Description
During this such a detailed paper concerning building an etsy economy the new face of creative entrepreneurship.
Building an Etsy Economy:
The New Face of Creative
Entrepreneurship
2
Cover Photo by: Shop Clementine
shopclementine.etsy.com
Ashfield, MA
3
Etsy democratizes access to entrepreneurship.
Etsy sellers are predominantly female—86% are
women. They are twice as likely to be young adults
(under age 35) as other US business owners. Many
are parents with children at home and 17% have
household income under $25,000 annually. Nearly
half (45%) had never sold their goods until they
sold them on Etsy. By making it easy to buy and sell
goods, Etsy makes entrepreneurship lower-risk and
accessible for these populations.
Etsy sellers run businesses in their own right.
Fully 76% of Etsy sellers consider their shops to be
businesses, and 30% focus on their creative businesses
as their sole occupation. This business mindset is also
refected in Etsy sellers’ aspirations—90% wish to grow
their sales in the future.
Etsy sellers are self-reliant.
Most Etsy sellers manage every part of their business
themselves. The vast majority of sellers work alone
from home, and most handmade sellers are self-
taught. Of the 65% who required capital to start their
businesses, 83% relied on their own personal savings,
and only 1% obtained a loan.
Etsy sellers personify a new paradigm for business.
Etsy sellers have ambitions to grow their businesses,
yet they wish to do so in a way that furthers their
personal values. Personal fulflment and enjoyment
often play a key role in the decision to start a creative
business. They also want their business to have a
positive impact on the world—71% of sellers agree that
growing their businesses sustainably and responsibly
is important to them.
Income from their creative business matters.
For 30% of Etsy sellers, their creative business—both
on and of Etsy—is their sole occupation.1 For the
rest, their creative business supplements other jobs,
contributing an average of 15% to total household
income overall. This money makes a diference—44%
use this income for necessary household expenses.
Implications for public policy.
Although Etsy sellers difer from traditional
entrepreneurs in many ways, they are emblematic of
larger shifts in the economy towards self-employment
and micro-business. Most are businesses of one, and
face very diferent challenges from even a fve- or
ten-person enterprise. Government and regulatory
agencies should enact policies that support sellers’
eforts to start and grow their creative businesses,
enabling the broader maker economy to thrive.
Etsy is a marketplace where millions of people around the world connect, both online
and ofine, to make, sell and buy unique goods. Etsy was founded in June 2005 in
Brooklyn, New York and now connects buyers and sellers in nearly every country.
Our 2014 survey of more than 4,000 US Etsy sellers, coupled with ongoing interactions
with our seller community, demonstrates that Etsy supports an emerging type of
creative entrepreneur. These sellers pursue their passions, work for themselves, and
defne success on their own terms. Individually their businesses may be small, but
together they ofer the promise of a more values-led, people-centered approach to life,
business and the broader economy.
Building an Etsy Economy:
The New Face of Creative Entrepreneurship
4
Etsy sellers represent a new face of entrepreneurship
Unlike the majority of traditional US enterprises,
the Etsy seller community is predominantly female,
with women accounting for 86% of all Etsy sellers.
This is more than double the number of women-
owned businesses in the US, where just over a
third are female owned.2 Etsy helps women create
businesses that not only enable them to earn income,
but also ofer fexibility and an outlet for their
creative passions.
While in aggregate, sellers are more likely than the
general population to be college educated (56%) and
have slightly higher than average household income
($56,180), Etsy creates opportunities for populations
who may not be as well served by traditional
entrepreneurial models. More than a third (37%)
of Etsy sellers are under 35, twice that of other US
business owners.3 Further, nearly a sixth of sellers
(17%) have household income less than $25,000.
Etsy enables sellers to get their creative businesses
of the ground without the barriers traditionally
associated with launching a business. For 45%
of sellers, Etsy was the frst place they sold their
goods, a fgure that rises to over half among parents
with kids at home, and to 60% among those under
35. In this sense, Etsy functions as an on-ramp to
entrepreneurship, creating opportunities for many
people who might not otherwise have started
a business.
Etsy sellers run businesses in their own right
While many Etsy sellers started their businesses
as an outlet for creativity or continue to hold day
jobs, their entrepreneurial spirit is undeniable—76%
consider their Etsy shop a business.
To support their creative business, nearly half of all
sellers (46%) have applied for a business tax ID and
41% have opened a business bank account. For 30%,
their creative business—both on and of Etsy—is their
sole occupation.
This business mindset is also refected in a desire for
future growth among Etsy sellers. The overwhelming
majority—90%—would like to grow their creative
business in the future, and nearly 8 in 10 reinvest a
portion of their earnings back into their businesses.
Key Demographics Etsy Sellers General Population4
Median age (years) 39 37.5
Gender (% female) 86% 51%
Education (% college grad or more) 56% 27%
Median household income $56,180 $52,250
Rural (%) 39% 21%5
U.S. ETSY SELLER DEMOGRAPHICS
5
Photo by: Andie and Jason Moore
Jason & Andie Moore of Andie’s Specialty Sweets
andiespecialtysweets.etsy.com
Dallas, TX
“I, Andie, originally opened our Etsy shop as a hobby to scratch an artistic itch while our youngest
children took afternoon naps. Immersed in motherhood, a real business was the furthest thing from
my mind. But creativity, in a steady and energetic stream, led to discovery!
We realized we were serving a niche market with potential to scale. Jason sold our current business
and we joined eforts in creating a viable business together. We’ve always found that artisan skills are
sought after regardless of market and economic conditions. Although punching a clock has seemed
appealing to us at diferent stages, we know the sacrifices we’re making today will outweigh decades
of weekends of.
Etsy has been a valuable tool and platform for us to test the market, advance our craft, hone our skills,
evolve our brand, and make adjustments to our future plans, with very little overhead and risk.”
6
HOW AN ETSY SELLER SPENDS HER TIME
Shipping
Other
Marketing
Communications
Accounting
Inventory Management
Making
Etsy sellers are self-reliant
The majority of Etsy sellers start their creative
businesses without help. They don’t need formal
training or conventional fnancing to get of the
ground—83% of handmade sellers are self-taught in
their craft, and of the 65% who needed some startup
capital, 83% relied on their own savings. Only 1% of
all sellers took out a loan.
Once launched, most Etsy sellers continue to manage
their creative businesses on their own—88% run their
Etsy shop alone, and 95% operate their businesses
from their homes, compared to 52% of small
businesses nationwide.6 Only 12% of Etsy sellers have
help running their business, much of which is from
unpaid friends or family—just 5% of Etsy sellers have
paid help.
Working alone, many Etsy sellers manage every
aspect of running a business, including marketing,
bookkeeping, and customer service. For every
hour that they spend making and designing their
products, they spend almost another hour on
business and administrative tasks.
7
Soo Son of Pale Fish NY
palefishny.etsy.com
New Orleans, LA
“5 years ago I moved to New Orleans, my husband’s hometown, and transitioned to jewelry design.
I decided to open my shop up on Etsy because, practically, it allowed me to explore a new medium
with low overhead and very low risk.
I was able to learn about jewelry business, while making money and learning market trends, materials
and store models. With Etsy’s great resources and social network of sellers, it was very easy and
encouraging to enter into my new business. Etsy allows me to directly connect with customers from
all over the world and get real-time direct feedback on what I am making.
Above all, Etsy ofers flexibility to accommodate my nomad lifestyle. So far my life has taken me
from Seoul to Tokyo, Manhattan to New Orleans, and soon to Ithaca, New York. I am able to pick up
and move my business without afecting my visibility or my customer base. Wherever I decide to
move tomorrow, as long as I have my tools, a mailing address, and an Internet connection, I have an
Etsy shop.”
Photo by: Pale Fish NY
8
Etsy sellers personify a new paradigm for business
For many years, the conventional and dominant
retail model has prioritized delivering goods at
the lowest possible price and growth at any cost.7
Etsy ofers an alternative model that celebrates
sellers’ success on their own terms and supports
sustainable growth.
In many ways, Etsy sellers represent a new approach
to business, where autonomy and independence
matter just as much as, if not more than, the bottom
line. Many want to keep their business at a scale they
are able to manage themselves, with 69% saying they
are not looking to employ any more people and 65%
saying they would not consider taking out a loan to
expand their business.
Yet they are ambitious—90% of Etsy sellers want to
grow their business, and 54% would consider selling
goods wholesale or on consignment. One in two (56%)
would consider scaling their business operations, for
example by purchasing new equipment (30%), using
outside manufacturing (20%), or renting or acquiring
additional space (38%). At the same time, they wish
to grow responsibly. Of those who wish to grow
their business, 75% agree that being sustainable and
responsible is important to them.
Additional studies demonstrate that trends in
small-batch manufacturing are making it easier
for creative entrepreneurs to scale their operations
in a sustainable way. New technologies such as 3D
printing, computer assisted design, and computer-
controlled routers make more complex production
possible, while the growth of shared maker spaces
in libraries and other community spaces make these
technologies accessible to many more people.8
In 2012, the market for maker services and products
reached $2.2 billion and this fgure is expected to
grow to $8.41 billion by 2020.9 Meanwhile, manu-
facturing is moving back to the US from overseas,10
and is increasingly housed in smaller facilities that
can accommodate smaller orders and the customized
production that individual makers need.11
These trends bear out in Etsy’s own experience.
Of the more than 3,000 sellers worldwide who have
been approved to work with outside manufacturing
partners on Etsy, 86% are working with partners in
their home country.12
9
Photo by: Erin Little
“I used to manage a women’s health clinic, a job I loved. When the 70-hour work weeks started to take
a toll on my stress levels and family time, I started drawing and collaging to calm my nerves. With
encouragement from friends, I opened an Etsy shop. Eventually I left my job in the healthcare field to
focus on making art full time. When diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2010, I was having trouble
holding my pens to draw — and I started freaking out. I discovered that the pressure of holding a
cutting knife in my hand felt good, so I began to explore papercutting.
These days, it’s a key part of my repertoire. While taking a printmaking workshop last year, I stumbled
into a lab full of high-tech tools for fabrication. Here, I first laid eyes on a laser cutter in action. The
possibilities excited me so much that I bought my own with a loan from the bank, the first debt I have
ever taken on as a business owner. After the laser cutter was delivered, it sat in my studio for several
months, unused. I was really scared of it.
Since learning the ropes, the machine has opened up new opportunities for my business. I now make
laser-cut versions of my hand-cut artwork and have landed work making laser-cut signs for other
businesses, something I hadn’t even considered when making the purchase.”
Jennifer Judd-McGee of Swallowfield
swallowfield.etsy.com
Northeast Harbor, ME
10
Etsy sellers are building mindful, responsible,
values-driven businesses
While income plays an important role in Etsy sellers’
decisions to start a creative business, more sellers
cite personal factors than fnancial drivers as their
main motivation.
When asked about motivations for starting their
creative business, 65% of sellers said supplemental
income was a motivating factor. Further, 26%
cited a desire for greater fnancial independence,
21% wanted to provide fnancial support for their
families, and 13% had plans to save for the future.
Yet personal fulflment plays an even larger role
in Etsy sellers’ motivations. In total, 79% cited
creativity as a motivating factor. In addition,
three-quarters (74%) of sellers said they were
motivated to start their creative business because
they wanted to do something they enjoy either as
a main job or in their spare time, and a third (33%)
of sellers started their creative business to fulfll a
personal dream. Overall, almost two-thirds (64%)
agreed that doing something they enjoy is more
important than making money.
Sellers are driven by more than personal
opportunities. Almost three-ffths (59%) of Etsy
sellers say it is important that their business has a
positive impact on the world. This translates to real
opportunities on a local level, with 54% saying that
local manufacturing and sourcing of materials is
important to their business.
Etsy sellers also take a collaborative approach to
building their businesses. Over 8 in 10 (81%) have
interacted with other Etsy sellers, citing factors
including business advice, networking, and
emotional support among the reasons they connect
with others in the community. Etsy sellers also self-
organize into mutual support groups online, forming
over 10,000 Etsy Teams around the world. A quarter
of Etsy sellers worldwide are on a Team, providing
local support and opportunities to collaborate with
each other.13
11
Photo by: Docksmith
“My boyfriend Lee, his sister Katie, Katie’s husband Chris and I, Olivia, were on a mission to move up to
Maine. We kept scheming and trying to think of what we could do in Maine to make a living.
We started making docking stations, and we were getting great feedback on Etsy. We found a 1700s
barn that was up for rent with an apartment above and a woodshop below, so we moved and quit our
jobs. We all came from parents who were entrepreneurs. We’ve all been taught from a young age that
if you work hard and you have a vision that you can really see it through.
Chris and Lee are the driftwood scavengers. They work with parks in our area, camp out in the
wilderness without cell service, and come back with loads of wood. Then they figure out the
functional design, I photograph each piece, and Katie designs all the packaging. We’re all in business
together. This is another level of our love.”
Chris and Katie Francis, Lee Goodwin, Olivia Turrell of Docksmith
docksmith.etsy.com
Brunswick, ME
12
For 30% of sellers, their creative business is their
sole occupation. For the rest, Etsy shops provide
a meaningful source of supplemental income. On
average, sellers report that their creative business—
both on and of Etsy—contributes 15% of their yearly
household income. Notably, 44% of sellers use creative
business income to pay for household expenses, and
17% for rent or mortgage payments.
This income matters, particularly to the 17% of Etsy
sellers who earn less than $25,000 per year. For this
group, income from their creative business makes up
21% of their entire household income. While the latest
census data shows that the percentage of Americans
living under the poverty line decreased from 15% in
2012 to 14.5% in 2013, this is still well above the pre-
recession fgure of 12.3% in 2006.14 With a considerable
proportion of the US population still living below
this threshold, enabling lower earning households to
supplement their income through their own business
ventures is an important step in helping them achieve
fnancial stability.
Supplemental income makes a diference in sellers’
lives, but its value changes depending on their
circumstances. Younger sellers aged 18-24 are more
likely to save income from their creative business,
with over 40% putting their earnings into savings
(compared to 25% of sellers generally), and around a
ffth (19%) using it to fund their education. Meanwhile,
sellers with children at home are more likely to say that
their creative businesses enable them to support their
family fnancially (27%) and to use their Etsy income to
pay for household expenses (49%).
For the 26% of sellers who had no paid employment
prior to starting their business, or currently lack paid
employment,15 entrepreneurship could be their best
opportunity to earn income. These sellers are diverse:
38% of this group are homemakers, 23% are retirees,
15% are students, 12% are unemployed, and 7% are ill
or disabled.
In many ways, Etsy sellers are also part of a
larger trend towards independent work and self-
employment. According to a Freelancers Union,
Elance/Odesk study, 34% of the US workforce is made
up of individuals who have engaged in supplemental,
temporary, or project- or contract-based work in the
past 12 months, and they account for $715 billion in
economic activity each year.16 The majority of Etsy
sellers (51%) also ‘work independently’(either their
creative business is their sole occupation, they are
self-employed in other ways, they work part-time, or
they are temps). Like many ‘independent workers’,
Etsy sellers are combining income from multiple
sources. The majority—57%—have a job outside of
their creative business, and only 36% of all Etsy
sellers have full-time employment.
Creative business income matters
Etsy sellers represent an encouraging response to these
economic trends, establishing independent creative
businesses that diversify sources of income and help
build resilience in the face of broader insecurities.
36%
Full-time
Employee
51%
Independent
Workers
11%
Unemployed
2%
Other
Independent Workers 51%
Creative Business 30%
Self-employed 10%
Part-time 10%
Temps 2%
2014 EMPLOYMENT AMONG ETSY SELLERS
13
Photo by: Erik Valind
“I opened my Etsy shop because I was at a point in my life where I was looking for a fulfilling, creative
career and at the same time I saw a need that wasn’t being met in the needlework market. The great
thing about Etsy and the digital marketplace is how quickly and easily you can set up shop and act
on an impulse like that, with very little capital or business know-how necessary. I think that really
increases the odds that fresh ideas and products will actually make it in front of customers.
I went from being somebody who worked 75 hours a week outside the home to being somebody who
works that much at home. All my friends who still work in the film industry say that I have found some
secret password into a diferent life.
Running a creative business has completely changed how I value my creative energy and time; I now
consider those things my greatest assets. When I used to work for other people, I was investing my
creativity in making someone else’s dreams come true. Now I’m investing in myself. It can be scary
because that investment doesn’t always pay you in a weekly paycheck like a normal job, but you see
the rewards in the long term.”
Jody Rice of Satsuma Street
satsumastreet.etsy.com
Los Angeles, CA
14
A Micro-Advocate in Every Agency
Makers often struggle to learn about the regulations
that govern their businesses, yet they are hungry
to comply with the rules. Regulatory agencies
should establish a Micro-Advocate to conduct
direct outreach to micro-businesses, create user-
friendly educational tools, and make formal
recommendations to ease compliance burdens.
Entrepreneurship Training in Every Jobs Program
Most workforce development programs focus
on job training and job placement, overlooking
the opportunities that self-employment and
entrepreneurship ofer unemployed and
underemployed populations. Workforce development
programs should expand their oferings to include
micro-business support and training.
Peer-to-Peer Trade Between Every Country:
The maker economy is global, yet trade laws have not
kept up with the advent of peer-to-peer marketplaces,
where individuals ship small quantities of goods
from one home to another. Countries should
negotiate a universal low-value customs exemption,
and harmonize the customs, duties, and consumer
protection regulations that apply to these products.
Small-Batch Manufacturing in Every Community
Consumer demand for local, unique goods creates
opportunities for makers to reach bigger markets, yet
these designers face several challenges when scaling
their home-based operations. Governments should
expand manufacturing support services to help
small-batch manufacturers source materials, update
designs, and locate suitable production partners.
Economic Security for Every Entrepreneur
Lacking the security and benefts that come with
a full-time job, micro-businesses must manage
unpredictable income fuctuations without the
benefts of social insurance. Government should
invest in programs to help micro-entrepreneurs
weather unexpected income shocks and manage
their personal and business fnances.
A Free and Open Internet for All
The Internet has democratized access to
entrepreneurship for millions of people, enabling
makers access a global customers base and
compete with much bigger brands. Governments
should establish clear, bright line rules to prevent
discrimination and preserve an even playing
feld online.
Opportunities to Support the Maker Economy
Although Etsy sellers difer from traditional entrepreneurs in many ways, they are
emblematic of larger shifts in the economy. Most are businesses of one, and face very
diferent challenges from even a fve- or ten-person enterprise. Operating in gray areas
between amateur and professional, business and worker, consumer and provider,
they are inconsistently captured in government statistics and poorly understood by
policy makers.
This study, coupled with Etsy’s ongoing interactions with its seller community, has
deepened our understanding of the particular challenges creative entrepreneurs face.
To enable a people-powered economy to fourish, governments should enable micro-
entrepreneurship, support small-scale commerce, and foster economic security for all.
More than 4,000 U.S. Etsy sellers an online survey
from November 24, 2014–January 5, 2015. The sample
was taken from a database of US sellers who had
sold at least one item in the previous 12 months.
Sellers from our database were randomly contacted
and invited to take part in the survey via email. The
survey was developed by Etsy and Kantar Media, and
the research was conducted by Kantar Media.
Due to methodology and survey text changes, some
data in this report is not directly comparable to
data in our 2012 report, Redefning Entrepreneurship:
Etsy Sellers’ Economic Impact. These changes were
implemented to help better align 2014 survey data with
other national and international industry surveys.
1 Due to changes in methodology, this stat is not directly
comparable to the data in our 2012 report. See
Methodology section for more details.
2 Demographic Characteristics of Business Owners, 2012.
US Small Business Administration, Ofice of Advocacy.
3 Demographic Characteristics of Business Owners, 2012.
US Small Business Administration, Ofice of Advocacy.
4 American Communities Survey, 2013.
5 American Communities Survey, 2010.
6 US Census Bureau, SBO, SUSB, 2007.
7 Bruce Upbin, Artisinal Manufacturing: Creating Jobs to
Produce Things in America Again,http://www.forbes.com/
sites/bruceupbin/2013/12/11/artisanal-manufacturing-
creating-jobs-to-produce-things-in-america-again/
8 Gary Price, Results from Makerspaces in Library Study
Released,http://www.infodocket.com/2013/12/16/results-
of-makerspaces-in-libraries-study-released/
9 Tim Bajarin, Why the Maker Movement is Important to
America’s Future,http://time.com/104210/maker-faire-
maker-movement/
10 Made in America, Again, Why Manufacturing will Return to
the U.S.,http://www.bcg.com/documents/file84471.pdf,
Boston Consulting Group
11 Joshua Sophy, Small Business Manufacturing is Up. One
Reason: Reinvention,http://smallbiztrends.com/2013/05/
small-business-manufacturing-growth.html
12 Etsy internal data
13 Etsy internal data
14 US Census Bureau, Income and Poverty in the United
States: 2013.
15 Data calculated based on aggregate of full-time sellers
who had no paid employment prior to starting their
business and part-time sellers who currently have no paid
employment.
16 Freelancing in America, A National Survey of the New
Workforce,http://fu-web-storage-prod.s3.amazonaws.
com/content/filer_public/c2/06/c2065a8a-7f00-46db-
915a-2122965df7d9/fu_freelancinginamericareport_v3-
rgb.pdf, Freelancers Union, Elance-oDesk
Methodology
End Notes
15
Contact
[email protected]
55 Washington St. #512
Brooklyn, NY 11201
doc_605652876.pdf
During this such a detailed paper concerning building an etsy economy the new face of creative entrepreneurship.
Building an Etsy Economy:
The New Face of Creative
Entrepreneurship
2
Cover Photo by: Shop Clementine
shopclementine.etsy.com
Ashfield, MA
3
Etsy democratizes access to entrepreneurship.
Etsy sellers are predominantly female—86% are
women. They are twice as likely to be young adults
(under age 35) as other US business owners. Many
are parents with children at home and 17% have
household income under $25,000 annually. Nearly
half (45%) had never sold their goods until they
sold them on Etsy. By making it easy to buy and sell
goods, Etsy makes entrepreneurship lower-risk and
accessible for these populations.
Etsy sellers run businesses in their own right.
Fully 76% of Etsy sellers consider their shops to be
businesses, and 30% focus on their creative businesses
as their sole occupation. This business mindset is also
refected in Etsy sellers’ aspirations—90% wish to grow
their sales in the future.
Etsy sellers are self-reliant.
Most Etsy sellers manage every part of their business
themselves. The vast majority of sellers work alone
from home, and most handmade sellers are self-
taught. Of the 65% who required capital to start their
businesses, 83% relied on their own personal savings,
and only 1% obtained a loan.
Etsy sellers personify a new paradigm for business.
Etsy sellers have ambitions to grow their businesses,
yet they wish to do so in a way that furthers their
personal values. Personal fulflment and enjoyment
often play a key role in the decision to start a creative
business. They also want their business to have a
positive impact on the world—71% of sellers agree that
growing their businesses sustainably and responsibly
is important to them.
Income from their creative business matters.
For 30% of Etsy sellers, their creative business—both
on and of Etsy—is their sole occupation.1 For the
rest, their creative business supplements other jobs,
contributing an average of 15% to total household
income overall. This money makes a diference—44%
use this income for necessary household expenses.
Implications for public policy.
Although Etsy sellers difer from traditional
entrepreneurs in many ways, they are emblematic of
larger shifts in the economy towards self-employment
and micro-business. Most are businesses of one, and
face very diferent challenges from even a fve- or
ten-person enterprise. Government and regulatory
agencies should enact policies that support sellers’
eforts to start and grow their creative businesses,
enabling the broader maker economy to thrive.
Etsy is a marketplace where millions of people around the world connect, both online
and ofine, to make, sell and buy unique goods. Etsy was founded in June 2005 in
Brooklyn, New York and now connects buyers and sellers in nearly every country.
Our 2014 survey of more than 4,000 US Etsy sellers, coupled with ongoing interactions
with our seller community, demonstrates that Etsy supports an emerging type of
creative entrepreneur. These sellers pursue their passions, work for themselves, and
defne success on their own terms. Individually their businesses may be small, but
together they ofer the promise of a more values-led, people-centered approach to life,
business and the broader economy.
Building an Etsy Economy:
The New Face of Creative Entrepreneurship
4
Etsy sellers represent a new face of entrepreneurship
Unlike the majority of traditional US enterprises,
the Etsy seller community is predominantly female,
with women accounting for 86% of all Etsy sellers.
This is more than double the number of women-
owned businesses in the US, where just over a
third are female owned.2 Etsy helps women create
businesses that not only enable them to earn income,
but also ofer fexibility and an outlet for their
creative passions.
While in aggregate, sellers are more likely than the
general population to be college educated (56%) and
have slightly higher than average household income
($56,180), Etsy creates opportunities for populations
who may not be as well served by traditional
entrepreneurial models. More than a third (37%)
of Etsy sellers are under 35, twice that of other US
business owners.3 Further, nearly a sixth of sellers
(17%) have household income less than $25,000.
Etsy enables sellers to get their creative businesses
of the ground without the barriers traditionally
associated with launching a business. For 45%
of sellers, Etsy was the frst place they sold their
goods, a fgure that rises to over half among parents
with kids at home, and to 60% among those under
35. In this sense, Etsy functions as an on-ramp to
entrepreneurship, creating opportunities for many
people who might not otherwise have started
a business.
Etsy sellers run businesses in their own right
While many Etsy sellers started their businesses
as an outlet for creativity or continue to hold day
jobs, their entrepreneurial spirit is undeniable—76%
consider their Etsy shop a business.
To support their creative business, nearly half of all
sellers (46%) have applied for a business tax ID and
41% have opened a business bank account. For 30%,
their creative business—both on and of Etsy—is their
sole occupation.
This business mindset is also refected in a desire for
future growth among Etsy sellers. The overwhelming
majority—90%—would like to grow their creative
business in the future, and nearly 8 in 10 reinvest a
portion of their earnings back into their businesses.
Key Demographics Etsy Sellers General Population4
Median age (years) 39 37.5
Gender (% female) 86% 51%
Education (% college grad or more) 56% 27%
Median household income $56,180 $52,250
Rural (%) 39% 21%5
U.S. ETSY SELLER DEMOGRAPHICS
5
Photo by: Andie and Jason Moore
Jason & Andie Moore of Andie’s Specialty Sweets
andiespecialtysweets.etsy.com
Dallas, TX
“I, Andie, originally opened our Etsy shop as a hobby to scratch an artistic itch while our youngest
children took afternoon naps. Immersed in motherhood, a real business was the furthest thing from
my mind. But creativity, in a steady and energetic stream, led to discovery!
We realized we were serving a niche market with potential to scale. Jason sold our current business
and we joined eforts in creating a viable business together. We’ve always found that artisan skills are
sought after regardless of market and economic conditions. Although punching a clock has seemed
appealing to us at diferent stages, we know the sacrifices we’re making today will outweigh decades
of weekends of.
Etsy has been a valuable tool and platform for us to test the market, advance our craft, hone our skills,
evolve our brand, and make adjustments to our future plans, with very little overhead and risk.”
6
HOW AN ETSY SELLER SPENDS HER TIME
Shipping
Other
Marketing
Communications
Accounting
Inventory Management
Making
Etsy sellers are self-reliant
The majority of Etsy sellers start their creative
businesses without help. They don’t need formal
training or conventional fnancing to get of the
ground—83% of handmade sellers are self-taught in
their craft, and of the 65% who needed some startup
capital, 83% relied on their own savings. Only 1% of
all sellers took out a loan.
Once launched, most Etsy sellers continue to manage
their creative businesses on their own—88% run their
Etsy shop alone, and 95% operate their businesses
from their homes, compared to 52% of small
businesses nationwide.6 Only 12% of Etsy sellers have
help running their business, much of which is from
unpaid friends or family—just 5% of Etsy sellers have
paid help.
Working alone, many Etsy sellers manage every
aspect of running a business, including marketing,
bookkeeping, and customer service. For every
hour that they spend making and designing their
products, they spend almost another hour on
business and administrative tasks.
7
Soo Son of Pale Fish NY
palefishny.etsy.com
New Orleans, LA
“5 years ago I moved to New Orleans, my husband’s hometown, and transitioned to jewelry design.
I decided to open my shop up on Etsy because, practically, it allowed me to explore a new medium
with low overhead and very low risk.
I was able to learn about jewelry business, while making money and learning market trends, materials
and store models. With Etsy’s great resources and social network of sellers, it was very easy and
encouraging to enter into my new business. Etsy allows me to directly connect with customers from
all over the world and get real-time direct feedback on what I am making.
Above all, Etsy ofers flexibility to accommodate my nomad lifestyle. So far my life has taken me
from Seoul to Tokyo, Manhattan to New Orleans, and soon to Ithaca, New York. I am able to pick up
and move my business without afecting my visibility or my customer base. Wherever I decide to
move tomorrow, as long as I have my tools, a mailing address, and an Internet connection, I have an
Etsy shop.”
Photo by: Pale Fish NY
8
Etsy sellers personify a new paradigm for business
For many years, the conventional and dominant
retail model has prioritized delivering goods at
the lowest possible price and growth at any cost.7
Etsy ofers an alternative model that celebrates
sellers’ success on their own terms and supports
sustainable growth.
In many ways, Etsy sellers represent a new approach
to business, where autonomy and independence
matter just as much as, if not more than, the bottom
line. Many want to keep their business at a scale they
are able to manage themselves, with 69% saying they
are not looking to employ any more people and 65%
saying they would not consider taking out a loan to
expand their business.
Yet they are ambitious—90% of Etsy sellers want to
grow their business, and 54% would consider selling
goods wholesale or on consignment. One in two (56%)
would consider scaling their business operations, for
example by purchasing new equipment (30%), using
outside manufacturing (20%), or renting or acquiring
additional space (38%). At the same time, they wish
to grow responsibly. Of those who wish to grow
their business, 75% agree that being sustainable and
responsible is important to them.
Additional studies demonstrate that trends in
small-batch manufacturing are making it easier
for creative entrepreneurs to scale their operations
in a sustainable way. New technologies such as 3D
printing, computer assisted design, and computer-
controlled routers make more complex production
possible, while the growth of shared maker spaces
in libraries and other community spaces make these
technologies accessible to many more people.8
In 2012, the market for maker services and products
reached $2.2 billion and this fgure is expected to
grow to $8.41 billion by 2020.9 Meanwhile, manu-
facturing is moving back to the US from overseas,10
and is increasingly housed in smaller facilities that
can accommodate smaller orders and the customized
production that individual makers need.11
These trends bear out in Etsy’s own experience.
Of the more than 3,000 sellers worldwide who have
been approved to work with outside manufacturing
partners on Etsy, 86% are working with partners in
their home country.12
9
Photo by: Erin Little
“I used to manage a women’s health clinic, a job I loved. When the 70-hour work weeks started to take
a toll on my stress levels and family time, I started drawing and collaging to calm my nerves. With
encouragement from friends, I opened an Etsy shop. Eventually I left my job in the healthcare field to
focus on making art full time. When diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2010, I was having trouble
holding my pens to draw — and I started freaking out. I discovered that the pressure of holding a
cutting knife in my hand felt good, so I began to explore papercutting.
These days, it’s a key part of my repertoire. While taking a printmaking workshop last year, I stumbled
into a lab full of high-tech tools for fabrication. Here, I first laid eyes on a laser cutter in action. The
possibilities excited me so much that I bought my own with a loan from the bank, the first debt I have
ever taken on as a business owner. After the laser cutter was delivered, it sat in my studio for several
months, unused. I was really scared of it.
Since learning the ropes, the machine has opened up new opportunities for my business. I now make
laser-cut versions of my hand-cut artwork and have landed work making laser-cut signs for other
businesses, something I hadn’t even considered when making the purchase.”
Jennifer Judd-McGee of Swallowfield
swallowfield.etsy.com
Northeast Harbor, ME
10
Etsy sellers are building mindful, responsible,
values-driven businesses
While income plays an important role in Etsy sellers’
decisions to start a creative business, more sellers
cite personal factors than fnancial drivers as their
main motivation.
When asked about motivations for starting their
creative business, 65% of sellers said supplemental
income was a motivating factor. Further, 26%
cited a desire for greater fnancial independence,
21% wanted to provide fnancial support for their
families, and 13% had plans to save for the future.
Yet personal fulflment plays an even larger role
in Etsy sellers’ motivations. In total, 79% cited
creativity as a motivating factor. In addition,
three-quarters (74%) of sellers said they were
motivated to start their creative business because
they wanted to do something they enjoy either as
a main job or in their spare time, and a third (33%)
of sellers started their creative business to fulfll a
personal dream. Overall, almost two-thirds (64%)
agreed that doing something they enjoy is more
important than making money.
Sellers are driven by more than personal
opportunities. Almost three-ffths (59%) of Etsy
sellers say it is important that their business has a
positive impact on the world. This translates to real
opportunities on a local level, with 54% saying that
local manufacturing and sourcing of materials is
important to their business.
Etsy sellers also take a collaborative approach to
building their businesses. Over 8 in 10 (81%) have
interacted with other Etsy sellers, citing factors
including business advice, networking, and
emotional support among the reasons they connect
with others in the community. Etsy sellers also self-
organize into mutual support groups online, forming
over 10,000 Etsy Teams around the world. A quarter
of Etsy sellers worldwide are on a Team, providing
local support and opportunities to collaborate with
each other.13
11
Photo by: Docksmith
“My boyfriend Lee, his sister Katie, Katie’s husband Chris and I, Olivia, were on a mission to move up to
Maine. We kept scheming and trying to think of what we could do in Maine to make a living.
We started making docking stations, and we were getting great feedback on Etsy. We found a 1700s
barn that was up for rent with an apartment above and a woodshop below, so we moved and quit our
jobs. We all came from parents who were entrepreneurs. We’ve all been taught from a young age that
if you work hard and you have a vision that you can really see it through.
Chris and Lee are the driftwood scavengers. They work with parks in our area, camp out in the
wilderness without cell service, and come back with loads of wood. Then they figure out the
functional design, I photograph each piece, and Katie designs all the packaging. We’re all in business
together. This is another level of our love.”
Chris and Katie Francis, Lee Goodwin, Olivia Turrell of Docksmith
docksmith.etsy.com
Brunswick, ME
12
For 30% of sellers, their creative business is their
sole occupation. For the rest, Etsy shops provide
a meaningful source of supplemental income. On
average, sellers report that their creative business—
both on and of Etsy—contributes 15% of their yearly
household income. Notably, 44% of sellers use creative
business income to pay for household expenses, and
17% for rent or mortgage payments.
This income matters, particularly to the 17% of Etsy
sellers who earn less than $25,000 per year. For this
group, income from their creative business makes up
21% of their entire household income. While the latest
census data shows that the percentage of Americans
living under the poverty line decreased from 15% in
2012 to 14.5% in 2013, this is still well above the pre-
recession fgure of 12.3% in 2006.14 With a considerable
proportion of the US population still living below
this threshold, enabling lower earning households to
supplement their income through their own business
ventures is an important step in helping them achieve
fnancial stability.
Supplemental income makes a diference in sellers’
lives, but its value changes depending on their
circumstances. Younger sellers aged 18-24 are more
likely to save income from their creative business,
with over 40% putting their earnings into savings
(compared to 25% of sellers generally), and around a
ffth (19%) using it to fund their education. Meanwhile,
sellers with children at home are more likely to say that
their creative businesses enable them to support their
family fnancially (27%) and to use their Etsy income to
pay for household expenses (49%).
For the 26% of sellers who had no paid employment
prior to starting their business, or currently lack paid
employment,15 entrepreneurship could be their best
opportunity to earn income. These sellers are diverse:
38% of this group are homemakers, 23% are retirees,
15% are students, 12% are unemployed, and 7% are ill
or disabled.
In many ways, Etsy sellers are also part of a
larger trend towards independent work and self-
employment. According to a Freelancers Union,
Elance/Odesk study, 34% of the US workforce is made
up of individuals who have engaged in supplemental,
temporary, or project- or contract-based work in the
past 12 months, and they account for $715 billion in
economic activity each year.16 The majority of Etsy
sellers (51%) also ‘work independently’(either their
creative business is their sole occupation, they are
self-employed in other ways, they work part-time, or
they are temps). Like many ‘independent workers’,
Etsy sellers are combining income from multiple
sources. The majority—57%—have a job outside of
their creative business, and only 36% of all Etsy
sellers have full-time employment.
Creative business income matters
Etsy sellers represent an encouraging response to these
economic trends, establishing independent creative
businesses that diversify sources of income and help
build resilience in the face of broader insecurities.
36%
Full-time
Employee
51%
Independent
Workers
11%
Unemployed
2%
Other
Independent Workers 51%
Creative Business 30%
Self-employed 10%
Part-time 10%
Temps 2%
2014 EMPLOYMENT AMONG ETSY SELLERS
13
Photo by: Erik Valind
“I opened my Etsy shop because I was at a point in my life where I was looking for a fulfilling, creative
career and at the same time I saw a need that wasn’t being met in the needlework market. The great
thing about Etsy and the digital marketplace is how quickly and easily you can set up shop and act
on an impulse like that, with very little capital or business know-how necessary. I think that really
increases the odds that fresh ideas and products will actually make it in front of customers.
I went from being somebody who worked 75 hours a week outside the home to being somebody who
works that much at home. All my friends who still work in the film industry say that I have found some
secret password into a diferent life.
Running a creative business has completely changed how I value my creative energy and time; I now
consider those things my greatest assets. When I used to work for other people, I was investing my
creativity in making someone else’s dreams come true. Now I’m investing in myself. It can be scary
because that investment doesn’t always pay you in a weekly paycheck like a normal job, but you see
the rewards in the long term.”
Jody Rice of Satsuma Street
satsumastreet.etsy.com
Los Angeles, CA
14
A Micro-Advocate in Every Agency
Makers often struggle to learn about the regulations
that govern their businesses, yet they are hungry
to comply with the rules. Regulatory agencies
should establish a Micro-Advocate to conduct
direct outreach to micro-businesses, create user-
friendly educational tools, and make formal
recommendations to ease compliance burdens.
Entrepreneurship Training in Every Jobs Program
Most workforce development programs focus
on job training and job placement, overlooking
the opportunities that self-employment and
entrepreneurship ofer unemployed and
underemployed populations. Workforce development
programs should expand their oferings to include
micro-business support and training.
Peer-to-Peer Trade Between Every Country:
The maker economy is global, yet trade laws have not
kept up with the advent of peer-to-peer marketplaces,
where individuals ship small quantities of goods
from one home to another. Countries should
negotiate a universal low-value customs exemption,
and harmonize the customs, duties, and consumer
protection regulations that apply to these products.
Small-Batch Manufacturing in Every Community
Consumer demand for local, unique goods creates
opportunities for makers to reach bigger markets, yet
these designers face several challenges when scaling
their home-based operations. Governments should
expand manufacturing support services to help
small-batch manufacturers source materials, update
designs, and locate suitable production partners.
Economic Security for Every Entrepreneur
Lacking the security and benefts that come with
a full-time job, micro-businesses must manage
unpredictable income fuctuations without the
benefts of social insurance. Government should
invest in programs to help micro-entrepreneurs
weather unexpected income shocks and manage
their personal and business fnances.
A Free and Open Internet for All
The Internet has democratized access to
entrepreneurship for millions of people, enabling
makers access a global customers base and
compete with much bigger brands. Governments
should establish clear, bright line rules to prevent
discrimination and preserve an even playing
feld online.
Opportunities to Support the Maker Economy
Although Etsy sellers difer from traditional entrepreneurs in many ways, they are
emblematic of larger shifts in the economy. Most are businesses of one, and face very
diferent challenges from even a fve- or ten-person enterprise. Operating in gray areas
between amateur and professional, business and worker, consumer and provider,
they are inconsistently captured in government statistics and poorly understood by
policy makers.
This study, coupled with Etsy’s ongoing interactions with its seller community, has
deepened our understanding of the particular challenges creative entrepreneurs face.
To enable a people-powered economy to fourish, governments should enable micro-
entrepreneurship, support small-scale commerce, and foster economic security for all.
More than 4,000 U.S. Etsy sellers an online survey
from November 24, 2014–January 5, 2015. The sample
was taken from a database of US sellers who had
sold at least one item in the previous 12 months.
Sellers from our database were randomly contacted
and invited to take part in the survey via email. The
survey was developed by Etsy and Kantar Media, and
the research was conducted by Kantar Media.
Due to methodology and survey text changes, some
data in this report is not directly comparable to
data in our 2012 report, Redefning Entrepreneurship:
Etsy Sellers’ Economic Impact. These changes were
implemented to help better align 2014 survey data with
other national and international industry surveys.
1 Due to changes in methodology, this stat is not directly
comparable to the data in our 2012 report. See
Methodology section for more details.
2 Demographic Characteristics of Business Owners, 2012.
US Small Business Administration, Ofice of Advocacy.
3 Demographic Characteristics of Business Owners, 2012.
US Small Business Administration, Ofice of Advocacy.
4 American Communities Survey, 2013.
5 American Communities Survey, 2010.
6 US Census Bureau, SBO, SUSB, 2007.
7 Bruce Upbin, Artisinal Manufacturing: Creating Jobs to
Produce Things in America Again,http://www.forbes.com/
sites/bruceupbin/2013/12/11/artisanal-manufacturing-
creating-jobs-to-produce-things-in-america-again/
8 Gary Price, Results from Makerspaces in Library Study
Released,http://www.infodocket.com/2013/12/16/results-
of-makerspaces-in-libraries-study-released/
9 Tim Bajarin, Why the Maker Movement is Important to
America’s Future,http://time.com/104210/maker-faire-
maker-movement/
10 Made in America, Again, Why Manufacturing will Return to
the U.S.,http://www.bcg.com/documents/file84471.pdf,
Boston Consulting Group
11 Joshua Sophy, Small Business Manufacturing is Up. One
Reason: Reinvention,http://smallbiztrends.com/2013/05/
small-business-manufacturing-growth.html
12 Etsy internal data
13 Etsy internal data
14 US Census Bureau, Income and Poverty in the United
States: 2013.
15 Data calculated based on aggregate of full-time sellers
who had no paid employment prior to starting their
business and part-time sellers who currently have no paid
employment.
16 Freelancing in America, A National Survey of the New
Workforce,http://fu-web-storage-prod.s3.amazonaws.
com/content/filer_public/c2/06/c2065a8a-7f00-46db-
915a-2122965df7d9/fu_freelancinginamericareport_v3-
rgb.pdf, Freelancers Union, Elance-oDesk
Methodology
End Notes
15
Contact
[email protected]
55 Washington St. #512
Brooklyn, NY 11201
doc_605652876.pdf