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Why has the huge $70 billion art market hasn’t joined the internet’s marketplace revolution

Why the $70 billion art market hasn’t joined the internet’s marketplace revolution

Inside the box: Art is where the home is - The Economic Times

 

The modern internet was built for marketplaces. Its emergence has led to the creation of large-scale marketplaces matching vacationers with homeowners (AirBNB), riders with drivers (Uber) and romantic partners with each other (Tinder).

You’d imagine that the fundamentals of this shift would apply to the craft market too, where an inefficient $70 billion market is waiting for an online company to help match work with empty walls. But it hasn’t happened yet. The hundreds of startups trying to solve this problem have struggled mightily, and just yesterday two well-funded tech companies went bankrupt.

Art startups fail not because sales don’t work on the internet (they can and will, and in some cases sorta do) but because founders and investors exercise bad judgement due to the strong emotions that it evokes. And while my company is not always perfect, I believe there’s a blueprint to fix the mistakes that will finally open this market . And when that happens, finding the perfect piece of art for your home, office or friend will be as easy as calling an Uber.

 

Art is Sexy

The human element of the industry plays a large role. It is sexy, and pervasive in pop culture, leading to bad decisions from startups that think making a splash is a long-term business strategy. When you have Kanye West, Eric Schmidt and Leonardo Dicaprio headlining the news, it’s no wonder that founders are drawn in like a moth to a flame. The intrigue leads them to spend lots of time and money on partnerships with the rich and famous, creating a flashy brand and trying to capture the cameras/Twitterati. These are all great ways to build hype, attention and followers. They are not ways to build a successful company.

Girl Paints Lips with Red Lipstick - Sexy Pop Art Painting Square - Art Prints by Tallenge Store | Buy Posters, Frames, Canvas & Digital Art Prints | Small, Compact, Medium and Large Variants

 

Focusing on Supply

The next big mistake these startups make is diving headlong into signing up throngs of artists and suppliers in an effort to quickly build supply. It is not your average marketplace industry. Too many founders assume, incorrectly, that art startups haven’t found success yet because the millions of talented people around the world have never been brought online successfully. I can’t count the number of times I have heard startup founder say “we are bringing artists online and democratizing the market” (hell, I think I said that when we started Indiewalls).

Why Everyone's Focusing on Supply Chain Transparency and What it Means

 

Following the Herd

So many founders look at other unsuccessful art startups and foolishly copy their model, forgetting the idea that “insanity is repeating the same process and expecting different results”. Founders need to stop repeating the exact same mistakes. They need to do thorough competitive analysis. It’s a huge cohort… there are almost double the number of startups as there are hotel startups according to AngelList. Point being, entrepreneurs need to be more creative to truly crack this nut.

 

Thinking Inside the Box

Lastly, these startups are often founded by “art insiders”. While industry experience can be an asset in other fields, in this case it can also be an achilles heel. This fine world is so traditional and insular that market experience often leads to in-the-box thinking. In my opinion, this market will be captured by people who can look at a 2D problem and present a 3D solution.

Thinking Inside the Box – Millcraft

My recommended solution? Find your target customer. Learn their problems inside and out. Then build products and experiences that fix them. Do not throw lots of money at the customer or over-saturate your community until you’ve charted a long-term course. None of this is super original in the tech world. But so many art companies have ignored this advice in our industry that it bears repeating.

More and more the public needs creativity to expand their minds and enhance their lives. Though it hasn’t happened yet, the internet will inevitably make access to this much easier. A successful marketplace will be difficult to build , but luckily the worst mistakes have already been made, clearing the way for the industry to learn and bring the works of millions of artists into our lives.

 

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This article is automatically sourced by automatic news feeds through online softwares, Inventiva team has not made any modifications and adjustments in the article and is published as it is after giving due credits to its original source.
 

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