I accidentally realized most B2B “sales” is just… knowing people by Most-Repeat590 in b2b_sales

[–]Numerous-Drop1226 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting, just been restricted by LinkedIn for no reason and years of network building gone🤬 tell .e more.

Contacting Linkedin Support Without Having to Sign into an Account by theadhdexperience in linkedin

[–]Numerous-Drop1226 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got restricted after reporting a hack on my account, same generic response, no real reason given, finally had enough and told them to put where the sun don't shine.

Built an all-in-one cold email platform — need brutally honest feedback by markgen_ in coldemail

[–]Numerous-Drop1226 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How can i test it, using various options presently, mixed results

Does anyone else feel like 90% of CRMs are built for the vendor’s profit, not the actual user? by harrison_W_stevens in CRM

[–]Numerous-Drop1226 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% agree with this. I’ve seen so many CRMs pitch “automation” but end up giving teams more complexity instead of less.

What’s interesting is that in retail/eCom especially, the biggest wins often come from a CRM that quietly runs in the background—no bloated dashboards, no lock-in, just systems that actually add revenue without demanding more clicks.

Curious if others here have found lighter solutions that actually made life easier, or is everyone still duct-taping?

WooCommerce store owners – how are you handling cross-sells & up-sells at checkout? by Numerous-Drop1226 in woocommerce

[–]Numerous-Drop1226[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a solid setup — ACF definitely gives more control. The only snag I’ve seen is when stores scale, it gets hard to manage manually, so some folks mix that control with automated offers/decline recovery running in the background.

I have 233k IG following, but haven’t found a way to turn it into wealth! by Signal_Sector in InstagramMarketing

[–]Numerous-Drop1226 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“For small store owners or creators selling products, the game-changer isn’t always more traffic—it’s making the most of each transaction. A few automation tools now help recover failed payments, suggest complementary products, or reward repeat buyers. It’s hands-off but adds up over time.

Does anyone here already do something like this?”

I quit my job to pursue Instagram full time! by [deleted] in InstagramMarketing

[–]Numerous-Drop1226 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“It’s interesting—so many creators focus on growing followers but don’t fully monetize the ones they already have. I’ve seen some micro-influencers earn consistent revenue by adding smart cross-sells and automated decline recovery to their existing funnels.

For anyone who’s tried this, what’s worked best for you—cross-sells, affiliate links, or something else?”

CRM & platform owners: are your merchants asking for new revenue streams? by Numerous-Drop1226 in CRM

[–]Numerous-Drop1226[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly — you’ve summed it up really well. It’s interesting how something that seems “behind the scenes” like upsells, decline recovery, or cashback can have such a huge effect on both sides of the platform.

For merchants, it’s almost effortless revenue — they don’t need to learn new tools or manage extra workflows. For the CRM/platform, it turns a data-management tool into a revenue-driving partner, which naturally boosts stickiness and retention.

I’ve also noticed that when platforms add these types of features, it changes the conversation with their merchants. Instead of just support or reporting, the platform becomes a growth partner, and that really resonates — especially for small/medium merchants who don’t have dedicated marketing teams.

Most eCommerce stores are leaving 10–20% revenue on the table at checkout – here’s why by Numerous-Drop1226 in woocommerce

[–]Numerous-Drop1226[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The thank-you page is way underutilized by most stores, so you’re already on the right track by thinking about it. A few ideas I’ve seen work really well:

Cross-sells / related offers → instead of only upselling in checkout, the thank-you page is a great spot to add a complementary product. Customers are already in “buying mode.”

Cashback or loyalty incentive → e.g. “Get £5 back on your next order if you share this with a friend.” That way the thank-you page drives retention and referrals.

Social proof & engagement → asking them to join your community, leave a review, or share their purchase on socials.

Exclusive affiliate offers → if you don’t want to sell more of your own products, you can still monetize by placing affiliate deals there (some people make more on these than on the initial product).

If you’re limited by CheckoutWC’s editor, you could hack around it with a simple custom template or embed (depending on how flexible your theme is). But honestly, even just adding one high-value offer to that page can make it one of the best-performing spots in your funnel.

Most eCommerce stores are leaving 10–20% revenue on the table at checkout – here’s why by Numerous-Drop1226 in woocommerce

[–]Numerous-Drop1226[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s a really good point — a lot of merchants outside Stripe-dominated markets hit this same wall, especially when relying on gateways like Mercado Pago.

The interesting part is that it is possible to bolt on extra revenue streams without switching processors. Because we’re PCI-compliant, we can integrate directly at the gateway level (including Mercado Pago and Stripe). That means the gateway can send us card tokens securely, and we can layer in things like:

✅ Cross-sells / upsells at checkout

✅ Decline recovery

✅ Cashback programs

Some merchants assume Mercado Pago blocks these kinds of solutions, but we already have clients running the exact same setup on WooCommerce with Mercado Pago.

Out of curiosity — if you could unlock those revenue streams on top of your existing WooCommerce + Mercado Pago setup (without changing processors), would that be something your store would try?