From Prints to Posts: The Birth of a Design Blog
When I used to think about small business owners I certainly didn't think of someone like myself. I spent most of my college years listening to bad jam bands and working in a printmaking studio trying to figure out how I'd make a living off of the semi-awful artwork I was producing. Three years later I found myself in Brooklyn running a website that somehow sprouted an e-commerce shop this year. I hardly made a business plan and certainly didn't think about how I should brand my company, but here I am, running a small (but successful) business from my apartment in Park Slope.
Working next to my cats on the couch one day I caught myself thinking of how I could expand my website (where I write about product and interior design) and it hit me- I was one of those people. Those people who ran their own companies, considered their business' future and thought about how best to please the consumer (in my case, my readers) and myself. As much as that thought used to send chills down my spine, it suddenly made sense. I was 24 and doing something I actually liked every day and finding a way to make a living at it. I figured maybe this whole small business thing wasn't actually such a bad idea.
Since I've learned to embrace the site (and myself in a sense) I've become more confident with my writing, the site's content and style and the way in which I run my small business. Design*Sponge may have started as a way to give my boyfriend a break from incessant design commentary, but it's become something that I am thoroughly proud of and thrilled to run every day.
Over the course of my posts here I'll be talking about what it's been like to be a young woman running a web-based business. Stay tuned for tales of scandal, intrigue, blogger back-stabbing and some of the most archaic ad sales managers in the history of the internet. Along the way I hope to help those starting a small business avoid some of the perils and pitfalls of going it on your own.












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I just completed meetings with two Arizona state congressmen to discuss federal legislation that would encourage the use of residential wind energy systems in homes across the US. I’m now on my way to St. Louis where I’ll meet US Energy Secretary Bodman, several undersecretaries and perhaps, though briefly, President Bush. My goal is to build support for small-scale wind energy legislation.