I make printables and editable templates that refuse to sit quietly in a downloads folder. You can use them yourself… or rebrand and sell them as your own. Some spark creativity at home and create little screen-free moments. Others help creators turn simple ideas into products they can actually share with the world. And these days, I also help thoughtful creators spot the hidden friction between effort and results — because sometimes a small shift is all it takes to get things moving again!
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Hello and welcome to my printables and low-content creation series, Reader 👋 Looking for a previous issue? They are all available to read on my website. Last week, I shared how I once believed I needed 100 products. And I mentioned a photography experiment I’ll come back to soon. But before that, there’s something I see even more often. A product gets created. It’s thoughtful. It gets listed… and then… Not much happens. Maybe a few views. So the natural move is: A different idea. New product. New hope. No one really says it out loud, but we’ve all done it. Because staying with something that didn’t land feels uncomfortable. So we move on. But there’s another version of the same pattern. It looks more careful. More intentional. Instead of moving on, we stay. We tweak. Maybe this one just needs to be right. So we wait. And tweak again. From the outside, these two approaches look completely different. One is fast. But underneath, they are solving the same discomfort. One avoids failure by moving on. Because in both cases, something important is missing. Not effort. Not ideas. But understanding. What actually happened when someone encountered the product? Where did they hesitate? Without that, each new attempt starts from scratch. And each “improvement” is based on guesswork. This is where things start to shift. Instead of asking: “What should I create next?” Try asking: “What did this actually show me?” Even silence is information. Even low clicks are signals. Even confusion is useful. If your shop feels like a series of fresh starts, this might be why. Not because you’re doing it wrong. Because no learning loop is being created. That photography experiment I mentioned last week? It sits right in the middle of this. Because the answer isn’t “more”… and it isn’t “perfect” either. PS: If every new product feels like starting over, it’s not a creativity problem. It’s a missing learning loop. . === . NOTE: I'm moving things around in the backend to make room for a new project. Can you help me spot "bad experiences" regarding my site, your members' area, communications, or whatever? I would really appreciate your help with this! It will make it so much easier for me to fix and improve everything that needs attention. Thank you! === . Disclosure: From time to time, I will include links in the emails that would include promotions for my own products or affiliate products, meaning I get paid when you buy the product. However, I only ever mention products I love and would recommend whether I was being compensated or not. Always use due diligence when buying anything and remember, what works for me may not always work for you! Thank you so much for your support of Stephie The Happy Mom! To make sure you keep getting these emails, please add Hello@stephiethehappymom.com to your address book or whitelist us. |
I make printables and editable templates that refuse to sit quietly in a downloads folder. You can use them yourself… or rebrand and sell them as your own. Some spark creativity at home and create little screen-free moments. Others help creators turn simple ideas into products they can actually share with the world. And these days, I also help thoughtful creators spot the hidden friction between effort and results — because sometimes a small shift is all it takes to get things moving again!