When a small shop starts testing personalized add-ons, the menu can grow faster than the proof. A small test menu keeps the offer easier to review before it becomes a public promise.
AntBelt G1 fits this planning stage as a compact engraving workflow, but the business decision still needs restraint. A seller should avoid offering every possible blank, material, and message style before the samples are clear.
A first test menu can stay narrow:
- One product family.
- Two or three personalization positions.
- One proof photo routine.
- A note about what still needs review before taking paid orders.
This keeps the customer offer understandable. It also protects the seller from mixing untested blanks with tested ones simply because the first sample looked promising.
For more launch-period seller planning notes, see /updates/.
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