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Epoxy Table Business

Digital Products

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Digital Products for Your Epoxy Table Business

Digital products let you earn revenue without adding time to your production schedule. For an epoxy table business, your expertise is your biggest asset—customers and other makers are willing to pay for templates, guides, and resources that save them time or help them avoid costly mistakes. These products generate passive income and build your brand authority simultaneously.

The best digital products for epoxy work address real problems your customers face: design choices, material selection, finishing techniques, and business decisions. You already know the answers to these questions. Packaging that knowledge into downloadable formats takes minimal ongoing effort once created.

Epoxy Resin Wood Table Design Template Collection

What it is: A set of 15–20 CAD or PDF design templates showing different table layouts, dimensions, wood-to-resin ratios, and edge configurations. Customers download, customize, and print templates to guide their own builds or present to clients.

Who buys it: DIY woodworkers and smaller epoxy businesses that want design variety without starting from scratch.

How to create it: Take photos of your best tables and measure their exact proportions. Use free tools like Canva or Affinity Designer to create scaled templates showing top view, side profile, and resin percentage breakdowns. Document each design with material recommendations and difficulty ratings.

Where to sell it: Etsy (high traffic for this audience) or your own website via Gumroad. Etsy gives visibility; your site builds email lists.

Realistic income: $400–$1,200 per month if you price at $19–$29 and sell 20–50 copies monthly.

Epoxy Table Troubleshooting & Problem-Solving Guide

What it is: A comprehensive PDF documenting 30+ common problems (yellowing, clouding, dust contamination, uneven cure, bubbles, color bleeding) with detailed solutions and prevention methods.

Who buys it: Intermediate makers and new business owners who’ve hit problems and want to fix future batches without expensive trial-and-error.

How to create it: Write detailed case studies from your own experience—what caused each issue, what you tried, what worked. Include close-up photos of problems and solutions. Organize by problem type and resin brand (since different products behave differently). Add a quick reference troubleshooting flowchart.

Where to sell it: Gumroad (direct sales with built-in email capture) or your website. Consider cross-promoting in Facebook epoxy groups where people actively search for solutions.

Realistic income: $300–$900 per month at $17–$27 per download with 15–40 sales monthly.

Epoxy Table Pricing & Cost Calculator Spreadsheet

What it is: An Excel or Google Sheets calculator that factors material costs, labor time, overhead, profit margin, and market positioning to generate final pricing. Users input their local costs and labor rate; the sheet calculates wholesale, retail, and custom pricing.

Who buys it: New epoxy table makers and woodworkers transitioning into the business who undercharge or struggle with pricing strategy.

How to create it: Build a spreadsheet with rows for resin, hardener, wood, molds, finishing materials, electricity, and labor. Create formulas that multiply material cost by markup percentages and add labor based on hourly rate. Include tabs for different table sizes and complexity levels. Test it with 5–10 actual projects to ensure accuracy.

Where to sell it: Gumroad or your website. This tool is worth promoting directly to people asking “how much should I charge?” in online communities.

Realistic income: $200–$600 per month at $15–$25 per sale with 10–30 monthly purchases.

Complete Epoxy Table Business Launch Checklist

What it is: A detailed PDF checklist covering every step from equipment selection through first customer delivery: safety equipment needed, supplier vetting, workspace setup, legal structure decisions, pricing strategy, marketing channels, and quality standards.

Who buys it: Complete beginners who want to start an epoxy table business but feel overwhelmed by where to begin.

How to create it: Organize your first-year business decisions into categories. Write 2–3 sentence explanations for each item explaining why it matters and common mistakes to avoid. Include a resource list (recommended suppliers, tool brands, safety certifications). Add estimated costs and timelines.

Where to sell it: Your website with email capture or Etsy. This appeals to people searching “how to start epoxy table business,” so optimize the title accordingly.

Realistic income: $500–$1,400 per month at $27–$47 per copy with 15–50 sales monthly, since it’s higher-value content for serious entrepreneurs.

Epoxy Resin Material Sourcing & Supplier Comparison Guide

What it is: A detailed guide comparing 20+ epoxy brands, wood suppliers, pigment sources, and tool vendors. For each supplier, include cost per gallon, cure time, yellowing resistance, customer service reputation, and ideal use cases.

Who buys it: New and scaling makers who want to avoid bad supplier relationships and find better prices on materials.

How to create it: Order small amounts from suppliers you haven’t used and test them honestly. Document performance, customer service response time, shipping speed, and pricing. Create comparison tables by resin type (UV, two-part standard, deep-pour, etc.). Include your personal recommendations based on value, not relationships.

Where to sell it: Gumroad with email signup or your own website. Update it annually to keep pricing current—this justifies charging $24–$34 since the information has ongoing value.

Realistic income: $350–$950 per month at $24–$34 per download with 12–40 monthly sales.

Video Course: Epoxy Table Pour & Finishing Techniques

What it is: A recorded video course (8–12 modules, 20–30 minutes total) showing your exact process from mold preparation through final sanding and sealing. Each module covers one specific technique with close-up footage and narration.

Who buys it: DIY enthusiasts wanting to learn your methods and intermediate makers wanting to refine their technique.

How to create it: Film your next 5–8 projects with multiple camera angles. Keep footage raw and real, including small mistakes that you correct. Use screen recording to show measurement and design decisions. Edit into clear modules with chapters. Use affordable tools like CapCut (free) or Adobe Premiere Elements ($100 one-time).

Where to sell it: Teachable, Kajabi, or Gumroad (simplest option). Host on your own website with membership software if you want to build an email list.

Realistic income: $600–$2,400 per month at $47–$97 per course with 10–50 enrollments monthly, depending on promotion effort.

Custom Epoxy Table Portfolio Presentation Template

What it is: A customizable Canva or PowerPoint template that epoxy table makers use to present their work to potential clients. It includes sections for design inspiration boards, material options, pricing tiers, timeline, and previous project examples.

Who buys it: Business-focused epoxy makers and woodworkers who struggle to present their work professionally to high-value clients.

How to create it: Design a clean, professional template in Canva (free version works) showing your best work. Create variations for residential and commercial projects. Include text blocks for customization and a color scheme that works for wood and resin. Provide a PDF guide explaining how to adapt it.

Where to sell it: Etsy or your website at $12–$19. This is a simpler product with lower perceived value, so price accordingly and bundle it with the pricing calculator for better value perception.

Realistic income: $150–$400 per month at $12–$19 per template with 10–30 monthly sales.

Getting Started With Digital Products

  1. Start with the pricing calculator or checklist. These require no filming, photography, or complicated design work. You can create both in 4–6 hours using Google Sheets and a simple PDF editor. List them on Gumroad immediately and test your sales process.
  2. Create your design template collection next. This leverages work you’ve already done. Measuring your existing tables and organizing them into templates takes 8–12 hours but generates passive income for years.
  3. Build your material sourcing guide while testing new suppliers anyway. You’re gathering this information regardless; documenting it adds minimal extra work and addresses a real pain point beginners face.
  4. Film your video course gradually. Record one project per month for the next year, then edit into a polished course. This is your highest-income product but also requires the most effort upfront, so space it out.
  5. Launch a second version of earlier products. Once you’ve sold the epoxy table design templates, create “Advanced Design Templates” or “Commercial Project Collection” at a higher price point for returning customers.

Pricing Your Digital Products

Your audience—DIY makers and small business owners—expects to pay more for information that saves time or prevents costly mistakes. A $300 mistake in materials justifies a $35 troubleshooting guide. Price your products based on the value they protect or enable, not on your creation effort. A designer might spend 20 hours on a template collection, but if it saves makers $500 in failed attempts, pricing at $29 is reasonable.

Avoid pricing below $12 per product, as it trains customers to undervalue digital work and you’ll need high volume to earn meaningful income. Bundles ($49 for three related products) outperform single-item sales and capture price-sensitive customers while increasing total revenue per transaction. Increase prices slightly after 50 sales—early customers accepted a lower price for risk; later customers should pay for proven value.