And Why It Matters
Once you understand what marketing for tattoo artists actually is, the next step is simple:
Who is your work for?
Not in a corporate sense.
Not in a “build an avatar” exercise.
Just in a real, practical way.
Why this matters
If your work is for everyone, it connects with no one. Not because it’s bad, but because it’s unclear.
People need to recognise themselves in what you do. And that only happens when you’re specific.
Where most tattoo artists get stuck
They say things like:
“I’ll tattoo anything.”
“I’m open to all styles.”
“I just want more clients.”
Sometimes that comes from a lack of direction.
But not always.
Some tattoo artists genuinely enjoy working across multiple styles.
They like the variety, the different challenges, and the steady flow of work.
There’s nothing wrong with that. But it is a different type of business.
Understanding the difference
If your work is highly specific, one style, one direction, then your marketing is about attracting people to you.
Your name, your style, your identity.
But if you’re open to everything, your business works differently.
It becomes more about:
- accessibility
- location
- availability
- and trust in the shop as a whole
You’re not just promoting yourself. You’re promoting the experience of getting tattooed there.
Because your clients are often local, and they’re not always choosing based on style alone. They’re choosing based on convenience, trust, and reputation.
A simple example
Years ago, I helped a friend set up a rehearsal studio in the city centre.
There were already plenty of established studios. Same gear. Same prices. Nothing to separate them on paper. So instead of competing on what everyone else was doing, we looked at the experience.
The idea was simple: Give every band free tea and coffee.
An average band has four members, rehearsing for a few hours. At most, that’s a handful of cups of coffee.
Instant coffee costs next to nothing. But the perceived value is huge.
It makes the place feel welcoming. It makes people want to stay.
And more importantly, it makes them want to come back.
That studio is still running years later. Still serving free coffee.
The point
It wasn’t about reaching more people.
It was about understanding the people they wanted to attract, and giving them a better reason to choose that space over another.
Same service. Same price. Different experience.
Where people go wrong
Problems start when people mix business models.
Trying to build a highly specialised personal brand, while also saying “I do everything.”
Or relying on local, walk-in work, but marketing themselves like a niche artist.
That’s when things feel inconsistent.
The key point
Neither approach is better. But they require different decisions.
If you enjoy tattooing everything, lean into that.
But understand:
Your marketing should reflect a local, accessible, reliable service, not a highly niche identity.
What this actually comes down to
It’s about understanding:
- what you enjoy doing
- what you’re best at
- and who naturally connects with that
Those three things tend to overlap. And that’s where your strongest work, and your best clients, come from.
Think about it like this
Every tattoo artist already has a type of client they prefer.
The ones who:
- trust your process
- like your style
- don’t argue over every detail
- and leave happy
And then there are the others. The ones that drain you, question everything, and make the process harder than it needs to be.
Marketing is about attracting more of the first group, and less of the second.
Marketing for Tattoo Artists
You’re not choosing who’s allowed to get tattooed by you. You’re choosing who your work is for.
That’s not exclusion. That’s clarity.
Why this works
When you’re clear about who your work is for:
- your content becomes easier to create
- your work becomes more consistent
- your clients feel more aligned
- and your reputation starts to build in the right direction
People start to recognise you for something specific. And that’s when things begin to compound.
The shift
Stop asking:
“How do I appeal to more people?”
Start asking:
“Who naturally connects with what I already do?”
Straight truth
You don’t need more types of clients. You need more of the right ones.
Quick exercise
Think about your last 10 clients.
- Which ones did you enjoy working with the most?
- What did they have in common?
- Which ones would you happily work with again?
- Which ones would you avoid if you could?
There’s your answer.
Final thought
Marketing for tattoo artists isn’t about reaching everyone.
It’s about being clear enough that the right people recognise you when they see your work.