Don’t wait for followers
I wasn’t supposed to “make it.” No YouTube channel, no big following, no blue check next to my name. Just a guy with a laptop, an itch to escape the 9-to-5 hamster wheel, and a weirdly specific obsession with digital products.
No, I didn’t have a launch party. There was no “going viral” moment. No overnight magic. Just a lot of tinkering, coffee-fueled nights, and a slightly unhinged belief that this would work.
It did.
Somehow — through a mix of intuition, stubbornness, and many wrong turns — I built a 6-figure business selling digital products online. Without an audience. Without inventory. And without trying to become the next content-obsessed influencer.
But let me rewind. Because none of this made sense when it started.
The accidental door
Truth be told, I stumbled into this.
I wasn’t born with the “entrepreneur gene.” I didn’t dream of selling PDFs as a kid (what kind of child even dreams that?). I was just tired — tired of watching time slip like sand while I traded hours for someone else’s dream.
So one random Tuesday, I tossed a simple Notion template online. No marketing plan. No strategy. Just a digital file I’d made for myself and a price tag that felt both laughable and hopeful — $12.
Nothing happened.
For three weeks.
Then a sale pinged in. Someone in Belgium. A total stranger paid me for something I created once — and they were going to use it over and over. That tiny dopamine hit? It broke something open in my brain. It was like discovering fire.
No audience? No problem. Just be useful.
Let’s kill the myth.
You don’t need a huge audience to sell. What you need is something people already want — and a way to get it in front of them without begging for attention like a golden retriever with a marketing degree.
I leaned into utility. Solved real problems. Created stuff that helped people save time, stay organized, earn more, stress less.
Digital dropshipping isn’t rocket science. It’s just digital problem-solving — minus the shipping labels and warehouse headaches.
I started browsing marketplaces. Etsy. Gumroad. Creative Market. These are oceans full of buyers already shopping. You don’t need a massive audience if you’re standing right where people are looking.
People scroll, they find, they buy — no need to dance on TikTok.
Templates, tools, and tiny products that stack
The sweet spot? Low-ticket products with high value. The kind that feels like a steal at $9 or $17.
Think: planners, guides, templates, prompts, checklists, swipe files. Stuff that makes someone’s life easier right now.
That was my game.
Instead of building some big, bloated course that takes months to launch, I pumped out small wins. Micro-offers that stacked like Lego bricks.
One Notion dashboard became two. Then five. Then bundles. Bundles turned into storefronts. Storefronts into passive systems. At some point, I woke up and realized I’d made $100K+ from files that didn’t even exist a year earlier.
Wild.
Automation was my silent business partner
If I had to manually deliver every order? I’d have quit faster than you can say “scalability.”
Automation was my ace.
From the moment someone hit “buy,” things moved without me lifting a finger. They got the file. I got the money. Zapier handled some of the glue. Gumroad or Etsy did the heavy lifting.
My inbox stayed eerily quiet. No “where’s my order” emails. No late-night customer support. Just… sales. Trickling in while I cooked dinner or binged some questionable Netflix reality show.
I wasn’t selling products. I was selling systems. Tiny machines in the shape of digital files.
The beauty of being small
Here’s the thing: when you have no audience, you get to test fast. You’re not playing to the crowd. You’re not stuck in feedback loops or worried about “brand voice.”
You can be scrappy, even reckless. Launch something new this week, kill it next week, start again Monday.
Nobody’s watching. That’s the gift.
You get to learn in the shadows — tweak, pivot, experiment like a mad scientist. You don’t need permission or a committee. Just guts and Google.
Where I got it so wrong
Let me be real.
I wasted weeks making pretty logos and “brand kits” before I sold a single product. Dumb.
I underpriced things for months. Because impostor syndrome is a tenacious little troll.
I obsessed over perfection, overthinking every pixel. Meanwhile, others were selling ugly spreadsheets and laughing all the way to PayPal.
Perfection kills momentum. Ugly things that work pay bills.
What I’d do differently now
Start ugly. Launch fast. Improve later.
Test before you build. Don’t spend 40 hours making a course nobody asked for. Post a rough idea. Gauge interest. Get feedback. Then build backward from demand.
Use marketplaces, not just social media. Let Etsy bring you traffic while you sleep.
Create products that solve one hyper-specific pain point — not vague “value.” Give people a tool, not a philosophy.
And above all… don’t wait for a big audience. It’s not a requirement. It’s a distraction — especially early on.
The weird truth nobody told me
Most people selling digital products aren’t creators. They’re problem-solvers.
They look for friction — then build a shortcut, package it up, and sell it.
They’re not loud. Not flashy. But they quietly rake in passive income while everyone else is chasing trends.
That’s the beauty of digital dropshipping: you’re not selling your personality. You’re selling results.
You can be invisible and profitable at the same time.
Final Thought
People talk a lot about “freedom” in the online biz space — but they never tell you what it really feels like.
For me? It’s waking up and checking your phone not with dread, but with curiosity.
It’s building something once, and knowing it’ll keep working long after you’ve moved on.
It’s weirdly emotional, too. Like — whoa. I made this. People are using it. It’s helping. And I’m not chasing anyone.
I’m not saying it’s all sunshine and Stripe notifications. But damn, it’s close.
So if you’re sitting there thinking you need 100K followers, or a full-blown brand, or some magic algorithm to bless your shop — you don’t.
You just need one good product, a place to list it, and the guts to hit publish.
The rest? You’ll figure it out. I did. Somehow.
Most people play with AI. Smart people profit from it. TURN AI INTO PROFIT shows you how to be in the second group with zero guesswork. I used it myself — and it’s now part of my toolkit.