
Field Notes Went From Side Project To Cult Notebook (fastcompany.com) 18
Field Notes, the analog notebook company that began as designer Aaron Draplin's side project 20 years ago, has sold over 10 million notebooks and operates in 2,000 stores worldwide, co-founder Jim Coudal told Fast Company. The Chicago-based company, which Coudal says just completed its best year for sales and revenue with 2025 tracking to exceed those numbers, has grown from selling 13 notebooks on its launch day to producing quarterly edition runs of 30,000 to 60,000 packs. The brand's subscription model, launched in 2009 with 1,500-pack print runs, now encompasses 67 limited editions and provides both predictable cash flow and regular customer engagement opportunities for the company.
Ooh shiny. (Score:1, Flamebait)
I guess they appeal to the Apple fanboy crowd.
Re:Ooh shiny. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3)
Not shiny. Artisanal.
I wonder if they'll collaborate with these folks [imgur.com]. It seems their product is made for them.
Subscription Model (Score:5, Insightful)
What are two words that will sour me on your product faster than an inkjet printer demanding one to buy more ink cartridges?
this is an ad (Score:5, Informative)
This is an ad.
Re:this is an ad (Score:4)
It is an endless stream of words that actually says nothing about the product.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Ads which make claims about products can be argued about.
Less space than a phone, lame (Score:2)
"Limited edition" (Score:2)
A term meaning nothing more than paying extra to show off.
Re: (Score:2)
Nothing is infinite except the shamelessness of marketers.
"regular customer engagement opportunities" (Score:2)
So, you're telling me that this "analog notebook" requires a lot of tech support? Your marketing department certainly has a top-notch way of describing your customers as idiots or your products as wildly defective. ("Why not both?")
Leuchtturm & Muji have me covered. (Score:2)
For all my paper notebook needs I'm more than covered by Leuchtturm and Muji.
Leuchtturm for the german premium quality spin on the Moleskine-type of notebook. Notebooks don't get any better than Leuchtturm IMHO. Once you've gone from Moleskine to Leuchtturm you don't go back.
For more affordable options I use Muji as my go-to brand.
Best of all: Both brands are also prefectly city-snob/hippster compliant and go perfectly well with Freitag or Crumpler messenger bags, lumberjack shirts and the smug 'I don't giv
Re: (Score:1)
(you forgot the mandatory waxed mustache for male hipsters)
I used National, then Moleskine for engineering notes, until I realised that pretty much all my data was online and all my emails were archived. I wasn't doing a lot of work using paper, so I stopped using notebooks. Still have almost all my old ones though, although I regret leaving my first ones at a previous employer.
Bookbinding (Score:2)
Are we doing sponsored content now? (Score:1)
I think msmash is a very bad editor.