USA TODAY International Edition

Zazzle rides COVID- 19 and Zoom jokes for winning 2020

- Jefferson Graham

The on- demand website Zazzle has been churning out mugs, T- shirts and other products from people’s photos and images from partners like Disney, Harry Potter and Peanuts for years.

After the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, all of the sudden, personaliz­ed puzzles were red hot.

“We’re talking a 4,000% increase in sales,” says Jeff Beaver, who co- founded Zazzlewith brother Bobby. “We couldn’t keep up with the demand.”

The same goes for on- demand masks, mugs and the like, which benefited from the stay- at- home orders. Instead of visiting retail stores, consumers could shop, and pick and choose, going to Zazzle artists and entreprene­urs to fine tune what they wanted.

“We launched a whole line of PPE as fast as we could when the pandemic hit,” Beaver says.

Paper products like cards and invites were always Zazzle’s most popular, but they took a hit when parties and events

were canceled due to the COVID- 19 crisis.

The Zazzle artist community put out coffee mugs and masks that played on both the pandemic and how all of us were spending hours in video meetings. A cute coffee mug and mask that played on the times, “You’re on Mute,” became very popular, Beaver says.

The masks range from $ 12 to $ 20. Sales did initially take a big dip, down 50% when shelter- in- place orders first hit. But once the site’s designers began getting creative with pandemic and work/ learn from home- themed products, Zazzle saw what Beaver says is a “remarkable” turnaround. Sales are now 50% higher than they were a year ago.

Many people look to Zazzle to open their own storefront­s, similar to Etsy, except they aren’t selling fully handcrafte­d gifts, but instead products customized from their designs, such as logos that can be ordered on shirts or mugs and then manufactur­ed on demand.

Some 80 million units are made- toorder from Zazzle yearly.

They’re rare, but Beaver says there are several “Zazzle millionair­es,” and 250 folks are earning six figures, all by putting Zazzle stores on their websites, or selling their wares at Zazzle. com.

All told, Beaver says Zazzle has 30 million customers who have bought stuff from the website.

Beyond COVID- related products, Zazzle also sells cards, leggings, socks, planners and even images that can be used as Zoom background­s.

The success of Zazzle, which has been around since 2005 and is profitable, stems from a basic issue with retail, Beaver believes.

“It’s hard for a merchant to perfectly imagine what demand will be like for every product that they’re going to offer in their store 12 months from now,” he says. “It’s tremendous waste in the supply chain, and that’s why our model is so efficient. Nothing is produced until somebody buys it.”

Zazzle doesn’t need to have an afterChris­tmas sale to sell the excess inventory that didn’t sell.

“From an e- commerce standpoint, this is a much more healthy way of the future,” he adds.

Headquarte­red in Silicon Valley – with offices also in Cork, Ireland, and Reno, Nevada – Zazzle partners with ondemand factories all over the country to get things made, and shares revenue with them, and the original designer.

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ZAZZLE Zazzle offers on- demand masks

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