A small shop can lose time by offering too many personalized items before the sample work is organized. A seasonal menu keeps the first offer narrow: one or two blank types, one design style, and a short list of personalization fields.
AntBelt G1 is a compact engraving project, so the most useful seller content is practical. Instead of promising a large catalog, start with a menu that can be photographed, reviewed, and explained clearly. A market seller might test a tag, a coaster, or a packaging insert before adding more product shapes.
A narrow menu also helps customer communication. The seller can show exactly what the sample proves and what still needs approval. That is stronger than saying every material, shape, and design will work the same way.
If a second product line is tempting, make it a separate test. Give it its own proof folder and its own customer wording. That keeps the first offer clean and easier to support.
For more AntBelt launch notes, see /updates/.
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