• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
    • About Jessika Hepburn
      • Press/Publications
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Branding
    • Ethics
    • Health
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • Planning
  • Fellow Makers
    • Community
    • Interviews
    • Resources
  • For the Hands
    • DIY
    • Handmade Goodness
  • For the Head
  • For the Heart
    • 365 Days of Presence
Oh My! Handmade

Oh My! Handmade

Making a good life since 2010

How to Plan A Launch (& keep your lunch)

Thursday, April 12, 2012 by Jessika Hepburn

planning a successful launch day, plan the launch & keep your lunch

You have a grand idea you want to share and celebrate, but how? Selling often makes us feel icky-especially when we have poured our love and late nights into the finished product. Will anyone love it as much as we do? That question can keep us from loving our own launches if we’re caught up catching butterflies in our bellies and hyperventilating into a paper bag. I’ve been there! Launching is an awful lot like birthing-we wait in anticipation until the big day & then despite the fear we push or pull our way through to bring our baby into the world. Just like preparing for a baby or a big change planning your launch ahead of time will help keep you under control on the day of.

ARE YOU READY?

I waited over a year to launch my first product on OMHG and since then I have been part of many launches of my own and had the chance to join in on helping out some wonderful friends with theirs. I have learned a whole lot of what not to do through my own mistakes and I’m going to share some of this with you. There is nothing wrong with waiting until you have a good idea of what you want to launch, who you are launching to, and have at least a small community to help you celebrate. You don’t have to wait until everything is perfect but if you put in the time in advance to have a support base then your launch will of couse be more successful. So if you are just starting out and have 5 followers and one or two posts on your blog I suggest doing some more work building your offering first. Assuming you have already built a following and have people listening then you are ready to start planning the big launch.

MAKE IT A PARTY

A new baby is something to celebrate with others. Treat your launch like a party & plan it like one:

  • Set your launch date at least one month in advance.
  • Start letting people know about your big day!
  • 3 weeks before-send out invitations & invite your friends
  • Ask your best supporters to help spread the word
  • Get yourself a party dress! Or hat, or shoes, whatever-something that will make you feel all sparkly & excited.

DON’T DO IT ALONE

A successful launch is a team event-if you have a supportive team of cheerleaders there with you everything will be a lot more fun & a lot less stressful. I am lucky to always have my team of contributors, readers & #omhg friends to hold my hand on launch day. Make sure you identify who your supports are and ask them to be part of your launch team. Send them a write up about the launch or have them interview you or review your product. Bridgett of Perideau Designs did a great job of that with her new custom mouse pads! Check out her post by clicking above to see how she showcased testimonials & her product brilliantly.
http://www.bridgettedwards.com/2012/03/02/new-items-available-at-perideau-designs/

PLAN FOR SUCCESS

For the Cultivate Your Creativity launch I made the mistake of trying to parent both kids AND launch the big project in the middle of the day. This meant small children running around in various states of undress making a giant mess, a heap of noise & eating too many granola bars. The constant needing to switch gears to focus on them & on the launch was highly stressful. Don’t do this. For our upcoming Guide to Businessy Goodness launch I have planned for help the day before AND the day of so I can focus all my attention on the big day. Lessons learned!

Launch day party planner, planning a launch without loosing your lunch

Some other tips to help plan for success: 

  • Make a list of what you need to do the month before & for each week leading up to the launch
  • Write up a couple draft emails to send to your launch team & via newsletter etc.
  • Set up a separate mailing list to notify people about your launch-Mailchimp is awesome.
  • Start a separate launch day calendar to help you count down & stay on track
  • Don’t keep tweaking your product right up until launch day, give yourself AT LEAST 1 week with everything all wrapped up and ready to go.
  • Have your copy, images & posts written up and ready to send out before launch day.
  • On launch day clear everything from your schedule-give it your 100% attention!

SET REASONABLE EXPECTATIONS

Don’t go into your first launch expecting to sell a thousand copies/products/anything. Be happy with 10, or one! Try not to set yourself up for disappointment instead of success-then when you sell a thousand copies you will be humbled and full of joy, not ticked at yourself that you didn’t sell 1001.

At the same time allow yourself to let those crazy emotions-the fear, uncertainty, wild excitement, run through you. Just keep them in check by not letting them carry you away. This launching of our loves is powerful stuff and is bound to set your heart to racing (I know mine has been pounding a mile a minute since I announced the guide in January!).

POST-LAUNCH DEBRIEFING

You’ve gone to the moon and back + caught a few stars to bring home as reminders of your adventures. Now what? Take a couple days of to process it all then check back in to find out what worked/didn’t work. Catch those ideas while the whole experience is fresh in your mind but has also had a bit of time to settle. This last worksheet will help you grab those ideas before they are gone.

launch debrief, how to plan a launch and keep your lunch

Tell us about your launch day woes & wonders in the comments! There is nothing better then learning from others & what worked/didn’t work for them. Also be sure to hop on the Oh My! Guide to Businessy Goodness launch day party list-it’s going to be a blast;) 

 

Filed Under: Editor, Entrepreneurship, For the Head, Planning

Primary Sidebar

Articles

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

Mine-Mill organizers claimed that the first of four concerts, held at the Peace Arch in Blaine, WA, in 1952, attracted 40,000 admirers, mostly from the Canadian side of the border near Vancouver. Source: Pacific Tribune Archive.

On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance

New Year's Revolution, illustration of hands breaking free from shackles

A New Year’s Revolution

Go Do Some Great Thing, Lawrence Hill

Go Do Some Great Thing

Dr. Pauli Murray, "I intend to destroy segregation by positive and embracing methods. When my brothers try to draw a circle to exclude me, I shall draw a larger circle to include them." An American Credo

Draw a Larger Circle

Fellow Makers, young Italian immigrant garment worker in Brooklyn

#FellowMakers History & the Triangle Factory Fire

Seventy Ways to Build Community, Save Your Sanity, and Change the World

70 Ways to Build Community

Stop the Hustle | Oh My! Handmade

Stop the Hustle: On Slowing Down, Stepping Up & Paying Attention

Community Is Not Clubs: How We’re Segregating the Internet & What We Can Do

Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike

Categories

Read More

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)
  • Press Release: Concern over Changes to Etsy Values Leads to #EtsyStrike
  • Community Statements on Changes to Values at Etsy #etsystrike
  • CALL FOR COMMUNITY STATEMENTS: Do changes to values at Etsy matter to you?
  • Et Tu, Etsy? A call for fellow makers to strike.
  • A Thousand and One Reasons to Hope

Footer

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

In June of 2016 I supported my love Chris as we dealt with the death of both his parents and a co-worker over a three week period. This essay written the summer of those deaths is my attempt to make sense of grief and the struggle to carry all that I care for. Originally published […]

Archives

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Log in