making www.gimp.org a platform for a single merchandiser, so that he can ship Gimp-T-Shirts which also serve as a platform for said merchandiser does sound like a bad deal for me. Also the stuff currently available does not catch my fancy.

We will ask to validate product lines, and I don't think Federico would oppose printing designs which GIMP community members come up with. The t-shirts are a very high quality, so the only issue is the designs.

The deal would be non-exclusive for GIMP goods, but would be exclusive (with a limited lifetime) for placement on gimp.org. One requirement I'd like Federico to satisfy is the ability to link directly to the GIMP products rather than going through the main page.

The idea of doing things this way is that it's the path of least resistance to getting a GIMP store. We control the product line, get regular updates on sales (we can even consult the sales database in real-time), and regular payments. We don't have to worry about credit cards, deliveries, customer service, stock management or any of the other things that make an online store hard work.

I believe the hassle
which will come up when other merchandisers become aware of this deal is not worth it.

I've talked to a few, the reason I'm suggesting Federico is that he has already been making and selling high quality GIMP t-shirts for several months. And why would there be hassle when other merchandisers find out? None have even approached us to try something like this. In any case, if it's the bother of other merchandisers you are worried about, I am willing to be the front-man for this and take all such requests.

Cheers, Dave.

William Skaggs
2005-05-20 16:53:52 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Seems okay with me, except that I think the advertising part should be strengthened a bit: such a prominent presence calls for a fixed payment in addition to a cut (or a click-through payment if that can be implemented). I am assuming that it would show up as a text link: if not, it needs to be made clear that the ad must be small and unobtrusive, e.g., a text link together with a two-color logo in GIMP's foreground and background colors.

-- Bill

______________ ______________ ______________ ______________ Sent via the CNPRC Email system at primate.ucdavis.edu

Sven Neumann
2005-05-21 00:28:57 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi,

Dave Neary writes:

For their part, they would like to continue having their logo on the arm (which I'm OK with)

The logo on the arm is definitely what keeps me (and probably others) from buying this stuff. I wouldn't dare to leave home wearing one of these shirts. It also gives me a very bad feeling about this merchandising arrangement.

and they would like to be our official merchandiser - that is, have a place in the sidebar on every page, and a place of prominence on the front page.

I don't think a prominent place on the front page is appropriate. Integrating it into the sidebar might be.

That's why I'm writing here. Is this arrangement OK with people?

What exactly does this arrangement involve? We can hardly decide anything w/o knowing what we are talking about. Does it mean that sourcewear will be the only official merchandiser?

Sven

Eric P
2005-05-21 01:56:03 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Dave Neary wrote:

I would like to improve on this relationship, and I know that Federico at sourcewear feels the same. For my part, I'd like to see better products, and more products,

I'd like to be able to order one of those Pixel Pusher shirts. The plain white with Wilbur is boring IMO.

as well as formalising the cut we get from merchandising (this is currently an informal arrangement, I think that we should get an engagement on paper).

Yes. This is very important.

For their part, they would like to continue having their logo on the arm (which I'm OK with)

How does the Gimp benefit from this? Does WalMart get to put their logo on the Fruit of the Loom shirts they sell? Of course not.

Personally, I think their logo has no place being on the shirt in any permanent form. I'd definitely look elsewhere for a shirt vendor if they're insistent on their logo appearing on any of the Gimp product. I will help you find one if need be.

, and they would like to be our official merchandiser If you can pan out everything mentioned above/below equitably, then I don't see a problem with this.

- that is, have a place in the sidebar on every page, and a place of prominence on the front page.

Once again... how does the Gimp benefit from such an arrangement? Webspace comes at a premium in the industry I work in. Of course, the Gimp isn't a company, but that's not to say we shouldn't be selective who we contract to do our merchandising.

That's why I'm writing here. Is this arrangement OK with people?

No.

I honestly don't mean to be so negative, but what you've proposed just doesn't look good at all.

Eric P.

David Neary
2005-05-21 09:10:47 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi,

Sven Neumann wrote:

Dave Neary writes:

For their part, they would like to continue having their logo on the arm (which I'm OK with)

The logo on the arm is definitely what keeps me (and probably others) from buying this stuff. I wouldn't dare to leave home wearing one of these shirts. It also gives me a very bad feeling about this merchandising arrangement.

This seems to be a common point and I'll discuss this with Federico.

I don't think a prominent place on the front page is appropriate. Integrating it into the sidebar might be.

At least announcing its existence when we add the link to the sidebar might be nice.

What exactly does this arrangement involve? We can hardly decide anything w/o knowing what we are talking about. Does it mean that sourcewear will be the only official merchandiser?

It would be a non-exclusive agreement to produce wilber goods, with an agent identified for the GIMP project who would have control over product quality and designs. Exact details need to be worked out. And I'm not going to spend time doing that if the idea is not workable in principle.

The only exclusive part would be that the link "Buy GIMP stuff" on gimp.org would go to wilber merchandise on sourcewear.com. They're getting placement - people who want to buy gimp merchandise go to gimp.org, where we currently don't cater for them. They don't go to sourcewear.org, so they don't sell many t-shirts, and we don't get much money from the arrangement.

If we add a link to wgo, we are providing a service to people who want to buy wilber stuff and don't know where to go, they get more referrals, more sales, and we get a bigger slice of a bigger cake to spend on things that we want - for example, paying for the publishing of the GIMP manual (why not?) and a GIMP conference (when someone around here decides they want to put the time into arranging one).

Cheers, Dave.

Sven Neumann
2005-05-21 15:32:52 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi,

I've thought more about the whole thing and I would like to propose the following solution:

We add a page about GIMP merchandising to www.gimp.org. This page ("GIMP Stuff" ?) gets linked from the sidebar and from the Donations page and it is mentioned on the front page at the time it is added (and perhaps every once in a while). On that page we give links to all places where people can obtain GIMP stuff but only if the GIMP project also gets a fair share of the bargain.

This is probably less than what Federico from sourcewear wants us to do but I don't see why we should start to do agreements with anyone. Let alone the fact that there's no legal entity who could make such an agreement. If at all it would be Tigert as the author of the Wilber drawing who could claim rights on it.

For the moment, sourcewear will probably be the only GIMP merchandiser linked from the "GIMP stuff" page, but I hope that more nice GIMP things will be available in the future. If that can help the GIMP project in any way, that's a nice side-effect. If you think however that we need to push GIMP merchandising further by having an official GIMP merchandising shop, then we should probably first have a discussion on what we want to spend the raised money on. At the moment we have more money available than we ever had and no idea whatsoever what it should be used for.

Sven

David Neary
2005-05-21 15:47:19 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi,

Sven Neumann wrote:

I've thought more about the whole thing and I would like to propose the following solution:

We add a page about GIMP merchandising to www.gimp.org. This page ("GIMP Stuff" ?) gets linked from the sidebar and from the Donations page and it is mentioned on the front page at the time it is added (and perhaps every once in a while). On that page we give links to all places where people can obtain GIMP stuff but only if the GIMP project also gets a fair share of the bargain.

That's grand with me. It's a fair middle line between having nothing (current state) and having an integrated merchandising line.

This is the model that KDE use already, by the way. It's worth noting that what KDE gets in stuff is pretty tiny - it's measured in hundreds of euros a year.

I think this is a fair compromise between the concerns that GIMP is selling out, and the desire to have GIMP merchandising for sale.

Unless there are objections to this, I'll figure out the details with all concerned over the next couple of weeks.

Cheers, Dave.

Simon Budig
2005-05-21 17:28:47 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Hi Dave.

First of all - because you seem to be concerned about that - I'll readily admit, that Federicos Company is a good one. Otherwise we would not even need to discuss this.

Second: My concerns are certainly influenced by the fact, that two of my closest friends run a company that also does free software merchandising and yes, I am involved in most of the designs.

Dave Neary (dneary@free.fr) wrote:

Simon Budig a écrit :

And what is involved with being the "official merchandiser"? How would we handle other companies trying to sell Gimp merchandise and want similiar exposure? Do we need an official merchandiser?

Essentially, this is what it comes down to ("de we need an official merchandiser?"). Or more to the point, do we want a GIMP store. Clearly we don't *need* anything.

Currently, there is next to no GIMP stuff, and what little there is is not profiting the GIMP project at all.

At least the second part is not exactly true. The Gimp Pin at http://www.kernelconcepts.de/products/fun/pins.shtml has been available for ages and we have gotten a huge load of pins. It actually was the first pin they did (and they grossly overestimated the demand), cvs:gimp/docs/Wilber.svg would not exist without this pin. At best it created a red zero for them. They still have lots available and they don't sell. Do I need to mention that the quality is great (silk-screened with 5 colors) and the price is very reasonable?

So now we are deciding to give an exclusive link to sourcewear on every page and rid us of a possibility to link to other great Gimp products. I'll admit that after your first mail I had the horror vision of a sourcewear-logo in the sidebar and I am happy to hear that this is not the case. However, I don't think it is OK to ignore the fact that Federicos company is not the only good company out there.

Of course you probably did not know about Kernelconcepts. They never approached the Gimp-Mailinglists for inclusion on gimp.org, I was very reluctant when they asked me about it ages ago and I did never harp on the fact that the pins have been made by them, when I handed the Pins out freely whenever I meet Gimp-people. Maybe they should have done, maybe I should have done. I do now, because I think they deserve to be listed in a potential list of good gimp-merchandising makers.

If the project as a whole decides that we don't want to have a relationship like this with a merchandiser, then fine. We won't, and we will continue not to have GIMP stuff for sale which will generate money to pay for stuff. Right now, we're not paying for mych stuff as it is, in spite of my recent mails on our financial situation.

But as I also said, the relationship in its current state is a non-starter. Federico is selling almost no GIMP t-shirts, and until there is some link bringing GIMP fans to sourcewear, that's not going to change. Which means we continue to sit on our high horse, and people who want to buy t-shirts don't know where to go to find them.

How many queries for a Gimp T-Shirt have you encountered in the last few years? I can probably count them on a single hand without fingers, and I simply don't believe that the additional exposure would generate a lot of requests for Federico and as a result this is probably not a big source of revenue for the GIMP.

Federico, please correct me if I am wrong, but I am pretty sure that the Gimp-Shirts are done on a transfer-basis, i.e. not silkscreened.

Having a shirt with silk-screened stuff needs big quantities and when you are a small company you cannot afford to put that much money into a product where you don't know if it sells.

If you're curious you can look at Petra's collection at http://www.kernelconcepts.de/products/fun/tshirts.shtml with a selection of silk-screened or embroidered shirts for different free software projects. Make sure to have a look at the prices as well. This kind of stuff only works, when you know that you sell at least a certain amount of shirts, either to the project itself (for a booth or a conference), or by pre-orders. For the records: Petra usually has a full disclosure politics towards the projects regarding the manufacturing price and the projects have a big influence in the pricing of the shirts.

[...]

The idea of doing things this way is that it's the path of least resistance to getting a GIMP store. We control the product line, get regular updates on sales (we can even consult the sales database in real-time), and regular payments. We don't have to worry about credit cards, deliveries, customer service, stock management or any of the other things that make an online store hard work.

Ok, when we want a Gimp-Store this is a big plus. I however doubt that this results in a regular stream of revenue.

I believe the hassle
which will come up when other merchandisers become aware of this deal is not worth it.

I've talked to a few, the reason I'm suggesting Federico is that he has already been making and selling high quality GIMP t-shirts for several months. And why would there be hassle when other merchandisers find out? None have even approached us to try something like this. In any case, if it's the bother of other merchandisers you are worried about, I am willing to be the front-man for this and take all such requests.

I hope I have clarified why I am concerned about this. You know for yourself that the Gimp-Pin is really nice. And I feel bad when we are now talking about linking to merchandise and rid ourselves of the possibility to link to this one.

My preferred solution would be a page on www.gimp.org, maybe included as a separate item in the menu. There we can list sourcewear as prominently as we wish, but it would be obvious that we are in control. We would have the possibility to link to other interesting stuff as well (which IMHO exists!).

And should we ever need a bigger amount of silkscreened shirts and we know in advance that a certain amount gets sold immediately, I'd like to suggest Petra / Kernelconcepts and I can guarantee immediate control over the artwork and the quality of the shirt. As in Me sitting in their offices.

Bye, Simon

Carol Spears
2005-05-21 18:12:43 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

On Thu, May 19, 2005 at 01:32:29PM +0200, Dave Neary wrote:

As many of you know, we have an informal merchandising arrangement with Sourcewear.com which has raise a few dollars this year (not much, though).

I would like to improve on this relationship, and I know that Federico at sourcewear feels the same. For my part, I'd like to see better products, and more products, as well as formalising the cut we get from merchandising (this is currently an informal arrangement, I think that we should get an engagement on paper).

For their part, they would like to continue having their logo on the arm (which I'm OK with), and they would like to be our official merchandiser - that is, have a place in the sidebar on every page, and a place of prominence on the front page.

it would have been interesting to see what a simple little "advertisement" would have done to help improve the success of the company (which does not sound very successful -- gimp has a huge user base, i think). simple like a once every other month mailing to the user lists mentioned on the web site, explaining the merchandise, providing urls and explaining the deal.

one thing that makes walmart so successful is that they put the stores in the neighborhood of the people who they think will shop there. (how they did their research is another matter ....)

in my opinion, the relationship between anything with the name "source" imbeded into its name tends to mean that an extremely leecherous relationship with TheGIMP is already happening or just around the corner or in developer terms "planned".

That's why I'm writing here. Is this arrangement OK with people? I will firm things up quickly with Federico if it is, but I didn't want to start negociating something without running it past the communtiy that has stuck with the GIMP.

Lazy approval is in effect - if you haven't replied in 3 days, I'll assume everyone's happy with this.

when i first started using this freesoftware, i thought it was really cool and went around looking at the other projects and their merchandise. there was no gimp stuff there.

everything is so blurred since then -- their logo on the shirt and the need for gimp to advertise them, i think that if Federico had been interested in selling tee-shirts, he should have tried some email to the user lists first or perhaps contacting gimp web site to get a mention there.

while we are looking for "merchandisers" official and not, we should also review how interested and successful their company has been in promoting stuff.

for instance, i would have mentioned gimp merchandise on my web site -- no problem. the problem apparently was in the company seeing the need for help from gimp or is it an all or nothing attitude?

perhaps Federico could explain things himself? too much go-between for one person and you start to consider the go-between to perhaps be part of the many problems. i do not want to do this.

thanks, carol

Eric P
2005-05-21 18:20:58 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

Sven Neumann wrote:

What exactly does this arrangement involve? We can hardly decide anything w/o knowing what we are talking about. Does it mean that sourcewear will be the only official merchandiser?

Personally, I think there should be one 'Merchandise' link on the front page which links to another page listing ALL the companies/organizations that have Gimp merchandise. Let them all duke it out.

Eric P.

Carol Spears
2005-05-21 18:42:58 UTC (almost 19 years ago)

GIMP merchandising

On Thu, May 19, 2005 at 01:32:29PM +0200, Dave Neary wrote:

As many of you know, we have an informal merchandising arrangement with Sourcewear.com which has raise a few dollars this year (not much, though).

in the spirit of "open" can they make their files available?

do they have the ability to stitch? perhaps the open merchandisers could make this information more open to this forum.

carol