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$1.3k profit day.
i promise I'll post the breakdown of my previous post
https://www.reddit.com/r/dropshipping/s/6JiOCJYW2Q
First time hitting this in a single day.
A few weeks ago, I was testing products that weren’t doing much. Some had clicks but no add to carts, some had add to carts but no purchases, and some just died instantly.
At first I thought it was just “bad products”, but looking back it was more how I was testing and how everything connected.
What changed wasn’t anything dramatic. It was a bunch of small adjustments that started compounding.
On the ads side, I simplified everything a lot.
Before, I was overthinking creatives, trying to make them look polished or different. Now I just focus on making it clear.
– Short videos that show the product doing one thing well
– First few seconds actually matter more than the rest
– One angle per creative instead of mixing messages
I tested a small batch at a time (usually a handful), not dozens.
The biggest shift was how I judged them:
if people aren’t stopping to watch or engage early, it’s usually not going to magically improve later.
I used to let ads run too long hoping they’d turn around. Now I cut them faster and move on. That alone saved a lot of money.
When something does get attention, I don’t just leave it, I try to understand why and make slight variations of it.
That part made scaling feel a lot more controlled instead of random.
On the store side, I realized most of my issue wasn’t traffic, it was what people saw after clicking.
I looked at it from a first time visitor perspective and it wasn’t as clear as I thought.
– The offer wasn’t obvious immediately
– The page had too much going on
– Trust wasn’t strong enough early on
I didn’t redesign everything. I just simplified:
clearer headline, better structure, more obvious proof, less unnecessary sections.
After that, the same kind of traffic started converting better.
Another thing that made a difference was having someone else look at what I was doing.
When you’re working on your own setup every day, you stop noticing issues because everything feels “normal” to you.
There were small gaps I completely missed, especially in how the ad and the product page connected.
Once those were pointed out and fixed, things started making more sense.
Not saying that’s the only way to do it, but having that extra perspective definitely sped things up for me.
Right now I’m still keeping everything pretty simple:
– Testing a few creatives at a time
– Cutting quickly based on early signals
– Focusing more on angles than quantity
– Keeping the store clean and easy to understand
Nothing fancy, just trying to be consistent with it.
This isn’t some “I figured it all out” post. I’m still testing and still making adjustments.
Just sharing because a lot of the progress came from fixing things I didn’t even realize were problems at first.
this are the data I could bring out.... I'll post more about it.
And pls upvote so that others can see.