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eBay Sales Patterns Show That the Maker Movement is Still Growing (Video)

Meet Aron Hsiao. He works for Terapeak, a company that tracks sales through online venues such as eBay and Amazon in order to help merchants decide what to sell -- and how. The five 'maker' categories Terapeak tracks (drones, robotics, Arduino, Raspberry Pi and 3D printing) outsold Star Trek-related merchandise by a huge amount, namely $33 million to $4.3 million, during a recent 90 day study period. Star Wars merchandise did better at $29.4 million, but still... And as another comparison, Aron says that all Apple laptops combined, new and used, sold $48.4 million, so the DIY hobbyist movement still has a ways to go before it catches up with Apple laptops -- but seems to be heading steadily in that direction.

Drones are the hottest hobbyist thing going right now, Aron says, but all five of the hobbyist/tinkerer' categories Terapeak tracks are growing steadily at a rate of up to 70% year over year, with drones leading the way and robotics trailing (but still growing). It's good to see people taking an interest in making things for themselves. If you remember (or have heard of) the Homebrew Computer Club, you have an idea of what tinkerers and hobbyists can produce if given even a tiny bit of encouragement. And it's good to see that the DIY mindset is not only still alive, but growing -- even if it seems to be moving away from traditional hobby tinkering (cars; radios) toward concepts (drones; robotics) that weren't considered mass market 'homebrew' possibilities even a few years ago.

6 of 24 comments (clear)

  1. 5 is greater than 1 by tomhath · · Score: 1

    (drones, robotics, Arduino, Raspberry Pi and 3D printing) outsold Star Trek-related merchandise...Apple laptops combined, new and used, sold $48.4 million

    I'm more surprised at the Apple number than the combined sales of five other categories. But then, Apple laptops aren't PCs.

  2. CNC mills, laser engravers/cutters by ArcadeMan · · Score: 1

    I just ordered parts that fall into the Arduino and the 3D printers categories, but those are going to be used in a tiny desktop CNC mill.

  3. Re:Another request to stop autoplaying video by ArcadeMan · · Score: 1

    It is an HTML5 video and it is not auto-playing.

    I know it's HTML5 because I don't have Flash nor Java on my system (Safari on OS X), nothing auto-plays and I see a placeholder image for the video. Clicking on that image plays the video (with a nice ad that you can't skip for the first few seconds).

  4. Maker movement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Stop with this awful term Slashdot. Rebranding crafting somehow doesn't make it new and hip. It's a thing, it's always been a thing, it'll always be a thing.

    1. Re:Maker movement by WillAdams · · Score: 1

      Yes, please, thank you.

      Stackexchange managed to totally derail the Digital Fabrication area when they rebranded it as ``Maker'' something or other, and the term just annoys me.

      Can we at least (re)define it as people who read _Make Magazine_?

      Anyway, you may find the Shapeoko wiki of interest: http://www.shapeoko.com/wiki/

      --
      Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
    2. Re:Maker movement by tepples · · Score: 1

      Rebranding crafting somehow doesn't make it new and hip.

      A lot of influential gatekeepers have decided not to associate with crafters. For example, Amazon requires items to have a UPC or EAN, and the cost of the GS1 membership required to obtain and renew those product identifiers tends to be out of reach of crafters operating below day-job scale. The same is true of the $480 per year fee for professional Amazon sellers. This is why crafters need their own sales channels.