The Quarter

Download the Bootstrapped Report: https://www.joinstation.co/bootstrapped
Silkscreen Marketing: https://silkscreenmarketing.com
Full Deep Dive: https://www.joinstation.co/blog/silkscreenmarketing
Photo Credit: https://www.hollandsentinel.com/story/news/2011/12/25/mygreatlakeonline-allows-fans-to-show/45298490007/

When I started my entrepreneurial journey, Kylen Blom was one of the founders I immediately looked up to. He had legendary stories like sleeping in boats to sell his t-shirts, and he was already running his business full-time right after college while I was just getting started.

That felt like the dream.

Today, Kylen is a good friend and someone I still admire. He's the founder of Silkscreen Marketing, an art-focused production studio in Holland, MI. He's built an incredible studio that takes swag items that usually come out generic and boring and makes them genuinely creative and memorable.

In this deep dive, we'll explore how a college pitch competition led to sleeping in boats around the Great Lakes, how a small local team competes with giant competitors, and how Kylen and his team think about growth in a different way than most.

What is The Quarter?

The stories of how bootstrapped businesses go from $0 to $250k in annual revenue

When I started my entrepreneurial

journey, there was one founder that

I really admired out of the gate.

He had these like legendary stories

about sleeping in boats to sell his

t-shirts, and at the time he was just

starting to run his business, My Great

Lake, full-time right after graduation.

And for me, that was the dream

to be able to work on your

business full-time post-grad.

That was the dream.

And today, Kylen Blom is now a good

friend and someone I still really admire.

He's now the founder of Silkscreen

Marketing, an art focused production

studio in Holland, Michigan, where he is

built an incredible studio that that takes

your normal like swag items, particularly

T-shirts that usually are T-shirts

that you like, probably go to sleep in.

But with his creative design team, he's

actually made them, make them like some

of the best t-shirts and t-shirts that you

wanna pull outta laundry and immediately

wear, they become your favorite t-shirts.

So in this deep dive, we'll explore

how a college pitch competition led to

him sleeping in the boats around the

Great Lakes, how his small team competes

with the giants and how Kylen and his

team think about growth in a different

way than I think most businesses do.

Let's dive in.

Kylen got started at the same

college that I got started in,

in Hope College, which is a small

Christian college based in Holland,

Michigan with about 3,400 students.

And at the time, hope was just getting

kind of started into entrepreneurship.

They were like dabbling in it and whatnot.

And Kylen was one of the very

first students to really do

something larger at Hope.

And one of the ways they were kind of

helping to seed entrepreneurship within

Hope was through these pitch competitions.

But instead of me explaining how these

like pitch competitions were really

valuable and kind of kickstarted

a lot of different entrepreneurial

journeys, here's Kylen to explain.

I was doing idea pitch competitions

around campus right as they were

getting started, and it was like the.

Grand prize was, you know, a $200 cash

card, which was groceries for a month.

So I just came in and pitched all

sorts of ideas and had a blast with it.

And one of the judges came to me with

this whole concept of t-shirts for

each of the specific Great Lakes.

And I was like, that's kind of cool.

And I was like, this

is a perfect excuse to.

Travel and also do a startup.

And so that's kind of where

it got going is just that.

Why not?

Let's try it for a summer and if it

doesn't work, the worst thing that happens

is we had a great time cruising around

and asked a couple of friends if they

wanted to join and you know, they're

just like, yeah, what's the catch?

I was like, no catch.

We're just going to.

Drive around the Great Lakes and stay as

close to the water as we can and end up

where we end up and sleep, where we sleep.

And people just loved it.

And everyone we talked to along

the way loved the stories.

I mean, we were cash poor.

I mean every dollar we had was

invested in getting t-shirts printed.

'cause we weren't printing them ourselves.

We had to batch order them.

And the more you order, the cheaper they

are per shirt, the better our margin.

And so we were just going around

town to town trading t-shirts for

a beer and a burger kind of thing.

And they, people loved it.

You know, we pull into Leland and walk

through Fishtown and it's like, Hey, the,

the cheese shop, we've got a T-shirt if

you can get us a sandwich and a beer.

And he is like, I can't ring that up,

but I'll, I'll do it, I'll take it.

I think we were in almost 30 retail

locations by the end of those two

summers, and it was like very successful.

I did very little direct

to customer sales.

It was mostly just other businesses,

uh, which made it a lot easier to

justify than buying a press myself.

so it's kind of a crazy story.

He was really just like, Hey, like,

that's grocery money for the month.

And all of a sudden though, he's like

sleeping on boats and traveling the Great

Lakes and trying to just get all these

different t-shirts into all the different

retailers around the Great Lakes.

Now If you're not from the Midwest,

you might be thinking like, why?

Why does this idea have any appeal?

Well, if you're from the

Midwest, like typically, right?

You have a lot of pride typically

around your state or maybe your

hometown, like just the locations.

There's a lot of pride in being

like, Hey, I'm from Michigan, right?

One of the jokes that gets thrown

my way is you always know, like

if someone's from Detroit, and

that's because they've already.

Told you, and yes, I am guilty

of this, but you know what?

Screw it.

Go Tigers.

And I hope the Yankees lose every game.

Anyways, Kylen was able to then take

this idea, create the shirts, right,

and then go to all these different

retailers across the Great Lakes, and

as he mentioned, right, they got over

30 retailers, and that's a pretty decent

scale that allowed Kylen then to go buy

the equipment, to actually start producing

the shirts himself rather than having to

order them from a, a secondary vendor.

And you would think if you have the

right equipment, like printing on

t-shirts, can't be that hard, could it?

Well, here's Kylen to explain some

of the product issues they had out of

the gate and how they overcame them.

I bought a press and a dryer and

exposure unit all of the basics on

like a Friday and brought it all to

the barn behind my parents' house.

Uh, just.

Figured out how to screen print.

And this was when there's like, this

will date me certainly, but like YouTube

had five how to screen print videos

and they were all for like massive

machines coming out of the manufacturer.

And there was no like,

Hey, this is how you do it.

Online tutorials, like nothing.

It was like, okay, so let's.

Let's try see what happens.

And it took me all

weekend next to no sleep.

Got the order of shirts done,

brought it up to Ludington.

I came back with like half of the

shirts 'cause the shop owner was just

like, I can't, no, this is, this isn't

straight, this isn't aligned correctly.

And then even more of those shirts

came back from customers after,

like I put it through the wash and.

All of the ink just disappeared.

And so he is like, dude, you gotta,

you have a quality problem here.

I was like, I have very

many quality problems here.

Uh, so ended up, you know, figuring it

out, you know, it's gotta go through

the dryer at a certain temperature for

the ink to stay and the exposure unit.

Has to be a very specific time.

Otherwise your lines get blurred

and you've gotta keep your screens

in a certain way, in a certain

tightness for everything to line up.

And so we, you know, figured it

out and, uh, just had a lot of.

Late nights and crazy times.

I was using a, a closet sized

bathroom to expose all of my screens.

I had to run a garden hose from

the outside through the window

to spray it off in the shower.

There was just emulsion everywhere.

It was, it was great.

We had a blast do in it, and then

I ended up living upstairs of that

barn area, so I had roommates and.

An employee at the time and an intern,

and it would just just be like five or six

of us hanging out there, printing shirts.

Yeah.

Doing whatever.

And it was, it was great.

And it was fun.

It wasn't financially successful,

but it was, it was a blast.

It was like, yeah, it, I liked this a lot.

after figuring out all the different

product issues and really kind of taking

My Great Lake to a pretty decent spot,

Kylen decided to actually sell it to

a larger apparel company in Michigan.

And so that way he can move on to like new

ideas and ventures and basically write the

incentive to, to get grocery money turned

into a business that was acquirable.

That's a pretty decent

outcome, I would say.

But even after selling the business,

right, Kylen kept one of the screen

printers from the sale, so that way

he could still be building shirts at

some or making shirts at some point.

And he did just that after, even

after selling My Great Lake, he was

working on like different various

projects because people were asking

to kind of do kind of side projects.

He might be making a few dozen shirts,

designing a new logo, websites.

He was kind of like this, like digital

handyman for a lot of different

people, and that led to what is now.

Silkscreen Marketing his current

company and through all the

different various projects.

Right?

He kind of like.

Built a pretty interesting niche

and that is, you know, he does some

marketing and design work and yet now

he has a team alongside him, but he

also has found a kind of a sweet spot

of being able to print shirts for local

businesses, the sweet spot, being about

50 to 300 different custom shirts.

And that really makes him pretty unique.

But instead of me explaining, here's Kylen

to explain kind of this niche and how they

are able then to compete at a, in a pretty

competitive market in t-shirt making.

we're not the shop for high volume

because we do everything by hand.

You know, there's the fully automatic

presses out there that will just.

Ripped through thousands

of shirts in a day.

And we're not that shop.

So if people come to us with a quote for

3000 shirts, we're, the first thing we

tell them is, we'll give you a quote.

We would love this business, but you'll

probably get a cheaper product elsewhere.

Our sweet spot and where we're price

competitive is we can do setups fast.

Whereas the big shops, that's not.

Forte.

So if we're in the like 50 to

a hundred shirt or 50 to 300

shirt range, that's like perfect.

Another value prop that we have is

that people can come in and it's like

they can get their hands on a sample.

They can see.

The process.

They can understand when we say how

screen printing works, like you can

either do color blocks and we can do

up to six different color blocks, or we

can do CMYK and here's the difference.

And let them feel it.

Let them see it.

And they, they also know that there's

like an expert behind the order.

When you do the big

online ones, it's just.

A computerized system that spits out

a file and assigns it to somebody

doing their thing on a line, you

know, it's, it's manufacturing

and this is more of like a craft.

It's hand done, it's hand printed.

We're looking at and holding

and feeling every shirt.

And if it's not perfect,

we're replacing it.

Being actually physically

in town is a big advantage.

I think the design ability that we

have as a shop, uh, specifically

Blake, is like unmatched, right?

You walk through downtown and you look

at all these different shops and half

of 'em are selling designs that he's

made, and you walk around hope, right?

Yeah.

And it's all the campus ministry

shirts that it's just like.

Our, our fingerprints are everywhere.

Yeah.

And people, once they get their hands

on our shirts, uh, are drawn to us

because of that quality element.

You know, they're used to a Gilden

ultra cotton and we're putting a

soft blend in their hands and they're

like, oh my gosh, I love this shirt.

I wear it.

It's the first shirt I pull out of the

laundry when, as soon as it's clean.

It's like, that's what we want.

We do get people coming back because

they say like, I need more of this shirt.

So it's pretty interesting

to see that like they've.

Built a really solid business.

And also Kylen mentioned, right,

that most of their business

is now just repeat customers.

They have some new clients that kind

of come in here and there, but because

of the trust and their reliability and

their, like their quality of work, like

they just don't need to have this like

huge amount of new customer acquisition.

And today, Silkscreen Marketing does

about $300,000 in annual revenue,

and they do it pretty consistently.

But one of the things that's really

interesting about Silkscreen Marketing

and Kylen here is actually their kind

of strategy and vision about how they go

about kind of growing or actually maybe

not even growing Silkscreen Marketing.

And instead of me kinda explaining their

approach to all of that, here's Kylen

to explain their vision and strategy.

I think a lot of that depends on the

team that we have here at any given

time, like we've got three full-time

people plus myself and we're every

couple of months checking in and

having that conversation of what.

What's next?

Where do we want to go?

What do we want to do?

Who do we wanna be?

You know?

So sometimes it's like, let's get a

letter, press and be able to do like

traditional letter printing, like business

cards, wedding invites, art prints.

Like sweet, let's do that.

What kind of things do we wanna

do on the production side that.

We maybe haven't been doing.

Yeah.

So, and now it's hats, right?

We can do patches and we can do all

sorts of different things with them.

And we've got the letter press

next it'll be embroidery.

So we can do like sewing in Yeah.

Actual elements.

So right now it feels like there's a,

a focus on expanding on the production

side, uh, which is cool, but I think

there is also capacity to expand on.

Yeah, the web and design side.

There's seasons of change always.

Last summer started a boat rental

company in Saugatuck, and so a

lot of my time was doing that.

Yeah.

Um, been the last couple of

years building a software.

To manage boat rentals with,

you know, a fully remote team.

So a lot of my time has

been spent doing that.

Not a lot of it.

And a lot of my time is spent

here at the shop, but not always

working on shop specific things.

We've got a whole formula of

things we could offer, right?

We've got the print mobile to go and yeah.

Screen print.

Onsite at different events, how

much do we wanna focus on that?

How are we going to dedicate

time and energy to do that?

Because it's hard to do that when

everybody is working full time and

then an event on the weekend is.

Extra.

You know, it's hard to

always be excited to do that.

So do we find a intern that's

willing to kinda take that on?

But now somebody has to coach the

intern and it's like, versus how

much do we wanna enjoy summer?

It's just an ever

changing, evolving, yeah.

Mix of what do we have the energy for?

What are we passionate about,

what do we want to be doing?

You know, do we want to offer.

Some limited retail out

of the front of the shop.

Do we wanna move to a new location and

showcase more of what we can do and

put our press in the front window of

a storefront downtown and people walk

by and see us print shirts and we're

a workshop that's, you know, cool and

gritty and can do web and design and

it's, yeah, where we'll be in five years.

I, I don't know.

It really depends on.

The team and what makes the

most sense and what's, uh, a

risk we can take financially.

Uh, having bootstrapped everything

up to this point is kind of like,

yeah, it's gotten us this far.

Let's, let's keep it going.

And, you know, it maybe doesn't

mean hockey stick stick growth, but.

Yeah, I don't know if everybody

really wants to, you know, break

that $500,000 barrier and now we've

a much bigger company with a lot more

that has to get done and now more

people and now more management and

more admin, and that means somebody

somewhere has to spend less time on.

Doing the fun things.

I find this approach to strategy

and vision really fascinating, and

I actually think it's really cool.

Right?

It's not just like growth

for growth sake, right?

As Kylen mentioned, right?

They could go do $500,000 in annual

revenue, I think if they wanted, but like.

That really takes the fun out of it.

That really kind of takes the, like,

the why of why they're doing this.

And really what they want to be able

to do right, is build like a steady

like way of living, but also like

get that like creative fulfillment.

And by doing this where it's like, hey,

we have a little bit of revenue and a

little bit of resources to invest in these

little things like letter press or like

a machine to make hats or patches, right?

Like they have the resources to do that

and then give 'em like that creative

fulfillment of like, Ooh, this is

a new product, this is a new thing.

But also that gives them the ability to

grow the business, potentially, right?

'cause maybe like all their

different clients, like actually

they want hats, they want patches,

they want these different things.

And I think that's a

really healthy approach.

So that's the high level story of

Silkscreen Marketing and really Kylen's

kind of entrepreneurial journey so far.

What I wanna do now is actually go

through the growth strategies that Kylen

has used to build Silkscreen Marketing

to over two 50 K in annual revenue.

And to me there's two different

growth strategies that Kylen

has been mostly focused on.

And the first one is.

Relationships and his relationships.

Kylen's relationships are pretty visible.

If you go into downtown Holland,

you're gonna see pretty much a ton of

different designs that his team and

himself have designed and produced.

If you go into a store like the,

the local coffee shop Lemonjellos.

You're gonna notice, like Kylen's

designed the t-shirts in there

and all sorts of things, right?

And you might not even know that

this Kylen and his team, but it's

a really indicative, right, of like

how deep their relationships are

in downtown and how they've really

cultivated a really strong network.

And Kylen has done this

in a few different ways.

First, right?

Was like with the My Great Lake

t-shirts where you just kinda walked

into stores and those kind of things.

But I'll talk about that in a second.

But also Kylen mentioned, right?

He'd go to like the networking events.

He'd go to like the young

professionals groups.

He would just network like crazy and

build a lot of strong relationships

within the downtown area and West

Michigan, and specifically Holland, right?

It's a good sized town, but

it's like not the biggest town.

So by really like building a really strong

network and being like known for being

like the t-shirt guy essentially, right?

It really helps him to build.

A lot of strong relationships very

quickly and also like it just kind of,

you get to build a really robust client

base and as kind of, you've kind of

seen throughout this entire deep dive.

Like Kylen's been at this for over

a decade and he doesn't take on

too, like he takes on new clients,

but most of his businesses actually

repeat business from the clients

he's had for a really long time.

Kylen's a really good example.

If you network really strongly, especially

in your local area and can really build

clients that are just like, are doing

repeat business all the time and you

build a lot of trust with them and do

high quality work, like you can kind of

stop doing marketing at at at extent.

Especially if you're happy with

the revenue that you're doing

and the lifestyle you're living.

Like you can essentially kind of turn

off the marketing and just go to work.

And I think for a lot of founders that's.

Pretty darn attractive.

Growth strategy number two is

cold outreach and cold outreach,

like we mentioned like at the very

beginning of the deep dive, right?

Like Kylen was going around to

all the different retailers.

He was going in person to go sell

these my great lake T-shirts and Right.

That worked out.

You got over 30 retailers

that all worked out.

But that process I think taught Tyler,

Kylen a ton of different skills.

One right it, it made him

comfortable with selling.

But second also helped him build a ton

of relationships with these retailers.

He got a lot of the local communities,

even all across the Great Lakes.

He built a ton of relationships

with these people.

And also right now, like all

of that credibility he like

has really compounded, right?

So if there's like a new shop

in town or maybe there's a

new business in town, right?

If Kylen is meeting them at a

networking event or maybe he just

like is meeting that, he's getting

introduction to them, it's super easy

for him to have credibility like.

Out of the gate.

And it's not really cold outreach, right?

Especially if you're gonna be like,

yeah, I see all the designs, like the

credibility him and his team have and be

able to show up in person and do that.

Like that's not cold outreach.

That's pretty warm outreach.

So that's the story of Silkscreen

Marketing and Kylen Blom.

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