Seasonal products can push small sellers into offering too many personalized options too early. A cleaner approach is to start with one object type, one artwork style, and one proof sample before expanding the menu.
For example, a seller might test a coaster, tag, card, or small keepsake first. The listing can focus on the use case, the personalization area, and the sample look. More object choices can wait until the first workflow is understood.
This matters because buyers often judge custom gifts by consistency. If every sample looks different, the listing feels less reliable. A small menu with clear photos can look more professional than a large menu built from untested assumptions.
AntBelt G1 is positioned for compact personalization work, but small shops should still treat launch-period content as planning guidance. Use samples to decide what belongs in the first seasonal menu, and leave final machine package details to the official Kickstarter page.
Follow the AntBelt G1 Kickstarter page for the launch reminder and final reward details:
