#travelling from here to a show abroad in europe/us is straight up not affordable on a monthly paycheck
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yeah but when will I get to see blind channel without having to travel 10+ hours by plane? đ
#*cries in latin american*#travelling from here to a show abroad in europe/us is straight up not affordable on a monthly paycheck#and even if somehow they manage to tour here we wouldn't get another show in like 2 or 4 years or so#guess i'll just die idc
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Hey - Pat from StarterStory.com here with another interview.Today's interview is with Kelly Belknap of Adventurist Backpack Co., a brand that makes minimalist travel backpacksSome stats:Product: Minimalist Travel BackpacksRevenue/mo: $15,000Started: September 2017Location: DenverFounders: 2Employees: 0Hello! Who are you and what business did you start?My name is Kelly Belknap, and I co-founded Adventurist Backpack Co. along with my wife Matilda Sandstrom.We design minimalist backpacks for travel, and for every backpack purchased, 25 meals are provided to families in need across the U.S. (We do this through our partner Feeding America, providing meals to over 200 food banks across the country.)Our flagship product is our Adventurist Classic backpack, which is made as a daypack for travelers, hikers, students, and everyday use. Itâs padded front/back for electronics and completely weather-resistant for any adventure - and also fits perfectly underneath the seat of an airplane. We have the Adventurist Classic available in 6 colors, and have 2 new designs on the way which will be available on our website starting at the end of August.Since our launch 22 months ago, we have been able to provide nearly 100,000 meals to families in need. We currently have our backpacks sold in Urban Outfitters and eBags.com, as well as on our website and over 50 universities and boutique retailers across the country.imageCo-founders Kelly Belknap (right) and Matilda Sandstrom (left) traveling by train through Belgium.What's your backstory and how did you come up with the idea?We came up with the idea for Adventurist about 3 years ago when Matilda and I were 21 and 24 years old, respectively. Since Matilda is from Sweden, and Iâm from the U.S., we spend a lot of time traveling back and forth from North America to Europe (not to mention that we love to travel anywhere whenever we get a chance.) This means that a good backpack for us is an essential.We are both fans of Scandinavian minimalist design, and I loved the style of all of the backpacks we saw people wearing in Sweden, as well as Denmark, Finland, and Norway. They werenât just a tool to carry your stuff around in, but also a fashion accessory in which you could accentuate your personal style - and most importantly make your outfit look even better by wearing a backpack, not worse.Sometimes you just donât need 2 million zippers/pockets and bright neon colors.After returning to the U.S. from one of our trips abroad, we decided that we wanted to make a backpack that we couldnât seem to find anywhere across the country. We wanted to design a fashionable, high-quality, and affordable backpack for less than $100. Since most of the fashionable/well-built backpacks we found were upwards of $150-$300, we knew that there had to be other people like us that wanted something good looking and with high quality, weather-resistant fabric, that wouldnât cost the same amount as a plane ticket itself.This is when we started sketching out our designs for the first Adventurist Classic, a backpack that would blend the styles of Sweden (Matildaâs home) and Colorado (my home). It would be a simple and high-quality backpack with 2 pockets, 2 zippers, and a laptop sleeve. We had no prior experience in design, being fresh out of high-school (Matilda) and college (me) but we sat down with a piece of graph paper and a little pencil from IKEA, and started drawing away. The design that you can find on our website and at Urban Outfitters is the same as the one that we drew on that graph paper, before we even knew that we would start a company.We also knew that if we were going to start a company, we wanted to integrate giving back as a key pillar of our business model. On one of our early trips abroad, we would go by the grocery store each morning and buy food to pack into individual meals, and then stuff them into our backpacks. While we were out exploring each day, we would then hand these meals out to anyone that we saw who was in need. We wanted to spread kindness and thought that sharing a meal would be a good way to let others know that there are people out there who care about them.When we came up with the idea for our backpacks, we thought back to this trip and thought that we could continue providing meals from our backpacks even while we werenât traveling. During our trip we were able to fit about 25 individually packed meals in our big backpacking backpacks, and today we still provide 25 meals for every backpack sold.At this time, our financial situation was basically that of college graduates scraping by while we were figuring out what we wanted to do with our lives. We had just gotten married and our budget was basically non-existent. I worked in the receiving warehouse for Barnes and Noble and Matilda worked as a retail employee for Banana Republic. We had about $3000 that we had saved up that went towards starting the company, as well as a $4000 investment from my parents. This $7000 total we ended up using to set up a website and order our first round of several hundred backpacks. We had no idea what we were doing and how we were going to get the word out about our new company, let alone if anyone would even like our backpack designs. But we decided to move forward with the idea and start an Instagram account, the only free way we could think of advertising our new brand.Take us through the process of designing, prototyping, and manufacturing your first product.As mentioned above, we had no previous product design experience, so everything was pretty âlearn-as-we-goâ.Weâre not the kind of people who feel that everything has to be planned out perfectly - I personally feel that you kind of have to jump into things before youâre ready because the only way to truly learn something is by actually doing it.After our designs were completed, we sent them around to about 4 or 5 different manufacturers that we found via Alibaba.com, which is a great place to start for anyone looking to manufacture a product.After getting back a few samples, we settled on one factory that had a similar vision as us, was able to provide us with high-quality materials, and also upheld the highest certifications and standards for working conditions and environmental impact.imageAs soon as we had a final sample made that we were completely satisfied with, we went ahead and placed an order for several hundred backpacks of our first design.We soon realized that an order of this size would not be delivered straight to our doorstep (a.k.a. The moment we learned about sea-freight, customs agents, freight forwarding, etc.) This was a really big learning moment for us, and having to work through all of this ourselves better educated us on the entire process from design and production, to shipping and receiving.We were in awe the first time a huge 18-wheel semi-truck stopped in front of my parents house to drop off our first shipment of backpacks.Describe the process of launching the business.Besides designing our product and figuring out logistics, creating our website was the biggest process for us. Since we were planning to start out with only web sales, this was to be our main method of selling backpacks and showing our new brand off to the world.We opted to use Shopify, a great resource for any business selling things online, to design our own website. Shopifyâs basic plan costs only $30 or so a month, and provides you with everything you need to print shipping labels, accept all kinds of payment, and track metrics regarding users and sales.We had our Instagram set up about 2 months before launching our company, and tried our best to âhype upâ our new brand and the backpacks that we still didnât even have photos of. We did this by taking photos of the sample backpack that we did have along our travels through South America and Europe prior to officially launching the business. We wanted to create an Instagram account that inspired the love of travel and adventure, and were able to gain about 500 loyal followers by the time we launched on Sept. 1, 2017.The day that we launched, we were happily surprised to see that along with our friends and family who ordered backpacks as soon as the website went live, we were also getting a few orders from people we didnât know - real customers. We attributed this to our social media presence on Instagram and decided that we would double down on this method of free marketing to hopefully gain a continuous stream of customers. This was also exciting because it was starting to validate our vision as well as our product, which we had not pre-tested in the market before launching. It was definitely a relief and a big motivator that we were on the right track.About a week into being a company, we received a message on Instagram from a retailer in Montana with 6 locations that wanted to order 100 of our backpacks. As this was a big percentage of all of the backpacks we currently had on hand, we were super excited, and even a little skeptical about this actually happening. We had not previously thought at all about having our backpacks IN store, as we planned to sell only via our website. After a few seconds of disbelief, we decided that we would absolutely sell them 100 backpacks at wholesale price, and ended up driving a car full of backpacks up to Montana from Colorado the following weekend. The experience left us excited, and proved to be a useful lesson in staying flexible, and being able to say âyesâ to opportunities that pop up. Without much of a game plan, it allowed us to be fluid in our decision making for the company and figure out along the way what works and what doesnât.Since launch, what has worked to attract and retain customers?We have bootstrapped our entire first 2 years, and plan on continuing to do this for the foreseeable future.We have doubled down on social media and free press to gain attention and market our company. We spend a good amount of time creating high quality content on Instagram to share with followers, as well as doing giveaways and other contests. We also try to send out a monthly email newsletter thatâs actually fun to read - not just touting the deal of the day.Besides Instagram and our email newsletter, weâve been fortunate enough to gain press and feature articles from Forbes, Travel Channel, Fast Company, ABC, CBS, etc. This has really helped in our search for retailers, as they know that we are doing our best to get our name out there. The name of the game is email, email, email. Send emails to everyone (read: send very well written, conscientious, and to-the-point emails).Since we have nothing to lose, we have emailed writers from TIME Magazine, USA Today, New York Times, and other world class publications in order to gain press or gain contact with someone that we can pitch ideas to in the future. We have also emailed buyers of national and international retailers such as REI, Nordstrom, Urban Outfitters, Journeys, etc. - which is how we eventually ended up getting our backpacks into Urban Outfitters.The moral of the story is that there are tons of creative ways to advertise and market your business without spending much money at all - you just have to be open to possibility and look in the places that others arenât.How are you doing today and what does the future look like?Though we donât give out specific financial details, we can say that our company has been profitable since day one. This is due to bootstrapping, and not spending money that we donât have. Our only costs are the backpacks themselves (along with customs, taxes, etc.), our website, shipping costs, minimal FB and IG advertisements, and a MailChimp subscription. Everything else we do âby handâ.We still sell mainly on our website (about 50%), but accounts with Urban Outfitters, boutique retailers, as well as universities such as the University of Oregon, Colorado State University, University of Wisconsin, etc. have grown our sales on the retail side of things lately (40%). We also occasionally sell backpacks for large corporate events (4-5 a year), such as for Googleâs International Womenâs Day conference this year, which accounted for several hundred backpacks in one order (10%).We plan on keeping a healthy balance of web sales, retail, and event sales in the future, and hope to expand to even more states and countries in the coming months. We would love to have our backpacks in every state by the end of our 3rd year in business, as well as in my wifeâs home country of Sweden.Through starting the business, have you learned anything particularly helpful or advantageous?In starting a business, especially with no prior experience, the entire process is a learning opportunity. The biggest general tips that I have learned and can give are to take calculated risks, be flexible, and be friendly.We have found a lot of luck in simply reaching out to people that we think we have no chance of ever actually talking to. If you have something of good value to offer someone else (especially if you can do it without asking for anything in return) - even if they are busy, high-up, famous, etc. - they will want to hear from you.I also believe that grit is the name of the game. If youâve come up with an idea that people like, and that can help people, while making the world a better place - youâve already won half the battle. All thatâs needed is to wake up, get creative, get to work, and keep on going. There have been so many stressful times in our first 22 months, as well as plenty of mistakes; but as long as you learn from each setback, and grind it out through the rough patches, thereâs no reason why a business canât be successful. Thatâs our plan at least, and weâre certain it will work out in the long run.What platform/tools do you use for your business?We use Shopify for all of our website, analytics, shipping, and selling needs.We do everything from scratch on social media (Instagram and Facebook), and use MailChimp for our email newsletter creation.We believe in a DIY approach to cut down on costs at the beginning, while possible. Of course there are different scenarios for every business, but if at all possible, itâs great to be able to know how to run everything yourself in case of emergency - and letâs be honest - most companies arenât so busy in their first few months that you HAVE to automate or delegate every single task. Learn to do it yourself, so that when the time comes, you can more responsibly pass off certain tasks.What have been the most influential books, podcasts, or other resources?The podcast How I Built This is a super inspirational show that takes a look at how the founders of the worldâs largest brands created their companies. You can learn what it took to build these brands, as well as the setbacks and problems the founders had to endure to make it to the top.Another podcast Masters of Scale is a similar idea, but done in a slightly different, more story-telling approach. The host of this podcast is Reid Hoffman, the founder of LinkedIn, so he has tons of experience and knowledge himself on what it takes to build a company and succeed.My 3 favorite books (that I would suggest for aspiring business owners) are:Shoe Dog by Phil Knight,The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho, andTrust Me Iâm Lying by Ryan Holiday.Shoe Dog is the autobiography by Phil Knight, the founder of Nike. This story is valuable in the information he provides about everything from how he got started selling another brandâs shoes, to designing his own, and the making of Nikeâs iconic âSwooshâ logo. Itâs also possibly the most inspiring book that Iâve read thus far regarding business.The Alchemist might not be for everyone - but itâs my favorite book of all time, and I think itâs an incredible story about following your dreams and your heart, and not letting anything get in the way of your ultimate goal and fulfilling your true purpose in life. I might make it sound more hippy-dippy than it really is, so just go find a copy and check it out for yourself. Itâs super famous for a good reason.Trust Me Iâm Lying by Ryan Holiday is the book that has impacted me the most as far a concrete value and steps that you can take to get media exposure for your business. Contrary to the name, this book is not actually about lying, but about becoming a great storyteller, and learning how to get in contact with people that are able to spread your story far and wide across the expanse of the internet (and other more old-fashioned mediums). For anyone that has just started a company and is looking to get the word out, do yourself a favor and read this.Advice for other entrepreneurs who want to get started or are just starting out?Just do it. Thereâs never a perfect time to start a business, so best to just jump in and start swimming. The worst that can happen is a learning experience, a great story, and an even better adventure.Are you looking to hire for certain positions right now?At the moment, we are not hiring for any specific positions, but we encourage anyone who is interested in joining the Adventurist team to send an email/resume to hello (at) adventuristbackpacks.com. Thanks guys!Where can we go to learn more?www.adventuristbackpacks.comInstagram - @adventuristbackpacksFacebookIf you have any questions or comments, drop a comment below!Liked this text interview? Check out the full interview with photos, tools, books, and other data.For more interviews, check out r/starter_story - I post new stories there daily.Interested in sharing your own story? Send me a PM
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American Shithole #20 â Vacations, Part One: Camping Is For Masochists
By Eric Wilson
This is as good a week as any to introduce my series on vacationing: American style. The president has been overseas; leaving rotten chum in his filthy wake for allies and enemies alike. At least he gave us all a break here domestically from our daily mouthful, I suppose.
My good friend and housemate just returned from two weeks in Iceland, Scandinavia, Europe and Russia, while I have been dog sitting on what was supposed to be a staycation for me (it wasnât) â providing more than enough material for future articles on the topic.
Part Two of this series is a piece I wrote before American Shithole. It was to be my first feature for Literate Ape; one in which I found myself on a miserable LA weekend getaway for an Eric Clapton show. Unfortunately, the night before I submitted my draft some asshole murdered 58 people at an outdoor concert just down the street from where I live, and I didnât feel it was an appropriate time to share that story.
In fact, I slid into a funk that week, and I hardly interacted with anyone for a while. A few months later Trump called Haiti and unspecified African nations âshitholeâ countries, my inner fury was rekindled, and American Shithole was born.
So I will be returning periodically to this series that never got off the ground. It was always my intention to write a few pieces on the American vacation. I know it's a boon for comedy. Holiday travel is a goldmine for humor in general; in my case, even more so because I truly suck at vacationing, and terrible things always happen.
Staycations â if I am to judge them by the last two weeks â have me faring only slightly better.
The good news is: things are looking up, baby! This was my least disastrous vacation (okay, staycation) yet, even though I slept fitfully, had only a very limited amount of fun, and as expected, terrible things still happened (even though I stayed at home), I still feel like it was a success. More on this later.Â
If youâre wondering how itâs possible that a mostly unpleasant staycation was my best vacation ever, itâs because my experience with vacations includes heavy hitters like suicide, sickness, hurricanes and other natural disasters, being thrown off a bridge embankment â and camping, which Iâm sorry outdoor aficionados, but camping is just the worst.
I am convinced that folks that choose to go camping over a plethora of other vacation destinations â sunny beaches, moonlit resorts, islands with sexy people, places with people of any kind, coordinates that include a nearby lavatory, locations that aren't teeming with wildlife looking to eat you, etc. â those people are fucking closeted masochists. Here is how many times you should go camping in your life: one-half of one time. You should attempt to sleep on rocks, in a damp tent, with a wet blanket, soaked shoes â like some sort of cold burrito for bears â hungry, exhausted and homesick, just one-half of once. Then pack up in the middle of the night, drive home, and never look back.
In my lifetime I have been camping roughly a score of times. Thatâs twenty, millennials. (Well why didnât you just say twenty then, fuckface?)
While I cherish the time with my father (an avid, well-respected angler and outdoorsman), and I do genuinely love the remoteness and beauty of the wilderness, I have camped nineteen and one-half times too many in this life.
I assume I have never taken to vacationing as an adult, at least in part due to my experiences on vacations as a kid; which were at times awful. Or perhaps just some of it was traumatic, and that is all that I remember.
On one of the first camping trips I can recall I was eight years old, and while we were in the Grand Tetons the mother of my best friend at the time committed suicide. She shot herself while her son and I were camping together. I'm still haunted by that quiet drive home. I canât imagine being my father and having to tell a child his mother was gone. I canât possibly fathom what that was like for my friend.
That event set the tone for every subsequent camping trip over the next forty years.
I have been on trips that didnât involve camping; although only a handful. I have taken one cruise back in the nineties â we were hit by a hurricane. The captain made a late decision to turn the ship around and head back to LA, missing our ports of call, Puerto Vallarta, MazatlĂĄn, and Cabo San Lucas. Half the ship was throwing up for hours as the swells throttled that behemoth vessel like it was a tug boat in a bathtub with a fat, unruly toddler.
I have never forgotten the generous 25% discount offered by Carnival on our next Carnival cruise adventure, as compensation. Thank you Carnival Cruise Lines, I will never stop telling people of your boundless generosity â I hope you donât mind that I roll my fucking eyes every time that I do.
On my next vacation (other than sporadic wilderness treks whereupon I fall into rivers, catch zero trout, or get bitten by nasty critters) I spent a month in Belgium, France and Spain during the summer of 2001. I picked up a lung infection on the flight over that dogged me the entire trip. I also fell asleep shirtless on the beaches of Biarritz, after not running with the bulls in Pamplona â probably one of the few smart moves I made. I got drunker than my normal drunkenness to ease the pain of my scorched backside, and somehow managed to offend a tiny British woman; who subsequently shoved me off a bridge.
Besides a brief sojourn in Dublin shortly after 9/11, I havenât been back to Europe since â or anywhere else of note for that matter. Except camping of course, I have heartily not enjoyed plenty of camping.
I was also taken to Disney World by my mom as a young lad. I cried on the roller coaster, so she took me on the Tea Cups. I cried on the Tea Cups. Â
I found out much later in life that my vacations â the majority of which involved camping, I think Iâve mentioned already â were not the vacations my friends from later on in life enjoyed when they were kids. The key word here is enjoyed.
They traveled to exotic places that offered not only luxuries such as food and lodging, but culture and entertainment.
I stared at trees.
My European friends seem to have it all sorted as well. They enjoy paid holiday at least twice a year for as long as they can remember â to wonderful destinations all over the world. Yes, that European socialism sounds like a real nightmare.
Yet, before this bit of light entertainment is taken as some sort of whingeing by my friends at home and abroad, I would like to mention that I am very thankful to have had any holiday trips at all â as I know millions have never been afforded a single vacation in their entire lives.
Except camping, but I have made the case that camping doesnât count.
We can all agree, right? That camping doesnât count?
Itâs not a vacation if what you are doing is indistinguishable from survival training. Preparing for the coming apocalypse by eating baked beans straight out of a can is not a vacation.
That being said, I have a feeling staycations are the vacations I will look forward to in the future, until it is time that I shuffle off this mortal coil. I am fine with that, although wary that the comedic arc of my creative endeavors will suffer. Granted, this staycation over the last few weeks was rough â and I will get to that story someday soon â but at least I was home.
I donât know what it is about travel, but I never seem to enjoy myself the way it seems everyone else does on vacation. How about you, dear reader, are your holidays all they're cracked up to be?
On a more somber note, I watched a lot of Parts Unknown this past weekend â I imagine quite a few of us did â and I would like to take a moment to honor one of humanityâs great travelers, Anthony Bourdain. I looked up to Anthony. He had suffered, he was honest, he had integrity. I had always hoped that one day I would be able to call him my friend. As a writer, entertainer, culinary master and cultural ambassador for the world, he was peerless.
Bon voyage, Mr. Bourdain â you will be missed.
B.S. Report
Two of the families of the Parkland student activists were Swatted last week. If you donât know what Swatting is, thatâs when someone calls in a phony emergency â usually involving imminent danger â whereby a SWAT team is deployed to an unsuspecting household, in hopes that they will shoot innocent people accidentally.
So yeah, thatâs what conservative gun-loving fuckheads would wish upon the surviving family members that dared to stand up to the NRA. Trumpâs base truly is a festering hive of dickless cowards, with no sense of compassion or empathy, and nothing but shit for brains.
4LWjr.
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