Erik S. said: keithcurtis said: ... Never, ever stop at a place with a sign that just says "Hamburgers". Underlined for emphasis. This is a bit off topic, but... Strongly disagree. I would instead say, if you stop at a place with a sign that just says "Hamburgers" then adjust your expectations for the unknown. Thats not necessarily bad. Ive ate at plenty of small "not so well branded" restaurants with outstanding food(or well branded business that sell food as a secondary, and the brand is not connected to the food(like a bowling alley)). There is potential one might be bad, but it's not guaranteed enough to say 'never try'. Yeah, I'm with you, Erik. While I understand many people are prone to fall for branding influence, my best dining experiences have come from places with just a neon sign that says 'pho' or even worse, you had to have discovered it on Google Maps to realize there was even a restaurant there because the hours are hand written on a sign taped to the window and the house looks like a regular house and I'm pretty sure the owners just live upstairs. One of my favorite places to eat. Actually, I'd be more suspicious of 'burgers' than 'pho', but if the food on the sign is a single food item then I have a hope that they're good at one thing and that thing isn't branding. I have eaten amazing non-Western meals at the sketchiest looking stops. There's a taco place a few blocks from me, one of my favorite places in the city, the only signage says '3 tacos $5' hand written. You go in, you get exactly that, and it's great. Now the real suspicious sign is this: Burgers, Pizza, Chicken, Sushi, Chinese Food (cheap!!! delivery phone number) Laundry, Vacuum Cleaner Repair and Money Exchange Mmm yeah I'm not going there. You know why? There's no way they're EXCELLENT at making any one of those foods if they are spreading themselves out in the hopes of capturing all audiences. This applies to packages. If something claims to be every token you could ever possibly need, or the last map pack you'll ever have to buy, absolutely none of the elements will be the best a creator can make. I would much rather pay for Ice Temple, 3 Levels versus 500 Generic Dungeons! If you try to do everything to make sure you get every customer, instead you result in a package that contains nothing great and tons of cheap pieces. Specializing is going to improve your sales, so instead of doing 20 temples, do Elemental Temples, or do 5 different Elemental Temple packs, one for each element, with several variation themes for different Ice Temples, Fire Temples, Earth Temples, etc. You don't want someone to buy a 500 item pack and use a couple items and never remember you, you want to hook them with one really good thematic pack so that way when they want more of that kind of asset they buy a different one of your packs. This is what the most popular map artists do, with packs featured around say 'desert' or 'tundra' or 'jungle' or 'small village' rather than enormous megapacks that do everything slightly worse. This will do more for you in the long run because instead of buying 1 pack and being disappointed, they'll buy 1 pack, love it, and realize they need a new one for the next campaign. ;) Don't try to sell sushi, burgers, and a laundry. Sell people one great idea with enough modular pieces that they feel like they have a decent use ratio for it. I took a look at my sales over the year and indeed, the resultant most popular map set was the highly specialized niche one and not the generic one, and the most popular asset was the Tracking Clocks, which does 1 task. So in the future, that's how I will be moving forward, trying to hone in on a coherent theme for each pack instead of how I started, and that's what I recommend. Branding is useful for people searching for your specific thing. A tiny logo would do, I just put my name on all my pack thumbnails and usually use the same font, but this can be improved upon if you make a good template for example maybe you always put your name on a red bar at the bottom. Increase the chances people will see your item and recognize it as yours and associate it with pre-existing trust in what you make. :) This is what I learned from 1 year of Roll20 sales. You don't have to be McDonalds, but it helps to be known for doing A Thing.