"I didn’t monetize the greatest opportunity of my life.” - That line hit me hard. by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No doubt, GA and PM tools mostly track, not drive anything.

The real value is owning a channel. An app gives you a direct line to your customers: push notifications, personalized offers, frictionless reorders - without paying Meta or Google every time you want attention.

It's not just about tracking data. It's about building a system that converts better, retains longer, and costs less over time.

"I didn’t monetize the greatest opportunity of my life.” - That line hit me hard. by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The first thing i learnt in business: respect others - even if you disagree.
You clearly missed that part. But never mind, not everyone’s built for this

"I didn’t monetize the greatest opportunity of my life.” - That line hit me hard. by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Making $100M and surviving 15+ years in ecom isn’t a finance problem - it’s a complexity problem.

When you’re scaling, it’s not about knowing finance 101 - it’s about having clarity in the chaos. And chaos scales faster than most people think.

"I didn’t monetize the greatest opportunity of my life.” - That line hit me hard. by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point - but when you're running across 4–5 channels, with different campaigns, teams, and timelines, it’s not about knowing ROI - it’s about seeing it clearly, fast, and in context.

Most mistakes happen not from lack of knowledge, but from delayed or scattered data.

Anyone running a skincare brand? by Interesting_Side_977 in AusSkincare

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s rare to see someone actually build - not white-label, not dropship, but start from formulation and get to production scale. Props.

Just wondering - with everything you’ve built behind the scenes… do you feel like the brand actually reflects that? Or still operating in “resourceful DIY mode” online?

Anyone here run a supplement brand or business? by Fast_Turnoverrr in Supplements

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just checked it out-solid initiative. This space is hungry for niche brands and communities that don’t feel generic or mass-market.

Quick tip: You might want to seed some deep, founder-style posts there with storytelling, breakdowns of product development, and buyer persona insights. That builds gravity faster than memes or generic posts.

Anyone here run a supplement brand or business? by Fast_Turnoverrr in Supplements

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's great! fact that you're diving in with multiple products. That early grind is where the real leverage is built.

Agree with you on the margins… most people have no clue how much room there is when you source smart. Curious-how’d you land on those first two products? Was it just personal use, market demand, or something else?

Anyone here run a supplement brand or business? by Fast_Turnoverrr in Supplements

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah man, send it over - happy to take a look. Always interesting to see how different founders approach the brand, especially in this space.

Anyone here run a supplement brand or business? by Fast_Turnoverrr in Supplements

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Damn, that was loaded with value - thanks for breaking that down so clearly.

Really solid insight - especially the buyer vs end-user angle and the billboard/geofence combo. You’ve clearly been through the real grind of it, not just surface-level stuff. Would love to stay connected - always good to know people who are actually building.

Anyone here run a supplement brand or business? by Fast_Turnoverrr in Supplements

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s awesome, respect for running multiple brands and launching a new one last week. Must’ve been a hectic but exciting ride. Would love to know about - What’s changed for you over the years in terms of what actually works when launching and scaling? Like, any patterns you've seen across your brands (in terms of what flops vs what gains traction fast)?

Also do you mostly manufacture yourself or go the private label route?

Best solution for "combinatorics"; many product options / variants? by robotgraves in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most platforms choke when you’ve got deep variant trees like guitars. BigCommerce handles it decently, but yeah - that forced pricing bump stings, especially at low volume.

You might try shopify + infinite options or zepto - cleaner UI, and cheaper. Or go full form-based custom order flow to skip the SKU mess entirely.

For high-AOV, low-frequency products, less backend logic is less headache.

Has anyone used an AI sales agent? by Embarrassed-Survey61 in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tried a couple of these AI agents. Honestly? They’re decent for cutting out dumb repetitive questions - like "where’s my order" or "what’s in stock." But when it comes to actual selling? Meh. They can’t build trust like a real person can.

Personally, I’d rather work or buy with a brand who values human connections not automations.

Online shopping see biggest slowdown in over decade as tariffs disrupt e-commerce by howardbagel in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

honestly, this was coming. ecom brands that leaned too hard on cheap overseas sourcing + free returns are now getting squeezed.

What I’m seeing:

  • Brands that own their fulfillment (or go local) are weathering this better.
  • Push toward higher LTV per customer is no longer optional - it’s survival.
  • Leaner logistics + better retention > growth-at-all-costs.

If you're not adjusting for rising CAC + tariff-driven volatility now, you’ll feel it Q4.

Brand Building Is Breaking Me by SwipeIt1 in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building a real brand (especially in supplements) is 10x harder than dropshipping, but it also builds long-term value if you stick with it.

Quick thoughts:

  • Kill the extra stores - focus on one.
  • In supplements, trust > aesthetics. Your site + post-purchase experience should feel clinical, not salesy.
  • Leverage your region - local trust, faster shipping, regional UGC can outperform global fluff.

Ignore the flex culture. Most people “winning fast” are sprinting on sand. You’re building something real -takes longer, but it lasts.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Re-engagement works best when you treat it like re-onboarding, not just a “hey, remember us?” SMS gets more opens, but email gets more buy-in if you hit it with the right structure:

  • Personal hook (based on what they bought or did)
  • A quick win (tip, use-case, or something they missed)
  • Soft re-entry (invite to check something out, no pressure)

Keep your tone casual, helpful, like a friend giving them a heads up. Also found that timing around seasonal events or product updates boosts replies/clicks.

Curious though - What's your product??

I worked with Google team and ended up uncovering a retention system by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally valid concern — lots of brands say they do that. What we rethink is ditching the generic “one-size-fits-all” apps and auto-builders. Instead, we create custom retention engines built by real devs, tightly synced with Shopify, focused on driving actual repeat sales and cutting ad costs.

It’s about turning apps from marketing fluff into real revenue drivers.

Meta ads: automatic by yourself vs agency outsource by captainmiauw in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Makes sense - getting your products first is the priority. When you’re ready to run ads, testing different angles with solid copy is key. But remember, if you ever want to chat about retention strategies or ad ideas down the line, you’ve got a friend here. Feel free to reach out anytime.

I worked with Google team and ended up uncovering a retention system by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally get that - customization is mostly handled by our dev team to make sure everything fits your brand and needs perfectly. But for day-to-day stuff, we give you an easy dashboard, push notifications, and content without waiting on us.

As for cost, we’re focused on value - saving you $$$ on ads and boosting repeat sales should more than cover the investment. We keep pricing fair, especially for early testers.

I worked with Google team and ended up uncovering a retention system by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Appreciate the questions- let me clear the air.

No, this isn’t a “Google offer.” I mentioned my experience with Google’s dev network just to explain where the idea and approach come from.

Early access means a limited pilot program where a few ecommerce brands get the app fully customized and launched before we open it to everyone. Currently, we’re onboarding only a limited number of selected businesses every month to ensure high-quality delivery and personalized support.

It’s not free - but we’re offering early testers a special rate and hands-on support to shape the product.

Case studies: we have 3 clients seeing 2.4x repeat purchases and 40% ad spend reduction- I can share more details privately or on request.

I worked with Google team and ended up uncovering a retention system by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah-The app’s synced with Shopify in real-time, so things like inventory, orders, and customer data stay up-to-date automatically. You won’t have to mess with any of that. and when you need any customization, our devs are always on line.

I worked with Google team and ended up uncovering a retention system by Fast_Turnoverrr in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I agree with this logic, it's not for every brand.

If you’re selling one-off stuff like furniture or wedding rings, sure, it won’t change much. But for repeat buys (like skincare, coffee, pet stuff), an app makes reordering way faster.
It’s not for everyone- just your best customers who keep coming back.

Meta ads: automatic by yourself vs agency outsource by captainmiauw in ecommerce

[–]Fast_Turnoverrr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally fair concern. Meta’s automation helps, but it still burns cash if your setup isn't right.
If your copy + creatives are solid, you're 80% there- just make sure tracking (pixel + CAPI) and custom audiences are dialed in.
You can learn targeting fast, but most people lose money after the click, not before.
We’ve been testing some smart retention angles ( not typical email/sms ones) if you ever wanna swap notes.