The Story of CG Cookie
Apr 26th 2016
âWhat do you do when you have everything to lose?âCreate a business that challenges traditional structures, sprouts a devoted community and inspires creativity in tens of thousands of people around the world. Obviously.Easier said than done, you think? Youâre right. This is the story of CG Cookie from its early days as you have not heard it before, complete with bite-sized lessons we learned along the way.
2007 didnât start off great for the Burkes. With freelance work drying up, Wes and his wife were months behind on their mortgage payments and looking at certain financial doom if something didnât present itself. They had just had their first child and were quickly running out of time.
Lesson 1: Believe in Your Mad Dreams
^The humble studio of CG Cookie when it started.Â
Until Wes found a job in downtown Chicago, a 2-hour one-way commute away from home. Â Think about it: how do you endure a 2-hour journey, twice a day, 5 days of the week? For some, this would mean catching up on sleep or scrolling through their Facebook feed with glazed-over eyes.Â
For Wes, it turned into 2 hours of intense work on a site he decided to call CG Cookie. âI donât exactly remember why,â he admits today - a result, perhaps, of sleep deprivation. After 8-10 hours at work, he would reverse his commute, continuing to build what was becoming a patchwork site of CG news, jobs, images, and tutorials.Â
At home, Wes would allow himself 30 minutes to relax after dinner and continue to work on CG Cookie until midnight. Rinse, repeat.âLooking back, it seems like total insanity,â smiles Wes. âBut in my case, that is just what it took: a slightly mad belief that what started as an insignificant side-project could one day become something more, something that would have a positive impact on people's lives.â
Lesson 2: If Things Arenât Working Out, Give Yourself an Ultimatum
Before that would happen, there were serious hurdles to jump; fast forward to spring 2009 when Wes was struggling again. No longer able to afford CG Cookie, he and his friend Jonathan Williamson brainstormed for solutions.Â
They decided to outline and offer pre-sale on a DVD covering the latest release of a little-known open-source 3D software: Blender. Â If this didnât work out, it seemed certain the project would shut down and theyâd write off their losses.Having launched the pre-sale site at 10 oâclock in the evening, Wes fired up his email the following morning and excitedly called Jonathan: âWe have well over 30 pre-orders for a Blender training DVD!"Â
This was a defining moment for CG Cookie; in addition to providing a desperately needed financial injection, it was the first validation of all previous efforts, as Wes remembers: âIt was a huge moment for us: the first proof that what we are doing might be ârealâ.âÂ
Lesson 3: Find a Way to Get Paid For Your Work
This was well into the second year of the existence of CG Cookie as a site, but as a stand-alone business, CG Cookie wasnât born until 2010. Wes and Jonathan (now official partners) incorporated the company in November and made a crucial decision just 1 month later: âWe decided to offer a subscription-based membership for $10/month.â says Wes. In return, members would gain access to pre-recorded content teaching them Blender, Photoshop and other software packages. Â Offering subscription meant two things for CG Cookie: first, it provided the business with residual income.Â
Second, it put the site on the front lines as a commercial entity in the open-source Blender community. Afterward, things moved fast, as they tend to do at CG Cookie: âWe created our first iPad game Eat Sheep, published a book 'Art of Blender' and increased our staff from 2 to 6 full-time members,â says Wes. âWe were beginning to feel the pace of the adventure quickening.â
Self-publishing our first art book was hard!
Lesson 4: Be Generous and Give Back
The success of CG Cookie was showing financially, too. âEach year, we would increase our gross revenue by at least 30%,â says Wes, âand from the early days, our profits would go right back into the company to create more content and new features.Â
At the same time, we were donating thousands back to the Blender Development Fund as a way to give back to the community that supported us.â (CG Cookie's Blender Market is now the main sponsor of the Fund.) Wes and Jonathan invest heavily into the CG Cookie crew: âOur hope has always been to enable our crew to live where they would like to, spend time with family and feel vested in CG Cookie and our mission,â says Wes who supports a remote working culture, a flexible vacation policy and a 4-day work week.Â
âWe wouldnât be where we are without our crew - thatâs not a cliche, but pure fact. For that reason, things like paying 100% of our full-time employeeâs medical benefit costs are a no-brainer to me.â
Lesson 5: Be Prepared to Change Everything
With lots of love going around, 2014 started off great for CG Cookie. The author crew was publishing tutorials of higher quality than ever before; the growing community was loving the new content and the CG Cookie brand continued to gain recognition.Â
But under the surface, worrying signs were emerging: after a long period of growth, the numbers of CG Cookie subscribers hit a plateau and Wes and Jonathan were left scratching their heads. What are we doing wrong? The answer presented itself during a company retreat in early 2015. âWe all sat at a table and asked some tough questions about who we are and what we want to achieve.Â
What emerged from the debate is the one thing we were lacking: a clear direction,â Wes remembers. Â This really hit home for Wes when filling out an application for a Venture Capital program called indie.vc which asked him to list all of CG Cookie's social networks: "I started to feel embarrassed as I listed the social accounts of all the sites we were running: Concept Cookie, Blender Cookie, Max Cookie, Sculpt Cookie, Unity Cookie...each of them having their own Facebook, YouTube and Twitter accounts. This really opened my eyes as to how scattered our focus had been."Â
With this realization, the crew quickly got to work on restructuring CG Cookie into a concise, focused website. For months, the crew would work on creating a logical progression of tutorials into structured learning flows with quizzes and exercises, until the new âCG Cookie Fiveâ was revealed to the community in the summer of 2015. Â âLooking back, it was an insanely short amount of time to accomplish what we set out to do,â says Wes, âand it was far from perfect, with bugs and even a few non-functional pages at the launch at 4am. But we did it!"
Art education taught by a bunch of characters :)
Lesson 6: Be Clear on What You Came Here to do, and donât forget it!
âThe main thing we learned from our rehaul of CG Cookie in 2015 is the need to be clear on who we are,â says Wes. In his words, what exactly is that? âOur goal is to enable artists to become successful. How to do we do that?Â
By providing affordable, top-notch education, incredible tools to speed up your workflow and a marketplace to enable financial success.â Instructor and Lead 3D Artist Kent Trammell
The companyâs mission defines everything the crew does, from deciding what tutorial to create to designing new site features. The bottom line, to Wes, is that CG Cookie will succeed only if it helps its members succeed as well - whether that means growing their skills for their own enjoyment or making it in the industry. The question, "Will this benefit our community?" has become a mantra for the whole team and the answer decides what action will be taken; for a small crew with limited resources, clarity and knowing your priorities is everything.
Lesson 7: Embrace Fear
More than 7 years after the birth of CG Cookie on a train into Chicago, one lesson rings particularly true for Wes: the necessity to confront oneâs fear.  He remembers the times of feeling fear from facing insurmountable odds: âThere have been numerous times in the CG Cookie journey when I felt a gut-turning anxiety, the visceral fear of the unknown and of making a wrong choice,â says Wes, âbut Iâve learned to press through the fear, the questions, the doubt and turn them into a fuel to create something amazing. Having a great business partner, team and family in my corner certainly helps!âÂ
Today, he speaks at industry meet-ups, events for creatives and, recently, at his collegeâs graduation ceremony, about accepting fear and then taking the plunge anyway: âIâve learned that fear usually means I am on the right path,â adds Wes, âunless, of course, it is that fear of being electrocuted by sticking your fingers into a light socket. That one is real - don't do it."
Wes Burke and Tim von Rueden at CG Cookie's first conference!
Unfortunately, I've found that the Lesson 3 and the Lesson 6 are quite often mutually exclusive, because getting paid for what you love requires compromises so fundamentally unacceptable that if you do it the way that pays off, you will no longer love it (or even respect yourself, having given up so much of your integrity), and if you stick by your guns and do what you love, the way you love it, you're lucky if you don't get sued, let alone paid. So yeah, excellent post, and I hope CG Cookie continues to prosper, but it hasn't changed my convivtion that work is what you do to put the food on the table (or just for survival, plain and simple), and arts is what you do to take a break from work and be yourself for a change.
I know myself. Trying to start a project is very hard. Indeed, here, where I was born and live (Spain) things are way much harder that in another countries. No matter if you can earn it or not, you must pay every month around 400⏠just to legally work as a freelance. Right know, while I write this lines, politicians on tv try to convince us that everything is going to be ok in a few month time. But the reality is far from that. Guys... credit to you for all the hard effort (I'm sure of this) behind this site and project. Don't know how much time I'll be a member of the site, but until today all I can say is that this is a great place to learn everything related to 3D and games. I enjoy a lot all the videos, really.
Thank you for giving us new guys a platform, And thank you for your hard work, when I read the part about confronting your fears and develop a screw it just do it attitude, it brought a tear to my eye, once again thank you for your selfless interests in paying it forward to us newbies. Now how do I donate.
And we say: Schön, dass du dabei bist! :)
Munch..crunch..Yummy!
I see a team with the same goals and tremendous human value. :)
So inspiring
Hi
I had no idea CG Cookie was such a young endeavor. Congratulations on your perseverance. I started on blender 2 years ago at age 67 having no experience on
computers. It has been a challenge, especially being a left brain thinker- artist, art
teacher. I am now at the point that I need a more powerful computer as Hair will not
render to my satisfaction. When that happens, I will be ready to rig and animate my
character into my story backgrounds. Meanwhile I plan to incorporate some 10,000 photos I have taken over the years by studying photoshop with the goal of using
them in my finished product. This is a wonderful opportunity for any artist/teacher
to realize their artistic dreams in yet another medium. Thanks for all your help.
With kindest regards
Linda
Thanks guys! I appreciate CG Cookie for existing and helping me with my art education. Without you guys, I would never have made as much progress as I have with my own projects. Here's to more years of cookies to come!
This was awesome guys! Thanks for sharing this with the community!
(I believed in you guys from the start! :) )