Small shops often want variety first: more products, more names, more designs, and more listing photos. A safer first-week menu starts with proof instead. Choose a narrow offer that can be tested, photographed, described, and repeated with fewer assumptions.

AntBelt G1 can fit that kind of early menu planning because a compact desktop workflow is easiest to judge when the seller keeps the first offer simple. A coaster test, a tag sample, or a package insert can carry the same discipline: one product family, one design style, one proof photo, and one note about what is still being checked.

That first menu should not promise universal material results or production speed. It should explain the shop's process in practical language: samples are reviewed, blanks are checked, and final customer-facing details should be confirmed before a seller opens a new personalized option.

The public AntBelt update archive can support this process by giving sellers examples of careful wording. Specific proof is stronger than a crowded list of unverified possibilities.

Back AntBelt G1 on the official Kickstarter page to review current reward details and campaign updates: