Disclaimer: First off let me say I do not work for Amazon or it’s affiliates. However I am always open to new potential prospects and or employers. :)
As An Amazon Customer
I have been an avid Amazon Customer since they went online years ago. I have spent thousands upon thousands of dollars on their site and have only had one problematic experience (and that was with one of their affiliate vendors, not Amazon per see). In Seattle during the late nineties and early oughts we felt the internet boom/bubble more than any other city. Amazon was one of ours. It was an incredible time. The mighty Microsoft was our .com ships anchor. Bold new ideas and creative thinking about how we shop, communicate and live were being presented by new companies every other day. I remember going to house parties and everyone there talking about a new .com they were developing, pushing, looking for investors for or investing in. Money was everywhere and we couldn’t get enough of the new internet commerce. Fast forward ten years and few are left standing. Amazon did survive the bubble bursting and rightly so.
CD-R, DVD-R On Demand
I’m not going to get into the history of Amazon. Google it for yourself. Suffice to say they started as an online retailer, later partnered and expanded until now you can buy almost anything from their massive website. I won’t get into the history of CreateSpace either. They used to be called CustomFlix and are a part of the Amazon empire. They started by making books and printed material on demand much like CafePress.com, except your completed titles were (almost) instantly available on Amazon.com- the worlds largest online retailer. Incredible creative thinking for a such an already successful company. Next CreateSpace delved into the CD and DVD arenas, much like DiscMakers.com Short Run Services, but again, your titles are available on Amazon. Using CD-R and DVD-R technology CreateSpace enables a musician or film maker to upload art files, content files and then mail in larger DVD content files to be made into finished retail ready DVDs and CDs. They are made as you or your customers order them, not stashed in a warehouse, garage or closet until they are ordered or in some cases thrown away. Also understand CD-Rs and DVD-Rs made by CreateSpace and other Short Run (less than 500 unit) Manufacturers are burned or “duplicated” discs, not replicated. Whats the difference?
Replication Vs. Duplication
Replication is an injected mold manufacturing process in which CDs or DVDs are professionally manufactured from raw plastic, molded into the shape of the disc. Minimums are usually 500 to 1,000 units. The more you run the cheaper the per unit price. I use Atlanta Manufacturing Group exclusively for my runs over 1,000. Prices are between $ .97 to $1.90 per disc. Cost depends on if the title is a CD or DVD and the type of printing and packaging you desire. Their website is http://www.amgcds.com
Duplication is a process in which smaller quantities of CDs or DVDs are created or “burned” using recordable media (normally in runs less than 500). With CreateSpace these discs are virtually indistinguishable from replicated discs, with perfectly printed full color surfaces and cover art, Norelco or jewel cases and the ever unenvironmentally friendly shrink wrap. CreateSpace discs do have the standard purple (DVD-R) and green (CD-R) undersides (sometimes called purple and green bottoms) that characterize recordable media. I have seen duplicated silver bottoms from other manufacturers (exactly like replicated discs), but I believe CreateSpace prefers to let people who understand burned media easily know that these are, in fact, duplicated and not replicated discs. Amazon also has a disclosure saying something to that effect on their website. This is important as older CD and DVD players may have difficulty reading CD-Rs and DVD-Rs. All newer players should not have a problem. Some retailers will not carry Duplicated Discs. More than anything, this is to discourage the Home Burner from submitting ugly, inferior, non playable media. In three years, I have never had a customer complaint (knock on wood) about CreateSpace CD or DVD play quality. Remember, Duplicated Discs can be made “On Demand” reducing overstock and the need to run 500 or 1,000 units that you may not be able to sell. This also eliminates upfront replication costs (usually $700-$1,200 plus set up fees). With both replicated and duplicated discs, the more you run the cheaper the per unit price, however duplication will almost always cost substantially more per disc than replication.
The Member Dashboard
Once you have set up an account with CreateSpace, your home page is referred to as your “Member Dashboard.” This is the area where you can check messages from the CreateSpace Team, add new titles, edit titles, delete titles, buy copies of your books or discs (more on that later) and view sales reports. Very user friendly.
Set Up- Four Basic Steps:
To set up your title on CreateSpace, you have to go through four basic steps.
1.) Title Setup. This where you list the title, description, release date, copyright notice, etc. Slightly different for CD and DVD releases.
2.) Artwork. This is where you upload you titles artwork files. It’s pretty straight forward, but you need to get your files ready before attempting this step. I am a graphic artist with years of Photoshop and Illustrator experience and with a decent internet connection this step is a breeze.
3.) Sales Channel Management. This is where you set your price (more on that later), Amazon keywords, eStore settings (CreateSpace gives you an instant web page to sell you title from- especially cool if you do not have a website) and Amazon Video On demand settings (more on that later).
4.) Title Setup Submit. The area to proof your title information and artwork and then submit it to CreateSpace/Amazon. After you submit and during processing, you cannot change your titles info or artwork, but once your title is “available” you can fine tune or change things to you hearts content.
Changing Information, Pricing and Artwork
One of my favorite things about CreateSpace is the control you have over your titles listing. Earlier this year my film Hot Rod Girls Saves The World was accepted into the Backseat Film Festival. I got a little Festival Wreath from the Registrar and added it to the DVD cover artwork. Quickly I uploaded the new artwork file to CreateSpace and within a few weeks the new artwork was on Amazon! Now this is huge people. When you run 1,000 DVDs you are stuck with that artwork until you make another run. Not so with CreateSpace. This flexibility is a key selling point (in my opinion) to using their services.
Later I received a “Great!” review from Film Threat Magazine. I added it to my artwork file and bingo, everyone who saw the discs on Amazon knew that Film Threat liked my movie.
On another front, a few months before Christmas I decided to drop the price of my film Hot Rod Girls Save The World by a dollar. This was to encourage sales and be in-line with my sales strategy and price point for the amount of time the film had been available (since December 2008). I opened my CreateSpace Account, bopped over to the edit page and adjusted the price. Two days later the Amazon price was set at my new price point.
This flexibility also applies to title information (forgot an actor just add them) and whether you even want your title on Amazons V.O.D. Service or Amazon itself anymore. Try that with a 1,000 run and a typical distributor!
Buying Your Own Titles
With CreateSpace you can also buy your titles to sell on your own website. Duplication for orders less than 50 units is currently around $4.95 each. Prices per disc go down the more you order (example an order of 100 discs currently cost $2.97 each). Turn around is fast and you can select the type of shipping you require. On several occasions I ordered 200 discs a week before an event and received them with a little time to spare (though not much- so don’t do this!). You can also order multiple titles at the same time, however you only get a discount per title ordered, not in combination. For example if you order 30 units of one title and 20 units of another, you will not get the 50 unit discount. Another very cool aspect of CreateSpace is being able to create a DVD, Book and CD for the same project. We sell Hot Rod Girls Save The World as a Film, Screenplay and Soundtrack in this way. You can order all the various media versions of your project and have them ready to sell at your vendor booth with only one order! Lastly and most importantly- you can order titles to ship to customers instead of yourself. What you ask? Why would I need to do that? Many times I run out of a title and forget to order more. A customer will order from our website and I have no product to ship. "What to do," you ask? "No problem," I reply. Just order the title from the CreateSpace website and set the delivery address to the customers. This can be a life saver- but make sure you always check the “Don't show prices on the receipt“ button before checkout. Otherwise your customer will be asking you why the hell the invoice says the DVD only cost $4.95 and you charged them $19.99! This is also an excellent way to ship to small distributors. I have several guys that sell my movies at Car Shows, but only order 10-20 at a time. I just jump onto my CreateSpace pages, order the discs and have them shipped to their front doors. Addresses are stored on the CreateSpace site. They can be edited, saved and deleted at will. CreateSpace also gets better deals on shipping than you or I ever could, so it really makes sense to use this method for shipping from the US to the UK, Australia, Japan, etc. I would imagine, but can't say for sure, that if you lived in Australia or the UK you could use the US based CreateSpace to ship orders within the States much cheaper than if you shipped from your own country.
Direct Payment And Sales Tracking
Another great feature of the CreateSpace website is the direct payment plan. Once your account is active you can link your bank account for direct monthly royalty deposits. I have also set my business bank account debit card up as the default method of payment for my CreateSpace orders. This enables me to see my purchases and royalty payments on my monthly bank account statements. Invaluable at tax time. All sales records are available in the Sales Report section of the CreateSpace website. Excellent for tracking sales and projected sales trends for your titles. This year, in particular, I was able to see that sales for my most recent film were up 30% over last years Christmas buying season. Try asking a regular distributor for a sales report sometime. If the file will even open (many use these wacked out accounting programs) the mumbo jumbo they contain never seems to add up- “unsold units” “returns” “outstanding balances’ blah, blah, blah. CreateSpace is concise. X number of DVDs were sold in X month, X number of downloads in this month.
Amazon VOD
Much like what the MP3 format did for the music world, Video On Demand (or VOD- the delivery system name not format name like MP3) is doing for the film distribution world. Using CreateSpace you can select to have your film available as a VOD, both for purchase and rental on the Amazon website. Your deal with CreateSpace is non-exclusive, which means you can use other distribution services, but Amazon is the biggie so why not start at the top and work your way down? Be warned- some larger distributors will not touch a film that has been on Amazon as a VOD or DVD-R. I experienced this first hand, but honestly feel I am making more money with CreateSpace than I could have with this larger distro company. Additionally I have more control of my titles, which is something I really, really wanted. I like to be in the drivers seat- ya know?
UPC
CreateSpace allows you to use your own UPC and ISBN numbers or they can generate them for you at no cost!
Upfront Costs
Currently there are no upfront costs or set up fees to use CreateSpace (other than the purchase price of the titles you order). This is an incredibly cool deal, because in the past you would have to shell out hundreds or thousands of dollars for a disc run before you cold have professional looking merchandise in your hands. Then you would send it to the distributors to see if they wanted to carry it. CreateSpace cuts the time from project completion to online listing and sales down to the time it takes to receive your proof copy in the mail. This is also great for listing older titles or “back catalog” titles. Maybe you sold out of your last run of 1,000 DVDs and now only sell a few a month, but want it out there. Using CreateSpace, all your titles can “Stay In Print” forever.
Customer Service
Honestly in the last three years I have only had to call customer service once! I had a disc with a pop in it. They corrected the listing immediately and after I sent in a new content CD-R was good to go. Except this one time- my orders always show up, are correct, look and play great. No lost orders, mis-ships, women's panties in the box- it is amazing. Not so for their competitors Disc Makers. Every fifth order I made with Disc Makers seemed screwed up, had the wrong content on it (imagine getting someone else's music or film on your CD or DVD!), no shrink wrap (when you paid for it), CD booklets packaged upside down, etc. etc. I truly don't know how they stay in business.
WithOutABox.com and IMDb.com
Amazon also owns withoutabox.com and IMDb.com and has been trying to integrate these sites with CreateSpace and Amazon. With Out A Box is a film festival listing and submission site both for film makers and festivals. I have both types of accounts as besides my Record Label and Film Company, I run the annual Hot Rod Monsters Film Festival here in Seattle. I use WOAB to submit my work (shorts and feature) to potential festivals. With an account on WOAB you can send and pay for festival submissions from one website. They also let you know of upcoming festival deadlines and can tell you if your film meets format and style criteria for a certain festival. Very cool. IMDb or the Internet Movie Database is THE online listing for actors, crew, film and film companies. Kind of a whose who in the film world. Case in point- Wikipedia uses IMDb listings (and other means) to help establish the noteworthiness of a film for inclusion in the Wiki site.
Other Players
IndieFlix, YouTube, Hulu, Vudu, Netflix- ahh just Google it man.
CREATESPACE PROS:
-Near Instant Listing On Amazon.com Available
-Trust (Unlike Billy Bobs DVD Distribution, you know Amazon is a real company with real history)
-Direct Payments Both Fair and Accurate
-Extremely High Quality (In Media and Printing)
-Quick Turnaround For Your Short Run
-Competitive Prices
-VOD Download and Rental
-Did I Mention A-M-A-Z-O-N.COM!
CREATESPACE CONS:
-Not Enough Packaging and Media Options(Like Disc Makers)
(i.e. Colored Cases, Clear Cases, Double Sided Printing, Digipaks, Dual Layer Discs, BluRay, etc.)
-Could Have Easier Multi Disc Setup
(currently you have to list a tile twice and connect the two listings- very confusing)
-Front & Back Artwork Should Be Uploaded to Amazon
(I have several compilation style DVDs and would love to have the back cover viewable online. This would let people know what is on the disc as well and let them read the back cover synopsis, actors listings, etc. You can go on Amazon later and add images, but this is a real hassle and a consistent format would make Amazons titles look better)
-Full CreateSpace Community Integration with Twitter, Facebook, Etc.
(Much more could be done with the CreateSpace community pages and Amazon)
-Limited Shipping Address Book (Currently the CreateSpace address book is limited to a hand full of non-alphabetized addresses. You can only see six at a time and those six are the last six entered. A full feature alphabetized system would be appreciated for small record labels and film companies with multiple regular shipping destinations.)
Bottom Line
The future of independent film distribution is here- so get off you ass and finish that movie! CreateSpace is a great place to start.
In Closing
I would like to recommend that you not put all your eggs in one basket. I made that mistake with MP3.com (remember them) years ago. I had many rare music tracks listed on their site and when they were bought out, the new owners changed formats and all my work was “erased.” I have backups of the songs on CD-Rs someplace, but have never bothered to reload these songs onto another music website. God forbid Amazon goes out of business (don’t laugh monoliths GM and Chrysler almost did) or decides to sell CraeteSpace to Sony, but in this modern age, nothing is sacred and the shelf life of a .com is never certain.
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Killing Machine Music Video Progress
Lancia Stratos (One Of My Fave Christmas Presents)
So this is one of my favorite Christmas presents this year. Our family really had to cut back and have a light year as far as gifts go. Didn't spend as much money. We really couldn't. Our business had a fairly rough 2009 but not as bad as some of my friends (I eat three square and have a roof over my head so I can't complain). I hope we all have a better 2010. So anyway Lancia's are now (technically) a Mopar In-Law since FIAT and Chrysler got married this year. I have always been a fan of the Italian automobiles. Ferarri, Lamboghini, Alpha Romeo, Lancia and Maserati. The Stratos has been on my favorite Euromobile radar for decades and this die-cast is excellent in detail.
Friday, December 25, 2009
Merry Christmas!
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Killing Machine & DTM Charger
Working on the Killing Machine video for the new Hot Rod Girls Save The World (Kustom Edition) DVD. Super Amanda did an excellent performance for the video, I just haven't had time (until now) to edit it. This is a tie in to the film. Also reworked my DTM Charger, lowering it and ripping out most of the interior. If I only had an extra $60,000 it would be a real car. It still needs front airdam, etc.
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
iGTO Under Construction
Started putting the Intergalactic Muscle iGTO together this week. Had to order some new jet planes to cannibalize for this new creation. All Intergalactic Muscle Cars can not be newer than 1968 (D.B. Petty disappeared early 1968 and all concepts are based on what he remembers of Earth based autos). Building the iGTO concept in between render times for the new Killing Machine music video.
Monday, December 21, 2009
Christmas Tree Crisis
So last night we went out to get our Christmas Tree. We intentionally waited to get and decorate the tree closer to Christmas. Hate decorating right after Thanksgiving. So first we head over to Home Depot. On the way over I notice our GMC "Band Van" is sputtering a bit. I think it needs a new fuel filter, but haven't changed it yet. Get to Home Depot. No trees. They are sold out. So we jump back in the "Band Van" (AKA Big Bertha) and head to Fred Meyers. Half way there, on a major street, Bertha dies. Pouring rain, middle lane. We are seriously blocking traffic. People pass by- yell and beep. Now maybe Bertha is not the best looking van and maybe I should put some money into a tune-up, but common people! Family stuck in traffic and you yell and beep?!? Always "the other guy" with those turd muffins. Finally after five minutes Bertha starts. She sputters and I try to get over into the right hand lane. No one will let us over! It's like, "fuck you, block the other lane you band van drivin' low lifes!" So I punch it and lurch at the cars to my right. They slam on their brakes and let me over. People may not like looking at Bertha, but people do not fuck with Bertha. Not even 4x4s and Suburbans! Sputter sputt sputt into the Fred Meyer parking lots. I have a feeling if I dump a bottle of STP fuel treatment in Bertha she will come around. The wife and kids go pick the tree, I grab the STP (hey that rhymes).We meet up and load the tree and STP into Bertha. Sput sputt sput. Then she's running better. Bpurrpp and off we go to get some good gas and was down the STP. Bertha dies pulling into the gas station. We fill up with the good stuff. Bprrrr sputt sputt. She won't start. Bprrrrr, putt-sputt. We limp her over to a parking spot and sit for a few minutes. "well," I tell the family, "at least there's a mechanic here, so if she won't start they can fix her." "But Dad, the what about the tree!" We are at least twenty blocks from home so there is no way to walk the tree home. We try to start Bertha again. Brummmmm! She's running...she's running good! STP rocks! So homeward we go with our Fred Meyer tree in tow (hey that rhymes too). Set the tree up, put some lights up while listening to some Ska (our yearly tradition to decorate the tree to Ska tunes). Life is good.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
3/4ths Of The Milldue Family
This is from last Saturdays wrap party. Aren't they a happy family?
Today buckets of rain in Seattle. Love the rain. Got some trailer DVDs for Rat Rod Rockers! ready to send out as promo.
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Rat Rod Rockers! Wrap Party
Had a great time showing clips and hanging with the cast and crew of Rat Rod Rockers! I can't believe we knocked this one out in four months. Special thanks to everybody involved with this film- Thanks a million times over!
Saturday, December 12, 2009
New Theater Space
Setting up the screening room for the Trailer and Clips of my new film Rat Rod Rockers! for tonights Wrap Party. This is a little private screening for cast and crew and also a test for our theater space. We will be putting on a Childrens Film Festival this Spring and this is a good preview of the rooms acoustics and projection quality.
Friday, December 11, 2009
New Die-Cast Cars
Added a few new ones to my Die-Cast Auto Collection. The awesome Rod Turnbull from Australia sent a few new ones including a Ford Falcon XY GTHO (1:32nd scale), Ford Falcon XA RPO 83 (1:32nd scale) and two very detailed Holdens (1:64th scale). Rod knows I am developing an Australian Muscle Car Fetish and helping me get some cool cars for my collection. I also got my 1967 Dodge Coronet (1:18th scale) that I pre-ordered last July in the P.O. Box today. A good day for die-cast.
Monday, December 7, 2009
Rat Rod Rockers! Filming Dec. 7
Aeon Black who plays Harold Milldue in Rat Rod Rockers! came by the studio today to do a few quick pick-up shots. The remaining scenes to shoot are just a handful now. We need to shoot the second ending sequence and little ambient shots and that is all.
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Astro-Stang Complete
Finally finished the Astro-Stang Intergalactic Muscle car today. Added the last few details and now it's (tentatively) done. Next up is a '67 GTO.
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Rat Rod Rockers! Filming Dec. 4th
Excellent night of filming last night for Rat Rod Rockers! We were doing Ivan's (Kerry Murphy) Russian Mob Boss Office scenes. Also in the scene were Traci Davey (pouring Vodka), Holly Niemeyer (rubbing Ivans back) and Raegan Mckibbin (filing her nails). Also special thanks to Raegan Mckibbin and her bo for creating the excellent "Ivans Office" in their living room.
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
WTF!?! It's December already!
Man I can't believe how fast 2009 slipped away. The months just blurred together this year. Is this a sign of me getting older or as some scientists have suggested- time actually speeding up.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Rat Rod Rockers! Pick-Up Shots
Cameron Black came over to do a few quick close-ups for Rat Rod Rockers! Only two scenes left to shoot!
Interview With Entertainment Corner
Did a nice little 10 question interview with Mireille M. for her Entertainment Corner Blog. The link is at http://theentertainmentcorner.blogspot.com/2009/11/my-interview-with-da-sebasstian.html
Saturday, November 28, 2009
WarMachine
This is one of my older sculptures entitled "WarMachine," that I am cleaning and restoring. So many of my pieces were stuffed in boxes and stashed in the attic that just getting them in a viewable state will take hours of work. This one has pieces of plastic that I found in a pile just outside a signal light control box downtown Seattle. Apparently the worker hadn't had time to clean up the pieces. They were in a pile right in front of the box. I was walking, so I could only grab a hand full of cool stuff. Love finding shite for my work.
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Happy Thanksgiving!
Love Thanksgiving. Didn't used to when I was younger. Woke up watched the Macy's Parade on TV and then parts of the Dog Show. Just relaxing and de-stressing. We will cook up a big slab of salmon over a pan of stuffing (our family tradition) and eat early. Hope all are enjoying the day in these strained economic times. Really is starting to feel like a depression instead of recession...ya know?
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Tom Daniel Interview
Forgot to mention that last week I heard news from Gearhead Magazine that the Tom Daniel interview I did months ago is set to be in the next issue, Tom is best known for his Monogram Model & Hot Wheels kustom car designs. One of the few smaller scale designers that influenced lifesize 1/1 scale fabricators and builders. He was great on the phone and remains a true icon in the kustom kulture world.
Astro-Stang Paint Job
Put a light dusting of burnt orange on the Astro-Stang (part of my Intergalactic Muscle series of Space Cars). Also installed the windshield and side glass. I need to detail paint and it will be finished. I detail paint after assembly because I never know how these Space Cars kit bash together. Next up is the GTO.
Monday, November 23, 2009
Moving Moving Moving
Spent the last few days moving into our new creative space and studios. Man how did we accumulate so much stuff! My back is a little sore from the lifting. My wife, kids and I did it all by ourselves. Our dogs are digging it. They missed us for the last few days. I think this will simplify our lifestyle. Now we have to finish unpacking and settle in.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Le Carcasse De Feminite
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
My Current Basses & Guitars
My current collection of cheap ass Guitars & Basses. L-R Top Row DeArmond M65 (baritone slide), Hohner Acoustic, Haohner Acoustic (slide), Blaze 3/4 Scale Bass (home modified with sympathetic string), L-R Bottom Row DeArmond M55, Danelectro Dead-On 67 Baritone, Squire Modified Jazz Bass, Squire Bronco Bass
IRS & Barracuda's
Woke up this morning to a frantic call from my wife saying the IRS was at our Arts School and needed to talk to us. Since I handle all the accounts I jumped into the van and raced over to the school. It seems that not paying ALL of your quarterly payroll tax is a big no no with the IRS. Seriously, I knew this, but it has been a rough year for our school. The IRS gals were very pleasant and asked lots of questions and requested tons of paperwork, but I think we can get this worked out. At least I now have a definitive "go to" gal within the IRS for questions and advice on how to handle our business taxes.
On a completely different subject I read a very cool blurb about the Plymouth Barracudas history on Allpar.com. The point they mentioned was that although the 1970 Barracuda looks a bit like a 1967 Chevrolet Camaro on steroids, the 1970 Camaro has a very similar rear roof design and look to the 1967 Barracuda. It's like the two companies were copying each others 1967 designs, but three years later because of the time it takes to make a new cars design.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Intergalactc Muscle Fleet
Here is the current fleet of Intergalactic Muscle cars that I designed and built by kit bashing various plane and car kits with odd ball found plastic pieces. The main website is www.intergalacticmuscle.com
Front to back are Astro-Stang, (1967 Mustang) Hyper-Cuda (1967 Barracuda), Interceptor 1 (1964 Polara), Star-Charger (1966 Dodge Charger) and the IT-Bird (1966 Thunderbird). All these Space Cars will be featured (in CGI form) in the Hot Rod Girls Save The World sequel.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
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