vigilante398
Authorized Vendor
I sold out and I sold out hard. I built my very first pedal in 2013 and as soon as it was finished a friend offered to buy it from me, and it felt good to make something someone wanted. So I kept going.
I'm not much of a salesman, but I love building, and selling has always been way for me to afford to keep doing that. I would still build pedals even if they weren't selling (and I did for many years), but I'm able to accomplish a lot more when I'm selling.
I don't plan on this ever being my full-time job, but it has paid for every piece of gear I own, loads of equipment so I can make better pedals, and given some extra cash for fun stuff when I want it. It doesn't pay the mortgage or put food on the table, and if it ever did then it would be a lot more stressful.
I think I also like doing it semi-professionally because I don't feel super fulfilled at my day job. I like to think I'm good at my job, but I'm a low-mid level worker in a huge multinational corporation and sometimes I don't feel important. When I build pedals, all of a sudden I feel like what I'm doing directly matters to people. So maybe I'm mostly doing it for emotional reasons rather than monetary reasons

I'm not much of a salesman, but I love building, and selling has always been way for me to afford to keep doing that. I would still build pedals even if they weren't selling (and I did for many years), but I'm able to accomplish a lot more when I'm selling.
I don't plan on this ever being my full-time job, but it has paid for every piece of gear I own, loads of equipment so I can make better pedals, and given some extra cash for fun stuff when I want it. It doesn't pay the mortgage or put food on the table, and if it ever did then it would be a lot more stressful.
I think I also like doing it semi-professionally because I don't feel super fulfilled at my day job. I like to think I'm good at my job, but I'm a low-mid level worker in a huge multinational corporation and sometimes I don't feel important. When I build pedals, all of a sudden I feel like what I'm doing directly matters to people. So maybe I'm mostly doing it for emotional reasons rather than monetary reasons
Are you going to be at NAMM this year? I just made all my travel plansI tried actively pursuing it for a few years with onboard preamps for one specific luthier, but I've just never had the salesman gene. Based my travel and vacation budget around NAMM for a few years, traded lots of R&D, parts, and build time for "free" booth space and barter credit on instruments and accessories, mostly had a blast, and I have been working with a few other cool luthiers for the last year or two. I always brought a few pedals along to NAMM too, but being locked into one luthier's booth didn't really work in my favor. My goal was always to sell design work rather than hardware though, and IME that just won't happen unless you have some good tangible products for people to try out. I made a big networking breakthrough in 2020 but a month later we had The Plague, and I'm just starting over now with the onboard stuff, but also enjoying exploring the pedal builder culture and doing some different things.
If I were going to sell pedals as a "side hustle" I'd look at what it takes to build at least 100 at a time, preferably 1000. And by build, I mean have someone else do it!![]()