Jim Carter | Ecom Validation

681 posts

Jim Carter | Ecom Validation

Jim Carter | Ecom Validation

@dawsonecom

90% of "winning products" are trash. I prove it daily. 6 years in ecom, 9 stores, now building validation tool I wish I had on day one.

Validate Product Idea (Free) → شامل ہوئے Şubat 2026
242 فالونگ104 فالوورز
Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
"Your First Product Will Fail. The System Is What Survives. You will fail at your first product. Probably your second and third too. I'm not saying this to scare you off. I'm saying it because every successful ecom operator I know (myself included) went through the same thing. The difference between the ones who made it and the ones who didn't is what they did after they failed. Most people pick a product based on gut feeling. "This is cool, I'd buy it." They throw it on Shopify, run some ads, get no sales, and conclude that ecom doesn't work. Or worse — they conclude they're unlucky. Ecom has no luck factor. Zero. If your product didn't sell, you can crack the whole process open and find the exact failure point. Low click-through rate on your ad? The creative didn't stop the scroll. High clicks but everyone bounces from your store? Your landing page killed trust. People adding to cart but not buying? Check your checkout. Hidden shipping fee? Surprise tax? Something spooked them. Every failure teaches you something specific IF you are building a system that tracks it. I write questions for myself. For every step. Sourcing, offer engineering, ad creation, store setup, supplier communication. I ask the same questions every time so I am not wasting cognitive energy on decisions I already know how to make. Then I focus that energy on the parts that matter — the creative angle, the offer stack, the customer psychology. This is what separates operators from gamblers. A gambler picks a product, throws money at it, and prays. An operator builds a checklist, runs the product through it before spending a cent, and knows exactly where to look when something breaks. Your first product will fail. Build the system so your fifth one doesn't. If you're spending more time looking at "winning product" compilations on TikTok than you spend analyzing your own funnel data, you're in the gambling category. And the house always wins against gamblers. Build your checklist. Write your questions. Track your data. The system is the product. Everything else is a vehicle.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
Everyone's looking for "winning products." No product wins on its own. Your offer wins. Your angle wins. Your landing page wins. The product is just a vehicle. Don't sell just one product. Start offer engineering today.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@ecomchigga 40/40/20 works mostly because asks feel rare. abd youre hitting same people multiple times per week. buut “trust content” only pays when it’s all orbiting one pain your product fixes + you drop CTA within 24h of receipts, not whenever content calendar says.
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🀅@ecomchigga·
there's a content strategy that builds authority AND sells at the same time and almost nobody in the info selling space uses it properly everyone is doing one of two things. either they post pure engagement bait all day and wonder why nobody buys. or they post pure value all day and wonder why nobody buys both fail for the same reason. they only do one thing the accounts i've seen consistently clear $6K-$14K months selling digital products on twitter all run the same content split. i didn't invent this. i just noticed the pattern after studying it obsessively and tested it across enough accounts to know it's not a coincidence 40% of your tweets should be reach content. this is the broad stuff. the tweets that make someone who's never seen you before stop scrolling and think "okay who is this." relatable observations about making money online. blunt takes. pattern interrupts. these aren't meant to sell anything. they exist to pull new eyeballs onto your profile 40% should be trust content. this is where the money actually gets made. specific breakdowns of how things work in your niche. real numbers from your experience. behind the scenes of what you're building. raw honest thoughts that prove you've actually been in the trenches. this is what turns a random follower into someone who trusts you enough to buy something from you. most info sellers skip this entirely because it doesn't get as many likes as engagement bait the final 20% is conversion content. your CTA tweets. the "comment X for my guide" posts. the ones that actually drive leads into your funnel. and here's the counterintuitive part. this category should be your SMALLEST percentage of posts. not your biggest i see accounts where 80% of their tweets are conversion posts. every tweet is asking for something. comment this. DM me that. grab this. their whole feed looks like a telemarketer wrote it. nobody trusts them. nobody buys but when you run 40/40/20 something weird happens. your CTA tweets start converting at 3-4x the rate they used to. because by the time someone sees your conversion post they've already seen 4 other tweets that week that made them trust you. the CTA doesn't feel like spam. it feels like an opportunity i tested this on an account that was doing $400/month posting mostly engagement bait. switched to 40/40/20. didn't change the product. didn't change the price. didn't change the audience. just changed the content ratio 8 weeks later. $4,800 that month. same followers. same niche. just different content balance the content you post between your CTA tweets matters more than the CTA tweets themselves. that's the part nobody gets i wrote a free doc that breaks down this whole content system plus the full backend behind it. the offer structure, the DM framework, the launch playbook, the community setup. everything i use RT this + comment "ratio" and i'll send it to you (must be following)
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@roasroi tbh $2k/mo won’t save you if you don’t already have clicks coming in. build traffic + tracking on $100, then crank spend when you got signal.
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Roas ROI
Roas ROI@roasroi·
before you jump into affiliate marketing, get yourself to $5k per month with freelancing, salary, or a simple agency depending on your location / life situation - that will leave you with $2k to test stuff starting affil with $0 is possible, but very hard with $2k per month you will see the results much quicker as you can test freely and will be less inclined to cut potential winners too early
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
careful with winners :) everything with viral potential has expiry date (and we're talking days, not weeks). you better off with a boring product that works rather than some viral fidget today that's going to be absorbed and scaled by other players almost instantly. avoid trends, really. what has strong trend up will have strong trend down :) maybe check out dropshipseek.com, given you are in a research phase, could really help you with a market insights. best of luck!
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Fonz
Fonz@el_fonz25·
@dawsonecom Good point 🙏 been focused on getting a winner first but I’ll start testing bundles too
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Fonz
Fonz@el_fonz25·
Day 1 running Facebook ads for my Shopify store. Budget: $50/day Goal: Get data (not even sales yet) Just fixed my pixel + conversion setup after struggling for days. Let’s see what happens in the next 48 hours.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@c1rdin don't forget about bundles and upsells. in ecom, you're not going earn shit if you're selling just one product. aim to increase AOV and put people into decision "should I buy bundle A or B" instead of "should I buy or not" ;) Best of luck!
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cardin
cardin@c1rdin·
Just finished creating my Shopify store, Took the time to test things out and get the feel of it. Launched my first testing product, lets see how this goes Have to create ads as well later this weekend..
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
"Dropshipping vs Real Ecom — And Why You Should Care About the Difference Most people use "dropshipping" and "ecom" like they mean the same thing. They don't. Dropshipping is quick flips. You find a product with a small upward demand trend, build a store, engineer an offer, squeeze it until competitors pile in and inflate your CPMs to the point where margin disappears. Then you move on. Your target might be a comfortable $10-25k/month. Getting there still takes a shitload of work, but the game is speed and rotation. Real ecom is a different animal. You take a boring product with stable, non-emotional demand. Lawn irrigation parts. Replacement gaskets. Industrial tape. Nobody's making TikToks about it. You build a brand around it. You create a differentiator, build credibility, grow it slow. Cash flow at the beginning is painful. But this is where 8-9 figure revenues come from. And here's what's funny: the products that make the most money are the ones you'd never post about. No one's flexing their replacement water filter brand. But someone's clearing seven figures selling them because they stuck to one niche, understood the customer, and built something boring and real. I spent 11 years in retail. Most of the money I made came from products that would bore you to tears. Not fidget toys. Not viral gadgets. Boring, ugly, functional shit with stable demand and repeat buyers. If you're starting, dropshipping makes sense. You learn the mechanics: ads, funnels, offer engineering, supplier management. You build skills. But keep your eyes on the transition. The real money is in building something that doesn't need a new "winning product" every month. Pick your lane. But know they're different roads, and the flashy one has way more traffic.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
Ecom/dropshipping is not a slot machine. If something failed, you can take the whole funnel apart and find exactly where it broke. Low CTR? Ad sucks. High CTR, high bounce? Landing sucks. High ATC, no purchases? You slapped your customer with hidden fees. It's data, not luck.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@KodyNordquist Most expensive thing is team fighting over attribution. Get UTMs/naming tight + one sheet everybody uses and suddenly “what do we do next?” gets easy.
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Kody Nordquist
Kody Nordquist@KodyNordquist·
A few things that are actually worth the money (for DTC operators): • A founder who will record videos • Knowing contribution margin before opening Ads Manager • A creative producer you can text at 9 am and have content ASAP • Raw over studio, every time • A media buyer who tells you to pause before they tell you to scale • Flex Ads running while you sleep • An offer actually worth advertising • A bookkeeper who's seen a Meta P&L before • Email flows built past the week you launched • Honest feedback from someone managing more spend than you • A Shopify dev you can actually get on the phone with • Your break-even ROAS calculated before Q4, not during it • A peer who's two years ahead of you, not a course about it • Cash flow model for when ad spend hits, not just when revenue does • Killing a creative that's not working before it kills your account What would you add?
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@SEOKeval Fun hack, but “#1 in ChatGPT” is sandcastle. different accounts/models/countries pull different sources and one update reshuffles citations. If you’re paying dental blogs, bake in trackable CTA (coupon/quiz URL) + evergreen agreement so you can really tie “AI SEO” to revenue
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Keval Shah
Keval Shah@SEOKeval·
I ranked a brand as the #1 recommendation in ChatGPT for "best toothpaste for receding gums." It took less than 30 days. And it had nothing to do with Google rankings. Here's the AI SEO playbook I used to do it: 1) I entered the prompt "best toothpaste for receding gums" into ChaptGPT and analyzed the sources used to pull recommended products. They were predominantly "best" listicles showcasing the top 5-7 toothpastes for receding gums. And they were specifically published on dental blogs. 2) I wrote my own listicle for the "best toothpaste for receding gums." I modeled the structure and word count of the listicles ChatGPT was citing, but placed the brand as the #1 recommendation. The remaining recommended brands were pulled from the listicles ChatGPT was citing. 3) I published that listicle onto the brand's blog. 4) I used Claude to create 10 different variations of the listicle I wrote. I specifically told Claude to keep them around the same word count of the original listicle, and not to remove the phrase "best toothpaste for receding gums" from the content. 5). I found 10 dental blogs with a DR of 30+ and real organic traffic from non-branded keywords. And I paid them $100-200 to publish one of my listicle variations on their blog. 6) I waited around three weeks for the listicles to get indexed in Google. Once they were, ChatGPT started citing them for the prompt "best toothpaste for receding gums." And the brand I recommended #1 started being recommended #1 by ChatGPT as well. The best part is that ChatGPT specifically says their recommendations are from dentists and are "not just marketing." It just goes to show how easy AI is to manipulate. That's both awesome and very concerning at the same time.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@HamptonAc_ bigger lever is delivery certainty: show “Arrives by Fri” on PDP/checkout and hit it — customers hate mystery more than 3 vs 2 days. If US supplier isn’t ready, pre-stock top SKUs in 3PL and stop sending cold traffic to long-tail backorder stuff.
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Ac Hampton
Ac Hampton@HamptonAc_·
Your shipping says "7-14 business days." Amazon says "Tomorrow by 9pm." And you're wondering why you can't convert cold traffic. In 2026, shipping speed is a conversion rate problem, not a fulfillment problem. The stores winning are paying more per unit for US-based suppliers and making it back on higher CVR and lower refund rates. Fast shipping isn't a luxury anymore. It's a survival requirement
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
Traffic up doesn’t automatically mean Meta ads working — these trend tracking tools will surface brands growing from SEO/TikTok while paid quietly sucks. Stronger tell: 45+ day ad + they keep cutting NEW versions of same angle while same offer/LP stays live; that’s operator behavior when it’s printing. Steal that structure (offer + proof + mechanism), script comes last.
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Nick Theriot
Nick Theriot@nicktheriot_·
If I had to find 30 winning ad ideas in the next 30 days, I wouldn't sit in front of a Google Doc guessing what converts. I'd reverse-engineer brands actively scaling right now and recreate their ads for my niche using this exact TrendTrack filter stack. Most people approach creative strategy completely backwards. They open a blank document, stare at it for 20 minutes, throw together some random hook they think might work, waste money producing an unproven concept, then burn ad spend testing it. And 90% of the time, the ad flops as you're trying to invent from scratch what already exists. Brands are spending thousands per day on ads that are PROVEN to work. You can see exactly which ads are scaling. You can see the exact scripts. You can see the landing pages. But instead of using that data, most people try to be Don Draper and write copy from their gut. That's insane. Here's what I do instead and this is the exact routine I follow to build one new winning ad concept every single day: STEP 1: SET UP THE RIGHT FILTERS IN TRENDTRACK I don't want to see every brand running ads. I want brands that are ACTIVELY SCALING right now. Here's my exact filter stack: Monthly Visits: 100K to 1M Why this range? At 2% conversion rate and $50 AOV, 100K visits = roughly $100K/month revenue. 1M visits = roughly $1M/month. So I'm looking at brands doing $100K-$1M/month. These are brands past the startup phase but still running direct response ads (not generic brand awareness campaigns). If you want to adjust: cut these numbers in half for $50K-$500K brands, or double them for $500K-$2M brands. Traffic Growth: Positive (month over month) This is critical. I don't want brands that are flat or declining. I want brands that are GROWING because growth = they're spending more on ads that work. If traffic is going up, their ads are working. Visitor Countries: US Most of my clients advertise to US audiences, so I filter for US traffic. Adjust based on your market. Language: English Self-explanatory. Shopify Apps: Klaviyo This tells me they're serious about retention and email marketing (usually a sign of a scaled brand). Meta Pixel: Installed Confirms they're running Facebook/Instagram ads. This filter stack takes 1.5 million shops down to about 575 shops. That's perfect. I don't need millions of options. I need the RIGHT options. STEP 2: SORT BY BRANDS ACTIVELY SCALING Once I have my 575 shops, I sort by "Relevance" (brands that match my filters most closely). Then I browse through pages 1-4. Sometimes I go deeper if I want more variety, but honestly the first few pages give me endless ideas. I click on a brand. Let's say I click on "Serene Herbs." First thing I check: Are they scaling month over month? If I see their traffic graph climbing consistently, that's a green light. They're spending more because their ads are working. STEP 3: LOOK AT THEIR TOP PERFORMING ADS I click "Meta Ads" and switch between three views: 1. Top Performing (ads with highest impressions) 2. Longest Active (ads that have been running forever are usually winners) 3. Most Duplicated (ads they keep copying into new campaigns - also a sign of a winner) I don't have a preference. I look at all three. Then I watch the ads and ask: ⦁ Is this top-of-funnel (problem-aware, solution-aware, unaware)? ⦁ Or lower-funnel (product-aware, retargeting, discounts)? Why does this matter? Because I need to know what problem I'm solving in MY ad account right now. Do I need more cold traffic? → Look for top-of-funnel ads. Do I need better conversion on warm audiences? → Look for lower-funnel ads. If I don't know what I'm solving for, this whole process is a waste of time. STEP 4: GRAB THE SCRIPT AND LANDING PAGE Once I find an ad I like, I click "Open Ad Details." TrendTrack gives me: ⦁ Full transcript of the ad ⦁ The landing page URL they're driving traffic to This is gold. I'm not just seeing the ad. I'm seeing the ENTIRE funnel: ad + landing page. STEP 5: RECREATE IT FOR MY PRODUCT USING CLAUDE People mess this up usually as they try to manually rewrite the script. That takes forever and usually results in a worse version. Instead, I use Claude. First, I give Claude my product URL: "Here is my product: [URL]. Tell me everything about it." This forces Claude to actually understand my product (ingredients, benefits, positioning, price point). Then I paste the winning script from TrendTrack and say: "Rewrite this script from another product and industry for my product." Claude spits out a script that's 80-90% ready to go. THE GOLDEN RULE: NEVER COPY YOUR COMPETITORS This is the most important part. DO NOT recreate ads from brands selling the same product as you. Why? Because that's what creates high CPMs. If you're selling dog vitamins and you copy other dog vitamin ads, your creative looks identical to every other dog vitamin brand. Facebook's algorithm sees similar creative = charges you more. Your audience sees similar creative = scrolls past it. Instead, I look at DIFFERENT industries entirely. Example from the transcript: I found a winning ad about gut health for humans (talking about worms, toxic buildup, etc.). I rewrote it for a DOG multivitamin brand. Completely different industry. Same psychological framework. Brand new angle for the dog supplement space. That's how you cut through the noise. STEP 6: SEND TO MY EDITOR AND LAUNCH Once Claude gives me the script, I: 1. Copy the TrendTrack ad link (for visual reference) 2. Copy the Claude script 3. Send both to my editor My editor produces the ad (hires UGC creator if needed, edits the video, etc.). Then we launch it. I do this ONCE PER DAY. That's 30 new ad concepts in 30 days - all based on proven winners from brands actively scaling. BONUS: I ALSO RECREATE THE LANDING PAGE TrendTrack shows me the exact landing page the winning ad is sending traffic to. I take a full-page screenshot, upload it to Claude, and say: "Review this landing page and recreate the copy for my product." Now I have: ⦁ New ad creative (based on a proven winner) ⦁ New landing page (based on a proven funnel) I can test the new ad with my current landing page AND test it with the new landing page. Double the learning. THE 80/20 RULE I STILL FOLLOW Even with this strategy, I'm not just testing random new concepts. 80% of my time = iterations and variations of messaging that already works. ⦁ Iteration = take a winning ad, change ONE thing (different hook, different visual style, same message) ⦁ Variation = same core message, different creative execution (e.g., testing a new angle on "scratching" for dog supplements) 20% of my time = new messaging (testing new personas, awareness levels, desires, or sophistication stages). This "one ad per day" strategy feeds into that 20%. THE LESSON: If you're sitting in front of a blank Google Doc trying to come up with ad ideas, you're doing it the hard way. Winning ads already exist. Brands are spending thousands per day on concepts that WORK. Your job isn't to invent from scratch. Your job is to find what's working in OTHER industries and bring it to YOUR niche. That's the Mr. Beast approach. That's how his team gets 4X the views by finding trending concepts and recreate them better. You can do the same with Facebook ads. TrendTrack + Claude + one ad per day = 30 proven concepts in 30 days.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@FedotOff90 eeh, everyone wants the cute $4M subscription brand… then you find out founder is TikTok, support, and product brain. without checking cohorts I wouldnt wire :D
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Alex Fedotoff
Alex Fedotoff@FedotOff90·
Spent an hour with a guy who's done $400M in ecom over 10 years. I asked him what he'd do differently if he started over today. He said he'd never build a brand again. He'd just find brands already doing $3-5M/year with subs and good retention, acquire them, scale them to $30-50M, then exit. "I spent 10 years building one brand. I could've built 10 in 5." The best operators I know aren't building from scratch anymore. They're plugging into what's already working.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@levikov boomer traffic is money but they’ll bounce if page smells even slightly scammy. phone # top right, simple checkout, readable text. also groups hate affiliate links — admins delete you in 5 min :)
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69kov
69kov@levikov·
Men aged 55-70 have more disposable income than any other demographic on the internet, they return products at nearly half the rate of younger buyers, and virtually nobody is building content or products for them because every marketer under 35 thinks they don't exist online… This is probably the single most neglected goldmine in all of digital marketing right now Baby Boomers control over 70% of all disposable income in the US. The average net worth for Americans aged 55-64 is $1.57 million. Ages 65-74 it's $1.78 million. Mortgages paid off or close to it. Kids out of the house. Career earnings at peak or sitting on retirement funds. More money and fewer expenses than at any other point in their lives And they are online. Adults 55-64 spend over 5 hours per day on screens. They're on YouTube, they're on Facebook, they're spending hours consuming content every single day. They just don't announce it by posting about it the way younger demographics do so marketers assume they're invisible Here's why they convert faster and return less. Gen Z shoppers returned an average of 7.7 items in 2025. Boomers returned 4.8. That's 38% fewer returns. 51% of Gen Z buyers admit to "bracketing" which means ordering multiple sizes and sending most of them back. Boomers bracket at 24%. Half the rate The reason isn't complicated. Older buyers make more deliberate purchases. They're not impulse-scrolling and panic-buying 4 sizes of a shirt at midnight hoping one fits. They see something that solves a problem they actually have, they evaluate it for 30 seconds, and they buy it. No overthinking. No cart abandonment. No ordering 3 versions to return 2. They grew up buying things in stores where you looked at the product, decided, and walked out with it. That psychology didn't change just because the store moved to a screen They also don't need to be "warmed up" the way younger audiences do. A 22-year-old needs 15 touchpoints, 8 retargeting ads, and 3 months of free content before they trust you enough to spend $50. A 60-year-old with money sees a clear product that addresses a real problem presented by someone who respects their intelligence and they buy. The sales cycle is compressed because the buyer has been purchasing things for 40 years. They know what they want. They know when something is worth the money Now here's how you actually make money from this The play that's printing hardest right now is building faceless content pages on Facebook and YouTube targeting this exact demographic with product affiliate content. Not TikTok. These guys are not scrolling TikTok. They're on Facebook and YouTube for hours every day and the content that converts them is the opposite of what works on younger audiences Health supplements, pain relief products, sleep aids, home improvement tools, golf accessories, fishing gear. Products in the $30-80 range with 15-25% affiliate commissions. You build a faceless page around a specific interest. A fishing tips page. A golf improvement page. A men's health after 50 page. Post calm, authoritative, educational content. No flashy editing. No zoomer energy. Just a knowledgeable voice giving real information The content split works the same as any other audience. Educational videos build the following and the trust. Product videos monetize. But the conversion gap between this audience and younger audiences is where the real money shows up. Same number of followers, same number of views, but the 55-70 demo converts at dramatically higher rates because they actually have money, they actually buy what they click on, and they almost never return it Facebook Groups are the secret weapon for this demographic. 1.8 billion monthly active users. The 55+ audience LIVES in Facebook Groups. "Men's Health Over 50." "Golf Tips and Tricks." "Woodworking Projects." These groups have hundreds of thousands of members who are actively asking for product recommendations. You can build a page, post value content in the groups, and funnel traffic to affiliate products with almost zero ad spend The average order value for this demographic is 2-3x what you'd see from Gen Z audiences buying the same category of product. They buy the premium version. They don't wait for a coupon code. They don't abandon the cart and come back 3 weeks later. They just buy One person running 3-5 faceless pages targeting men 55-70 across different interest categories on Facebook and YouTube can realistically build a $10-30K/month affiliate business from a demographic that everybody else ignores. The competition is essentially zero because every 24-year-old marketer is too busy fighting over audiences that have no money (btw the ad costs to reach this demo are significantly cheaper than 18-34 because every brand on earth is bidding against each other for young eyeballs while the 55-70 demo sits there with low CPMs, highest disposable income, and lowest return rates in digital commerce. if you ever decide to layer paid ads on top of organic content for this audience the ROI is genuinely embarrassing compared to what you'd get targeting younger demographics) there's a reason luxury brands have always targeted older demographics with money instead of young demographics with influence. the old guys actually buy. and right now almost nobody online is selling to them we cover audience targeting, content strategy, and building distribution for high-converting demographics in a free webinar. 100% free. link in bio to sign up
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
@ecomchigga PDFs don’t convert. activation converts. Put one “do this in 10 min” task inside guide + community prompt, then obserev activation rate (people who actually complete) — if it’s single digits, then even with 40K views/day you're going to starve still.
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🀅@ecomchigga·
a guy with 32,982 followers asked me to look at his info product setup last week. wanted to know why he wasn't making sales i looked at his twitter. great content. good engagement. 20K-40K views per tweet. comments flowing in. the account looked healthy from the outside then i asked him 3 questions "where does someone go after they comment on your CTA post?" "i send them the guide in DMs" "then what?" "what do you mean then what" "after they get the guide. where do they go next. what's the next step in your system" silence that was the whole problem. the guide was a dead end. no community link. no offer ladder. no follow up. no auto-DM sequence. he was generating 300+ leads per week and every single one of them hit a wall after reading the PDF i checked his gumroad. his $297 product had 11 sales. in 3 months. with 32,982 followers then i looked at an account i'd built the backend for. 1,900 followers. faceless. no viral moments. $6,400 in the last 30 days the difference was literally just plumbing. the small account had auto-DMs sending the guide AND the community link. community was active with 180 people. free guide had links to the $497 system on every other page. community members were seeing wins posted daily and buying without anyone DMing them. high ticket inquiries were coming inbound from people who'd been in the community 3-4 weeks same game. same platform. same niche one account had 32,982 followers and a PDF that went nowhere one account had 1,900 followers and a pipeline that went everywhere 33K guy is still posting daily wondering why his DMs don't convert. the 1,900 follower account owner is on his second launch this month your follower count is not your problem. your follower count was never your problem
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
Your product research has to be manual. Pick a niche. Go deep. Understand the customer, the pain points, the seasonality. Build a checklist. Filter with no mercy. Boring? Yes. Slow? Yes. Profitable? Also yes. That's the tradeoff most people refuse to make.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
VIRAL ITEMS WILL NOT HAVE MARGIN. Burn this into your brain. If you can see it trending on a spy tool, so can 10,000 other dropshippers. All of you pile in. CPMs go up. CAC goes up. Margin goes to zero. You funded someone else's exit.
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Jim Carter | Ecom Validation
Ad spy tools and "winning product lists" are the biggest scam in ecommerce history. I know, half your feed is promoting them. Hear me out. 🧵
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