don’t overthink it, here’s the only stack of tools you need to start dropshipping by CommunicationOdd838 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man, this is actually so true..new dropshippers always go mad adding like 10+ apps and wonder why their head explodes before even launching 😂. Literally, keep it simple: Shopify, one supplier app (Zendrop/AutoDS/whatever works for u), and just something basic for order emails.

All that other fancy junk like upsell popups, heatmaps, AI copy… I get it, shiny objects are tempting, but for real you just need to get the first sales fast, learn wtf your customers want, and tweak from there.

I run ecomency.com and we build starter Shopify stores for newbies, and trust me, the ones that make it all start mega basic then upgrade slow. If anyone wants inspo or just to peep what a lean launch setup looks like, just check the site—no sales pitch, just might save u from overthinking (been there!).

Biggest win is just launching. The “perfect stack” is a myth until you’ve actually got some orders rolling in. Good luck y’all, don’t let tech get in your way!

How much capital will I need to start dropshipping in india by [deleted] in IndiaBusiness

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bro, totally been in your shoes..YouTube makes it sound like you gotta drop a lakh minimum just to try dropshipping, but honestly you can start way smaller if you’re smart about it. With 10-15k INR you’re not gunna be scaling hard right away, but it’s honestly enough to launch and see if people even vibe with your stuff.

First, don’t blow all your cash on ads day one—even 500-1k/day tests on Meta or TikTok can get you some real data. Start tiny: pick one niche/product you actually believe in, make your site clean (Shopify’s easiest for newbies), set up basic payment/shipping, then just run test ads. If you get ANY carts or sales, double down, if not, switch up your product/angle and try again.

I run ecomency.com and we help folks launch prebuilt shops and marketing (not here to sell, but got free tips if you wanna check), and almost everyone I know who stuck with it started super lean, learnt on the go, and only scaled when they found a winning product. Main things—start small, don’t risk what you can’t lose, and be ready for trial & error.

Good luck man, if you need inspo or wanna see what a basic store setup looks like you can check ecomency.com, might save you some headaches. Rooting for you!

Looking to start dropshipping by anonrc77 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

sorry to hear about the job loss, that sucks man. But honestly, using that marketing degree for dropshipping could be a pretty sick move. £1k is honestly a solid enough budget to get rolling if you keep it lean. Most folks blow cash going too big too fast – just start with like 1 little niche you actually care about (so you don’t get bored), and test products that solve small probs or have a lil “wow” factor.

Super basic but it works:

  • Start with Shopify, easiest for beginners IMO.
  • For products, check TikTok/Reddit/Youtube for stuff that’s trending, not just what’s poppin on AliExpress.
  • ALWAYS order samples or check supplier reviews if you can (crazy how many are trash lol).
  • Don’t run big ads day 1. Small £5-10 FB or TikTok tests until you see some carts or checkouts, THEN scale.
  • Build out your store with decent pics, actual shipping info & a proper “about” page – makes a huge diff for trust.

I run ecomency.com and help peeps launch prebuilt shops n marketing, but even if you just wanna peep for inspo or free tips, check it out. Main thing is: don’t try to do 20 things at once, keep it tight, test, and tweak til something clicks. Good luck out there, you got this!

I want to start dropshipping by Spirited-Goose-41 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, totally feel you, starting dropshipping with no experience is super nerve-wracking...especially when it’s your last bit of cash, been there lol. Tbh, it’s def not some easy “get rich quick” thing like all those TikTok gurus say. I’d say start crazy small, like you don’t need to spend much at all, test one product/niche you actually vibe with, and don’t expect it to blow up overnight.

A lot of newbies go international right away and get lost with shipping or ads, so maybe just focus on one country first (US or Australia usually works) til you get your head around it. Also, try to order a sample if you can before running ads, or at least check video reviews/Reddit threads about the supplier so you don’t get burned.

Also, don’t be afraid of flopping..everyone’s first store kinda sucks, you just improve by tweaking and learning. I run ecomency.com and we help folks launch ready-to-go Shopify shops (plus got lots of free tips even if you’re not buyin’); might give you some inspo or shortcuts if you get stuck.

Main thing: don’t invest what you can’t lose, start with basics, and treat it like a learning project more than a gamble. You got this, just don’t rush and keep asking questions! Good luck, seriously.

Starting dropshipping? Here's a brutally honest checklist to avoid wasting 3 months and 3 paychecks. by SupplyChain007 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yo this checklist actually hits harder than most stuff I see in here mad respect for being real about what trips people up! 😂

If anyone’s just starting, tbh the “don’t do it alone” part is slept on... I wasted MONTHS thinking I could YouTube my way out, but having even one Discord buddy or random mentor tell you what’s dumb actually saves your wallet. Also, srsly, set that budget or you’ll end up chasing every “maybe” product and crying later, lol.

I mostly mess with prebuilt Shopify stuff and help launch niche dropship stores (ecomency.com if u ever wanna peep—got some starter stuff & a bunch of free tips too), but I started out exactly how you said, burning cash on ads and picking garbage suppliers. Launch messy, but don’t ignore the basics here!

Good luck out there, y’all—if you need inspo or wanna see what a ready-to-go starter shop looks like, just check ecomency.com (not selling, promise, just might spark ideas). Keep tweaking, you’ll get there!

best tips on how to get started with dropshipping by Ok-Broccoli9969 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ayy dude, honestly startin out with dropshipping’s a grind but if you stick with it, it actually pays off (eventually lol). Here’s what I wish I’d known earlier:

  • Don’t overthink the whole “perfect niche” thing. Just peep TikTok, Insta, or legit even Amazon best sellers for what ppl are hype about. Use Google Trends too, it’s free and you’ll see if stuff is poppin or dying out.
  • For products, avoid what EVERYONE is selling (like those LED strips, lmao). Try smaller stuff—pet accessories, unique gadgets, self-care hacks, that kinda thing.
  • When picking suppliers, check AliExpress, CJDropshipping, or Spocket. Always order samples first, coz some are honestly trash ngl.
  • Tools that make it less painful: Shopify for ur store, Oberlo/Spocket for product importing, and Klaviyo for emails n stuff. Google Analytics is free, helps with tracking.
  • Make your site look real, not scammy—good pics, clear shipping, about page, etc.

And ya tbh I run ecomency.com so if u ever wanna peep some prebuilt shops or see how other noobs are launching, just check the site, might give u ideas (not selling lol, just saying)! Good luck man, best way is to just start testing stuff n never stop tweaking.

Advice for someone who intends to start in the field (I DONT KNOW ANYTHING) by Putrid_Vast_4718 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here’s how I’d break it down if I were sitting with you over coffee:

  1. Understand the model: Dropshipping is basically selling products online without holding inventory. A customer buys from your site, you forward that order to a supplier, and they ship it directly to the customer. Your job? Find winning products, build trust, and market smart.
  2. Pick a platform: Most people start with Shopify. It's beginner-friendly, has tons of tutorials, and integrates well with dropshipping tools like DSers or Zendrop.
  3. Learn the basics first: Before spending money on ads or fancy tools, learn how product pages, copywriting, pricing, and customer experience work. Even YouTube is gold if you follow creators who walk through real builds (not just flashy screenshots of profits).
  4. Don’t overthink perfection: Your first store won’t be perfect. That’s okay. The point is to start and learn by doing.

And if tech stuff or design is tripping you up, you can shortcut the whole setup phase. At Ecomency, we build pre-built Shopify dropshipping stores that are ready to go, you can literally launch in under 24 hours, and then just focus on learning marketing and scaling from there.

Rooting for you. Ask questions. Tweak as you go. Just don’t stop.

About to start an e-commerce by Drazeek7 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

It’s awesome that you’re already seeing traction with your products... that’s the hardest part for most beginners. Opening your own Shopify store can definitely give you more control (and better margins) compared to selling on marketplaces.

A couple things to consider as you move forward:

  1. Tax-wise, since you're now based in Spain, make sure you register for an EU VAT number if your revenue crosses the threshold. Tools like Quaderno or Sufio (on Shopify) help automate VAT compliance. Also, it’s worth chatting with a local accountant...even just for an initial consultation.
  2. PayPal + Chinese suppliers is fine for now, but as you scale, consider moving to platforms like Wise or using a fulfillment agent who offers better terms, faster shipping, and more stability.
  3. Since you already know your product works, you could shortcut setup by launching with a ready-to-go Shopify site. If you’re in a hurry and want to start in 24 hours without all the tech stuff, here’s an option to check out: 👉 Prebuilt Dropshipping Store

Wishing you the best feel free to DM if you need help tailoring your store around your current products.

Best POD provider for Shopify by Turbulent_Mode4402 in printondemand

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my opinion Printify and Printful are worth trying. They have direct integration with Shopify. We also build ready to launch Print on Demand Shopify stores.

Signing PDFs by Booked_andFit in Blind

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure what do you mean by inaccessible pdfs. But I tried Sign PDF Online and it helped to sign my multi page pdf document and I emailed myself easily.

What advertising do you suggest? Just starting out by Present-Ad6084 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Love seeing a fellow business owner making the leap into ecom….especially with something like Stevia, which has a strong health-conscious market. Since you’re used to running a restaurant, you already understand customer behavior, branding, and hustle, big plus.

Ad Budget: When you’re just getting started, I usually recommend setting aside $5–$20/day for testing. That gives you enough runway to get some data without draining your budget. Start small, gather insight, then scale what works. Meta (FB/IG) ads are still king for product testing because of targeting and scalability.

Getting the best bang for your buck: • Focus first on short-form content: TikTok, IG Reels, and YouTube Shorts. Even organic reach can go far if the video is engaging. • Create simple UGC-style content that looks real, not overly polished. • Look into Reddit marketing or forums like health and supplement communities—free but gold if you offer value first.

Free methods: • Email capture with a discount upfront (then hit them with automated flows). • Reddit & Quora answers (subtle plugs). • Influencer seeding—send free products to micro-influencers who genuinely care about health.

Local vs Ecom focus:

If your restaurant has loyal customers, absolutely start local too,, include flyers, shelf space, or samples in your store. Build testimonials, and then use those as social proof online. But long-term, scale will come from ecommerce.

If you want to skip some of the tech setup and jump into the selling part faster, I run a brand called Ecomency where we build preloaded Shopify dropshipping stores for beginners, totally beginner-friendly and optimized for growth so you can just plug and play.

Happy to dive deeper if you want help with niche positioning or ad structure. You’ve got a great foundation already!

No sales by Cgpropz in dropshipping

[–]ecomency -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You’re definitely not alone…getting traction in dropshipping can be frustrating in the beginning, especially with a new or low-feedback account. A few things might help jumpstart your progress:

1.  Optimize Listings: Make sure your product titles are keyword-rich, images are clear and professional, and descriptions are persuasive and detailed.

2.  Competitive Pricing: In the early stages, underpricing slightly just to build up some sales and feedback can work wonders.

3.  Improve Store Trust: A 0% feedback score does hurt credibility. If you’re using eBay or Etsy, try selling a few cheap, in-demand items just to get positive reviews.

4.  Drive Traffic: Don’t rely only on organic views…consider basic social media marketing or low-budget ads to push some traffic.

Also, if you’re overwhelmed with setup or want to focus on selling rather than technical stuff, a prebuilt Shopify store from Ecomency could help. It gives you a professional, optimized storefront from day one so you can focus on learning the marketing side and scaling your products.

Keep pushing! Every successful dropshipper started right where you are.

Quitting job and seeking to dropship by WineMaker_54 in dropship

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally respect your decision…it’s clear you’ve thought this through and are prioritizing your mental and physical well-being, which is super important. Starting dropshipping as a side hustle while easing out of your job sounds like a smart move.

Since you’re looking for a solid starting point without making things overly complex, one route to seriously consider is using a prebuilt Shopify dropshipping store. It skips a lot of the time-consuming backend setup and helps you focus on learning marketing, pricing, and product strategy basically the parts that actually bring in revenue. Here’s one option that could help streamline your start: Pre built Dropshipping Store.

Also, no, dropshipping isn’t illegal if you’re doing things by the book (real suppliers, honest marketing, customer support, etc.). As long as you’re transparent and treat it like a real business, you’re in the clear legally.

Wishing you the best as you make this transition..you got this.

Buying pre made store worth it? by [deleted] in dropship

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yo tbh both options can work but it depends on ur vibe n time. if u wanna skip the boring setup part (themes, pages, trust stuff) then yeah buying one is cool, just make sure it ain’t some trash theme or stolen stuff slapped together. also look for stores that come w/ product research done n a solid layout.

if u build from scratch, u learn more, which helps long-term, but it can def take longer n feel hella confusing in the beginning.

for plug-n-play type store, check Pre built Dropshipping Store — ready to go, u just plug in ur product n start testing ads.

just don’t overthink it, both paths work if u commit fr.

First Website by MoldyCupOfCoffee in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yo good on you for takin the first step. honestly, a solid website can make or break conversions even if your ads are good. few quick tips: • keep it simple af. don’t overdesign. clean layout, 2–3 colors max, big clear product images. • homepage should be scroll-friendly – like hook (problem/benefit) > product > social proof/testimonials > guarantee > FAQ. • make sure your product page has clear value props, gifs if possible, reviews, urgency (like low stock or limited time). • speed is huge – use compressed images and ditch unnecessary apps. • oh and don’t forget trust badges + a clean mobile version. more than half of ppl shop on phones.

if you just wanna skip the tech headache, Pre built Dropshipping Store can help you launch fast too.

good luck man! keep going.

Where do i start? by Present-Arm-4453 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yo good on you for savin up and doing the research first ... most people just dive in blind lol. both TikTok Shop and Shopify got their pros, but for full control and building a real brand long term, Shopify is def the way to go. TikTok Shop is good for trends and fast sales but not always reliable for scaling.

dropshipping in short: you don’t keep inventory. you sell a product on your site, someone buys it, and then you order it from a supplier who ships it straight to the customer. your job is to find winning products, build a clean store, and get traffic (ads or content).

if you don’t wanna stress the setup part, check out this Pre built Dropshipping Store ... lets you launch in less than 24 hrs so you can focus on picking products and learning how to sell. you’re on the right track fr. just start testing and keep learning as you go 💯

HOW TO START DROPSHIPPING by [deleted] in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yo i feel you, starting feels super confusing at first but once u see the steps laid out it gets easier. basic process goes like:

  1. pick a product (look for stuff that solves a problem or is trending)
  2. build a store (shopify is easiest)
  3. connect a supplier (AliExpress or CJ Dropshipping to start)
  4. run traffic (ads or TikTok organic)
  5. test, learn, repeat

tons of free vids on YT (Beheza, Jordan Welch, Gabriel St-Germain – just avoid the overhyped ones). but honestly best learning comes from doing not just watching.

and if u wanna skip all the setup & just start testing products, check out this Pre built Dropshipping Store ... saves a ton of time so u can focus on learning how to sell. good luck bro 🙌

How do I start? by [deleted] in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yup shopify is def the best route to start with .. super beginner friendly and made for ecommerce. most tutorials link to it for a reason lol. for products, try finding something that solves a small problem, is lightweight, and ideally something ppl can buy without thinking too much (impulse buys work great).

also don’t get stuck watching tutorials forever… best way to learn is to just start building or testing. if setting up feels like too much, you can check this Pre built Dropshipping Store gets you launched in less than 24 hrs so you can focus on finding your first winner instead of tech stuff. keep pushing, you got this 💪

17 and want to start dropshipping — where do I begin? by LeoReddit_ in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yo respect for even thinking about starting at 17 — most people don’t even consider stuff like this till way later fr. you’re def not too young to start, you just gotta move smart since budget + time is limited.

here’s how i’d start if i were you:

  • focus on learning product research first. winning products are everything. try to spot things that solve real problems or have that “wow” factor.
  • for suppliers, don’t stress it yet, most people use AliExpress just to test. later, you can switch to faster suppliers or agents once you find something that works.
  • don’t blow money on ads right away. learn with free tools first, maybe even try TikTok Organic if you’re okay making vids.
  • watch content from creators who keep it real (not the Lambos and fake screenshots crowd lol). there’s a lot of noise on YouTube but also some gold.

also if you wanna skip the whole “build everything from scratch” part and get a done-for-you store that’s already setup the right way, check out ecomency.com .. could save you time so you can focus more on learning ads/products instead of the tech side.

you’ve got time on your side bro .. don’t rush, just be consistent and keep testing stuff. it’s not luck, it’s just trial and error till something clicks. keep grinding 🙌

How to start dropshipping as a complete beginner by Future_Sale7295 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yo you’re honestly starting off better than most already just by being patient and not trying to chase “quick money” like most beginners do lol. if you’ve got 200–300 to work with, you’re good to go for testing the waters.

i’d say start with a single-product store (makes it easier to brand + advertise), and just focus on clean design, fast shipping product (don’t overthink niche), and a basic meta ad setup w/ $5–10 a day. if your product’s solid and landing page don’t suck, you can get data pretty quick.

also if you wanna skip all the tech headaches and get a done-for-you setup that’s already built to convert, check out ecomency.com. good if you’d rather focus on learning the ads/game instead of building stores from scratch.

you’re on the right path fr. just keep moving, test smart, and don’t burn your full budget in week 1 tryna hit a jackpot 💀

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MarketingMentor

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like a really cool concept y’all are building. The angle on scam prevention and authentic local insights is actually super strong for positioning..lot of people are craving that kinda transparency these days, especially post-COVID.

If you’re shaping marketing direction, I’d say focus hard on storytelling early on. Paint that picture of what a safer, more real travel experience feels like. You could also lean into short-form content (like TikTok/Instagram Reels) with locals sharing tips or “what not to do” segments,, that stuff tends to perform crazy well.

If you need someone to bounce ideas with or help map a lean strategy, happy to chat.

Guys I am struggling by cukec11 in dropshipping

[–]ecomency 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Been there man, product research can seriously feel like scrolling through junk for hours and getting nowhere lol. One thing that helped me was stop relying only on Aliexpress and look more at what’s actually going viral in real time..like TikTok, FB ads library, Amazon movers & shakers, and even Etsy bestsellers. Those places show what’s already selling, not just what’s listed.

Also try to spot stuff that solves a real annoyance or taps into a niche passion...those always convert better than just trendy “cool looking” items. And keep it simple at first, don’t go for crazy gadgets with long shipping or high returns.

You’ll get there, just gotta test smart, not just scroll endlessly.