How to Start a Print on Demand Sticker Business: Step-by-Step from Zero to First Sale
Share
You've got the idea. You've seen other people doing it—selling stickers online, building small brands from their bedrooms, turning doodles into dollars. You want in. But every time you sit down to actually start, you hit a wall of questions. What do I sell? Where do I sell it? How much does it cost? Do I need a website? What if nobody buys anything?
Here's the truth: starting a sticker business in 2026 is genuinely one of the lowest-risk, lowest-cost ways to start selling physical products online. You don't need a warehouse. You don't need thousands of dollars. You don't even need to be a professional artist. What you need is a clear plan—and that's exactly what this guide gives you.
We're walking through every single step, from choosing what to sell to getting your first order. No fluff. No vague advice. Just the playbook.
Part 3 of The Print on Demand Playbook — a 14-part series on building a successful custom print business. Catch up on Part 1: What Is Print on Demand? or Part 2: POD vs Bulk Ordering if you're joining us mid-series.
Why Starting a Sticker Business in 2026 Is a Smart Move
Before we get into the how, let's talk about the why—because the timing genuinely matters.
The Barrier to Entry Is Almost Non-Existent
You can start a sticker business with as little as $20. That's not an exaggeration. With a print on demand model, you're not buying inventory—you're uploading designs and paying only when someone orders. Your startup costs break down to:
- Design tools (free to $20/month for Canva Pro or Procreate)
- A sample order to verify quality ($5-15)
- Maybe an Etsy listing fee ($0.20 per listing)
That's it. Compare that to a traditional retail business where you'd need $500-$5,000 in inventory before making a single sale.
The Market Is Growing, Not Slowing
Custom stickers and personalized products are booming. The global print on demand market is projected to exceed $39 billion by 2031, and stickers represent one of the fastest-growing categories. Consumers—especially Gen Z and Millennials—actively seek unique, small-batch products over mass-produced alternatives. Personalization isn't a trend anymore; it's an expectation.
Multiple Revenue Streams Are Possible
A sticker business isn't just "sell stickers on the internet." Once you're set up, you can expand into:
- Custom cards and stationery
- Magnetic bookmarks for the book community
- Sticker sheets for planners and journalers
- Scratch cards for business promotions
- B2B branded materials for small businesses
- Artist collaborations where you split revenue
- Wedding and event favors
- Corporate swag and promotional items
One platform, one set of skills, many product types.
It Fits Around Your Life
This isn't an all-or-nothing venture. The most successful sticker businesses start as side projects—created on evenings and weekends alongside a full-time job. With POD handling production and fulfillment, your actual time commitment is design and marketing. You can scale up or dial back depending on your schedule and goals.
Step 1: Choose Your Niche
This is where most beginners either overthink it or skip it entirely. Both are mistakes.
Why Niche Matters
"Stickers" is not a niche. It's a product category. Trying to sell generic stickers to everyone means competing with thousands of established sellers on price alone. A niche gives you a specific audience, a clear design direction, and a way to stand out.
Popular Sticker Niches in 2026
| Niche | Target Audience | Example Products |
|---|---|---|
| Fandom & pop culture | Fans of shows, games, bands | Character art, quotes, inside jokes |
| Humor & memes | Social media-savvy buyers | Funny quotes, relatable moments, internet culture |
| Motivation & self-care | Students, professionals, wellness | Affirmations, habit trackers, inspirational quotes |
| Nature & outdoors | Hikers, gardeners, eco-conscious | Botanical illustrations, wildlife, landscapes |
| Corporate & productivity | Entrepreneurs, remote workers | Laptop decals, desk accessories, team swag |
| Wedding & events | Couples, planners, party hosts | Custom favors, invitation seals, thank-you stickers |
| Educational | Teachers, parents, students | Reward stickers, subject-themed, classroom decor |
| Pet & animal | Pet owners, animal lovers | Breed-specific, funny pet quotes, custom pet portraits |
| Food & drink | Foodies, coffee lovers, bakers | Café aesthetics, ingredient art, recipe stickers |
| Travel & adventure | Backpackers, digital nomads | City skylines, travel quotes, country outlines |
The Passion + Profit Framework
Here's how to pick your niche without overthinking it:
- List 3-5 topics you genuinely care about. Things you'd create content about even if nobody paid you.
- Research demand for each. Search Etsy, Instagram hashtags, Google Trends. Are people already buying in this space? That's a good sign—it means the market exists.
- Find the gap. Look at what's already available. What's missing? What could be better? Where is the competition thin?
- Overlap passion with profit. The best niche sits at the intersection of "I love making this" and "people will pay for this."
Validating Your Niche
Before committing to a niche, do a quick validation check:
- Search volume: Use free tools like Google Trends, Etsy search suggestions, or Pinterest search. Type your niche idea and see if autocomplete suggests it (that means people are searching).
- Competition check: Search your niche on Etsy and Instagram. Competition existing is good—it proves demand. No competition at all might mean no market.
- Community size: Are there Facebook groups, Subreddits, or Discord servers for your niche? Active communities mean passionate buyers.
- Price tolerance: Look at what similar stickers sell for. If everything in your niche is priced at $2, you'll struggle. If people are paying $4-6 per sticker, there's margin to work with.
You don't need months of research. Spend 2-3 hours on this and move on. You can always pivot later.
Step 2: Create or Source Your Designs
Your designs are your product. This is where the magic happens—or where people freeze up. Don't.
Creating Your Own Art
You don't need to be Picasso. Some of the best-selling stickers are simple typography, minimalist line art, or clever phrases. Tools that make design accessible:
- Procreate ($13, iPad) — The gold standard for hand-drawn digital art. Natural-feeling brushes, intuitive interface.
- Canva (free or $13/month Pro) — Drag-and-drop design with thousands of templates. Perfect for typography-heavy stickers and beginners.
- Adobe Illustrator ($23/month) — Professional vector design. Best for clean, scalable artwork and logo-style stickers.
- Figma (free) — Browser-based design tool. Great for layout and typography work.
- Photoshop ($23/month) — For photo-based designs, collages, and detailed illustration work.
The golden rule: Create at 300 DPI resolution with a transparent background (PNG format) for sticker printing. This ensures crisp, clean results.
Using Design Templates and Resources
Not every design needs to be original from scratch. You can use:
- Font pairings to create typography stickers (check font licenses for commercial use)
- Public domain illustrations as bases for your designs
- Design element packs (shapes, textures, patterns) from Creative Market or Design Cuts
- Color palette generators like Coolors to create cohesive design collections
Commissioning Artists
If design isn't your strength, partner with someone whose strength it is. This is the model behind The Potato Club's Artist Collaboration Series—artists create, the business handles everything else.
You can find artists on:
- Instagram and Twitter art communities
- Fiverr and Upwork for commissioned work
- Local art schools and illustration programs
- Artist collaboration groups on Facebook and Discord
Key considerations:
- Always use a written agreement covering usage rights, payment terms, and exclusivity
- Clarify whether you're buying the design outright or licensing it
- Budget $20-100 per design for quality custom artwork
- Look for artists whose style matches your niche
Design Copyright Basics
This is important. Getting a cease-and-desist letter is not a fun first-sale celebration.
You CAN create and sell:
- Original artwork and illustrations you created
- Original phrases, quotes, and slogans you wrote
- Designs inspired by general concepts (e.g., "coffee lover" aesthetic)
- Parodies and transformative works (with limitations)
You CANNOT use without permission:
- Disney characters, Marvel heroes, anime characters (owned by companies)
- Protected brand logos and trademarks (Nike, Starbucks, etc.)
- Other artists' designs copied or closely imitated
- Song lyrics, movie quotes, or book excerpts (copyrighted text)
- Celebrity likenesses for commercial use
When in doubt, create original work. It's safer, more authentic, and ultimately more valuable because nobody else can sell it.
Step 3: Choose Your POD Partner
Your POD provider is your production partner. Choose wisely—quality, reliability, and pricing directly affect your brand reputation and profit margins.
What to Look For
| Factor | Why It Matters | What to Check |
|---|---|---|
| Product quality | Your brand depends on it | Order samples before selling |
| Pricing | Determines your margins | Compare per-unit costs across providers |
| Minimum order quantity | Affects how you test designs | Lower MOQs = more flexibility |
| Turnaround time | Customer satisfaction depends on speed | 2-3 days is excellent; 2+ weeks is a problem |
| Shipping options | Your customers may be global | International shipping capability is essential |
| Product range | More products = more revenue streams | Stickers, cards, bookmarks, sheets |
| Customer support | Issues will arise | Responsive, helpful support saves your reputation |
Why The Potato Club Works for Starters
For new sticker businesses, The Potato Club offers specific advantages:
- Low minimums — Start with as few units as you need. No forced bulk orders.
- Pricing from $2.00 SGD for die-cut stickers and $0.16 SGD for kiss-cut stickers — Competitive rates that leave room for healthy margins.
- 2-3 day production — Fast enough for time-sensitive launches and events.
- International shipping from Singapore — Sell to customers worldwide without logistics headaches.
- Full product range — Die-cut stickers, kiss-cut stickers, sticker sheets, custom cards, magnetic bookmarks, scratch cards. Expand your catalog without switching providers.
- Artist collaboration program — If you're an artist who doesn't want to deal with business logistics, TPC handles production, fulfillment, and shipping while you earn from every sale.
Comparing Your Options
Don't just go with the first provider you find. Order samples from 2-3 providers and compare:
- Print quality (color accuracy, sharpness, vibrancy)
- Material quality (durability, water resistance, finish)
- Cut precision (clean edges, accurate shapes)
- Packaging (professional presentation matters for customer experience)
- Pricing (total cost including shipping to your key markets)
A $0.50 difference per sticker might seem small until you're selling 500 per month.
Step 4: Set Up Your Storefront
Time to pick where you sell. You have options—and you don't have to pick just one.
Etsy: The Default Starting Point
Pros:
- Built-in audience of millions of active buyers
- People go to Etsy specifically to find stickers
- Easy setup with minimal technical knowledge
- Built-in payment processing and seller protections
Cons:
- Transaction fees (6.5% + payment processing fees)
- High competition in sticker categories
- Limited branding control
- Algorithm changes can tank your visibility overnight
Setup basics:
- Create an Etsy account and open a shop
- Choose a memorable shop name that reflects your niche
- Upload your product listings with great photos and descriptions
- Set competitive pricing (research what similar shops charge)
- Enable international shipping or use a POD provider that ships direct
Shopify: When You're Ready to Level Up
Shopify gives you a fully branded store with complete control. It's worth considering when:
- You're generating consistent monthly sales on Etsy
- You want to build an email list and own your customer relationships
- You need more sophisticated analytics and marketing tools
- You're investing seriously in your brand
Cost: Starting at $39/month. Only worth it when you have enough volume to justify the expense.
Social Media Selling
- Instagram Shops — Tag products in posts and stories. Your followers can buy without leaving the app.
- TikTok Shop — Massive reach potential, especially for visual products like stickers. Short-form video of your design process or product showcases can drive serious traffic.
- Facebook Marketplace & Shops — Good for local sales and community-based selling.
Local Markets and In-Person Sales
Don't overlook physical sales channels. Pop-up markets, craft fairs, and local events are excellent for:
- Building a local customer base
- Getting real-time feedback on your designs
- Practicing your sales pitch
- Making cash sales without shipping costs or platform fees
For this, you'll need physical stock—perfect for a small bulk order from The Potato Club.
Step 5: Create Your First Product Listing
Your listing is your storefront, your salesperson, and your first impression—all in one. Here's how to make it count.
Product Photography Tips (Even With a Phone)
You don't need a DSLR camera. A smartphone with decent quality and good lighting is enough.
The basics:
- Shoot in natural daylight (near a window, not direct sunlight)
- Use a clean, uncluttered background (white poster board works great)
- Show the sticker on something — a laptop, water bottle, notebook, phone case. Context sells.
- Include a close-up showing detail and cut quality
- Add a size reference (coin, ruler, or hand) so customers know the actual dimensions
- Take 5-8 photos per listing to cover different angles and use cases
Editing: Use free apps like Snapseed or Lightroom Mobile to adjust brightness, contrast, and white balance. Don't over-filter—you want the product to look like it does in real life.
Writing Descriptions That Sell
Your description should answer every question a buyer might have before they have to ask it. Structure it like this:
- Opening hook — One sentence about what the sticker is and who it's for
- Product details — Size, material, finish, waterproof rating
- Use ideas — Where to stick it (laptop, water bottle, planner, etc.)
- Shipping info — Production time, delivery estimate, international availability
- Call to action — Invite them to check out related designs or bundle deals
Example:
A waterproof die-cut sticker for the coffee-obsessed. This hand-lettered "But First, Coffee" design is printed on premium vinyl with a matte finish—perfect for your laptop, hydro flask, or planner. Measures 2.5" x 1.8". Ships in 2-3 business days from Singapore, worldwide delivery available.
Pricing Your First Products
Here's a simple pricing formula for stickers:
Retail Price = (Production Cost × 2.5) to (Production Cost × 4)
| Your Cost | Retail Price Range | Margin Per Sale |
|---|---|---|
| $0.50 | $1.25 - $2.00 | $0.75 - $1.50 |
| $1.00 | $2.50 - $4.00 | $1.50 - $3.00 |
| $2.00 | $5.00 - $8.00 | $3.00 - $6.00 |
Factors that justify higher pricing:
- Unique, original artwork (not templates or common phrases)
- Premium materials (holographic, waterproof vinyl)
- Strong brand identity and loyal audience
- Niche markets with less competition
- Bundled sets and collections
Don't race to the bottom on price. A $3 sticker and a $5 sticker both require the same amount of effort to sell—but the $5 sticker gives you breathing room for discounts, bundles, and promotions.
SEO for Sticker Listings
Help customers find you by optimizing for search:
- Title: Include your primary keyword + descriptive terms ("Coffee Sticker — Funny Barista Die-Cut Vinyl Waterproof Laptop Decal")
- Tags: Use all available tag slots with relevant keywords (coffee, barista, laptop sticker, vinyl, waterproof, gift for coffee lover)
- Description: Naturally include keywords in sentences, not stuffed lists
- Categories: Pick the most specific category available
Think about how you would search for your sticker. Use those exact words.
Step 6: Market and Get Your First Sale
Your listing is live. Now comes the part that separates sticker sellers from sticker collectors: marketing.
Leverage Your Existing Network
Your first sale will probably come from someone you know—and that's perfectly fine. Every business starts somewhere.
- Share your shop on your personal social media. Not a hard sell—a genuine "hey, I made this thing, I'm proud of it, check it out if you want."
- Ask friends and family to share your listing with their networks
- Join communities related to your niche and participate authentically (don't just spam links)
- Send a few free samples to people who'll genuinely use them and share them
Content Ideas for Launch
You don't need a content strategy—you need content. Here are ideas to get started:
- Design process videos — Time-lapse of you creating the sticker from sketch to final art
- Unboxing and quality showcase — Show the finished product, demonstrate the die-cut, test the waterproof claim
- "Where I'd stick this" series — Place your stickers on different surfaces (laptop, water bottle, car, journal)
- Behind-the-scenes — Show how you package orders, choose designs, or pick your niche
- Customer spotlights — When you get your first sales, ask buyers to share photos (with permission)
Short-form video (TikTok, Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts) is king for product discovery in 2026. Prioritize video over static posts.
First-Sale Strategies
Want to accelerate that first sale? Try these:
- Introductory pricing — Launch at 20-30% off for the first week. Early buyers feel like they got a deal; you get your first sales and reviews.
- Bundle offers — "Buy 3, get 1 free" or "Sticker bundle: 5 for $12." Increases average order value and creates perceived savings.
- Launch giveaway — "Follow + tag a friend to win a sticker pack." Builds your audience and creates buzz. Cost: a few stickers and shipping.
- Limited edition framing — "First 20 orders get an exclusive bonus sticker." Creates urgency and rewards early supporters.
Step 7: Fulfill Orders and Build Systems
The first sale feels incredible. The tenth sale feels like momentum. The hundredth sale feels like a system. Let's build that system.
How POD Fulfillment Works With The Potato Club
Here's the flow once a customer places an order on your store:
- You receive the order through your storefront (Etsy, Shopify, etc.)
- You place the production order with The Potato Club, using your customer's shipping address
- TPC produces the item in 2-3 business days
- TPC ships directly to your customer — they never need to know about the production step
- You keep the margin between what the customer paid and what production + shipping cost
Some sellers choose to receive the stickers first and re-ship them to add personal touches (thank-you notes, branded packaging, bonus stickers). Others prefer direct shipping for speed and convenience. Both approaches work—pick what fits your brand.
Customer Service Basics
Good customer service isn't complicated—it's consistent.
- Respond within 24 hours to any message or inquiry
- Be honest about timelines — don't over-promise on shipping
- Fix problems proactively — if a print quality issue arises, offer a replacement before the customer escalates
- Set clear policies — shipping times, returns, exchanges, custom order terms
- Keep records — track every order, every issue, every resolution
Your first few customers are the most important. Treat them like gold. Their reviews will sell your next hundred orders.
Tracking and Learning From Your First Sales
After your first 10-20 sales, you'll have data worth analyzing:
- Which designs sold first? These are your early winners. Make more like them.
- Where did customers come from? Instagram? Etsy search? A specific post? Double down on what's working.
- What's your average order value? If it's $3-4, consider bundles to raise it to $8-12.
- Did anyone buy multiple designs? This signals collectible interest—create sticker sheets or themed sets.
- What feedback did you get? Product quality comments, packaging reactions, requests for specific designs.
Track this in a simple spreadsheet. You don't need fancy analytics tools yet—just consistent observation.
A Realistic Timeline: From Zero to First Sale
Here's what a realistic launch timeline looks like. Not accelerated, not aspirational—just honest.
WEEK 1: Foundation
├── Day 1-2: Choose your niche and research the market
├── Day 3-4: Create or commission 3-5 initial designs
└── Day 5-7: Research POD providers and order samples
WEEK 2: Setup
├── Day 8-9: Set up your storefront (Etsy or Shopify)
├── Day 10-11: Create product listings with photos and descriptions
├── Day 12: Price your products and finalize shipping settings
└── Day 13-14: Build social media presence and plan launch content
WEEK 3: Launch
├── Day 15: Officially launch your shop
├── Day 16-18: Post launch content across social channels
├── Day 19-20: Reach out to your personal network
└── Day 21: Run a launch promotion or giveaway
WEEK 4+: Momentum
├── Week 4: Analyze first results, optimize listings
├── Week 5-6: Create new designs based on feedback
├── Week 7-8: Double down on what's working
└── Month 3+: Consider expanding product range or sales channels
Most new sticker sellers get their first sale within 2-4 weeks of launching. Some get it on day one. Some take six weeks. The variable is almost always marketing effort, not product quality.
Common Beginner Mistakes to Avoid
Learn from other people's expensive lessons:
1. Trying to Sell to Everyone
Generic designs for a generic audience get generic results. Pick a niche, understand that audience, and serve them specifically.
2. Too Many Designs, Too Little Focus
Starting with 50 mediocre designs is worse than starting with 5 excellent ones. Quality over quantity, always—at least in the beginning.
3. Underpricing to "Get Sales"
A $1.50 sticker looks cheap, not like a bargain. Price fairly for the value you're providing. Underpricing attracts bargain hunters, not loyal customers.
4. Ignoring Product Photography
Blurry photos on a messy desk won't sell stickers. Invest 30 minutes in proper lighting and a clean setup. It makes a massive difference.
5. Not Ordering Samples First
How can you sell a product you've never held? Order samples from your POD provider. Check the quality yourself. You can't confidently sell something you haven't verified.
6. Copying Other Sellers
See a design that's selling well for someone else? Don't make a knockoff. It's unethical, potentially illegal, and terrible for building a brand. Create something original inspired by the same concept.
7. Giving Up Too Early
Most sticker businesses don't take off in week one. Or week two. The sellers who succeed are the ones who keep creating, keep listing, and keep showing up for months. Consistency beats intensity every time.
Budget Breakdown: Starting With $50, $100, or $250
The most common question we get: "How much does it cost to start a sticker business?" Here are three realistic starting budgets.
The $50 Launch (Shoestring Start)
| Item | Cost (SGD) |
|---|---|
| Canva Pro (1 month) | $13 |
| Etsy listing fees (10 listings × $0.20) | $2.60 |
| Sample order from TPC (3-5 stickers) | $10-15 |
| Basic phone photography setup (poster board + window light) | $5 |
| Social media (free) | $0 |
| Total | ~$35-40 |
What you can do: Create 10 designs, list them on Etsy, verify product quality, and start selling. You'll reinvest early profits into more designs.
The $100 Launch (Solid Foundation)
| Item | Cost (SGD) |
|---|---|
| Canva Pro or Procreate (1 month) | $13-18 |
| Etsy listing fees (20 listings × $0.20) | $5.20 |
| Sample order from TPC (multiple product types) | $20-25 |
| Product photography props | $10 |
| Small promotion budget (Instagram/Facebook) | $20-25 |
| Packaging materials (branded thank-you cards, etc.) | $10 |
| Total | ~$80-95 |
What you can do: Launch with 20 designs across multiple product types (die-cuts, kiss-cuts, sticker sheets), run your first promotional campaign, and ship professional-looking orders.
The $250 Launch (Serious Start)
| Item | Cost (SGD) |
|---|---|
| Design tools (Procreate + Canva Pro) | $30 |
| Etsy listing fees (40 listings × $0.20) | $10.40 |
| Comprehensive sample order (stickers, cards, bookmarks) | $40-50 |
| Professional photography setup or mockup templates | $20-30 |
| Marketing budget (ads, influencer samples, giveaway prizes) | $60-80 |
| Branded packaging and inserts | $25 |
| Shopify basic plan (if not using Etsy only) | $39 |
| Miscellaneous (shipping supplies, business cards) | $15 |
| Total | ~$240-265 |
What you can do: Launch a professional-looking brand with 40+ designs, multi-channel selling (Etsy + own store), paid marketing support, and branded customer experience. This is the "I'm treating this like a real business from day one" budget.
Your First 30 Days Launch Checklist
Print this. Screenshot it. Check things off as you go.
Before You Launch (Days 1-14)
- Choose your niche based on research, not just vibes
- Create 5-10 initial designs at 300 DPI with transparent backgrounds
- Research and select your POD provider
- Order samples and verify print quality
- Set up your storefront (Etsy, Shopify, or both)
- Write product descriptions for every listing
- Take or create product photos/mockups for every design
- Set your pricing with margin calculations, not guesswork
- Create social media accounts for your brand
- Plan your launch content (at least 5-7 posts ready to go)
Launch Week (Days 15-21)
- Publish all product listings
- Post your launch announcement across all channels
- Share your shop with friends, family, and personal network
- Run a launch promotion (discount, bundle, or giveaway)
- Engage with every comment, message, and interaction
- Post daily content showing your products and process
Post-Launch (Days 22-30)
- Analyze which designs are getting views, favorites, and sales
- Optimize underperforming listings (update photos, titles, tags)
- Create 3-5 new designs based on early feedback
- Follow up with first customers for reviews and feedback
- Calculate your actual margins (are you pricing correctly?)
- Plan your content calendar for month two
- Identify your top 2-3 marketing channels and double down
- Start a simple spreadsheet tracking sales, costs, and profit
Ongoing (Month 2+)
- Release new designs consistently (weekly or biweekly)
- Build your email list if you have your own store
- Consider expanding to additional product types (cards, bookmarks)
- Test new marketing channels (TikTok, Pinterest, collaborations)
- Evaluate whether any designs should move to small bulk orders
- Set revenue goals for month 3, 6, and 12
What's Next in The Print on Demand Playbook
This post is Part 3 of The Print on Demand Playbook, a 14-part series covering everything you need to know about building a successful print on demand business with stickers and custom prints.
Read the series:
- Part 1: What Is Print on Demand? The Complete Beginner's Guide
- Part 2: POD vs Bulk Ordering: Which Is Right for You?
- Part 3: You are here — How to Start a POD Sticker Business
- Part 4: How to Design Stickers That Actually Sell — Design principles, tools, and what makes customers click "add to cart"
- Part 5: Choosing the Right POD Provider — What to look for, red flags, and how to evaluate quality
Ready to Take the First Step?
Every sticker business starts the same way: one design, one listing, one sale. The difference between people who think about starting and people who actually do is just that—doing it.
The Potato Club makes starting simple. Low minimums mean no overcommitment. Fast turnaround means you can test and iterate quickly. International shipping means your market is the entire world. And pricing starting from $2.00 SGD for die-cut stickers and $0.16 SGD for kiss-cut stickers means your margins work from day one.
Your first sticker is waiting to be made. Start creating at The Potato Club.
Questions about starting your sticker business? We've been there. DM us on Instagram @thepotatoclub.store — we're happy to help you figure out your niche, pricing, or anything else.
Found this guide helpful? Share it with someone who's been talking about starting a sticker business. Use #PrintOnDemandPlaybook and #ThePotatoClub so we can cheer you on.