The FAQ Nobody Warned You (or us) About

A very real Q&A about running an online merch operation
Behind the Merch Curtain — Part 1

Q: What do you do when the only people trying to log in aren’t clients—but hackers and fake accounts from three continents away?
A: You don’t feel flattered.
You crank up security. You add more checks. More locks. More steps. And then you wait for a real human to log in and message you asking why it’s “harder than it used to be.”
Congrats. You’ve successfully protected nothing from nobody… yet.


Q: What do you do when a product prints off-center?
A: You return it. Immediately.
You don’t “see if the customer notices.” You don’t justify it. You eat the cost like an adult and move on.
That shirt? That hat? That hoodie?
You’ve just lost money on it. Not hypothetically. Not later. Instantly.

Q: But isn’t print-on-demand supposed to be risk-free?
A: That’s adorable.
Print-on-demand removes inventory risk. It does not remove reality.
Reality still includes misprints, damaged shipments, delayed carriers, wrong sizes, wrong colors, and that one item that somehow looked perfect in the mockup and cursed in real life.

Q: What do you do when a tried-and-tested printer completely screws up two orders for the same client?
A: You pause.
Because the sample was perfect.
The setup was correct.
The files were approved.
And somehow… production went sideways. Twice.
You remake the orders.
You eat the cost.
You apologize more than feels reasonable.
And you’re left with a very unhappy client who doesn’t care that the sample was flawless—because they’re holding the bad ones, not the good one.

Q: What do you do when someone ghosts you?
A: You send a follow-up.
Then another.
Then you stop.
Because running a business means knowing the difference between persistence and shouting into the void.
People disappear. Bands break up. Projects stall. Emails go unanswered.
It’s not personal. It’s Tuesday.

Q: What if a customer changes their mind after everything is already in motion?
A: You sigh.
You explain policies.
You try to help anyway.
Sometimes you lose money. Sometimes you keep the relationship. Sometimes you lose both.
None of this was in the Instagram caption.

Q: What do you do when profits are thin, but expectations are high?
A: You keep going.
You reinvest.
You fix what breaks.
You improve systems that only exist because something already went wrong.

Q: Is this normal?
A: Yes. Unfortunately.
This is the unglamorous middle layer of running merch, platforms, storefronts, or anything online.
Nobody posts about fraud prevention updates.
Nobody brags about remakes.
Nobody flexes the apology email.
But this is the work.

Q: So why do it at all?
A: Because when it does work—
When a band gets paid,
When a customer finally gets what they were promised,
When a drop goes smoothly,
When something you built actually supports someone else—
it’s worth the nonsense.
Even the ridiculous parts.
Especially the ridiculous parts.

Behind the Merch Curtain
This is the part of merch nobody talks about.
The fixes. The refunds. The mistakes. The systems built because something failed.
We’re pulling the curtain back—not to complain, not to scare anyone off—but to be honest about what it actually takes to do this right.
If you’re a band, artist, or business that wants merch handled by people who:

fix problems instead of hiding them
take responsibility when things go wrong
and understand that “easy” doesn’t mean “careless”

That’s what we do.
👉 Ready to launch merch without pretending it’s perfect?
Start with Amplify Merch and let us handle the chaos behind the scenes—so you don’t have to.
More from Behind the Merch Curtain coming soon.