The new cottage industries
In times gone by saying that you were involved in a “cottage industry” meant that you were doing something like making quilts at home or perhaps making cute little craft items. Essentially, working with your hands by and large.
These days a cottage industry is quite a different beast.
Yes, there are still many people around making those quilts and craft items but you’ll see them sold online these days. In fact, that aspect gives you more contact with the original maker of such items than most people would have had in the hay-day of the cottage industry. In the past, they’d have sold most of their items via buyers whereas now they can sell them to you directly.
However, these days there is a whole new class of cottage industry. It’s not uncommon to come across an ebay seller in the most unusual places. I’ve bought several items from a place based in the Shetland Islands myself which is about as far from “civilisation” as you can be. Likewise, there’s a number of places based in Point Roberts, the little bit of land forgoten about when the treaty definining the border between Canada and America was signed.
Similarly there are the likes of myself making something of a living from writing. There have, of course, been writers pottering away for a long time but the Internet has made that much more of an occupation open to everyone than it ever was in the past. After all, realistically I’d never have had a hope of getting 35,000 readers a week for my writing yet that’s the number I’ve had in the last week for this blog.
Some might say that these Internet based efforts aren’t a cottage industry. How could they be with so much technology? Yet, that craft item you bought also used technology, it’s just that the technology used to produce it was older.
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