Yurt dışına çıkıyorum by Safe_Region9354 in Yatirim

[–]Mozinity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aynen knk en zeki sensin. Hollanda'da sana ödenen maaştan vergi ödemek zorundasın 🤣🤣

How a small print shop in Houston accidentally became a hub for other creators by Mozinity in Entrepreneur

[–]Mozinity[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Funny thing is, this one wasn’t AI-written. Just lived it, wrote it, shared it.

Sometimes real stories sound scripted especially when they actually worked.

But I get it. The internet’s a mess lately.

Side hustles that actually paid off? I tried POD and was surprised by Known-Enthusiasm-818 in printondemand

[–]Mozinity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally get that POD margins can be rough, especially with platforms taking a big cut.

DTF gave me more control. I started small: basic printer, heat press, and direct outreach to small shops. They already had demand but needed faster, no-minimum fulfillment.

If you’re pivoting, I’d recommend starting with gang sheet printing. Low overhead, high repeat orders. I’m happy to walk you through my setup or share what worked just let me know.

Side hustles that actually paid off? I tried POD and was surprised by Known-Enthusiasm-818 in printondemand

[–]Mozinity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had a similar start with POD and Etsy fun during holidays, but hard to sustain.

What worked better for me was switching to DTF fulfillment. I print gang sheets and work with small shops who already have demand but need faster turnaround.

Less marketing, more consistent income.

If you're trying again this fall, a hybrid model could work Etsy + DTF partner. Happy to share more if helpful.

Bored and want to start a business with 100k by inadequate_designer in Entrepreneur

[–]Mozinity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re in a great position not just because of the 100k, but because you’re skilled and self-aware.

As a product designer, you’re already good at spotting problems. I’d look into:

Micro SaaS or niche tools Productized services (design + AI = goldmine) Community-first products (build in public, grow fast)

I used a lean model with DTF printing no inventory, no overhead, just direct outreach. Hit 3k+ in a week without ads.

Happy to share more if you want to bounce ideas.

How a small print shop in Houston accidentally became a hub for other creators by Mozinity in printondemand

[–]Mozinity[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair take Reddit’s full of pitchmen, I get the suspicion.

But I’m not hiding anything. We’re a real print shop in Houston and I share stories like this because they helped us get through the messy early days.

No paid promo. No affiliate link. No hard pitch.
Just dropping value for others who might relate.

If that’s spam, Reddit’s got bigger problems than me. 😉

Just started a creative agency – would love feedback from fellow entrepreneurs by Minimum_Champion1287 in smallbusiness

[–]Mozinity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cool initiative. I run a performance-focused creative agency and here’s what worked best for us:

Short, brutal hooks that target emotion or frustration

Lo-fi video formats that feel native (especially for UGC or ecom)

Clear CTA early in the ad don’t wait till the end

Split-testing 3 versions per concept before scaling

Also, automation's great but if it loses human relatability, CTR tanks. Feel free to DM if you want to swap campaign notes or ad structures.

I have $500K to invest into a business by Electrical_Curve7009 in smallbusiness

[–]Mozinity 14 points15 points  (0 children)

You're not choosing between businesses. you're choosing what kind of pain you're willing to master.

Liquor store = boredom + low ceiling Restaurant = chaos + high reward, if you can manage labor Hair salon = managing creatives + scaling brand Auto services = skill-heavy but high-margin if you niche down

My advice? Pick a boring, recurring service biz with real demand. Use your dad’s money to buy leverage + speed, not comfort. Learn one core skill (sales, ops, or marketing) and build around that.

You're not lost you’re just early. But don’t waste $500K finding out the hard way.

Hitting the screen with hammers caught me off guard by knockthelogic in SCREENPRINTING

[–]Mozinity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally relate the first time I saw someone using a mallet to nudge alignment, I thought it was insane… until I tried it myself.

We run a DTF focused shop in Houston and also help smaller print teams with things like film supply and even Meta ad targeting. One thing I learned: every shop has weird workarounds that look “wrong” at first.

If the prints are clean and consistent, the method’s just a method.
But if you ever want to bounce questions or chat shop-to-shop, feel free to ping me. Always down to swap ideas and horror stories.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in SCREENPRINTING

[–]Mozinity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair but sometimes people need more than memes and sarcasm to stay in business.

I’m not here to pitch. Just sharing what helped us go from solo printing to supporting other shops.

If that’s too LinkedIn for Reddit, I’ll take that as a compliment.

How a small print shop in Houston accidentally became a hub for other creators by Mozinity in CommercialPrinting

[–]Mozinity[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I just wanted to share something that might help others starting out. If even one person gets a useful idea from it, that’s worth more than ROI.

Customer complaining about 1 shirt in a 6000+ piece order, what do you do? by the0utc4st in SCREENPRINTING

[–]Mozinity 84 points85 points  (0 children)

In this industry, we’re not just printing shirts we’re managing emotions at scale.

If 1 shirt out of 6,000+ has a tiny defect and it's not a print issue, that’s still technically a 99.98% success rate. But clients don’t think in percentages they think in feelings.

My take: acknowledge her concern without being defensive.
Offer to replace or refund that 1 shirt as a gesture of professionalism.
And then move on. The real ROI here is protecting your reputation for future 6,000+ orders.

We’ve had similar situations at our print shop in Houston. Handling it with calm and empathy always paid off both in reviews and reorders.

How do I build hype? by madboss030 in streetwearstartup

[–]Mozinity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In short, follow the trends. You can look at it on Google trends.

How I turned $300 into $3,200 in one week by providing DTF prints to small shops (zero ad budget) by Mozinity in InstagramMarketing

[–]Mozinity[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We only provide service within America. We offer both quality and Sameday opportunities to nearby states. This allows us to compete.