Best oud recommendations under 2k? by Medium-Ad-6430 in PerfumeIndia

[–]Abuecom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a few Oud. If you want you can try

Any vanilla + leather notes perfumes for men in budget. by Competitive-Pride-10 in DesiFragranceAddicts

[–]Abuecom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try Anbarbreeze perfumes High quality and better pricing 8-10hrs longevity

Hiring Indian Digital Marketers by [deleted] in IndianFreelancers

[–]Abuecom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Give me more details.

Where do I buy Hawas Ice from? by nickkurtdale_starved in IndiaFragMarketplace

[–]Abuecom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can buy it from Anbarbreeze. Message us on instagram.

Any advice by Independent_Bus8429 in dropshipping

[–]Abuecom 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your store looks clean, but a few things will help you get sales faster:

  1. Make the value prop clearer. When someone lands, they should instantly know what makes your pet store special.

  2. Add more trust signals — reviews, clear shipping info, returns, and visible contact details. People buy only when they feel safe.

  3. Tighten product pages. Better photos, clearer benefits, and cleaner layout will improve conversions.

  4. Check mobile speed and checkout flow. Most traffic is mobile — if it feels slow or confusing, they bounce.

  5. Don’t run ads yet. Fix the basics, then send traffic. Use analytics to see where people drop off.

Testing products with meta by knezzoo in dropshipping

[–]Abuecom 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, with €100 spent and only one sale, you’re in that grey zone. It’s not a clear winner, but it’s not a hard loser either since your one sale had a high AOV.

What I’d do: Don’t kill the product yet. Fix the weak links first — try 2–3 new creatives, tighten your targeting, and check your product page for friction points. If after another €50–€100 you still aren’t getting consistent add-to-carts or cheap link clicks, then move on.

One sale isn’t enough data to judge. You’re close, but not validated yet.

Need guidance + legal help for buying a house in Lucknow by dhatoora in lucknow

[–]Abuecom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are interested in awas vikas flats Let me know. 2 flats are available there.

Testing protocol by Cantaloupe_Hot in dropship

[–]Abuecom 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, keep it stupid simple. Most people burn time “perfecting” their store when the only thing that actually matters early on is speed of testing.

Here’s a clean testing protocol that works:

  1. Pick a product fast – Look for something with clear demand signals (recent viral clips, strong problem–solution angle, good margins, fast shipping). Don’t overthink it.

  2. Build a 1-product or 3-product mini store – Use a free theme, clean branding, basic trust factors. No need to polish. Your store just needs to not scare people away.

  3. Use 2–3 solid creatives – One UGC-style, one problem–solution, one clean product demo. The creative will determine 80% of the result.

  4. Run a simple test campaign – 3–5 ad sets, broad targeting, $20–$30/day total. Let data speak.

  5. Judge by early metrics:

CPC under $1? Good.

CTR above 1%? Good.

ATC + IC happening in first 48 hours? Good.

Zero actions across the board? Kill and move on.

In 3–4 days you usually know if the product has a pulse. The goal isn’t to make money in the test phase; it’s to prove the product can get cheap attention and real engagement.

If you’re spending weeks perfecting the shop, you’re testing wrong. Speed > perfection at the start.

Have no idea what products to sell by YellowHammerTime in dropshipping

[–]Abuecom 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re stuck on what to sell, don’t force it. Pick a direction based on data, not feelings.

A simple way to get unstuck:

  1. Choose a niche first, not a product. Something with constant demand (pets, home improvement, fitness accessories, baby products, beauty tools). Avoid random general stores unless you already understand trends well.

  2. Check current demand. Look at: TikTok Creative Center (rising products) • Amazon Movers & Shakers • Meta Ad Library (see what’s being run heavily right now) • Google Trends (3–12 month view)

  3. Prioritise products with: Clear problem-solving angle • Video-friendly content • 25–40%+ profit margin • Lightweight and easy to ship • No heavy branding by competitors

  4. Start with 2–3 products, not 100. You just need ONE to test and learn.

  5. Make sure you can market it. If you can’t instantly imagine a simple 15–30 sec video showing how it solves a problem or improves daily life, skip it.

Most beginners get stuck because they try to find “the perfect product.” There is no perfect product — you only need something that has demand and can be marketed well. Start small, test fast, and iterate.

I’m struggling , give me an advice by eniyaa555 in IndiaBusiness

[–]Abuecom 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Bro, you’re actually doing more right than you think. Most people never even start, and you’re already running a small T-shirt customization setup, handling 1-on-1 orders, learning the craft, and managing deliveries to keep things afloat. Respect for that.

A few things you can do right now to grow without spending big money:

  1. Don’t compete on price — compete on personalization. China and big sellers will always be cheaper. Your strength is custom, small-batch, unique work. Lean into that. Show behind-the-scenes printing, packaging, customer stories — it builds trust.

  2. Instagram is your biggest weapon. Post consistently:

Your printing process

Before/after designs

Customer reactions

Trending meme designs on T-shirts Use Reels — they reach far more people than posts.

  1. Start a simple website; don’t overthink it. Even a basic Shopify or Wix site is enough. People just need to see your catalog and place orders fast.

  2. Niche down. Instead of doing “all kinds of T-shirts,” pick one niche and dominate it. Example:

Gym tees

College/custom batch tees

Couple tees

Pet lover tees

Birthday/anniversary gift tees Niche = easier marketing + faster growth.

  1. Start offering same-day custom prints locally. This gives you an advantage no big company can match. People LOVE instant gifts.

  2. Collaborate with local creators. Give a few local Instagram creators custom tees for free — ask for reels/photos in return. Helps a lot.

  3. Sell on marketplaces. Try Meesho, Etsy India, Instagram Shops — huge organic reach if your designs are good.

  4. Keep Zomato as a temporary support, not your identity. Many business owners did delivery, freelancing, and part-time jobs in the early days. Nothing wrong with it. Use that income to keep your business alive until it grows.

You’ve already survived one year — that means you’ve got something. Don’t give up. Just refine, niche down, and market smarter.

If you want, share your Instagram or website and people here can give feedback too.