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You are here: Home / How to Sell Your Art Online / 101: The Story of Your Art / Module 2 – Process Journaling

Module 2 – Process Journaling

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Comments

  1. Diane Harm says

    January 23, 2017 at 5:56 AM

    A lot to think about. Very interesting approaches.

    Reply
  2. Bill Snowman says

    January 24, 2017 at 6:05 PM

    “Go ahead and mock my crockery” – OMG this one is AWESOME lol . . . .

    Reply
  3. Susan Richardson says

    May 2, 2017 at 9:57 AM

    Very inspiring. Interestingly, after watching all three videos, I immediately wanted to go buy a piece of pottery from Keith. His funny, vulnerable, quirky video made me want to own something by this intriguing guy. That gives me a lot to think about. I haven’t even seen his work, but I want to share a piece of his world. Now how do I do that for myself? A fun and wonderful goal.

    Reply
  4. Maartje de Boer says

    February 26, 2018 at 5:09 AM

    Great examples! What I find intriguing is how I am reacting to the different video’s: while I love the video that Keith made and am triggered to see this work, I do not relate to the video of Gwenn so much (although I am a great fan of nature, I am one of these morons that does shave her legs…). This is also a good example of how finding your ideal collector works.

    Reply
  5. Lili FLOYD says

    May 8, 2018 at 5:16 AM

    love, love love the videos!
    Can totally relate to the humorous one. I like using humor whenever possible, that is a goal of mine- to incorporate more humor into my fb posts when showing my art.
    Really like Gwen’s slide show of the making of the piece.
    really liked Matt’s show of imagination!

    Reply
  6. Deborah Turner says

    May 9, 2018 at 5:53 AM

    I am in love with the Keith video! It was cleverly done and actually made me laugh out loud — and I’m literally just off to check out his pots, so, lesson learned: for me, humour definitely works. And—I’m about to share it with several other peeps (who might also check out his pots)

    Reply
  7. Anna Crow says

    September 6, 2018 at 2:02 PM

    I think there needs to be some kind of value, is learning about the artist enough? Or is it important that we either entertain or inform on how to do something or somehow provide the viewer with a reason to share.

    Reply
  8. Fox Larsson says

    February 6, 2019 at 7:13 PM

    Filling in this module’s workbook section actually felt very good, grounding and relaxing. And I was surprised I enjoyed writing what I was thinking and feeling while working on today’s piece.
    I don’t know if I could ever share those thoughts, as a lot of it was very personal, but there might be a balance to be found there eventually.
    Thanks.

    Reply
  9. Fox Larsson says

    February 10, 2019 at 11:52 AM

    After doing the homework for this module once I decided to try and write about every piece I finish for a few minutes, so today when I finished the next pic in my series I took some time to write about it.
    So far I am not posting those texts anywhere, just practising writing, and I think this is helping take off some of the pressure.
    And the cool thing is, I actually like the text I came up with, although coming up with a good text was not part of the goal. I mean, it’s definitely imperfect, not really structured. More like a meditation on the subject. But in its own right, it is kind of a cool insight into the pic, so I’m actually contemplating sharing it when I finally post the picture.
    I think I will try to keep doing this, regardless of whether I end up posting the texts or not.

    Reply
    • Nancy McLennon says

      June 17, 2019 at 7:55 PM

      Great idea, thanks for sharing!

      Reply
  10. Robert Burcar says

    January 15, 2020 at 8:12 PM

    Amazing questions.. I really really enjoyed writing about my life as an artist and it was fun to get closer to the truth of who Iam and discover and rediscover some new thought provoking revelations. I’m loving this course!

    Reply

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  • How to Sell Your Art Online
    • 101: The Story of Your Art
      • HTYSAO 101: Introduction
      • Module 2 – Process Journaling
      • Module 3: Discovering Your Uniquity
      • Module 4: How to Tell Compelling Stories About Your Art
      • Module 5: Connecting Your Story to Your Collector
    • 201: Sales Funnels
      • Lesson 1: Blogging for Art Collectors
      • Lesson 2, part 1: Experiences
      • Lesson 2, part 2: Email Marketing Intro
      • Lesson 2, Part 3: Email Marketing Indoctrination Sequences
      • Lesson 3: Sketching Your Sales Funnel
      • Lesson 4, Part 1: Analytics & Tracking
      • Lesson 4, Part 2: Traffic Sources
    • 301: PR & Media Outreach
      • Lesson 1: Promotion Principles
      • Lesson 2: Finding Places to Pitch
      • Lesson 3: Getting Influencers to Share Your Work
      • Lesson 4: Make Images Sharable
    • Pre-2017 Students
    • Q&A Call Recordings

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