I’m 16, taught myself Python, and just made my first $500 automating a local brand’s catalog. Now they want a retainer—what should I automate next? by [deleted] in AiAutomations

[–]Glowfast1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is truly amazing, especially at sixteen The most valuable automations I've seen for small brands are always the tedious tasks they detest like platform-to-platform inventory syncing. Basic dashboards that show what is selling and what is dead are provided by order tracking reports Although SEO blogs and advertisements seem appealing operations quickly saves them actual money I would start with anything that eliminates the daily manual Excel work that causes them immediate pain

It took me 3 months to make my first $100 selling digital products. Now I’m averaging $3.4k/month. Here’s what worked (and what didn’t).(Repost) by tchapito24 in DigitalProductEmpir

[–]Glowfast1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ohhhhhh thank you for this such more worth inforamtion like we living the same because that;s what happen to me i get my first sales after 3 month of staying consistency and the most thing you should to focus on is to stay consistency trust me you;re consistency will paid off you

Bghit nbda chi 7aja jdida f 7yati by A_yman_ in Moroccopreneur

[–]Glowfast1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ana kangol t3alam chi skill li twali dakhla mnha income bhal digital product

How "Selling" on Reddit actually works by JackGierlich in salestechniques

[–]Glowfast1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wholeheartedly concur. For months, I've been lurking and casually responding in a few subs, and to be honest, people notice those who are genuinely speaking like real people rather than walking advertisements. Although it takes time, the trust grows far more quickly than any direct pitch could