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Have Trouble with Destination-based
Sales Tax on Etsy?
We do too.

GoToGreatPanes' Etsy shop

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Etsy has updated their new sales tax feature so that it is at least as suitable for sellers as Paypal’s sales tax was which is great, but for some of us it’s still not usable.

If you live in a state that has sales tax based on the buyer’s address (destination-based) and the rate is determined by political boundaries–like counties or cities–and not on 5 digit zip codes, you may still be stuck.

Several states are set up this way including New York, Florida, South Carolina, Washington and others, and in these states some 5 digit zip codes cross county or city lines, meaning that two ship-to addresses in the same 5 digit zip code should be charged different sales tax rates.

Neither Etsy nor Paypal is set up to accommodate this issue so in-state buyers must be billed manually by sellers registered in most of these states if you want your tax collected accurately and need the receipt to show the actual tax due & collected.

Washington sellers are lucky–their state allows them a little lee-way when collecting sales tax through sites that aren’t set up to deal with the full 9 digit zip codes (see here for info) a few states have similar breaks for sellers, but many of us aren’t so lucky.

If you are in the same position as we are and are wondering what to do, here’s the only way I can find to make collecting tax accurately work:

  1. Offer “other” as a payment option in your Etsy shop,
  2. ask in-state buyers to select “other” as the method of payment in your listings & shop policies, then
  3. send them an email invoice with the sales tax rate for their ship-to address: Sending a Paypal Invoice



Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Looking for a discount at JoAnn’s Fabric & Craft Stores?

Bats from GoTo's Etsy shop

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

A little plus for USA sellers who have registered their businesses–amid the updates of our Sales Tax & Business Registration–Official State Website Links page…:

If you shop at Jo Ann Fabric and Craft stores, and you’ve registered for a state sales tax id number or otherwise registered your business with your state, you are eligible for a VIP discount card that entitles you to 10% off your purchases, in addition to purchasing many supplies exempt from sales tax in most states (so long as the supplies are for use in your business).

See all the details here on their website:

Jo-Ann VIP Discount Card

You are also eligible if you are part of a Sewing/Crafting Organization, an NPO or can prove you are an interior design professional.

Hope that helps increase your profits!



Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Sales Tax & Business Page–updated with more states

I’ve updated the new Sales Tax & Business Registration link page–we’ve now got info for the following states:


Alabama
Arizona
California
Connecticut
Florida
Illinois
Kentucky
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Michigan
New York
North Carolina
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
Washington
Wisconsin

If a state isn’t there and you’d like to see links please leave a comment with the state and I’ll add it to the top of my list!

New: Sales Tax & Business Registration Page

Well I’ve been meaning to do this for the past few years and now that Etsy is trying to add a sales tax feature to the site there’s been an even greater need for info on sales tax & business registration requirements.

I’ve got a hundred or so links bookmarked for sales tax issues in many states that have come up in the Etsy forums and I’m putting them up on the blog’s new:

Sales Tax and Business Registration Page

So far I’ve got info for only 10 states up, but I’ll be adding to the page as much as possible. If your state isn’t there yet and you’d like to see some links for it, please leave a comment on this post with your state and I’ll put your state at the top of the list for states to be added.

I’ve got direct links to answers many of the frequently asked questions from the forums–links that take you to official government pages because I believe you should only get your answers from the authorities.

Any other place you get answers–be it forums or unofficial websites–may or may not have accurate answers, and that’s just not good enough if you want to be obeying the law.

This post from 2008 should still prove very useful in your quest for information–it lets you know what questions are asked repeatedly by sellers, so finding out your state’s answers to these questions should help you understand issues you may not have faced yet, so you’ll be prepared to handle them when they arise:

Sales Tax Questions
You Need to Know the Answers To

Here’s to everyone getting legal!



Etsy
GoTo

Have you heard of Paypal Micropayments?



Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Most online sellers are aware of the business, premier and personal types of Paypal accounts but not so many know about the micro payment account where lower per-transaction fees are charged with a higher percentage fee. (I know this type of account is available to US sellers, but I don’t know about other countries.)

Micro payment accounts are useful for low dollar amount transactions because of the lower transaction fee (and less useful for larger transactions because of the higher percentage fees), but if most of your transaction totals are under $12.14 it might be a savings for you to use a micro account.

Types of Paypal accounts for selling items
(amounts are in USD)

Premier:
$0.30 per transaction plus 2.9%
one user–an individual

Business:
$0.30 per transaction plus 2.9%
same as the Premier account but you can accept money under your business name and have multiple log-ins (not just one user)

Micro-Payment:
$0.05 per transaction plus 5%
same as regular business account

How many Paypal accounts can I have?

Paypal tells you here that you are allowed “one Personal account and one Premier or Business account”, but they specify on the following Paypal page that you should have a micro payment account in addition to your regular business account if you want to receive both macro and micro payments.

See here for more on Paypal’s Micro Account & how to get one:

paypalobjects.com/IntegrationCenter/ic_micropayments.html

I hope this info saves some sellers a few bucks!

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Item Listing Basics



Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

I often see folks asking for help in the critiques section of the Etsy forums wondering how to improve their shops because they aren’t getting many hits.

The most common response is to improve your photos, and while good photos are very important, even excellent photos will mean little if your items are not showing up in search results for folks to see those photos and click through to your item. Web-based searches don’t return photos with their listings, so you really need to improve in other ways to get outside traffic in to your shop.

Promoting your business is great and usually necessary for success, as is getting the internet search engines to work for you…

The key:

Search engines can only find you based on the text in your listings.

Repeated text in titles, descriptions and tags is a good thing–it gives more weight to those keywords when search engines are returning results. Improve your listings with better titles, descriptions and tags by including words and information that folks would use when looking for items like yours–basically think like a buyer…

If a buyer saw your item once, then wanted to find it again,
what words would they search to find it?

Some important ways to describe your items in the text:

    Content–tell us what your item is in detail.
    A print? original? watercolor? photograph? hat? earrings? purse?
    Does it have two orange cats in a field of flowers? a field of yellow and white daisies? of light pink tulips?
    Red hand-knit hat with a multicolor tassel? or pompon? (or pom-pom, since that’s a common alternate spelling)
    Yellow and light blue handmade clay pendant on a bright pink ribbon necklace?

    Mood/Theme–Use common descriptors for your style so folks shopping for a “feel” can find you.
    Examples: Retro, goth, rustic, folk art, steampunk, kawaii, mod, surreal, formal, casual, country…

    Colors–describe all main colors in your item.
    Don’t describe the color of the background of your photo of a product (or the props you used) since that’s not what a shopper will be looking for/able to buy from your listing. (Obviously if a photo is the product, all main colors in it should be included.)

    Size–in inches and centimeters.
    The web is international, don’t make your buyers guess what something would be in their units of measurement.
    Print sizes in the title is very helpful in addition to it being in the body of a listing.
    Personally, I like to break the size out of the descriptive text to make it easy to see, like here: Suncatcher–Roswell

Working all those in to a flowing description & adding the appropriate bits to the title and tags can be a challenge.

It helps to have some writing skills, a friend who can help or to post in the forum critique section to get ideas on how to refine your listings. Here’s an example of an item description I helped someone with in the forums:

http://www.etsy.com/forums_thread.php?thread_id=6556178&page=2

That’s not the only way to work keywords in, sometimes folks tell a story in their description and/or use humor and that’s a great talent. I’m sure if you browse Etsy and see a few good description styles you’ll find one that suits you and your items, but be sure not to copy anyone’s listings.

Just a list of keywords isn’t good, search engines will see that keyword spamming and it may actually hurt your search engine results.

These should also help you get a feel for what tags and text will help:

Guidelines & Tips: Tagging on Etsy
etsy.com/storque/how-to/guidelines-tips-tagging-on-etsy-281

Etsy: Meta Tags
gotogreatpanes.com/blog/2009/07/21/etsy-meta-tags

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) info straight from Google
gotogreatpanes.com/blog/2009/06/22/search-engine-optimization

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Little Known Fact about Vacation Mode & Your Etsy Shop’s Syndication


Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Special thanks for flandersfield for sharing this important info with me so I could share it with you!

When you put your Etsy shop in vacation mode your items are removed from Etsy’s syndication feed which removes them from Google’s special Shopping/Product Search (as they should be, since Google only wants items currently available in Google Shopping).

When you bring your shop out of vacation mode your currently listed items won’t be placed back in the feed automatically. You’ll need to re-enable your current stock for upload to get them back on Google’s Shopping Search, see here for OhFaro’s quick tip to enable your items.

All items you list, renew, relist or edit will still be added automatically once you are out of vacation mode, this is just about items you had listed when you put your shop in vacation mode.

There does seem to be another small downside to going in to vacation mode besides your items being pulled from Google Shopping & the hassle of re-enabling:

When the new feed from Etsy was coexisting with the RSS feeds sellers had done themselves, items in the older feeds (RSS done by sellers) were coming up close to the top of the search results and the newer feed (Etsy’s syndication) were coming up later in the results for the very same listings. This leads me to believe that older feeds have a little more weight for better search results.

When you go in to vacation mode and come back out, you delete your old sub-account syndication feed and get a new one which might result in less-good results in Google Shopping searches.

That also means if you’ve bookmarked search results for your old author id, you’ll need to update it with your feed’s new author id when you come out of vacation mode or it won’t show you the items you currently have in Google Shopping.

Warning: There’ve been several syndicated sellers who used vacation mode and cannot get their shop back in to syndication even after re-enabling their items. Admin LisaJune has said that this is not happening to all sellers who have used vacation mode, it’s on an individual basis and that you should contact admin for help getting it fixed–here’s where you can find her post: http://www.etsy.com/forums_thread.php?thread_id=6498948&page=16&#post-50567894

I am hoping it’s a temporary bug that the admin will fix, but if you’re only going to need it for a few days it may be better just to put a notice in your shop, avatar and message to buyer for now.

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

We’re featured on Celebrate Odd Etsy!

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

I’m thrilled to announce that our Etsy shop has been featured on

Celebrate Odd Etsy

See the feature here:

Go To’s Stained Glass


Visit their Etsy shop:

Etsy
Buy Handmade
celebratetheodd

Image Cropping for Etsy

Bats from GoTo's Etsy shop

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Been wondering how to get images that look good in both the gallery and list view on Etsy?

For the perfect Etsy image you need an image with a 1.25 to 1 ratio, with the important part of your image in the center left to right, leaving .125 of the left and right sides without any necessary content.

What does that mean?

A small example–because it is easy to see the ratio in small numbers:

1.25 to 1.00 ratio:
125 pixels wide by 100 pixels high

Unnecessary content area:
12.5 pixels on each side that don’t have necessary content

What does that look like?

Here’s a blue & white image that is 125 pixels wide by 100 pixels high.

Blue & White Example
+
12.5 pixels wide white bar
100.0 pixels wide blue square
_12.5 pixels wide white bar
125.0 pixels wide

The blue square portion is 100 pixels wide by 100 pixels high, centered in the image left to right. Everything in the square will be visible in gallery or list view thumbnails.

On each side of the square is a white bar that is 12.5 pixels wide–consider that the unnecessary content area. Anything that falls into those bars won’t be seen in list view thumbnails, but will show in gallery view.

In these images the areas with the dotted lines show you what will be cut off the picture in list view:


125 x 100 pixels

125 by 100

570 x 455 pixels
(This is the new smallest image width for Etsty as of 8/2010)

Click image to see at 570 x 455 pixels
570 by 455

700 x 560 pixels

Click image to see at 700 x 560 pixels
Click for 700 by 560



Your “blue square area” will always be a square based on the height of the image, and you want the blue square centered left to right.


Examples of images with this ratio: Unnecessary content area on each side:

570 wide by 455 high
(Etsy’s minimum width for images)
57.5 pixels
600 wide by 480 high 60 pixels
700 wide by 560 high 70 pixels
800 wide by 640 high 80 pixels
900 wide by 720 high 90 pixels
1000 wide by 800 high
(Etsy’s maximum for the longest side of images is 1,000 pixels*)
100 pixels

*Very important info about over-sized images here: Google Shopping & Large Images

The sides: To find how many pixels you need to leave without important content for other image sizes, just subtract the height from the width and divide by 2:

570 wide by 455 high:
570-455=115
115÷2=57.5
57.5 pixels on each side
1000 wide by 800 high:
1000-800=200
200÷2=100
100 pixels on each side

If your images are already cropped and don’t meet the 1.25 wide to 1 high ratio, you can edit them in your photo editor to fit by adding white space around the image to create an overall image with the right dimensions with the important part in the “blue square area”. It’s only really important for the first image in a listing since that’s the one folks will see in search results.

Need more help? Join us in this forum thread (opens in a new tab/window):

http://www.etsy.com/forums_thread.php?thread_id=6489290

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.

Google Shopping–Pictures Missing?


Visit our Etsy shop: GoTo
Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
(This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.)

Now you’re syndicated, you’ve searched Google Shopping and found your items there but you’ve got no pictures–just this graphic?


Then your pictures are most likely too big.

If you are selling on Etsy, they have made these recommendations:

Minimum: 430 pixels wide
Maximum: 800 to 1,000 pixels wide or long on the largest side

Narrower images will be pixelated/blurry in the item listing because Etsy will stretch them to fit the 430 pixel-wide space on the listing page.

Larger images are slow to load which is:

bad for folks with older computers
bad for folks with dial-up connections

and now, it’s also

bad for uploading to Google Merchant Center which provides data for Google’s Shopping/Product search.

What to do?

You can either lower the setting on your camera or use photo editing program to make them smaller. If you don’t have photo editing software, you try these two free ones:

Picasa (from what I hear it’s relatively simple)
http://picasa.google.com

GIMP (more advanced)
http://www.gimp.org/windows

Need help getting the image sizes right for cropping on Etsy?

See this post:

Image Cropping for Etsy
http://www.gotogreatpanes.com/blog/2010/04/08/image-cropping-for-etsy

Go To Great Panes, Kathryn Maloney ©2010
(This post is copyrighted–you do not have permission to repost this content elsewhere but you are welcome to link to it if you’d like to share the information.)