Selling Digital Products on Etsy
The Complete Beginner-to-Builder Masterclass

Everything from 22 in-depth tutorials and case studies, distilled into one do-it-yourself curriculum — setup, product types, research, creation, SEO, pricing, launch, marketing, scaling, and real seller numbers. Built to do, not just read.

486concrete points
22source videos
16chapters
~17hof tutorials
How to use this: Work top to bottom like a course, or jump via the chapter chips above. Every point carries one real screenshot from the source video with its timestamp — click any image to enlarge, or hit ▶ Watch to open that exact moment on YouTube. Each chapter opens with the Pain it solves, the Relief (the new mental model), a Mental Picture, and a Plain-English Glossary.
$0.20per listing (every item, lasts 4 months)
6.5%transaction fee on each sale total
3% + $0.25payment processing (US)
12-15%Offsite Ads (only on ad-driven sales)
~$0cost of goods - it is a file

Etsy fee figures current as of 2026. Always confirm on Etsy's official Fees & Payments policy before pricing.

Chapter 01

The Big Picture & Mental Model

What this business actually is, and how the money flows
12 points

The Pain

You keep hearing 'sell digital products on Etsy = passive income', but you have no mental model of what you'd actually be selling, who buys it, or where the money comes from. It feels like a buzzword, not a business.

The Relief

A digital product is a file (a template, planner, printable, ebook) that a customer buys, downloads instantly, and you never ship. You build it ONCE and Etsy delivers a copy automatically every time someone buys. Your job is two things: (1) make a file people want, (2) make it findable on Etsy. Everything else in this course is detail on those two jobs.

Mental Picture

Imagine a vending machine you stock once. You load one chocolate bar, and the machine clones it infinitely. Every time someone pays, a perfect copy drops out and the original stays on the shelf. Etsy is the busy shopping mall the machine sits in, and the machine runs 24/7 while you sleep.

Plain-English Glossary

Digital product
A downloadable file (no physical item shipped) the buyer gets instantly after paying.
Digital download
Etsy's name for a digital product delivered as an automatic file download.
Passive income
Money that keeps coming from work you already did once (the file), rather than hours you trade now.
Marketplace
A website that already has millions of shoppers (like Etsy) where you rent a storefront instead of building your own traffic from scratch.
Profit margin
The slice of each sale you keep after costs. Digital products are near-100% because there is no material or shipping cost.
built-in traffic
the existing flow of buyers who come to a marketplace on their own
fulfillment
the process of packing and shipping a physical order after a customer buys
dispatch time
how many days the shop promises to ship/send the order after purchase; location freedom :: ability to run business from any location
affiliate marketing
promoting someone else's product and earning a commission per sale, no product creation needed
revenue stream
a source of income; "main revenue stream" = the primary way you make money
audience
a group of people who follow you and your brand (e.g., email subscribers, social media followers) who can be reached directly without relying on any platform's algorithm
six-figure income
annual income between $100,000 and $999,999
Speed-to-market
how quickly a new seller can start reaching real customers; Etsy's is uniquely fast vs. other platforms
saturated
a market where so many sellers exist that it is very hard to stand out or get sales
Definition and examples of digital productsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 0:37▶ Watch

Definition and examples of digital products

Digital products are products people can purchase and download instantly online. Instead of receiving something physical, buyers get a digital file they can use, edit, or print. Common examples: planners, social media templates, invitations, workbooks, wall art, presentations.

"Instead of receiving something physical, they get a digital file that they can use, edit, or print."
Terms
digital product
— a file delivered electronically — no shipping, no physical inventory
Why digital products are an attractive business modelYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 0:53▶ Watch

Why digital products are an attractive business model

Three main advantages:

  1. Easy to start — no inventory, no shipping, no large upfront investment, only time and effort required.
  2. Scalable and passive — create once, sell the same product over and over.
  3. Buyer appeal — customers save time by buying a template instead of creating from scratch.
"Once you create a product, it can sell over and over again, which makes it scalable and more passive over time."
Terms
passive income
— money earned repeatedly from a one-time creation effort
Why Etsy is the best platform for beginnersYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 1:17▶ Watch

Why Etsy is the best platform for beginners

Etsy has built-in traffic — buyers are already going to Etsy to search for digital products, so sellers do not need to find customers themselves. This contrasts with building your own website from scratch, which requires generating your own audience. Etsy's marketplace advantage makes it significantly easier to get first sales.

"Instead of finding customers yourself, Etsy is already bringing them to you."
Terms
built-in traffic
— the existing flow of buyers who come to a marketplace on their own
Digital products are infinitely scalable vs physical products90-day new shop case study⏱ 1:47▶ Watch

Digital products are infinitely scalable vs physical products

Physical product businesses require labor for every fulfillment cycle (print, cut, pack, ship). Digital products can be copied and distributed for free — no additional work per sale. Scaling physical requires machines and/or hiring people; digital scales automatically. Seller describes doing sticker shop fulfillment 2–3 times a week vs zero fulfillment for digital orders.

"the things that I'm selling are digital and they can be copied and distributed for free — it scales all by itself"
Terms
fulfillment
— the process of packing and shipping a physical order after a customer buys
Location freedom: digital shop earns regardless of where you are90-day new shop case study⏱ 3:35▶ Watch

Location freedom: digital shop earns regardless of where you are

Physical shop requires seller to be home to fulfill orders. During a Disneyland trip, seller had to either put all orders on hold or drastically extend dispatch times. A digital shop earns while seller is anywhere in the world — no equipment, no staff needed. Location freedom is a third type of freedom beyond financial and time freedom.

"there's no denying how nice it would be to make your money regardless of where you are in the world"
Terms
dispatch time
— how many days the shop promises to ship/send the order after purchase; location freedom :: ability to run business from any location
Digital products not best first step for total beginnersCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 1:12▶ Watch

Digital products not best first step for total beginners

Creator warns complete beginners looking for fast income online that digital products require time on product creation, learning new skills, and technical setup. Recommends affiliate marketing as the faster starting point. Claims he made over $1 million in profit from affiliate marketing before pivoting to digital products.

"Creating digital products is not the most optimal way for you to start earning online because you need to spend time with product creation, with learning new skills, and too much tech stuff"
Terms
affiliate marketing
— promoting someone else's product and earning a commission per sale, no product creation needed
When Etsy IS the right choice (narrow use case)$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 18:40▶ Watch

When Etsy IS the right choice (narrow use case)

Etsy is appropriate if:

  1. You are just testing the waters with selling online.
  2. You do NOT need consistent monthly income from it.
  3. You are okay treating it as bonus income rather than your main revenue stream. It is NOT recommended as your primary platform if you want stable, scalable income.
Terms
revenue stream
— a source of income; "main revenue stream" = the primary way you make money
Recommended 3-step platform strategy for new sellers in 2025$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 20:35▶ Watch

Recommended 3-step platform strategy for new sellers in 2025

Speaker's recommended sequence for artists starting out:

  1. Start with your own website — use Hostinger for low cost + easy AI-powered setup; get your store running in one afternoon.
  2. Once your website is running smoothly, add ONE marketplace platform; reuse all assets (photos, pricing, product details) already built for your website.
  3. Most importantly, focus on building your own audience — having your own audience is "like having insurance against algorithm changes." Building your audience is a learning curve but the single most valuable long-term investment.
"having your own audience is like having insurance against algorithm changes"
Terms
audience
— a group of people who follow you and your brand (e.g., email subscribers, social media followers) who can be reached directly without relying on any platform's algorithm
Digital products: create once, sell forever modelWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 0:07▶ Watch

Digital products: create once, sell forever model

Digital products (PDFs, planners, sound effects, courses, cheat sheets, ebooks, templates) can be created once and sold forever with 100% profit margin and zero inventory cost. A buyer can download, watch, and use them instantly. No shipping, no stock.

"You can create something once and sell it forever with 100% profit margin and zero inventory cost."
Terms
digital product
— a file a customer downloads instantly — no physical item made or shipped
passive income
— money earned from a product you made once, without trading more hours for it
Speaker's 4-year track record: multiple six-figure streamsWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 0:49▶ Watch

Speaker's 4-year track record: multiple six-figure streams

The speaker states he spent 4 years building multiple six-figure income streams selling courses, ebooks, templates, and software — all from a laptop. This allowed him to quit his job and travel the world.

"For the past 4 years, I built multiple six-figure income streams, selling courses, ebooks, templates, even software."
Terms
six-figure income
— annual income between $100,000 and $999,999
Etsy's core advantage: product in front of paying buyers within 24 hoursWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 5:15▶ Watch

Etsy's core advantage: product in front of paying buyers within 24 hours

Etsy's unique value proposition vs. all alternatives: a seller can have a listing live and visible to paying customers within 24 hours of opening a shop. No ad spend required, no existing audience required, no warehouse or inventory investment, no building a website from scratch. Etsy hosts the shop, builds the search engine, builds buyer trust, and brings millions of buyers who are already ready to spend. This speed-to-market is nearly impossible to replicate elsewhere.

"Etsy is one of the only platforms where you can have a product listed and in front of paying customers within 24 hours of opening the shop"
Terms
Speed-to-market
— how quickly a new seller can start reaching real customers; Etsy's is uniquely fast vs. other platforms
5 profitable creative businesses not needing big audience5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 0:10▶ Watch

5 profitable creative businesses not needing big audience

The video presents 5 most profitable creative businesses to start in 2026 that are:

  1. not trendy or saturated,
  2. do not require a big audience to succeed. The host also teaches the criteria used to choose them so viewers can find similar ideas independently ("teach a man to fish").
"businesses to start in 2026 are not trendy or saturated and they don't require a big audience"
Terms
saturated
— a market where so many sellers exist that it is very hard to stand out or get sales
Chapter 02

Feasibility & Reality Check

Honest costs, timelines, income, and why most beginners quit
20 points

The Pain

You don't know if this is a real opportunity or a scam. How much does it cost to start? How long until the first sale? Can it actually replace income, or is that YouTube-thumbnail fantasy? You're scared of pouring months in for nothing.

The Relief

Reality: startup cost is tiny ($0-$50: mostly Etsy's $0.20 listing fees + maybe Canva Pro). First sale commonly takes weeks-to-3 months. Meaningful income ($1k+/mo) usually takes 6-12 months of consistent listing. The reason 99% fail is not the model - it's quitting early, listing only 2-3 products, and skipping research. The 1% treat it like a business: dozens of researched listings, SEO, patience.

Mental Picture

Think of it like planting an orchard, not buying a lottery ticket. You plant many trees (listings), most of the fruit comes from a few winners, and nothing ripens the week you plant. People who 'fail' dug up the saplings at week 3 because they saw no apples yet.

Plain-English Glossary

Startup cost
The money needed before your first sale. For Etsy digital products it is unusually low.
Validation
Proving people actually want (and buy) something BEFORE you spend days making it.
Saturation
A niche so crowded with sellers that a newcomer struggles to be seen.
Consistency
Regularly adding listings and improving them - the single biggest predictor of who succeeds.
Six figures
$100,000+ in a year. Often quoted as revenue (total sales) not profit - watch the difference.
Star Seller
an Etsy badge awarded when a shop meets three criteria: 95%+ message response rate within 24 hours, on-time shipping, and 4.8+ average review rating over the past 3 months
sales sprint
the name of the speaker's paid program/course for Etsy sellers
SEO (search engine optimization)
the practice of choosing words/phrases for your listing title, tags, and description so Etsy's algorithm surfaces your listing to relevant searches
saturated
a market where so many sellers already exist that standing out is difficult; niche :: a specific product category or customer segment
listing fee
Etsy charges $0.20 each time you publish a product listing; perceived value :: how much a buyer feels a product is worth
listing
a single product posted on Etsy for sale; SEO :: search engine optimization — using the right keywords so buyers can find your product
guru
an online influencer who sells courses on how to make money, often giving outdated or oversimplified advice
content machine
posting new videos or posts every single day to grow a social media following
inventory
physical stock of products you've made or bought that you store until sold
upfront cost
money you have to spend before you make your first sale
Revenue vs. profit
revenue = total money received from sales; profit = revenue minus all costs (materials, fees, ads, etc.) — gurus often show revenue without subtracting expenses
Six-figure business
a business making $100,000–$999,999 per year (often claimed without clarifying whether this is revenue or profit)
Handmade seller
a seller who creates products using their own hands and tools (not industrial manufacturing), distinct from print-on-demand or drop-shipping sellers
PPC (Pay-Per-Click)
ads where you pay each time someone clicks; on Amazon this is the primary internal ad system
Drop shipping
selling products you never hold in inventory; a supplier ships directly to the buyer when you get an order
Amazon FBA
Fulfilled By Amazon — sellers send inventory to Amazon warehouses; Amazon packs and ships orders
Affiliate marketing
earning a commission by promoting other companies' products via links
Active buyers
Etsy's definition — buyers who made at least one purchase within the past 12 months; 95M+ on Etsy
Saturation myth
the belief that a market is too full of sellers for a newcomer to succeed — Jillian argues this is false on Etsy because most sellers compete poorly
six-figure
annual income of $100,000 or more
alignment
the match between your specific offer and the exact type of person who needs it; lukewarm :: mildly interested but not committed
Barrier to entry
the level of money, skill, or resources required to start; Etsy's is very low
Digital downloads are the most passive Etsy modelQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 0:05▶ Watch

Digital downloads are the most passive Etsy model

Once created and listed, digital downloads require zero ongoing labor per sale — Etsy automatically delivers the file to the buyer. Compared to POD (which requires a fulfillment trigger) and handmade (which requires physical production), digital downloads are the most hands-off model. Margins are higher than POD because there is no cut paid to a fulfillment company. Main costs are Etsy listing fee ($0.20) and the 6.5% transaction fee. Canva Pro helps creation but free Canva also works.

"It is way easier… the most passive way to sell on Etsy."
Recommended income goals — $1K/month starter, then $2K–$5K/monthQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:29:08▶ Watch

Recommended income goals — $1K/month starter, then $2K–$5K/month

Recommended beginner goal: $1,000/month ($10,000/year ≈ $30/day). This is realistic for a side hustler with a 9-to-5 job. Higher achiever target: $2,000–$5,000/month. Example products at that level: back-to-school chalkboard digital products → $4,000/month estimated revenue; back-to-school teacher gift products → $4,000/month. Instructor also mentions niche-specific "First Day of Senior Year" signs as an example of a niched-down seasonal product.

Realistic review math — 3–5 unhappy customers per 100 is acceptableQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:44:30▶ Watch

Realistic review math — 3–5 unhappy customers per 100 is acceptable

Out of every 100 customers, expecting 3–5 to be unhappy is realistic and acceptable. A 95% happy rate is genuinely good. Do not get emotional about bad reviews — they are an inevitable part of business. The critical period is the first 100 reviews: it is especially important to maintain all five stars during this window. When a bad review occurs:

  1. respond right away,
  2. message the buyer privately on Etsy,
  3. attempt to resolve it and request they update the review.
Terms
Star Seller
— an Etsy badge awarded when a shop meets three criteria: 95%+ message response rate within 24 hours, on-time shipping, and 4.8+ average review rating over the past 3 months
Speaker made $27k on Etsy without niching down or social media spam$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 0:12▶ Watch

Speaker made $27k on Etsy without niching down or social media spam

Speaker claims to have made over $27,000 selling digital products on Etsy without:

  1. Niching down first.
  2. Posting on Pinterest 10 times per day.
  3. Having followers.
  4. Running paid ads.
  5. Sometimes without any niche at all. Students in the speaker's program ("sales sprint") are making sales with brand new shops, no followers, no ads, and sometimes no niche.
"I've made over $27,000 selling digital products on Etsy without doing any of that."
Terms
sales sprint
— the name of the speaker's paid program/course for Etsy sellers
Myth 2 — focus on branding before selling; clicks come from SEO not aesthetics$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 5:30▶ Watch

Myth 2 — focus on branding before selling; clicks come from SEO not aesthetics

Seller trap: spending hours perfecting fonts, banners, color palettes, and shop logos before any sales. What actually happens: publish → nothing → spiral into redesigning branding. Reality: "Etsy is not Instagram." Buyers find listings through search results, not because they like a shop's aesthetic vibe. You do not need a cohesive color palette to make sales — you need clicks driven by strong SEO. Students in the speaker's program regularly make sales before their shop "looks how they want it to." Fix: if listing isn't getting views or sales, do NOT change banner/fonts — diagnose the SEO and listing photo instead.

"Etsy is not Instagram. People aren't finding your shop because they like your vibe. They're finding it because you show up in search results."
Terms
SEO (search engine optimization)
— the practice of choosing words/phrases for your listing title, tags, and description so Etsy's algorithm surfaces your listing to relevant searches
Downside: digital niches are more saturated than physical90-day new shop case study⏱ 5:28▶ Watch

Downside: digital niches are more saturated than physical

Because anyone worldwide can sell digital products with no equipment barriers, the competitive pool is global. Physical product sellers only compete within regions limited by equipment access and distribution. People outside North America, Europe, or Asia especially flock to digital products because physical product businesses may not be feasible. Result: you compete with the best globally, not just locally.

"in general digital product niches are more saturated Than Physical ones"
Terms
saturated
— a market where so many sellers already exist that standing out is difficult; niche :: a specific product category or customer segment
Some buyers reluctant to pay for digital; pricing sweet spot $10–$2090-day new shop case study⏱ 7:45▶ Watch

Some buyers reluctant to pay for digital; pricing sweet spot $10–$20

A segment of customers refuses to spend money on non-physical things. This drives many Etsy sellers to price digital products too low — some even below $1, which makes no sense because Etsy charges $0.20 per listing already. Seller's recommended pricing sweet spot for digital products on Etsy: $10–$20. High enough to be worth each sale, not so high as to deter buyers. Pricing digital products profitably and palatably for customers is harder than with physical.

"for me I think the sweet spot for digital products especially on Etsy is somewhere between the $10 to $20 range"
Terms
listing fee
— Etsy charges $0.20 each time you publish a product listing; perceived value :: how much a buyer feels a product is worth
Reality check: 200 listings with gorgeous designs but only 1 sale1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 1:47▶ Watch

Reality check: 200 listings with gorgeous designs but only 1 sale

Early in journey, seller found a competitor shop with over 200 listings, all with gorgeous designs, but only 1 sale. This was the wake-up call that success requires more than quantity of listings or design quality alone — demand research and SEO matter. Seller initially started selling wedding invitations (fast to design) but pivoted to business templates after discovering the demand.

"I came across a shop with over 200 listings, all gorgeous designs, but just one sale"
Terms
listing
— a single product posted on Etsy for sale; SEO :: search engine optimization — using the right keywords so buyers can find your product
Creator made hundreds of thousands selling digital products in 3 yearsCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 0:11▶ Watch

Creator made hundreds of thousands selling digital products in 3 years

The video host states he made "hundreds of thousands of dollars" creating, promoting, and selling digital products over the last 3 years. Separate claim: made over $1 million in profit through affiliate marketing. The live build demonstrates the full workflow — from no idea to listed product — can be completed in approximately 2 hours 31 minutes (accounting for a 5–10 minute pause during recording).

"In the last three years, I made hundreds of thousands of dollars creating, promoting, and selling digital products"
99% of beginners never make a single saleWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 0:20▶ Watch

99% of beginners never make a single sale

The harsh truth stated in the video: 99% of beginners who try selling digital products never make a single sale. The main reason given is following outdated advice from gurus — advice that requires showing your face, building a massive audience, or becoming a daily content machine. In 2025 a different approach exists.

"The harsh truth is that 99% of beginners never make a single sale."
Terms
guru
— an online influencer who sells courses on how to make money, often giving outdated or oversimplified advice
Outdated guru advice is why most beginners failWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 0:31▶ Watch

Outdated guru advice is why most beginners fail

Common advice from content creators tells beginners they must:

  1. show their face on camera,
  2. build a massive audience,
  3. become a daily content machine. The speaker argues these are outdated requirements in 2025 and not prerequisites for making money with digital products.
"They follow outdated advice from gurus and content creators."
Terms
content machine
— posting new videos or posts every single day to grow a social media following
Low barrier to entry: no inventory, shipping, or big upfront cost$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 4:05▶ Watch

Low barrier to entry: no inventory, shipping, or big upfront cost

The appeal of Etsy digital products that hooked the speaker: no physical inventory to store, no shipping to arrange, no large upfront costs. All that was needed was a laptop and time. This distinguishes digital products from physical side hustles (photography, baking, event decorating) that require equipment, ingredients, or a physical presence.

"No inventory, no shipping, no big upfront costs. All I needed was my laptop and some time."
Terms
inventory
— physical stock of products you've made or bought that you store until sold
upfront cost
— money you have to spend before you make your first sale
YouTube Etsy gurus overstate income; ad spend hidden from figures17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 5:05▶ Watch

YouTube Etsy gurus overstate income; ad spend hidden from figures

Many YouTube Etsy educators show results that are: (a) based on old data (years gone by), (b) reported as revenue not profit — they don't disclose their ad spend, which can be astronomical, (c) based on a "spend money to make money" model that's out of reach for most handmade sellers. The advice is often tailored for digital/POD niches and doesn't translate to handmade. Treat all income claims with skepticism.

"they don't share their ad spend which is astronomical ... a lot of the strategies I see are based on the you have to spend money to make money business model"
Terms
Revenue vs. profit
— revenue = total money received from sales; profit = revenue minus all costs (materials, fees, ads, etc.) — gurus often show revenue without subtracting expenses
Don't compare yourself to online seller claims; protect your mindset17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 10:18▶ Watch

Don't compare yourself to online seller claims; protect your mindset

Online sellers cannot honestly show the bad days — negative content hurts their brand and income. So social feeds are full of polished success narratives (six-figure claims, etc.) that may be partial truths or even outright false. The only way to protect yourself is to define your own version of success and measure yourself against that only — not against others. "Follow the feelings": if you feel good in your business, that is a valid indicator you're on the right track.

"the only way to protect yourself from the BS is to just not compare yourself to anyone else focus on your goals"
Terms
Six-figure business
— a business making $100,000–$999,999 per year (often claimed without clarifying whether this is revenue or profit)
Kim's verdict: Etsy still worth it, especially for beginners17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 12:42▶ Watch

Kim's verdict: Etsy still worth it, especially for beginners

Despite all the negatives, Kim recommends Etsy — particularly for sellers just getting started. It is a useful tool if you enter with eyes open and realistic expectations. Key conditions for success: patience, willingness to adapt, long-term thinking, and active self-promotion. Her personal bottom line: her worst day as a handmade seller is still better than her best day in any previous job.

"my worst day as a handmade seller is still better than my best days in my last job"
Terms
Handmade seller
— a seller who creates products using their own hands and tools (not industrial manufacturing), distinct from print-on-demand or drop-shipping sellers
Alternatives to Etsy all have serious hidden costs or barriersWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 1:52▶ Watch

Alternatives to Etsy all have serious hidden costs or barriers

Jillian compares Etsy to four common alternatives:

  1. Drop shipping — competitors spend $10,000–$50,000/month on Facebook/TikTok ads; very thin margins; no brand; supplier can change quality/cost overnight; race-to-the-bottom pricing risk.
  2. Amazon FBA/Handmade — fees + PPC (Amazon ads) eat 30–40% of revenue; Amazon controls your return policy (wear-and-return customers accepted).
  3. Affiliate marketing — takes 6–12 months of heavy content creation (4–6 posts/day) before consistent income.
  4. Own Shopify store — $30/month fee, zero built-in traffic; only family/friends visit at launch.
"Amazon fees and PPC... can eat into like 30 to 40% of your revenue. And they control your return policy, not you"
Terms
PPC (Pay-Per-Click)
— ads where you pay each time someone clicks; on Amazon this is the primary internal ad system
Drop shipping
— selling products you never hold in inventory; a supplier ships directly to the buyer when you get an order
Amazon FBA
— Fulfilled By Amazon — sellers send inventory to Amazon warehouses; Amazon packs and ships orders
Affiliate marketing
— earning a commission by promoting other companies' products via links
Etsy is NOT saturated — fewer than 2% of sellers compete correctlyWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 6:10▶ Watch

Etsy is NOT saturated — fewer than 2% of sellers compete correctly

Etsy has 7.5 million+ sellers and 95 million+ active buyers (purchased in last 12 months). The saturation myth assumes all sellers compete effectively — they don't. Based on coaching 6,000+ sellers and training 50,000+, Jillian estimates fewer than 2% of Etsy sellers use correct SEO, correct products, correct pricing, correct mockups, and correct targeting. The real competition is tiny. Most sellers are making fundamental mistakes; those who execute correctly face mostly incompetent competitors.

"I would say it's probably less than 2% of all of the Etsy sellers [who are doing things correctly]"
Terms
Active buyers
— Etsy's definition — buyers who made at least one purchase within the past 12 months; 95M+ on Etsy
Saturation myth
— the belief that a market is too full of sellers for a newcomer to succeed — Jillian argues this is false on Etsy because most sellers compete poorly
Repeat purchases math — 100 customers at $49/mo = $4,900/mo5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 2:06▶ Watch

Repeat purchases math — 100 customers at $49/mo = $4,900/mo

Repeat purchases radically change the business math. Example: charge $49/month for a product → 100 customers = $4,900 every month on repeat. To hit $10,000/month you only need ~204 customers. That's a six-figure year without constantly hunting for new customers. Small audience + right niche + repeat purchases = viable business.

"you have just a 100 customers. You're already making $4,900 every single month on repeat"
Terms
six-figure
— annual income of $100,000 or more
Small aligned audience outperforms large lukewarm audience5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 15:27▶ Watch

Small aligned audience outperforms large lukewarm audience

People overestimate how much audience size matters. When you're broad, you need scale (large audience). When you're specific, you need alignment (small group who feel you truly get them). A small group who deeply resonate will always outperform a large lukewarm group. Ask not "Could I do this?" but "Who exactly would I do this for?" That question alone puts you ahead of 97.6% of other businesses.

"A small group of people who feel like you really get them will always outperform a large group who are just lukewarm"
Terms
alignment
— the match between your specific offer and the exact type of person who needs it; lukewarm :: mildly interested but not committed
Etsy is not passive income today; expect upfront work for long-term payoffStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 0:12▶ Watch

Etsy is not passive income today; expect upfront work for long-term payoff

Rookie mistake #1: expecting passive income immediately on Etsy. Reality: there is significant upfront work required. The passive income potential is real but comes later, after the initial investment of effort. Etsy's advantages for beginners: very low barrier to entry, no coding/website skills required, no inventory required, very low startup costs (unlike Amazon FBA which requires capital), and low skill barrier — a 10-year-old could set up a shop. Despite the low barrier in, earning potential is virtually unlimited.

"if you're looking for passive income today do not start on Etsy because you're not going to see a passive income stream today it's going to be a lot of work upfront but it is worth it"
Terms
Barrier to entry
— the level of money, skill, or resources required to start; Etsy's is very low
Amazon FBA
— Amazon's fulfillment program requiring inventory investment and significant capital upfront
Chapter 03

How Etsy Works: Marketplace, Fees & Algorithm

The built-in traffic, every fee, and how search ranks you
19 points

The Pain

Etsy takes a cut, but you have no idea how much, so you can't tell if you'll actually keep money. And mysterious 'algorithm' decides who shows up in search - you don't know what it rewards, so your listings feel invisible.

The Relief

Fees are knowable: $0.20 to list (every item, lasts 4 months), 6.5% transaction fee on the total (item + any shipping), 3% + $0.25 payment processing (US). Offsite Ads add 15% (12% once you pass $10k/yr, and then you can't opt out) but only on sales those ads caused. So Etsy keeps roughly 12-15% per sale normally. The algorithm ranks by RELEVANCY (do your title/tags match the search?) plus quality signals (clicks, favorites, sales, reviews, recent activity). You win search by matching real buyer keywords and earning engagement.

Mental Picture

Etsy is a mall that already has a flood of shoppers walking past. You pay a small rent ($0.20) and a commission on each sale (~12-15%) in exchange for that foot traffic. The 'algorithm' is the mall directory that points shoppers to the shop whose sign matches what they asked for - so your sign (title + tags) must use their exact words.

Plain-English Glossary

Listing fee
$0.20 charged each time you publish (or auto-renew after 4 months) a listing, sold or not.
Transaction fee
6.5% Etsy takes from the total order amount when something sells.
Payment processing fee
3% + $0.25 (US) the payment system charges to handle the card.
Offsite Ads
Etsy advertises your items on Google/social; if a click leads to a sale, Etsy bills 12-15% of it.
Algorithm
The automatic system that decides the order of listings in Etsy search results.
Relevancy
How well your title, tags and category match what a shopper typed - the #1 ranking factor.
Quality score
Etsy's hidden measure of how often people click, favorite and buy your listing.
Canva Pro
paid tier of the Canva design tool, ~$12/month, unlocks premium templates and features
third-party platform
a marketplace you sell on but don't own — the platform controls traffic, rules, and fees
horizontal scaling
growing by adding more units (listings) rather than charging more per unit
Star Seller badge
Etsy recognition requiring: message response rate 95% within 24h, on-time shipping, and average review rating ≥4.8 over the rolling 3-month period
processing time
the number of days between when an order is placed and when you ship it, as declared in your listing settings
off-site ads
Etsy program where Etsy advertises your listings on external platforms; you pay 12–15% only when a sale results
on-site ads
paid Etsy listings that appear in Etsy search results, charged PPC
pay-per-sale
billing model where you pay ad fees only when a sale is completed, not for clicks or impressions
regulatory operating fee
a ~1.15% fee Etsy adds in certain countries to comply with local regulations
algorithmic marketplace
a shopping platform where software decides which listings appear first based on predicted performance, not seniority
impressions
the number of times your listing appears in search results
click-through rate (CTR)
the percentage of impressions that result in someone clicking your listing
conversion rate
the percentage of listing visits that result in a purchase
click-through rate
the % of people who see a listing in search and click on it
conversion
when a browser becomes a buyer
algorithmic boost
extra ranking advantage given by Etsy's search algorithm
domestic shipping
shipping within the same country (US to US)
CPC (cost per click)
how much you pay each time a shopper clicks your promoted/ad listing; profitability :: whether revenue exceeds total costs including ad spend
print-on-demand
products (shirts, mugs, etc.) printed only after an order is placed, by a third-party manufacturer, not handmade
offsite ads fee
fee Etsy charges (12–15%) when they advertise your listing on Google, Facebook, etc. and a customer buys through that ad
search ranking
the position your listing appears in when a buyer searches a keyword — being on page 1 gets almost all the clicks
listing frequency
how often you publish new products to your Etsy shop
Print on demand (POD)
a fulfillment method where a third-party prints your design on a product only after an order is placed — no inventory needed
Organic discovery
getting found by buyers through Etsy search without paying for ads
Etsy shop setup fee is $29 (one-time, not recurring)Top seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 7:23▶ Watch

Etsy shop setup fee is $29 (one-time, not recurring)

At time of filming, Etsy charges a one-time shop setup fee of $29. This fee varies by region. It is NOT a recurring subscription — unlike most other selling platforms. As a digital product seller, ongoing overhead costs are minimal: Canva Pro (~$12/month) and a research tool (Profit Tree, which has a one-time lifetime purchase option, no monthly fee).

"It's a one-time fee, it's not a recurring subscription like most other selling platforms."
Terms
Canva Pro
— paid tier of the Canva design tool, ~$12/month, unlocks premium templates and features
Etsy is a third-party platform with its own rulesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 5:45▶ Watch

Etsy is a third-party platform with its own rules

Etsy is a third-party selling platform — not the same as owning your own website. Every sales channel (Etsy, Amazon, Shopify) has a different "engine" and different rules. Understanding Etsy-specific rules is a prerequisite to winning on it; strategies for Shopify or social media traffic do not transfer directly.

"Every sales channel has a different engine required or a different set of rules to play that game."
Terms
third-party platform
— a marketplace you sell on but don't own — the platform controls traffic, rules, and fees
Etsy's 6.5% transaction fee — why it existsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 5:55▶ Watch

Etsy's 6.5% transaction fee — why it exists

Etsy charges a 6.5% selling fee on the total transaction price, including shipping charged to the buyer. The fee is the cost of the traffic Etsy delivers; without it, you would need to generate or buy traffic yourself. This fee applies to every sale.

"Etsy is solving a problem for you and that is called traffic."
Terms
transaction fee
— Etsy's 6.5% cut of the full sale price (item + shipping) taken from every completed order
On Etsy you compete head-to-head on every search pageQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 6:25▶ Watch

On Etsy you compete head-to-head on every search page

Unlike a standalone website where ads bring isolated traffic, on Etsy buyers land on a search results page where your listing sits next to direct competitors. Every click is contested. This means your thumbnail, price, and listing quality must out-compete neighboring listings at the moment of truth.

"On Etsy, people are going to a search page and you are showing up next to your direct competitors."
Two levers to grow on Etsy — more listings and max adsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 7:05▶ Watch

Two levers to grow on Etsy — more listings and max ads

Etsy is a horizontal scaling business. The two and only two core levers to grow revenue are:

  1. Launch more things to sell (expand your catalog — from 100 to 1,000 listings).
  2. Push Etsy Ads budget to the maximum. Once ads are maxed, the only remaining growth path is more listings.
"The big picture game of Etsy is two things to win. Launch more things to sell… and get your Etsy ads budget to the max."
Terms
horizontal scaling
— growing by adding more units (listings) rather than charging more per unit
Etsy algorithm judges a listing the moment it's postedQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 8:08▶ Watch

Etsy algorithm judges a listing the moment it's posted

Like an Instagram post, Etsy's algorithm evaluates every listing immediately upon publishing and decides its initial ranking. This makes proper listing setup critical from day one — a poorly optimized listing gets buried before it has a chance to earn clicks or sales.

"Etsy has an algorithm that judges you the second you post your listing."
Algorithm judges customer experience — 5 measurable signalsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:49:05▶ Watch

Algorithm judges customer experience — 5 measurable signals

Etsy's algorithm evaluates customer experience via five signals:

  1. Review star rating and volume — getting 10–15 reviews per 100 orders vs. competitor's 1–2 helps ranking.
  2. Processing time — 1-day processing beats 4-day; you must purchase the shipping label within your stated window or Etsy suppresses your shop.
  3. Response time — Etsy favors sellers who reply within 24 hours; Star Seller target is 95% of first messages answered within 24 hours.
  4. Message response rate — must reply to 80% of first messages within 24–48 hours minimum.
  5. Etsy ads spend — covered in Module 3.
Terms
Star Seller badge
— Etsy recognition requiring: message response rate 95% within 24h, on-time shipping, and average review rating ≥4.8 over the rolling 3-month period
processing time
— the number of days between when an order is placed and when you ship it, as declared in your listing settings
Etsy ads: on-site vs off-site; both are PPC/pay-per-saleQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:20:15▶ Watch

Etsy ads: on-site vs off-site; both are PPC/pay-per-sale

Two types of Etsy ads:

  1. On-site ads — appear within Etsy search and browse pages; you pay per click (PPC); budget is set by you.
  2. Off-site ads — Etsy places your listings on Google, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Bing etc.; you pay per SALE (not per click); fee is 12% if you made <$10,000/year or 15% if you exceeded $10k/year. Off-site ads can be opted out of if you are under $10k/year, but instructor recommends staying in: paying only when you get a sale is extremely favorable — no other ad platform offers pay-per-sale. If you refund an off-site-ad-generated order, Etsy credits back the ad fee.
Terms
off-site ads
— Etsy program where Etsy advertises your listings on external platforms; you pay 12–15% only when a sale results
on-site ads
— paid Etsy listings that appear in Etsy search results, charged PPC
pay-per-sale
— billing model where you pay ad fees only when a sale is completed, not for clicks or impressions
Three core Etsy fees every seller must knowYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 4:37▶ Watch

Three core Etsy fees every seller must know

Three main fees:

  1. Listing fee — $0.20 USD per listing; listing stays active 4 months or until sold; if it sells, the listing auto-renews and you are charged $0.20 again.
  2. Transaction fee — Etsy takes 6.5% of the total sale price.
  3. Payment processing fee — approximately 3–4% of the sale plus a fixed fee of $0.25. Example: on a $50 sale, transaction fee = $3.25 (6.5%), payment processing = ~$1.50 (3%) + $0.25 = ~$5 total fees.
"If you sell a product for $50, Etsy would take about 6.5% for the transaction fee, which is around $3.25."
Terms
listing fee
— $0.20 charge to publish one product on Etsy
transaction fee
— 6.5% Etsy takes from every sale
payment processing fee
— ~3–4% + $0.25 to handle the payment transfer
Additional Etsy fees beyond the three main onesYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 5:38▶ Watch

Additional Etsy fees beyond the three main ones

Two additional fees that may appear on statements depending on location:

  1. Regulatory operating fee — approximately 1.15% of order total; charged in certain countries based on local regulations.
  2. Taxes on seller fees — tax applied to the fees Etsy charges you; Etsy collects and remits to appropriate tax authorities. Full breakdown available on Etsy's website (seller house rules page).
"A regulatory operating fee is a small percentage fee around 1.15% of your order total that Etsy charges in certain countries."
Terms
regulatory operating fee
— a ~1.15% fee Etsy adds in certain countries to comply with local regulations
Etsy is an algorithmic marketplace driven by buyer satisfactionHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 1:25▶ Watch

Etsy is an algorithmic marketplace driven by buyer satisfaction

Etsy is purely an algorithm. Etsy makes money when a buyer finds a product, buys it, is happy with the quality, and returns to spend more. Therefore Etsy always pushes listings that have the highest potential to be clicked and bought — regardless of shop age (whether 10 years old or 3–4 months old). The best product presented the best way always performs best.

"All Etsy wants to do — they are a business at the end of the day, they just want to make money."
Terms
algorithmic marketplace
— a shopping platform where software decides which listings appear first based on predicted performance, not seniority
Three-metric funnel: impressions → clicks → conversions; diagnose each separatelyHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 15:25▶ Watch

Three-metric funnel: impressions → clicks → conversions; diagnose each separately

Every listing goes through three stages:

  1. Impressions (views in search).
  2. Clicks (click-through rate).
  3. Conversions (purchases). Diagnose issues by stage: - Low impressions = SEO/targeting problem; your product isn't showing up in search. - Getting impressions but low clicks = thumbnail/imagery problem; the main photo isn't winning the click even though SEO is working. - Getting clicks but no conversions = listing content problem; infographics, descriptions, unanswered buyer questions, or for physical products: high shipping cost or unclear sizing.
"The data will tell you exactly what to improve with your products."
Terms
impressions
— the number of times your listing appears in search results
click-through rate (CTR)
— the percentage of impressions that result in someone clicking your listing
conversion rate
— the percentage of listing visits that result in a purchase
Etsy sale countdown timer and green badge create urgency100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 1:18▶ Watch

Etsy sale countdown timer and green badge create urgency

When a listing sale is active and expiring soon, Etsy displays: (1) original price crossed out alongside sale price in bright green; (2) a green badge showing the % off (e.g., "65% off"); (3) a countdown timer showing "sale ends in X hours Y minutes"; (4) a "new markdown, biggest sale in 60+ days" badge. These visual cues boost click-through rate and conversions. Listings on sale also appear when buyers filter search by "on sale."

"Etsy really does help you promote your sale visually to your buyers."
Terms
click-through rate
— the % of people who see a listing in search and click on it
conversion
— when a browser becomes a buyer
Etsy prioritizes listings with domestic shipping under $6 in search100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 6:14▶ Watch

Etsy prioritizes listings with domestic shipping under $6 in search

Etsy officially announced that US listings with domestic shipping prices under $6 (including free shipping) are prioritized in search results. Listings with free shipping and listings charging under $6 are treated equally in search ranking — so free shipping no longer gives a direct algorithmic bonus over under-$6 paid shipping. The old advice that "free shipping = ranking boost" is now outdated.

"The old benefit of free shipping giving a direct algorithmic boost is no longer relevant as long as your shipping is under $6."
Terms
algorithmic boost
— extra ranking advantage given by Etsy's search algorithm
domestic shipping
— shipping within the same country (US to US)
Etsy ads becoming more expensive; reducing profitability1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 6:33▶ Watch

Etsy ads becoming more expensive; reducing profitability

In June 2025, seller and other sellers noticed Etsy ads were becoming significantly more expensive. Cost-per-click appears to have risen, or the platform has gotten more competitive. This directly reduced profit margins. Seller unsure if Etsy raised CPC prices or competition intensified. Warning: profitability calculations based on older ad costs may no longer hold.

"Etsy ads are becoming more expensive to the point where they almost aren't even worth it anymore"
Terms
CPC (cost per click)
— how much you pay each time a shopper clicks your promoted/ad listing; profitability :: whether revenue exceeds total costs including ad spend
Etsy reality in 2025: massive competition, algorithm volatility$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 16:45▶ Watch

Etsy reality in 2025: massive competition, algorithm volatility

Etsy described as "being a small shop in a massive mall where the mall owners keep changing the rules." Key facts: you compete with millions of sellers including mass manufacturers, digital product sellers, AI-generated products, and print-on-demand products — it is no longer handmade-only. Real example: speaker's smaller shop had $659 in sales one month, then $340 the next month (drop of nearly 50%) with same products, same effort — purely from Etsy's algorithm change. Year-over-year numbers show a downhill trajectory.

"It's like being a small shop in a massive mall where the mall owners keep changing the rules"
Terms
algorithm
— the hidden scoring system Etsy uses to decide which listings appear at the top of search results; it changes without warning
print-on-demand
— products (shirts, mugs, etc.) printed only after an order is placed, by a third-party manufacturer, not handmade
Full Etsy fee breakdown: plan for 25% of revenue going to fees$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 18:10▶ Watch

Full Etsy fee breakdown: plan for 25% of revenue going to fees

Etsy fee structure:

  1. $0.20 listing fee per item.
  2. 6.5% transaction fee on each sale.
  3. 3% + $0.25 payment processing fee per transaction.
  4. 12–15% offsite ads fee if Etsy advertises your product externally (mandatory for shops over $10k/year in sales).
  5. Etsy pushes sellers to offer free shipping, meaning sellers absorb shipping costs too. Total: safely assume 25% of your sales go to Etsy fees.
"you can safely assume that 25% of your sales end up being fees that you pay to Etsy"
Terms
offsite ads fee
— fee Etsy charges (12–15%) when they advertise your listing on Google, Facebook, etc. and a customer buys through that ad
payment processing fee
— fee charged per transaction to handle the actual movement of money from buyer to seller
Etsy algorithm rewards consistent listing activity with higher search rankNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 9:24▶ Watch

Etsy algorithm rewards consistent listing activity with higher search rank

Etsy's algorithm treats frequent listing as a signal of a quality seller. Reasoning stated:

  1. Active sellers are more likely to communicate with customers,
  2. better communication = better customer experience,
  3. better customer experience = buyers more likely to return to Etsy overall. Therefore, Etsy surfaces active sellers higher in search results as a platform-level incentive.
"Etsy wants active sellers to rank higher in search because if you're an active seller you're communicating with your customers."
Terms
search ranking
— the position your listing appears in when a buyer searches a keyword — being on page 1 gets almost all the clicks
listing frequency
— how often you publish new products to your Etsy shop
Etsy is heavily saturated; discovery is harder than ever17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 3:20▶ Watch

Etsy is heavily saturated; discovery is harder than ever

As of 2024, Etsy is "saturated as heck." There are now more sellers than buyers on the platform. Print-on-demand and digital products have been the dominant winners; handmade sellers face tougher odds. The algorithm is constantly tweaked — just when sellers figure it out, Etsy changes it again. Difficulty of organic discovery is at an all-time high.

"the platform is saturated as heck it is a wash with drop shippers and resellers"
Terms
Print on demand (POD)
— a fulfillment method where a third-party prints your design on a product only after an order is placed — no inventory needed
Organic discovery
— getting found by buyers through Etsy search without paying for ads
Chapter 04

Digital Product Types: Pros & Cons

The menu of what you can sell - effort, price, and demand of each
26 points

The Pain

There are a hundred kinds of digital products and you don't know which to make. Pick wrong and you waste weeks on something low-demand, hard to make, or impossible to compete in.

The Relief

They cluster into a few families, each with a clear trade-off. Canva templates (easy to make, huge demand, must look pro). Planners/printables (simple, evergreen, very crowded). Wall art (fast to make with design/AI, low price, sells in bundles). Ebooks/guides (higher price $20-60, more work, great margins). Spreadsheets/trackers (useful, sticky, niche). SVG/cut files (for Cricut crafters, needs design skill). Pick based on a skill you have + proven demand, not on what's 'easiest'.

Mental Picture

Think of a food court. Each stall (product type) needs different equipment and draws a different crowd. A smoothie stall (printables) is cheap to run but everyone has one; a steakhouse (ebooks/templates bundles) costs more effort but charges more and has fewer rivals. You're choosing which stall to open.

Plain-English Glossary

Canva template
A pre-designed file the buyer opens in Canva and edits themselves; you sell the editable link.
Printable
A file (PDF/PNG) the buyer prints at home - planners, art, checklists, worksheets.
Planner
A dated or undated organizing document (daily/weekly/budget/meal) sold as a printable or template.
Ebook
A multi-page digital book/guide, usually a PDF, sold at a higher price point.
SVG / cut file
A vector file used by cutting machines (Cricut/Silhouette) to make stickers, shirts, decals.
Bundle
Several products packaged together at one price to raise the perceived value and order size.
print on demand (POD)
a fulfillment model where a third-party printer produces and ships each item only after a sale is made — zero inventory
production partner
a manufacturer or fulfillment center that makes or ships your products on your behalf
digital download
a digital file (PDF, PNG, SVG, spreadsheet, template) sold on Etsy and delivered automatically to the buyer — no physical shipping required
evergreen product
a digital product that sells consistently year-round, not tied to one seasonal event
info product
a PDF or digital document that teaches specialized knowledge — study guides, professional how-tos, medical notes — priced higher than simple templates
SVG
Scalable Vector Graphic — a design file format used by Cricut and other craft cutting machines
Profit Tree
a market-research tool (also called "Profitry") that shows estimated monthly revenue for Etsy listings
editable digital download
a file the buyer can personalize themselves (e.g., via a Canva link), as opposed to a static file everyone receives identically
Cordial
a third-party tool some Etsy sellers use to handle buyer-driven customization requests
POD (print-on-demand)
a model where a third-party printer (e.g., Printify) fulfills and ships physical products (mugs, shirts, etc.) on your behalf; no inventory held
blanks
generic unbranded products (e.g., plain tumblers, leather tags) bought wholesale and then customized before resale
mini digital guide
a short focused product (5–6 pages or short video) that solves only one problem; solution depth :: how long/comprehensive an answer needs to be — does NOT need to be long to be valuable
UGC (User-Generated Content)
content created by regular people (not brands) for use in marketing; Canva website :: a functional website built entirely inside Canva's design tool, no code needed; carts :: items buyers have added to their Etsy cart but haven't yet purchased
ebook template
a pre-designed digital book layout buyers can edit with their own content; course creator :: someone who teaches online courses and sells them
budget planner
a spreadsheet or printable template that helps users track income, expenses, and savings goals; financial planning template :: broader category including budget trackers, debt payoff planners, savings goal sheets
GoodNotes
a popular note-taking app for iPad where users write with an Apple Pencil; digital planner :: a planner file (usually PDF) designed to be used inside apps like GoodNotes instead of printed on paper; ecosystem :: the community of users around a specific app or platform
social media templates
pre-designed post layouts buyers can edit and post on Instagram, Facebook, etc.; niche targeting :: designing products specifically for a defined audience (e.g., real estate agents) rather than a general audience
nursery prints
printable wall art designed for baby/toddler bedrooms; wall art niche :: the product category of decorative printable images sold on Etsy
DIY (Do It Yourself)
buyers who want to customize and print their own invitations rather than hiring a designer; editable template :: a design file the buyer can modify (change text, colors, etc.) using a tool like Canva
B2B (business-to-business)
selling products designed to help other businesses (e.g., a template kit for travel agents to use with their clients); starter kit :: a bundle of foundational templates covering everything a new business in a field would need
Google Docs resume template
a resume design file that opens in Google Docs (free, cloud-based) so buyers can edit without Microsoft Word; oversaturation :: a market state where many sellers already compete, making it harder to stand out
instant delivery system
automated setup that sends the digital file to the buyer immediately after purchase, with no manual work from the seller
Overhead
ongoing business costs (materials, hosting, equipment) that come before profit
Passive income
income earned with little ongoing active effort after the initial product creation
Word-of-mouth
organic sharing between people (groups, DMs, forums) — a free marketing channel activated only when a product genuinely delivers value
Testimonials
written or video reviews from customers confirming the product helped them
Four Etsy business models — choose the fulfillment that fits youQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 29:10▶ Watch

Four Etsy business models — choose the fulfillment that fits you

There are exactly four business models for selling on Etsy:

  1. Print on demand (POD) — third party prints and ships; you never touch the product.
  2. Digital downloads — sell files; no inventory or fulfillment.
  3. Completely handmade — you make and ship everything.
  4. Handmade with production partners — you design; a partner makes/ships. Each model has different daily workload, margins, scalability, and risk profile.
"All four of these business models have different needs, wants, fears, and goals."
Terms
print on demand (POD)
— a fulfillment model where a third-party printer produces and ships each item only after a sale is made — zero inventory
production partner
— a manufacturer or fulfillment center that makes or ships your products on your behalf
Print on demand — how the order flow worksQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 30:50▶ Watch

Print on demand — how the order flow works

POD workflow:

  1. Buyer places an order on your Etsy shop.
  2. Order automatically flows to a POD platform (e.g., My Designs or Printify).
  3. POD platform routes the order to a print provider.
  4. Print provider prints, packages, and ships directly to the buyer.
  5. Tracking number flows back to Etsy and the order is marked complete. You, the seller, never touch the physical product.
"You as the Etsy seller never actually have to touch the product."
Digital downloads — the second Etsy business modelQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 58:15▶ Watch

Digital downloads — the second Etsy business model

Digital downloads are the second of the four Etsy fulfillment models. Definition: digital files (PDFs, PNGs, spreadsheets, templates) made once on a computer and sold an unlimited number of times. No inventory, no shipping, no fulfillment partner. Most creators use Canva (free or Pro) to make them. Key advantage: near-100% margin after Etsy fees since there is no production cost per sale.

"Digital files that you make on your computer one time and theoretically an unlimited number of people can buy that file from you."
Terms
digital download
— a digital file (PDF, PNG, SVG, spreadsheet, template) sold on Etsy and delivered automatically to the buyer — no physical shipping required
evergreen product
— a digital product that sells consistently year-round, not tied to one seasonal event
Digital download product categories and real revenue dataQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:07:10▶ Watch

Digital download product categories and real revenue data

Proven digital download categories with Profit Tree estimated monthly revenues:

  1. Simple one-pager printables (checklists, trackers, planners — the "bread and butter"): editable summer planner $1,800/month; travel planner (Google Sheets) ~$400/month; bucket list template ~$200/month.
  2. Craft patterns (crochet, SVG/cut files): top crochet pattern bundle over $12,000/month; Christmas ornament crochet pattern ~$4,000/month; Halloween spooky crochet pattern ~$2,500/month.
  3. Business/professional templates (e.g., realtor templates): top realtor marketing bundle ~$9,000/month; others $200–$2,000/month.
  4. Info products / study guides (nursing, medical): family nurse practitioner bundle over $8,000/month; nursing school notes over $1,000/month.
  5. Social media templates (pregnancy announcements): religious pregnancy announcement $1,300+/month; little sister announcement $1,000+/month.
"The top crochet pattern bundle makes over $12,000 a month in revenue."
Terms
info product
— a PDF or digital document that teaches specialized knowledge — study guides, professional how-tos, medical notes — priced higher than simple templates
SVG
— Scalable Vector Graphic — a design file format used by Cricut and other craft cutting machines
Social media templates — pregnancy niche revenue dataQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:12:10▶ Watch

Social media templates — pregnancy niche revenue data

Social media templates are a strong product category on Etsy but can get "junky." One profitable sub-niche: pregnancy announcement templates. Profit Tree estimates: religious pregnancy announcement → $1,300/month estimated revenue; "little sister" pregnancy announcement → $1,000/month. Instructor has personally sold in this space. Templates are easy to make, even easier with AI + Canva.

"Sometimes they can get a little bit junky in the space on Etsy, but one particular niche I've found is the pregnancy announcement niche."
Terms
Profit Tree
— a market-research tool (also called "Profitry") that shows estimated monthly revenue for Etsy listings
Editable vs static downloads — customization trade-offsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:13:02▶ Watch

Editable vs static downloads — customization trade-offs

Pregnancy announcement templates sometimes require customer customization (name, birth date, ultrasound photo upload). Tools to enable self-serve customization: Canva (built-in share link), or a separate tool called "Cordial." Alternatively, sellers can do the customization for the buyer, but that removes the "set it and forget it" passive-income nature. Most digital-download sellers prefer systematized, non-custom products to avoid daily involvement.

Terms
editable digital download
— a file the buyer can personalize themselves (e.g., via a Canva link), as opposed to a static file everyone receives identically
Cordial
— a third-party tool some Etsy sellers use to handle buyer-driven customization requests
Wall art digital products — complexity warning for beginnersQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:15:50▶ Watch

Wall art digital products — complexity warning for beginners

Wall art is not recommended for new digital-product sellers because:

  1. You must provide the file in ~10 different sizes (8×10, 5×7, 18×24, etc.).
  2. Print quality standards are high because the item is framed.
  3. Harder to stand out. However, sellers in seasonal wall art do well. The instructor personally does not sell wall art but has seen students succeed with it.
Editable downloads = more questions, higher price; static = easier, lower CSQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:18:14▶ Watch

Editable downloads = more questions, higher price; static = easier, lower CS

Editable digital downloads (where buyers can customize name, date, etc.) generate more customer-service questions because buyers are often not tech-savvy. However, editable products can be priced higher. Static/non-editable products (everyone gets same file) require near-zero customer service. Simple one-page printables (e.g., a bucket-list PDF) can earn thousands per month — no need for complex multi-tab spreadsheets. The seller controls how complicated they make the business.

Handmade category — overview and position vs digital/PODQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:31:35▶ Watch

Handmade category — overview and position vs digital/POD

Handmade means physically making the product yourself (e.g., crocheted items). Still viable on Etsy; instructor is personally half-handmade, half-production-partner. Handmade has a higher barrier to entry than digital or POD, making it harder to replicate and potentially less saturated. However, any niche will have competition — no competition usually signals no demand. Hybrids (handmade + digital + POD in one shop) are possible but not recommended at launch.

Terms
POD (print-on-demand)
— a model where a third-party printer (e.g., Printify) fulfills and ships physical products (mugs, shirts, etc.) on your behalf; no inventory held
Handmade with production partner — sourcing from Alibaba/AliExpressQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:33:36▶ Watch

Handmade with production partner — sourcing from Alibaba/AliExpress

"Handmade with a production partner" = you buy wholesale blanks (e.g., tumblers, leather tags, cutting boards) and add your own customization (laser engraving, custom stamping). Best source for manufacturers: Alibaba and AliExpress — not just Chinese suppliers; also India, Vietnam, South America. Wholesale tumbler pricing example shown: $2.60–$2.85 per unit. Seller then engraves names with a laser engraver and sells on Etsy.

Terms
blanks
— generic unbranded products (e.g., plain tumblers, leather tags) bought wholesale and then customized before resale
Yale's curated list of high-demand digital product ideas for beginnersYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 14:05▶ Watch

Yale's curated list of high-demand digital product ideas for beginners

Yale shares product ideas from his own selling experience and Profit Tree research — products with strong demand and revenue. He displays the full list on screen (paused for viewers to note). Categories include logo templates (shown as example — described as one of the easiest for beginners), resume templates (example used in Profit Tree demo with $55k total revenue). The broader list covers multiple product types he has personally validated.

"These are either products that I've sold myself and have seen success with or ones that I've researched using Profit Tree and found really strong demand and revenue behind."
Digital product must solve ONE specific problem onlyCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 1:56▶ Watch

Digital product must solve ONE specific problem only

Biggest misconception: people think a digital product must be a huge bundle of everything they know. Correct approach: each product solves exactly ONE problem. Example — an Instagram coach does NOT need a 20-part video course covering start → build → brand → monetize → followers. Each letter A, B, C, D... in that process is one separate problem = one separate product. The solution can be as short as one page PDF or a 2-minute video. "The better the solution, the shorter it can be."

"If you are creating a digital product, this product should be solving one very specific problem"
Terms
mini digital guide
— a short focused product (5–6 pages or short video) that solves only one problem; solution depth :: how long/comprehensive an answer needs to be — does NOT need to be long to be valuable
Product 1 — Canva website templates: $14,000 from single UGC creator template priced at $1,43010 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 1:44▶ Watch

Product 1 — Canva website templates: $14,000 from single UGC creator template priced at $1,430

Canva website templates sell well on Etsy. More beginner-friendly than Shopify/coding templates — drag and drop, no coding. One specific listing: Canva website template for UGC/content creators, priced at $1,430 (far above typical sub-$50 price). Total sales: $14,000+. Currently in 18 carts. Not running any ads. Lesson: if product is genuinely high-quality and solves a specific need, you can price premium and buyers will pay.

"she's charging way more and people are still buying it — it's sitting in 18 people's carts right now and she's not even running ads"
Terms
UGC (User-Generated Content)
— content created by regular people (not brands) for use in marketing; Canva website :: a functional website built entirely inside Canva's design tool, no code needed; carts :: items buyers have added to their Etsy cart but haven't yet purchased
Product 2 — Airbnb welcome guide: $22,000 single listing; bundle hit $76,00010 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 2:59▶ Watch

Product 2 — Airbnb welcome guide: $22,000 single listing; bundle hit $76,000

Airbnb welcome guide template: $22,000 total sales. Second product from same shop (related item): $15,000. Top Airbnb bundle on Etsy: $76,000 total sales. Bundle strategy insight: take smaller individual products, combine them into a bundle, sell at higher price point. This creates high-ticket digital products. Contrast: selling $1–$2 products requires hundreds of sales per day to earn meaningful profit; a $100 bundle requires only one sale per day.

"you've got a bundle priced at $100, you only need one sale a day to hit your goal. Work smarter, not harder"
Terms
bundle
— multiple related digital products sold together as one listing at a higher combined price; high-ticket :: products priced significantly higher than competitors in the same category
Product 3 — Ebook template for course creators: $22,000; mega-bundle made $42,00010 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 4:01▶ Watch

Product 3 — Ebook template for course creators: $22,000; mega-bundle made $42,000

Ebook template designed for course creators and coaches: $22,000 total revenue, 160 pages, currently in 20 carts. Competing listing from different seller: a massive bundle with over 2,500 templates made $42,000 total — but their monthly revenue is almost the same as the 160-page product. Lesson: more templates does not automatically mean more value. Clarity and solving a specific need matters more than quantity.

"More templates doesn't automatically mean more value in the eyes of your customers. It's not about quantity, it's about clarity and value"
Terms
ebook template
— a pre-designed digital book layout buyers can edit with their own content; course creator :: someone who teaches online courses and sells them
Product 4 — Budget planners / financial planning templates: $18,000 with consistent monthly sales10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 5:14▶ Watch

Product 4 — Budget planners / financial planning templates: $18,000 with consistent monthly sales

Budget planners and financial planning templates perform very well on Etsy. Example listing found: $18,000 total revenue, currently in 20 carts, sells consistently every month. When scrolling similar listings, the pattern repeats — many are performing well. Finance niche is strong. Caveat: creating spreadsheets and financial templates has a learning curve. High-promise niche for those willing to learn.

"the finance niche is out here making money literally by helping others manage theirs"
Terms
budget planner
— a spreadsheet or printable template that helps users track income, expenses, and savings goals; financial planning template :: broader category including budget trackers, debt payoff planners, savings goal sheets
Product 5 — GoodNotes digital planner: $894,000 ($1.2M CAD) from one product10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 6:05▶ Watch

Product 5 — GoodNotes digital planner: $894,000 ($1.2M CAD) from one product

A single digital planner listing made for GoodNotes app earned $894,000 total sales (over $1.2 million Canadian dollars). This is the highest single-product revenue found in the research session. Key finding from broader research: almost all top-performing digital planners encountered were made specifically for GoodNotes. Recommendation: if entering the digital planner niche, lean into the GoodNotes ecosystem as that audience is proven and large.

"It's made $894,000 in total sales. If you're in Canada like me, that's over $1.2 million Canadian from just one product. That's insane."
Terms
GoodNotes
— a popular note-taking app for iPad where users write with an Apple Pencil; digital planner :: a planner file (usually PDF) designed to be used inside apps like GoodNotes instead of printed on paper; ecosystem :: the community of users around a specific app or platform
Product 6 — Instagram templates: $91,000 (54k templates) and $16,000 (50 templates only)10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 6:55▶ Watch

Product 6 — Instagram templates: $91,000 (54k templates) and $16,000 (50 templates only)

Instagram templates are flexible and can target many niches. Top performer found: Instagram template bundle for real estate agents, $91,000 total sales, in 20 carts, includes 54,000 templates (not beginner-friendly). Beginner alternative: a 50-template colorful retro-style bundle made $16,000. Lesson: you don't need thousands of templates to succeed — well-designed, stand-out templates sell at smaller quantities. Quality over quantity.

"you don't need thousands of pages to be successful. If your templates are well-designed and stand out, people will buy"
Terms
social media templates
— pre-designed post layouts buyers can edit and post on Instagram, Facebook, etc.; niche targeting :: designing products specifically for a defined audience (e.g., real estate agents) rather than a general audience
Product 7 — Nursery wall art prints: $35 listing earns $500/month, $50,000 total10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 8:06▶ Watch

Product 7 — Nursery wall art prints: $35 listing earns $500/month, $50,000 total

Nursery prints (specifically baby safari animal prints) performing very well on Etsy. Example: a simple set of three baby safari animal prints, priced at $35, earns approximately $500/month, total sales over $50,000. The entire nursery prints category shows strong performance. Good entry point for wall art niche. Simple, cute designs with emotional appeal for new parents.

"literally just a set of three baby safari animal prints. Super simple, super cute. It's priced at $35, brings in around $500 a month, and has made over $50,000 in total sales"
Terms
nursery prints
— printable wall art designed for baby/toddler bedrooms; wall art niche :: the product category of decorative printable images sold on Etsy
Product 8 — Wedding invitation Canva templates: $19,000; event niche broadly promising10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 8:52▶ Watch

Product 8 — Wedding invitation Canva templates: $19,000; event niche broadly promising

Editable Canva wedding invitation template: $19,000 total sales, currently in 20 carts. Demand driver: DIY brides cutting costs while wanting beautiful designs — custom invitations are expensive, so ready-made editable templates are a budget-friendly alternative and market is growing. Broader opportunity: extend beyond weddings to entire event industry — birthdays, baby showers, gender reveal parties. Many opportunities in event niche.

"with more and more DIY brides trying to cut costs while still keeping things beautiful, the market is only growing"
Terms
DIY (Do It Yourself)
— buyers who want to customize and print their own invitations rather than hiring a designer; editable template :: a design file the buyer can modify (change text, colors, etc.) using a tool like Canva
Product 9 — Travel agent starter kit bundle: $45,000; B2B products sell well10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 9:46▶ Watch

Product 9 — Travel agent starter kit bundle: $45,000; B2B products sell well

Travel agent template products performing exceptionally well. Top listing: travel agent starter kit bundle, $45,000 total sales. Top 3 listings in this category are all from the same shop and all performing well. Third listing alone pulls $2,000/month. Key insight: B2B (business-to-business) products sell particularly well because business owners are more willing to invest in tools that make their work easier or look more professional.

"products made for businesses aka B2B tend to sell really well because business owners are usually more willing to invest in tools that make their work easier"
Terms
B2B (business-to-business)
— selling products designed to help other businesses (e.g., a template kit for travel agents to use with their clients); starter kit :: a bundle of foundational templates covering everything a new business in a field would need
Product 10 — Resume templates (Google Docs + Word): $87,000 total despite seeming saturated10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 10:38▶ Watch

Product 10 — Resume templates (Google Docs + Word): $87,000 total despite seeming saturated

Google Docs and Microsoft Word resume templates: top listing made $87,000 total sales — surprisingly high given that free resume templates exist on Canva and the niche appeared saturated. Scrolling through the category confirms broad strong performance. Lesson: oversaturation is not always the enemy. Ways to stand out in this niche:

  1. distinctive design style,
  2. adding extra value (matching cover letters, portfolios, career tips),
  3. marketing to a specific profession or audience.
"Oversaturation isn't always the enemy. Instead of avoiding popular niches, focus on how you can stand out"
Terms
Google Docs resume template
— a resume design file that opens in Google Docs (free, cloud-based) so buyers can edit without Microsoft Word; oversaturation :: a market state where many sellers already compete, making it harder to stand out
You don't have to create the product yourselfWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 2:28▶ Watch

You don't have to create the product yourself

A twist most beginners miss: you don't have to create digital products yourself. Beyond AI-generated PDFs, there are marketplaces packed with ready-to-sell products complete with websites, designs, and instant delivery systems. Some products pay $500 or more per single sale.

"You don't have to create it yourself. I'm talking about proven marketplaces packed with ready-to-sell products."
Terms
instant delivery system
— automated setup that sends the digital file to the buyer immediately after purchase, with no manual work from the seller
Instagram templates were the first product type — beginner-friendly$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 4:01▶ Watch

Instagram templates were the first product type — beginner-friendly

The speaker's first product category was Instagram templates made in Canva — 9 listings. This is highlighted as a beginner-friendly starting point because:

  1. Canva is free and requires no design training,
  2. demand on Etsy for social media templates is consistent,
  3. quick to create,
  4. low barrier to entry with no physical materials needed.
"My very first products were Instagram templates, just nine listings."
Terms
social media templates
— pre-made design files (usually Canva) that buyers download and customize with their own text/photos for their Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, etc.
Ebook advantages: create once, sell forever; no inventory or shipping$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 2:50▶ Watch

Ebook advantages: create once, sell forever; no inventory or shipping

The core appeal of an ebook as a digital product type:

  1. Create it once, sell it an unlimited number of times.
  2. No physical inventory to store or manage.
  3. No shipping costs or logistics.
  4. No continuous trading of time for money.
  5. Enables financial, time, and location freedom.
  6. Low overhead. The speaker explicitly contrasted this with physical handmade products and service businesses (photography) where income is capped by time.
"something I could create once and sell it over and over and over again. No inventory, no shipping, no more continuously trading time for money"
Terms
Overhead
— ongoing business costs (materials, hosting, equipment) that come before profit
Passive income
— income earned with little ongoing active effort after the initial product creation
Why the ebook succeeded: solves real pain, gets real results, spreads organically$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 7:35▶ Watch

Why the ebook succeeded: solves real pain, gets real results, spreads organically

The ebook's success was NOT due to the topic (photography), the length (13 pages), or luck. It succeeded because:

  1. It solved the audience's most painful problem.
  2. It actually got buyers measurable results (booking more clients, some reaching 6-figure years).
  3. Hundreds of testimonials drove word-of-mouth spread in groups and forums — zero paid advertising required. Warning: selling generic Canva templates or easily Googleable information will not produce this outcome.
"it actually got people results, so they actually told their friends about it ... it spread like wildfire"
Terms
Word-of-mouth
— organic sharing between people (groups, DMs, forums) — a free marketing channel activated only when a product genuinely delivers value
Testimonials
— written or video reviews from customers confirming the product helped them
Chapter 05

Niche Selection & What to Sell

Choosing a corner of the market you can actually win
31 points

The Pain

Everyone screams 'niche down!' but also 'don't go too narrow!'. You freeze, unsure whether to sell 'planners' or 'ADHD-friendly meal-planning templates for new moms'. Wrong choice = no traffic or no buyers.

The Relief

A niche is just a specific buyer + specific need. Narrow enough to stand out, broad enough to have demand. You find the sweet spot with DATA, not vibes: search Etsy, see what's selling, count competitors, look for an angle (a style, audience, or use-case) that's underserved. Some top sellers stay broad and win on volume; beginners usually win faster with a focused angle, then expand. Sell what has proven sales AND that you can make well.

Mental Picture

Picture a crowded beach. 'Sell drinks' is the whole beach - too crowded. 'Sell ice-cold coconut water to sunburned tourists on the north end' is one umbrella with a line of customers. You want the smallest umbrella that still has a line.

Plain-English Glossary

Niche
A specific buyer group + specific need you focus your shop on.
Niche down
Narrowing from a broad category to a tighter, more specific sub-market.
Demand
How many people are actively searching for and buying this type of product.
Angle / differentiator
The thing that makes your version distinct (style, audience, format, bundle).
Best-seller
A listing or shop with proven, high sales volume - evidence of real demand.
mockup
a photo showing how the digital product looks in real life (e.g., a resume template shown on a laptop or desk); used as listing photos
Corjl
an online design platform used by some Etsy sellers (not Canva); buyers customize designs directly on the Corjl website
lorem ipsum
placeholder Latin text used in design mockups instead of real content; signals a lazy or generic template
sorority
a university women's social organization; members apply via a resume-like document during recruitment season
mega bundle
a listing containing thousands of designs bundled into one download, often AI-generated, sold at a low price
customer avatar
a detailed profile of your ideal buyer — their demographics, problems, desires, and purchasing motivation
spaghetti throwing
launching many unrelated products hoping something sticks — opposite of focused niche strategy
reverse-engineering
studying what already works and using those patterns as a model for your own approach
low-friction product
a product cheap/simple enough that buyers don't hesitate long before purchasing
print-on-demand
products printed and shipped by a third-party fulfillment company only after a sale is made
hybrid business model
running both digital downloads and print-on-demand physical products in one Etsy shop
average order value
the average dollar amount a customer spends per transaction
sub-niche
a narrower category within a broader niche (e.g., "baby milestones" within "baby products for moms")
clusters
groups of similar product types tested together rather than committing to one niche up front
gross merchandise sales (GMS)
total dollar value of all items sold on the platform
personalization
adding a buyer's custom text, name, photo, or choice to a product
option paralysis
inability to act because there are too many choices to evaluate
impostor syndrome
feeling that you're not skilled enough to compete with established sellers; saturated niche :: product category with many existing sellers
differentiation
making your product distinct from competitors through design, value, or targeting so buyers choose yours
repeat purchase
a customer coming back to buy more products from the same shop
Trade shows
industry events where brands preview new products; an early signal of what consumers will want months later
Gap-finding
identifying product categories or customer needs that exist on Etsy but are poorly served by current sellers
traffic
the number of visitors coming to a listing or website; niche :: a focused sub-segment of a market
moat
a competitive advantage that is difficult for others to replicate, protecting long-term market position
soy candles
candles made from soy wax (a natural alternative to paraffin wax)
commodity
a product or service so similar to competitors' that buyers choose only on price; micromanaged :: when a boss controls every small detail of your work
Niche decision framework: interest + experience + competition + effortNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 15:10▶ Watch

Niche decision framework: interest + experience + competition + effort

Creator built a pros/cons table for each niche candidate before deciding. Key factors evaluated:

  1. Do I have interest in this?
  2. Do I have experience/knowledge?
  3. Is competition low or manageable?
  4. How complex are the designs (pages, formats)?
  5. How hard are mockups to produce?
  6. Can I realistically compete with existing sellers' design quality?
  7. Is the price point worth the effort? This evaluation was done 2 hours into a 5-hour market research session.
"Your Etsy shop is based on this niche — you need to pick a good niche or else you may not make any sales."
Terms
mockup
— a photo showing how the digital product looks in real life (e.g., a resume template shown on a laptop or desk); used as listing photos
Why speaker rejected Etsy listing photo templates as a nicheNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 16:45▶ Watch

Why speaker rejected Etsy listing photo templates as a niche

Evaluated Etsy listing-photo Canva templates: pros — knows how to make them, proven demand (subscribers signed up for free version). Cons — extremely high competition (60 pages of results), very low prices ($5–$10 for 60-page packs), too many pages to create. Decided the time-to-revenue ratio was too poor. Key lesson: even if you know there is demand, if the price ceiling is low and creation effort is high, the niche may not be worth entering.

"The price is so low and it's just not worth my time."
Funeral/obituary template niche: opportunity identified but rejected for personal reasonsNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 20:32▶ Watch

Funeral/obituary template niche: opportunity identified but rejected for personal reasons

Obituary/funeral Canva templates identified as a strong opportunity: existing sellers use outdated design software (Corjl, not Canva), designs look old-fashioned, Canva templates would differentiate. High search volume (similar to wedding niche). Cons: would need to create many listings (competitors had 100+ obituary templates), speaker personally did not want to make funeral content. Key lesson: a niche can be excellent on paper but wrong for you personally — that is a valid reason to reject it.

"I do think this is a really really great niche with a lot of opportunity but I personally just don't want to do that."
Terms
Corjl
— an online design platform used by some Etsy sellers (not Canva); buyers customize designs directly on the Corjl website
Sorority resume template chosen as niche — decision rationaleNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 34:25▶ Watch

Sorority resume template chosen as niche — decision rationale

Final niche chosen: sorority resume and cover letter Canva templates. Reasons:

  1. Only 1–2 pages to design (not 60).
  2. Creator has experience writing effective resumes (applied to one government job, got it).
  3. Fewer Canva-format competitors (most sell Word/Google Docs versions).
  4. Existing listings use lorem ipsum — creator can differentiate with real sample text.
  5. Search volume confirmed reasonable across multiple tools (157–3,000 range depending on tool; e-rank showed low competition).
  6. Keyword score 69 on Everbee for "sorority resume template." Broader career niche also available as a future pivot (job trackers, cover letters, etc.).
"It's realistic — it's only like one or two pages, I have experience doing this."
Terms
lorem ipsum
— placeholder Latin text used in design mockups instead of real content; signals a lazy or generic template
sorority
— a university women's social organization; members apply via a resume-like document during recruitment season
Single well-made design beats 5,000-item AI mega bundleTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 16:58▶ Watch

Single well-made design beats 5,000-item AI mega bundle

When reviewing competitor research data, the seller observed: a single vintage printable wall art design priced at $7.40 earns ~$1,000/month, while a competitor selling a 5,000+ design mega bundle (likely AI-generated) earns only ~$300 more per month. Conclusion: you do not need thousands of products. Quality individual designs outperform large low-effort bundles in revenue-per-effort ratio. Do not feel intimidated by top sellers with massive inventories.

"Don't feel overwhelmed by these top sellers here. You do not need to start off with thousands of products."
Terms
mega bundle
— a listing containing thousands of designs bundled into one download, often AI-generated, sold at a low price
Master one niche and customer before expandingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 10:25▶ Watch

Master one niche and customer before expanding

When starting out, the winning move is: pick ONE niche, ONE product type, ONE sales channel (Etsy), and ONE customer avatar. Do not open multiple shops simultaneously, do not sell many product types at once. Master that customer first. Once proof-of-concept is established and cash flow exists, expansion becomes viable and lower-risk.

"Picking one niche, one product type, and one sales channel."
Terms
customer avatar
— a detailed profile of your ideal buyer — their demographics, problems, desires, and purchasing motivation
Three criteria for a winning niche selectionQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 12:08▶ Watch

Three criteria for a winning niche selection

When selecting your niche, aim for all three of:

  1. Something you are genuinely interested in (prevents burnout).
  2. A proven concept or an improvement on an existing proven product (data shows people already buy it).
  3. Something scalable — able to handle a large influx of orders and capable of producing enough catalog volume to reach six or seven figures.
"Something that you're actually interested in… a proven concept… something that's scalable."
"Spaghetti throwing" — the beginner niche mistake to avoidQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 14:05▶ Watch

"Spaghetti throwing" — the beginner niche mistake to avoid

Spaghetti throwing = launching many unrelated product types (funny meme shirts + dog shirts + sports shirts + Bigfoot shirts) targeting different customer avatars simultaneously. This dilutes skill development and brand cohesion. Instead, drill into one sub-niche fully (e.g., just sports shirts, then add funny sports shirts, personalized team shirts, basketball, tennis, baseball) before expanding.

"You're not really building a real customer identity or cohesive brand vibe."
Terms
spaghetti throwing
— launching many unrelated products hoping something sticks — opposite of focused niche strategy
Seasonal product strategy — chase the next holiday to build momentumQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:04:42▶ Watch

Seasonal product strategy — chase the next holiday to build momentum

Gold City Ventures' "Seasonal Product Secret Strategy": beginners who focus on the upcoming holiday consistently get early sales and algorithm feedback faster than those who start with evergreen products. Seasonal products are also design-beginner-friendly. Key tip: track trending color/aesthetic for each holiday. Example: Halloween shifted from orange/black to pink/orange after the Barbie movie — sellers who caught the trend outperformed those who didn't.

"Students that come in and they're chasing the next holiday actually do really well."
Mix seasonal and evergreen products for consistent year-round revenueQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:06:10▶ Watch

Mix seasonal and evergreen products for consistent year-round revenue

Evergreen products (e.g., budget trackers) sell year-round but also have peak seasonal moments. Example: budget trackers and paycheck calculators spike in January (New Year resolutions). Recommendation: build a shop with both holiday/seasonal listings AND evergreen products AND occasion-based products (birthdays, baptisms, etc.) to ensure revenue throughout the year.

"It can help your store to have both a mix of seasonal holiday type products, but also evergreen products."
Sell in a niche tied to your own profession or expertiseQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:09:00▶ Watch

Sell in a niche tied to your own profession or expertise

Business templates and info products sell better when the creator has real domain knowledge. Bonus point: if you work in a profession, your product is inherently more accurate and complete. Examples: speech language pathologists, physical therapists, Sunday school teachers, doulas, nurses. Even without working in the niche you can succeed, but existing expertise makes better products faster.

"Bonus points if you work in that profession because your product will be even better."
"Riches in the niches" — go specific, not genericQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:13:43▶ Watch

"Riches in the niches" — go specific, not generic

The highest-selling pregnancy announcement listings are niche-specific, not generic. Examples: "religious pregnancy announcement," "little sister pregnancy announcement," "second kid" announcement. Generic versions underperform because buyers want something specific to their personal situation. Use Profit Tree to identify which exact sub-niches have real demand before creating — that extra research step is what most sellers skip.

"The riches are in the niches."
Core strategic rule — pick ONE model, ONE niche, master before expandingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:35:08▶ Watch

Core strategic rule — pick ONE model, ONE niche, master before expanding

The single most important strategic rule taught in this course: pick one product type, one business model (digital, POD, handmade, or handmade+partner), and one customer avatar. Master that one thing before moving to another. The mistake called "spaghetti throwing": trying to launch sports shirts, travel shirts, dog shirts, and meme shirts simultaneously. Doing so prolongs reaching revenue goals and spreads attention too thin.

"What we're not going to do is spaghetti throwing."
Real data — focused vs scattered shops: 60K vs 4K sales comparisonQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:38:16▶ Watch

Real data — focused vs scattered shops: 60K vs 4K sales comparison

Two shops compared with ~600 listings each over similar timeframes: Shop A (scattered product types, "spaghetti") — 4,000 sales in 4 years. Shop B (focused on tumblers and cups, mastered one niche first) — 60,000 sales in 3 years. The focused shop had fewer product types but far more sales per listing. Lesson: mastering one product type then expanding beats spreading thin from day one.

Two-step process for choosing what to sellYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 10:00▶ Watch

Two-step process for choosing what to sell

Step 1 — Know your options: Go to ChatGPT (free) and type "Give me a list of 100 digital products I can sell on Etsy." Review the list, familiarize yourself with different product types, mark a few you are genuinely interested in creating. Step 2 — Check demand on Etsy: Search each idea on Etsy. Look for: a) Many listings (signals active buying); b) "Best Seller" or "Popular Now" badges (signals consistent sales); c) Items in carts or purchased in last 24 hours (signals active real-time demand); d) Click into a competitor's shop and note their other products — this is reverse-engineering successful shops.

"What you're doing here is essentially reverse engineering successful shops."
Terms
reverse-engineering
— studying what already works and using those patterns as a model for your own approach
Start with digital products first, especially graphic-based typesHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 2:50▶ Watch

Start with digital products first, especially graphic-based types

In 2026 the recommended order is:

  1. Start with digital products (clip arts, patterns, SVGs, AI-generated graphics). Reasons: a) Products made quickly. b) Low-friction — clip art sells for under $10, so easy first sales. c) Fastest way to get real sales data into the shop. d) No logistics (no shipping, few customer complaints).
  2. After getting data, add print-on-demand physical products for higher profit margins and giftability.
"Digital products, easily the less friction, and they are just the best product type that you can start off selling."
Terms
low-friction product
— a product cheap/simple enough that buyers don't hesitate long before purchasing
print-on-demand
— products printed and shipped by a third-party fulfillment company only after a sale is made
Hybrid model: digital + print-on-demand is 2026 best formulaHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 5:25▶ Watch

Hybrid model: digital + print-on-demand is 2026 best formula

The "hybrid business model" = sell both digital products AND print-on-demand physical products in the same niche shop. Flow: attract buyers with low-priced digital products → upsell them to higher-priced physical products in the same niche. Example: a fantasy-themed shop sells fantasy clip art (digital) and fantasy-themed mugs/posters (print-on-demand). Data from digital sales guides which physical products to create, avoiding guesswork.

"Selling both digital and print on demand is easily the best way to scale your shop based in 2026."
Terms
hybrid business model
— running both digital downloads and print-on-demand physical products in one Etsy shop
average order value
— the average dollar amount a customer spends per transaction
A niche is a clear audience with a use case — not a product typeHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 6:08▶ Watch

A niche is a clear audience with a use case — not a product type

Common mistake: confusing product types with niches. An SVG is NOT a niche. A PNG is NOT a niche. A t-shirt is NOT a niche. A niche = a crystal-clear audience with a use case for the product. Examples of real niches:

  1. Teachers + teacher materials (sub-product: classroom decor).
  2. Baby products for moms (sub-product: baby milestone items).
  3. Book lovers (sub-product: reading journals). Buyers type specific searches like "funny barbecue t-shirt for dad" not just "t-shirt."
"A niche is a crystal clear audience with a use case for the product."
Terms
niche
— a specific audience segment with shared interests/needs that you build your shop around
sub-niche
— a narrower category within a broader niche (e.g., "baby milestones" within "baby products for moms")
Myth 1 — niche down before opening your shop; reality: data drives clarity, not niche choice$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 1:12▶ Watch

Myth 1 — niche down before opening your shop; reality: data drives clarity, not niche choice

Widely repeated advice says: "Find your niche, build a brand, then open your shop." What actually happens: sellers spend weeks overthinking shop name, logo, and niche, then list a few random products that don't sell. The niche itself does NOT get you sales — data does. Correct approach:

  1. Start broad.
  2. Create products in clusters (multiple similar product types).
  3. Test what sells. Clarity about your niche comes from actual sales data, not from pre-planning.
"The niche isn't what gets you sales. The data is."
Terms
clusters
— groups of similar product types tested together rather than committing to one niche up front
Personalization is Etsy's #1 gifting trend; 66% of top bestsellers are custom100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 22:10▶ Watch

Personalization is Etsy's #1 gifting trend; 66% of top bestsellers are custom

Bonus tip 1: Capitalize on Etsy's customization market. Searches containing "personalize" or "custom" increased 43% year-over-year (Etsy data). Etsy Q4 2024 financial results: 1 in 3 buyers comes to Etsy specifically for personalized items; 1 in 3 dollars of Etsy's gross merchandise sales came from customized items. Of the 100 top shops' most sold listings, 66 out of 100 were custom/personalized products. Types seen: custom text, photos of loved ones or pets, kids' names, initials, birth flowers, design color options.

"Personalization is the biggest gifting trend on Etsy."
Terms
gross merchandise sales (GMS)
— total dollar value of all items sold on the platform
personalization
— adding a buyer's custom text, name, photo, or choice to a product
Overcome option paralysis: pick a niche based on your own experience90-day new shop case study⏱ 11:08▶ Watch

Overcome option paralysis: pick a niche based on your own experience

Too many product options leads to overwhelm and inaction. Strategy to narrow down:

  1. Focus on products/services you know best.
  2. Look at things you bought in the last month or are thinking of buying.
  3. Ask: what problem does it solve? Can you solve it better? Do you have the skills, or would developing them be fun? Avoid entering a niche you don't understand or don't care about.
"focus on products or services that you know best"
Terms
option paralysis
— inability to act because there are too many choices to evaluate
Lesson 2: Competition signals healthy demand — don't avoid it1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 10:02▶ Watch

Lesson 2: Competition signals healthy demand — don't avoid it

Seller initially avoided saturated niches (e.g., wedding invitations) due to impostor syndrome. Later learned: competition usually means healthy demand. Strategy — don't reinvent the wheel; put your own spin on current bestsellers. People connect with different styles and different sellers. Seller also tested this with a print-on-demand pet owner niche — saturated but still got sales.

"competition isn't a bad thing. In fact, it usually means there's healthy demand"
Terms
impostor syndrome
— feeling that you're not skilled enough to compete with established sellers; saturated niche :: product category with many existing sellers
Key mindset: there is always room in big markets; start now10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 11:36▶ Watch

Key mindset: there is always room in big markets; start now

Even in crowded spaces, a unique well-designed product that solves a real need will find buyers. Waiting for the "perfect moment" only delays success. The earlier you start, the more time you have to build, experiment, and grow. Specific differentiators for any niche:

  1. your design style,
  2. extra value bundled in (matching items, tips),
  3. marketing to a specific sub-audience. Space exists for every seller willing to put in quality work.
"don't let the fear of competition hold you back. There's space for you, and there's a buyer out there waiting for exactly what you're creating"
Terms
differentiation
— making your product distinct from competitors through design, value, or targeting so buyers choose yours
Create list of 5 products targeting same customer for repeat purchasesNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 1:25▶ Watch

Create list of 5 products targeting same customer for repeat purchases

Successful Etsy shops sell a variety of products that the same ideal customer would either buy all at once or return to buy again. Action: list 5 different product ideas that appeal to the same customer. Research tip: search your product idea on Etsy, find a successful shop selling it, and look at what other products that shop offers in the same niche — copy the category breadth, not the exact products.

"Make sure that you have five different product ideas that you can list and sell on your shop to the same customer."
Terms
niche
— a specific, focused topic area or target audience for your shop (e.g., "planners for homeschool moms" not just "planners")
repeat purchase
— a customer coming back to buy more products from the same shop
Winning sellers find trends outside Etsy first — influencers and trade showsWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 8:43▶ Watch

Winning sellers find trends outside Etsy first — influencers and trade shows

The sellers winning on Etsy in 2026 find trends before those trends appear on Etsy. Trend-scouting sources: influencer market, trade shows, broader consumer market signals. By the time a trend shows up as a bestseller in Etsy keyword tools, it's already 6–8 months old in the broader market. Sellers who merely copy current Etsy bestsellers are late entrants. Gap-finding (identifying categories underserved by current sellers) beats trend-chasing.

"the sellers who are winning, they are finding trends that are not on Etsy first"
Terms
Trade shows
— industry events where brands preview new products; an early signal of what consumers will want months later
Gap-finding
— identifying product categories or customer needs that exist on Etsy but are poorly served by current sellers
Selection criterion 1 — solve a real recurring problem5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 1:16▶ Watch

Selection criterion 1 — solve a real recurring problem

First criterion for picking a profitable business: focus on the problem first, not the competition. Ask: What kind of problems do people have? What's annoying them? What takes up mental space? What do they wish they didn't have to think so hard about? Products that genuinely solve problems do not require heavy convincing to sell.

"What kind of problems do people have? How can we fix them? What's annoying people?"
Small specific niche beats broad niche for audience size5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 2:21▶ Watch

Small specific niche beats broad niche for audience size

If a product is for everybody, you need massive traffic. But if it speaks to a very specific person with a very specific need, you can build a healthy business on a much smaller audience. Pricing also matters — you do not need thousands of customers if the product is priced to actually support the seller. Niche specificity + right pricing = no need for constant new traffic.

"if you are speaking to a very specific type of person with a very specific need, you can build a very healthy business on a much smaller audience"
Terms
traffic
— the number of visitors coming to a listing or website; niche :: a focused sub-segment of a market
Selection criterion 2 — moat (what makes it hard to copy)5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 4:01▶ Watch

Selection criterion 2 — moat (what makes it hard to copy)

Second criterion: does the business have a moat? A moat = what makes the business hard to copy. Examples of things that are hard to copy: taste, process, personal style, customer trust. A strong moat means competitors cannot easily destroy you even if they try. The metaphor: a castle moat (river around a castle) keeps enemies out — if your moat is strong, your "castle" (business) is impenetrable.

"what this actually means is what makes this business hard to copy"
Terms
moat
— a competitive advantage that is difficult for others to replicate, protecting long-term market position
Selection criterion 3 — niche within a niche within a niche5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 6:45▶ Watch

Selection criterion 3 — niche within a niche within a niche

The biggest mistake people make: staying too broad. "I sell candles" or "I do freelance design" is no longer enough in 2026 — there are millions doing the same. What works now: going super specific — a niche within a niche, or even a niche within a niche within a niche. Benefits of going deep: marketing gets easier, messaging gets clearer, pricing gets easier, competition becomes irrelevant.

"What actually works right now is going deep, super specific. Not just picking a niche, but picking a niche within a niche"
Candle niche-down example — 3 levels of specificity5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 8:10▶ Watch

Candle niche-down example — 3 levels of specificity

Three-level niche-down example for candles: Level 1 (broad): "I sell candles." Level 2 (better but vague): "I sell soy candles for people who want cozy home vibes." Level 3 (niche within a niche): "I sell soy candles for people who struggle to relax at night." Level 4 (deepest): "I sell soy candles for people who have anxiety and want a calming nighttime ritual that doesn't involve screen time." At level 4, you are no longer just selling a candle — you are selling a specific outcome to a specific person.

"At that point, you are not just selling a candle. You are selling a very specific outcome to a very specific person"
Terms
soy candles
— candles made from soy wax (a natural alternative to paraffin wax)
Broad freelancing makes you a commodity — niche to escape price competition5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 9:50▶ Watch

Broad freelancing makes you a commodity — niche to escape price competition

Staying broad as a freelancer ("I'm a video editor," "I do social media") puts you in the most competitive bucket possible — people compare you on price, speed, or availability, making you easily replaceable (a commodity). Niching fixes this. Examples of niched freelancing: "video editor for educational female YouTubers who sell digital products" or "social media manager specifically for handmade jewelry brands." Now you are a problem solver in a specific context, not just a service provider.

"Instead of being a general video editor, you become a video editor for educational female YouTubers who sell digital products"
Terms
commodity
— a product or service so similar to competitors' that buyers choose only on price; micromanaged :: when a boss controls every small detail of your work
Chapter 06

Market Research & Validation

Proving demand with data before you build anything
34 points

The Pain

You're about to spend days designing a product on a hunch. If you guess wrong, that's wasted time and zero sales - the classic beginner trap of 'build it and they'll come'.

The Relief

Validate first. Use Etsy search + research tools (eRank, Everbie, Alura, Sale Samurai, Marmalead) to see real search volume, competition, and which listings have lots of sales/reviews. Read the data: high searches + beatable competition + listings with hundreds of reviews = proven demand. Spy on top competitors to learn keywords, price, and what buyers complain about (your opening). Only build what the data says people already buy.

Mental Picture

A detective doesn't accuse on a hunch - they gather evidence first. Reviews are eyewitness accounts (what buyers love/hate), sales counts are the body of evidence (people pay for this), and research tools are the magnifying glass. You build the product only once the evidence is overwhelming.

Plain-English Glossary

Market research
Investigating what buyers want and what competitors sell before you commit.
eRank / Everbie / Alura / Marmalead
Etsy SEO tools showing search volume, competition, and top-seller data.
Search volume
How many times a keyword is searched per month - a proxy for demand.
Competition / competitors
Other shops selling similar products you must out-rank or out-differentiate.
Reviews
Public buyer ratings; their count signals sales volume and their text reveals gaps.
Everbee
Chrome extension + web tool that overlays estimated sales/revenue data on Etsy search results
Sales Samurai
market research tool showing search volume and competition per keyword
eRank
Etsy keyword research tool with Google data integration
Etsy Hunt
Chrome extension + tool showing views and competition; $3.99/mo
keyword score
Everbee metric = (monthly searches ÷ competing listings) × 1,000; higher means less competition per searcher
competing listings
total number of Etsy listings appearing for a given search term
estimated sales
a tool's algorithmic guess at how many units a listing sells; not official Etsy data
niche
a specific, focused category of products (e.g., sorority resume templates vs. generic resume templates)
Marmalead
another Etsy keyword research tool (not tested by creator); ~$10/mo estimated
Star Seller
an Etsy badge awarded to shops with high ratings, fast replies, and on-time shipping; used as a URL filter trick to find bestsellers
Profit Tree
an Etsy research tool (one-time lifetime purchase available, no monthly fee) that shows competitor sales data, tags, views, and conversion rates
product finder
Profit Tree feature that searches Etsy products and displays revenue/demand data
tags
up to 13 keyword phrases entered in the Etsy listing backend that directly signal to the algorithm what search terms to rank your product for
radar
Profit Tree feature that reveals competitor listing tags
evergreen product
a product that sells consistently year-round, not tied to a specific holiday or season
conversion rate
the percentage of people who view a listing and actually purchase it
bestseller badge
an Etsy-awarded badge shown on high-converting listings; a signal of proven demand
Etsy Radar
Profit Tree's Chrome extension that shows revenue analytics directly on Etsy search result pages
listing seasoning
the time Etsy's algorithm needs after a new listing is published before it starts ranking well in search results
13 tags
Etsy allows exactly 13 keyword tags per listing; using all 13 maximizes search visibility
average order value (AOV)
total revenue from a listing divided by number of orders; a listing with more expensive variations or upsell tiers will have a higher AOV
demand badges
Profit Tree's indicator showing views/cart-adds/purchases in the last 24 hours
lifetime plan
a one-time payment for permanent access to a tool
TAP test
Trust-Audience-Proof; a 3-step validation framework for Etsy product ideas
popular now badge
an Etsy label indicating a listing is currently trending
oversaturated keyword
a tag/word used by so many sellers that it's nearly impossible to rank for
Everbe (EverBe)
a Chrome browser extension for Etsy seller research that shows competitor shop analytics
listing age
how long a listing has been active on Etsy
E-Rank
Etsy analytics and research tool at e-rank.com; has both free and paid tiers
competitor research
studying other sellers' shops, listings, prices, and strategies to improve your own
Everbee (Everbe)
a paid Etsy analytics tool for keyword research and product/listing data; keyword research :: identifying which words buyers search to find products
faceless Instagram page
an Instagram account that never shows the creator's face, often using stock footage or AI visuals; niche :: the specific topic or audience a creator focuses on
tagline
a short sentence under the product name that explains what the product does and for whom
ratings count
number of reviews/ratings on a product, used to estimate total sales volume
negative feedback
1-star or 2-star customer reviews that explain what disappointed the buyer — a goldmine for product improvement ideas
validation
confirming real buyers want a product before you spend time making it
cart count
number of shoppers who added a listing to their Etsy cart but haven't purchased yet — signals demand
listing tracker
Profit Tree feature that saves competitor listings into named folders for ongoing monitoring
ROI
Return on Investment — the ratio of profit earned relative to effort or money spent
monthly revenue
total estimated earnings from a listing in the past 30 days, as estimated by Profit Tree
Market research workflow: four tools + brain dump firstNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 5:07▶ Watch

Market research workflow: four tools + brain dump first

Step-by-step process used:

  1. Watch 30 min of YouTube tutorials on the tools (2x speed).
  2. Brain-dump all personal interests and areas of experience into a Word doc.
  3. For each idea, search it in market research tools (Everbee, Sales Samurai, Etsy Hunt, eRank).
  4. Look for high search volume + low competition.
  5. Click into actual listings to see products and estimated sales.
  6. Iterate — one search leads to related ideas (rabbit-hole method). Four tools used: Everbee (free basic plan; also $30/mo paid), Sales Samurai (~$10/mo, 20% discount code available), eRank ($5.99/mo), Etsy Hunt ($3.99/mo).
"Brain dump all the things that I'm interested in… then go into Etsy and go through each of the things."
Terms
Everbee
— Chrome extension + web tool that overlays estimated sales/revenue data on Etsy search results
Sales Samurai
— market research tool showing search volume and competition per keyword
eRank
— Etsy keyword research tool with Google data integration
Etsy Hunt
— Chrome extension + tool showing views and competition; $3.99/mo
Key metric to look for: search volume vs. competition ratioNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 6:14▶ Watch

Key metric to look for: search volume vs. competition ratio

The core signal: look for keywords where search volume is similar to or greater than the number of competing listings. Example shown — "IVF journal": search volume ~3,000, competition ~600 — considered a good ratio. Counter-example: "notebook" — search volume ~3,000 but competition ~400,000 — avoid. Everbee also shows a "keyword score" = (search volume ÷ competing listings) × 1,000; higher score = better opportunity. Score of 77 is better than a score of 9.

"You're looking for high search volume and low competition."
Terms
keyword score
— Everbee metric = (monthly searches ÷ competing listings) × 1,000; higher means less competition per searcher
competing listings
— total number of Etsy listings appearing for a given search term
Market research tool sales estimates are not accurate — use for direction onlyNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 8:38▶ Watch

Market research tool sales estimates are not accurate — use for direction only

All market research tools (Everbee, Sales Samurai, eRank, Etsy Hunt) estimate sales using their own algorithms (views, reviews, listing history, etc.) because Etsy does not share actual sales data with anyone. Creator verified this by plugging her own shop into Everbee and finding the estimates were off. Different tools will show different numbers for the same listing. Use these figures as directional signals, not precise facts. Use multiple tools to cross-check.

"Etsy doesn't share sales data with anyone so we built a smart algorithm that uses data such as views, reviews, listing history."
Terms
estimated sales
— a tool's algorithmic guess at how many units a listing sells; not official Etsy data
You can do niche research without tools if you know your nicheNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 9:35▶ Watch

You can do niche research without tools if you know your niche

Creator's first shop was built without any market research tools, using only personal confidence in the niche — and it succeeded ($3,000+ CAD). Very small niches often show no data in tools because the search volume is too low to compute. If even 10 people per month search for something and you are one of the only sellers, you will get sales. Tools are most valuable at the niche-selection stage; after that, 1–2 tools for ongoing SEO keyword research may be enough.

"Sometimes we're a really small niche — there is no data on these market research tools."
Terms
niche
— a specific, focused category of products (e.g., sorority resume templates vs. generic resume templates)
Recommended market research tool budget: ~$60 for first monthNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 27:42▶ Watch

Recommended market research tool budget: ~$60 for first month

Suggested spend for the niche-selection phase: Everbee ($30/mo), Sales Samurai (~$10/mo), eRank ($5.99/mo), Etsy Hunt ($3.99/mo) — totals roughly $50–$60 for one month. All tools offer a free version to try first. After niche is locked in, cancel extras; keep 1–2 tools for ongoing SEO. The $60 investment is justified because the goal is to make $10,000–$30,000+ on Etsy over a year. Recommendation: use at least 2 tools (not just 1) because results differ between tools.

"You're gonna spend sixty dollars — and potentially in one year how much do you want to make?"
Terms
Marmalead
— another Etsy keyword research tool (not tested by creator); ~$10/mo estimated
Hack to find Etsy best-sellers directly in search resultsNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 32:27▶ Watch

Hack to find Etsy best-sellers directly in search results

Step-by-step:

  1. Search a keyword on Etsy.
  2. Click "All Filters."
  3. Check "Star Seller" and click Apply.
  4. In the resulting URL, find the word "star" and replace it with "best" (i.e., change the URL parameter from star_seller to bestseller).
  5. The results now show best-selling listings for that keyword. Use Everbee Chrome extension on these results to see estimated sales data.
"Change the star seller part to best — change that to best seller — and then now you can see the best-selling listing."
Terms
Star Seller
— an Etsy badge awarded to shops with high ratings, fast replies, and on-time shipping; used as a URL filter trick to find bestsellers
Use Profit Tree "Hot on Etsy" filter to find top-selling competitorsTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 15:19▶ Watch

Use Profit Tree "Hot on Etsy" filter to find top-selling competitors

For listing title research, the seller's primary tool is Profit Tree's product finder. Step-by-step process:

  1. Open Profit Tree product finder.
  2. Click "Hot on Etsy" button — this filters results to show only products with the most sales.
  3. Type a specific search term describing your exact product (e.g., "vintage printable wall art" — more specific than just "printable wall art" which is better for general niche exploration).
  4. Review the results focusing on monthly revenue figures.
  5. Identify a competitor product with strong monthly revenue and a similar style to yours.
  6. Click "View on Etsy" to open that listing and study its full title, keyword structure, and pricing.
"I always want to select the hot on Etsy button. That way it's showing us the products that are getting the most sales."
Terms
Profit Tree
— an Etsy research tool (one-time lifetime purchase available, no monthly fee) that shows competitor sales data, tags, views, and conversion rates
product finder
— Profit Tree feature that searches Etsy products and displays revenue/demand data
Use Profit Tree "Radar" to extract competitor tags directlyTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 21:35▶ Watch

Use Profit Tree "Radar" to extract competitor tags directly

Profit Tree's "Radar" feature (a new update at time of filming) lets you view and copy a competitor listing's exact Etsy tags — data normally hidden from sellers who spy manually on Etsy. Process:

  1. Find a top-selling competitor listing in Profit Tree.
  2. Click "View Tags" under the Profit Tree radar section.
  3. Click "Copy All Tags."
  4. Paste the copied tags into your planning notes (e.g., Notion planner). These tags feed into both your title construction and your own listing's tag section. Normally, tags are completely invisible when browsing Etsy directly.
"That is a very new thing. So normally you can't see the tags, but just because you can't see other Etsy sellers tags, doesn't mean that they're not using them."
Terms
tags
— up to 13 keyword phrases entered in the Etsy listing backend that directly signal to the algorithm what search terms to rank your product for
radar
— Profit Tree feature that reveals competitor listing tags
Track views-per-24h and conversion rate to evaluate demandTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 21:50▶ Watch

Track views-per-24h and conversion rate to evaluate demand

In Profit Tree, two metrics to examine per competitor listing:

  1. Purple badge = number of views in the last 24 hours. 40 views/24h on a single printable art design is considered decent.
  2. Conversion rate (visible by scrolling right in results) — a high conversion rate signals that the product is desirable AND signals to the Etsy algorithm to push the listing more. Example observed: a vintage Easter bunny print had 300+ views in 24h and the highest conversion rate of the visible results. Warning: low views on a seasonal product (e.g., Christmas print in March = 1 view/24h) means it is not evergreen — only create seasonal products for upcoming seasons.
"A higher conversion rate tells the Etsy algorithm that this seller is making high-quality products that customers are happy with. And that will encourage the Etsy algorithm to push that product out even more."
Terms
evergreen product
— a product that sells consistently year-round, not tied to a specific holiday or season
conversion rate
— the percentage of people who view a listing and actually purchase it
Step 1 of niche selection — validate demand via Etsy searchQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 14:50▶ Watch

Step 1 of niche selection — validate demand via Etsy search

Before building any product, search broad keywords in Etsy (or a research tool) to see what the market is actually buying. Search wide first (brainstorming phase); the goal is to collect data-backed product opportunities, not to finalize a product. Look only at products that are actually selling.

"We're going to search broad keywords… this is a brainstorming session."
Profit Tree — research tool for finding proven Etsy productsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 16:28▶ Watch

Profit Tree — research tool for finding proven Etsy products

Profit Tree is a product research tool with a "Product Finder" feature. Key workflow:

  1. Enter a broad keyword (e.g., "baby").
  2. Apply filters — "Best Seller" badge only, maximum listing age of 6 months.
  3. Review revenue data: the tool shows monthly revenue, listing age, and sales velocity. Examples found: 1-month-old listing already doing $5,000/month; 2-month-old listing doing nearly $20,000/month; personalized blanket listing generating $41,000 in total revenue in 2 months.
"This product is only one month old, already doing over $5,000 a month."
Terms
Profit Tree
— a third-party Etsy market research tool showing product revenue, listing age, and bestseller filters
bestseller badge
— an Etsy-awarded badge shown on high-converting listings; a signal of proven demand
Profit Tree Etsy Radar — Chrome extension for live researchQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 23:00▶ Watch

Profit Tree Etsy Radar — Chrome extension for live research

Profit Tree also has a Chrome extension called "Etsy Radar" that overlays live revenue data directly on Etsy.com search results. It can filter by marketplace/country (e.g., UK, Australia). It shows analytics like total revenue on a per-product basis. Coming feature: ability to tag and track competitor shops, listings, and keywords.

Terms
Etsy Radar
— Profit Tree's Chrome extension that shows revenue analytics directly on Etsy search result pages
Four requirements for a digital download that sells on EtsyQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:01:58▶ Watch

Four requirements for a digital download that sells on Etsy

Julie Berninger (Gold City Ventures, 20,000 students taught) outlines four requirements:

  1. Validated demand — use Profit Tree to confirm people are already buying similar products.
  2. SEO-optimized listing — title, description, and all 13 tags built around the right keywords.
  3. Aesthetic appearance — design quality must match the niche's standard (bachelorette = bold/glittery is fine; wedding = elegant and refined).
  4. Correct timing — list seasonal items 6–8 weeks before the target event/holiday so the algorithm has time to index and season the listing.
"We recommend 6 to 8 weeks before the event that the item is for."
Terms
listing seasoning
— the time Etsy's algorithm needs after a new listing is published before it starts ranking well in search results
Profit Tree digital filter — research only digital productsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 58:50▶ Watch

Profit Tree digital filter — research only digital products

In Profit Tree's Product Finder, there is a "Listing Type" filter you can set to "Digital" to show only digital download products. Combine with the bestseller badge filter and "max 6 months old" age filter to see which digital products are newly launched and already proven. Example: filtering "baby shirt" as digital shows PNG design files (the design itself, not the physical shirt) with bestseller badges still doing strong revenue.

"You can actually filter by just digital products."
3-step process for selling digital files on EtsyQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:14:24▶ Watch

3-step process for selling digital files on Etsy

Three required steps:

  1. Research what to sell — use a tool like Profit Tree to find products already in demand; skipping this and going straight to Canva is a common fatal mistake.
  2. Create the product — most sellers use Canva; AI tools currently struggle with text-heavy products but are good for clip art and wall art.
  3. List on Etsy — fill in title, all 13 tags, description; Etsy emails the buyer a download link automatically. Customer service is minimal (~99% of orders need no follow-up); #1 question received is "how do I download the file?" (due to Etsy's weak mobile-app download experience).
Terms
13 tags
— Etsy allows exactly 13 keyword tags per listing; using all 13 maximizes search visibility
Profitry listing tracker — key competitor metrics to analyzeQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:42:55▶ Watch

Profitry listing tracker — key competitor metrics to analyze

In Profitry's listings tracker, when researching competitors, study these metrics for each top listing:

  1. Average order value (AOV) — total revenue ÷ number of orders; higher AOV earns more algorithm favor over time.
  2. Average rating — standard is above 4.8–4.9 to compete.
  3. Shipping method — free vs paid shipping both work in some niches.
  4. Price tiers — if top sellers span cheap-to-mid pricing, you don't have to be cheapest.
  5. Personalization presence — if personalization is standard in that niche, you must offer it too.
  6. Star Seller badge — all top listings typically have it.
  7. Number of variation options — more options = higher AOV potential.
Terms
average order value (AOV)
— total revenue from a listing divided by number of orders; a listing with more expensive variations or upsell tiers will have a higher AOV
Star Seller
— Etsy's badge awarded to sellers with high review scores, fast shipping, and responsive messaging over 3 months
Check competitor shops' sales history to find their best-sellersYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 11:14▶ Watch

Check competitor shops' sales history to find their best-sellers

On any competitor's Etsy shop page, scroll down to see their total number of sales. Click that number — Etsy sometimes shows the actual items sold. This reveals which specific products are their best sellers. Note: this feature is optional on sellers' accounts, so not all shops will have it turned on.

"This gives you a really good idea of which products are actually selling in that shop so you can spot their best sellers."
Profit Tree tool for data-driven product researchYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 12:07▶ Watch

Profit Tree tool for data-driven product research

Profit Tree is a paid product research tool that pulls hidden Etsy data. It shows for each listing: price, monthly sales, monthly revenue, total revenue. Key feature: "demand badges" showing how many times a product was viewed, added to cart, and purchased in the last 24 hours — revealing current real-time demand. Example shown: top resume template listing had $55,000 total revenue, still making ~$400/month, added to cart 60 times in last 24 hours. Pricing: lifetime plan at $67 one-time payment (not monthly). Use it to click "View on Etsy" and study listing design, images, and what's included.

"Instead of guessing what's working, you can actually see what people are actively engaging with right now."
Terms
demand badges
— Profit Tree's indicator showing views/cart-adds/purchases in the last 24 hours
lifetime plan
— a one-time payment for permanent access to a tool
High competition in a niche is a positive signal, not a warningYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 11:42▶ Watch

High competition in a niche is a positive signal, not a warning

Seeing many competing sellers is actually confirmation of buyer demand. Sellers should not be afraid of competition — high competition always accompanies high demand. The goal is to enter a market where people are already spending money and bring your own version, not to find an empty niche with no proven buyers.

"High demand will always come with competition. That's completely normal. What you want is a product where people are already spending money."
The TAP Test — 3-filter framework to validate any product idea before listing$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 1:48▶ Watch

The TAP Test — 3-filter framework to validate any product idea before listing

Before listing any product, run it through the TAP test (Trust, Audience, Proof): Filter 1 — TRUST: Type a broad product idea (e.g., "clip art" or "printable planner") into Etsy search. Look at the first page. Find at least 5 related listings with the "bestseller" badge or "popular now" badge. This proves buyers already trust and repeatedly purchase this product type. Etsy is then more likely to show your version and buyers are more likely to buy. Filter 2 — AUDIENCE: Click one of those top listings → click "Analyze Listing" in Everbee → go to Tags section → look for keywords scoring 50 or higher. Score 50+ = high search volume + low competition = buyers are searching but few sellers cover it. Filter 3 — PROOF: Go back to the Etsy search results page → click "Product Analytics" in Everbee → check multiple listings for: at least 30 sales/month, a positive growth rate, and listing age under 1 year. A listing under 1 year old with 30+ monthly sales proves there is still room for new sellers.

"The fastest way to figure out what sells — run your idea through what I call the tap test."
Terms
TAP test
— Trust-Audience-Proof; a 3-step validation framework for Etsy product ideas
bestseller badge
— an Etsy label shown on listings with consistently high sales
popular now badge
— an Etsy label indicating a listing is currently trending
Everbee
— a free Chrome extension that shows Etsy keyword scores, search volume, competition, estimated monthly revenue, and sales data
Diagnosing non-selling listings: compare your keywords and title vs top performers$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 6:50▶ Watch

Diagnosing non-selling listings: compare your keywords and title vs top performers

Step-by-step method when listings aren't getting views or sales:

  1. Type your product's main keyword into Etsy search bar.
  2. Click Filters → under "Etsy's best" select "Star Seller."
  3. In the URL, change "star" to "best" to see bestselling products for that keyword.
  4. Choose a bestseller with 30+ sales/month AND listing age under 1 year.
  5. Open the listing → click "Analyze Listing" in Everbee.
  6. Look at their tags (keywords) and product title.
  7. Compare against your listing: Are you using similar high-performing keywords? Are your titles too vague or using weak/oversaturated words like "cute" or "minimalist"? Is your first photo clear, bold, easy to understand at a glance? Goal: mirror what's already working to rank higher.
"The goal is to stop guessing and start mirroring what's already working so you can rank higher in search results, get clicks, and make sales."
Terms
star seller
— an Etsy badge awarded to shops meeting thresholds for on-time dispatch, message response rate, and 5-star reviews
oversaturated keyword
— a tag/word used by so many sellers that it's nearly impossible to rank for
Everbe Chrome extension reveals competitor's top-selling listings by sales100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 3:28▶ Watch

Everbe Chrome extension reveals competitor's top-selling listings by sales

The Everbe Chrome extension tool, when used on any Etsy shop page, adds an "Analyze Shop" button under the shop banner. Clicking it lists all of the shop's listings with sortable data. Sorting by total sales reveals the shop's best-performing listings. Clicking a listing shows stats: total sales count, listing age, and more. The tool also overlays stats directly on the listing page. Used to identify proven products for niche/product research instead of guessing.

"Rather than just guessing what to sell, you can base it off of proven data to see what's actually working and selling on Etsy."
Terms
Everbe (EverBe)
— a Chrome browser extension for Etsy seller research that shows competitor shop analytics
listing age
— how long a listing has been active on Etsy
E-Rank free plan shows top 5 sellers by category for competitor research100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 8:30▶ Watch

E-Rank free plan shows top 5 sellers by category for competitor research

On e-rank.com, the "Competitor Research" > "Top Sellers on Etsy" feature lets you see top sellers filtered by category (e.g., clothing). On the free plan, you can see the top 5 sellers for any category. Paid plans show more than 5. The researcher used this to cross-check shipping strategies of the top 5 clothing sellers. Workflow: find top seller on E-Rank > click through > "see on Etsy" > use Everbe to sort by total sales > analyze top listing's shipping and pricing settings.

"On E-Rank's free plan, you are able to see the top five sellers for whatever category you would like."
Terms
E-Rank
— Etsy analytics and research tool at e-rank.com; has both free and paid tiers
competitor research
— studying other sellers' shops, listings, prices, and strategies to improve your own
Use Everbee for keyword research to validate ideas before creating1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 3:40▶ Watch

Use Everbee for keyword research to validate ideas before creating

Seller used free methods first, then subscribed to paid research tools. Tested several tools, kept only Everbee. Primary use: keyword research tool to find low-competition products. Caution: low-competition often also means low demand — seller found products with almost no other sellers but demand was also low and they never became bestsellers. Strategy must balance competition AND demand.

"One tool I stuck with was Everbe. I liked its keyword research tool, which was what I used to mostly look for low competition products"
Terms
Everbee (Everbe)
— a paid Etsy analytics tool for keyword research and product/listing data; keyword research :: identifying which words buyers search to find products
Lesson 1: Research is the foundation, not a side task1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 9:01▶ Watch

Lesson 1: Research is the foundation, not a side task

Graphic design skills alone are not sufficient — Etsy has no client brief to guide you. You must know:

  1. Is there demand for this product?
  2. How are people searching for it? Process: look at search volume, competition, pricing, and which designs are actually selling. Use tools like Everbee to validate ideas before designing. Informed risks > blind creation. Research separates a hobby from an actual strategy.
"research is what gives your shop and your items a real shot at being seen. It's what separates a hobby from an actual strategy"
Terms
search volume
— how many people search for a specific keyword per month; demand :: the level of buyer interest in a product
Use ChatGPT to brainstorm product ideas from niche audience pain pointsCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 3:40▶ Watch

Use ChatGPT to brainstorm product ideas from niche audience pain points

Step 1 of the live build: go to ChatGPT and ask "What problems could people in my audience actually have?" In the creator's niche (faceless Instagram pages), ChatGPT surfaced: lack of content ideas, zero knowledge on Instagram growth algorithm, struggling to create viral Reels/carousels, no niche clarity. Each problem = one potential digital product. Creator picks "struggling to create viral Reels" and refines it to "how to find viral content ideas."

"The easiest way how to find the idea for your mini digital product is just by going to ChatGPT and asking it what problems could people in my audience actually have"
Terms
faceless Instagram page
— an Instagram account that never shows the creator's face, often using stock footage or AI visuals; niche :: the specific topic or audience a creator focuses on
Generate 5 product names and taglines using ChatGPTCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 4:28▶ Watch

Generate 5 product names and taglines using ChatGPT

After picking the problem, ask ChatGPT for "top five names for a digital guide product" on that topic. Example output for "viral content ideas for faceless pages":

  1. Viral Content Vault — 100 Viral Content Hooks for Faceless Pages,
  2. Viral Content Finder — Discover high-performing content ideas that go viral,
  3. Faceless Content Gold Mine,
  4. The Viral Idea Machine,
  5. Faceless Viral Blueprint — Find, reverse engineer, and replicate viral Instagram content ideas in minutes. Creator selected option
  6. Then asked ChatGPT for 5 subtitle/tagline options and selected: "Master the exact process top faceless pages used to find viral content and replicate it fast."
"The viral content finder is a perfect one. Discover high performing content ideas that go viral."
Terms
tagline
— a short sentence under the product name that explains what the product does and for whom
Research competitors on Gumroad to validate price and formatCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 21:43▶ Watch

Research competitors on Gumroad to validate price and format

Before listing on Gumroad, browse the platform's categories. Find best-rated books/products in your niche. Check: how much money they're making, what their product looks like, what rating count suggests in units sold. Example: a product with 435 ratings could represent ~1,000 buyers = $49,000–$60,000 in revenue (at ~$49–$60 price). Use this data to decide your product format, price point, and cover design.

"What books are the best rated, how much money they are actually making and then I would check how they actually look like"
Terms
ratings count
— number of reviews/ratings on a product, used to estimate total sales volume
Research method: use Profit Tree tool for real Etsy sales data10 digital products that made $10k+⏱ 0:08▶ Watch

Research method: use Profit Tree tool for real Etsy sales data

Speaker (Yale, six-figure Etsy seller) used Profit Tree's product research tool to find winning products. Tool pulls real-time data from Etsy showing: how much a product earns and how often it sells. Alternative free methods: manually browsing Etsy, browsing Pinterest, checking Google Trends. Profit Tree pricing: $67 lifetime access (limited time, normally $360/year). Core strategy principle: don't create whatever you feel like selling — find products with a proven track record of selling, then create your own better version.

"You can't just create whatever you feel like selling and expect it to take off. The most successful digital products solve a real need and already have a proven track record of selling"
Terms
Profit Tree
— a paid Etsy research tool showing real product revenue and sales frequency; real-time data :: current, live information pulled directly from Etsy listings
Day 2 — Deep-dive competitor research: study both winners AND losersNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 2:25▶ Watch

Day 2 — Deep-dive competitor research: study both winners AND losers

Most sellers only study successful competitor shops. This strategy requires also studying shops that are NOT doing well. Steps:

  1. Find top-performing shops in your niche.
  2. Find low-performing shops in your niche.
  3. Read their customer reviews.
  4. Pay close attention to negative feedback.
  5. Write down notes on what to include or avoid in your own products, what pricing to target, and how much value to include. The goal: make sure your products address complaints competitors' customers had.
"I study these shops, I read their reviews and I pay close attention to the negative feedback."
Terms
negative feedback
— 1-star or 2-star customer reviews that explain what disappointed the buyer — a goldmine for product improvement ideas
Use Profit Tree to validate digital products fastBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 1:46▶ Watch

Use Profit Tree to validate digital products fast

Market validation first step: open Profit Tree, search the keyword "digital" (keep it broad so any listing with "digital" in the title shows up). Apply three filters:

  1. Minimum price $20 (focus on higher-ticket items only).
  2. Max listing age 12 months (find what's hot right now, not stale listings).
  3. Listing type = digital products only (exclude physical). Results show recent sales velocity and cart counts per listing.
"The biggest money and time waster in e-commerce is not validating the product before you invest time into selling it."
Terms
Profit Tree
— a market research tool for Etsy that shows estimated revenue, sales velocity, and cart counts for listings
listing age
— how many months since the product was first listed on Etsy
validation
— confirming real buyers want a product before you spend time making it
Profit Tree icons signal daily sales and cart activityBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 3:00▶ Watch

Profit Tree icons signal daily sales and cart activity

In Profit Tree results, a specific indicator icon next to a listing means it sold at least one time in the last 24 hours. Cart count (e.g., "100 people in carts") signals buyer intent. Example found: a Google Sheets product, 10 months old, estimated $9,000/month revenue, sitting in 60 carts — $35 price after discount, 8 sales in the last 24 hours = over $100/day on one listing.

"This indicator means that it sold at least one time in the last 24 hours... This is really, really valuable data."
Terms
cart count
— number of shoppers who added a listing to their Etsy cart but haven't purchased yet — signals demand
Track winning listings in Profit Tree folders by nicheBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 3:50▶ Watch

Track winning listings in Profit Tree folders by niche

After finding a validated listing, click "begin tracking this listing" inside Profit Tree and add it to a named collection folder (e.g., "Google Sheets digital download"). Repeat for multiple competing products. Then sort the folder by "total monthly revenue" to rank which product makes the most money and should be built first, second, third.

"We want to focus our efforts on the ones that are going to make us the most money."
Terms
listing tracker
— Profit Tree feature that saves competitor listings into named folders for ongoing monitoring
Sort tracked listings by monthly revenue to prioritize build orderBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 5:20▶ Watch

Sort tracked listings by monthly revenue to prioritize build order

After tracking several competitor listings in Profit Tree under a folder, sort by "total monthly revenue" (not daily sales or number of sales). The highest monthly revenue listing becomes product #1 to build. In this video, the wedding planner topped the Google Sheets folder. This sorting ensures time is spent on the highest-ROI product first before lower-revenue alternatives.

"I want to see which one is making the most money at least this month."
Terms
ROI
— Return on Investment — the ratio of profit earned relative to effort or money spent
monthly revenue
— total estimated earnings from a listing in the past 30 days, as estimated by Profit Tree
Chapter 07

Creating Your Products

The tools and step-by-step workflow to make the file
54 points

The Pain

You're not a designer. The idea of building a polished, sellable file from scratch feels overwhelming - which tool, what size, how to make it look professional, how to deliver it.

The Relief

You don't need design school. Canva (free or Pro) covers most products with drag-and-drop and ready templates. AI tools (Claude, ChatGPT) now draft ebooks, spreadsheets, and even generate files. Workflow: 1) copy the structure of a proven best-seller (not the content), 2) build it in Canva/your tool, 3) make it look pro with consistent fonts/spacing/mockups, 4) export the right format (PDF/PNG/Canva link), 5) upload as an instant download or a one-page PDF with the access link. Many sellers build a product in a few hours.

Mental Picture

Cooking from a recipe vs inventing cuisine. You're not inventing - you're following a proven recipe (a best-seller's structure) with your own ingredients (your style/content). Canva is the well-stocked kitchen; AI is the sous-chef that preps. The plating (mockups) is what makes buyers' mouths water.

Plain-English Glossary

Canva
A free/paid web design tool with drag-and-drop templates; the default for Etsy digital products.
Canva Pro
Paid Canva tier (~$13/mo) unlocking more assets, brand kit, and the share-as-template link.
Template link
A Canva URL you give buyers so they can copy and edit your design themselves.
AI tools (Claude/ChatGPT)
Assistants that draft text, outlines, spreadsheets, and product content fast.
Mockup
A styled preview image showing the product in use (on a screen, framed, in hands).
Instant download
Etsy setting that delivers the file automatically the moment payment clears.
Export / file format
Saving your design as a usable file - PDF for documents, PNG/JPG for images, SVG for cut files.
TinyURL
a free URL-shortening service used to create a short backup link to the Canva template in case the main hyperlink fails
Use as template link
a special Canva share link that lets the recipient copy your design into their own Canva account without editing your original
CapCut
a free mobile/desktop video editing app; easy for beginners
DaVinci Resolve
a professional free video editing software
resolution
the pixel density of an image; higher resolution allows larger prints without blurring
PNG/JPEG/PDF
common digital file formats — PNG/JPEG for images, PDF for documents and printables
Canva template link
a special shareable URL that opens a Canva design and gives the recipient their own editable copy
flatten
saving a PDF in a way that bakes all layers into a static image, removing interactive links
My Designs
a POD and digital products hub that connects Etsy/Shopify to print providers (including Printify) with bulk publishing and AI tools
Printify
a large print-on-demand marketplace connecting sellers to dozens of print providers worldwide
publishing profile
a saved template in My Designs containing product settings, mockups, pricing, and colors for one-click reuse on future batches
Vision AI
My Designs' AI that scans design images and auto-writes Etsy-optimized titles, descriptions, and tags
submark
a compact, simplified version of a logo (initials or icon) used in small spaces
letter spacing
the gap between characters in a text element
digital product
a file (PDF, template, video, etc.) sold online that the buyer downloads instantly; live build :: recording of someone completing a real task in real time, not pre-recorded steps
mini-course
a short course of 2–5 videos covering one skill or topic, not a full multi-week program
ebook
a digital book delivered as a PDF file; Canva :: free online graphic design tool at canva.com used to design ebooks, templates, social media posts, etc.
Google Doc
free cloud-based word processor by Google, accessible at docs.google.com
prompt
the instruction text you type into an AI tool like ChatGPT to get a specific output
batching
grouping similar tasks together in one session to save time (e.g., finding 30 content ideas in one sitting instead of daily)
welcome module
the opening page of a guide that explains who it's for, what they'll learn, and why it matters
color scheme
a set of 3–5 matching colors used consistently throughout a design; template :: a pre-designed layout you customize by swapping in your own text and images
image generation prompt
text instructions given to an AI image tool (like ChatGPT's DALL-E) to produce a specific visual
strikethrough price
original price shown with a line through it to signal a discount; perceived value :: how much a buyer thinks a product is worth based on presentation, not actual cost
thumbnail
the small preview image representing a product on a marketplace or sales page; Gumroad :: an online platform to sell digital products directly, handling payments and file delivery without needing a website
low-ticket
a product priced low, typically under $50, used to attract buyers; high-ticket :: a product or service priced high, often $500+, such as coaching or mastermind programs
master template
a single reusable design layout used as the base for all pages in a document
screenshot
a captured image of a computer screen used to show readers exactly what something looks like in practice
PDF Standard
a compressed PDF format suited for screen reading and digital delivery, smaller file size than PDF Print
AI-generated content
text or images created by an AI tool like ChatGPT without human input; hybrid approach :: combining AI output with human editing to create better final results
product-market fit
confirmation that real buyers want and pay for your product, discovered only by actually selling it
split test
launching two or more versions of a listing with different images/colors to see which earns more clicks and sales
Claude desktop
the downloadable app version of Claude AI that runs locally on your computer with expanded coding capabilities
Claude Code page
a mode inside Claude desktop optimized for writing and executing code, with stronger technical capabilities than the standard chat interface
system prompt
an initial instruction block given to an AI before the main task that sets its role, rules, and quality standards for the entire session
tokens
the units of text that AI models process; more back-and-forth iterations consume more tokens and increase cost
openpyxl
a Python library (code package) that creates and styles Excel (.xlsx) spreadsheet files programmatically
Python
a programming language Claude uses in the background to generate the spreadsheet file
grid lines
the faint lines separating cells in a spreadsheet; turning them off gives a cleaner, designed look
conditional formatting
automatic cell color changes based on values (e.g., red if over budget, green if under)
infer
for Claude to figure out logical content (like tab names) from context clues, rather than being told explicitly
context window
the total amount of text Claude can hold in memory during one session; a bloated context from too many iterations slows responses and costs more tokens
color palette
the set of specific colors Claude picks for the spreadsheet design; it tries to match styles that perform well on Etsy
brand vibe
the overall visual and emotional feel of a product's design (e.g., earthy/neutral, modern/clean, romantic/floral)
file path
the address of a folder on your computer (e.g., C:/Users/YourName/Etsy) where Claude saves generated files
locally
files are stored on your own computer, not uploaded to a server
DNF
Did Not Finish — a reading status indicating a book was abandoned
TBR
To Be Read — a reading status for planned future books
vibe coding
a workflow where AI generates the core structure of a product and the human refines aesthetic details and fixes; the term emphasizes creative collaboration over pure automation
intermediary page
a separate page (e.g., a PDF instruction file or landing page) that buyers access after purchase, which then links them to the actual Google Sheet template
cross-tab dashboard
a summary sheet that pulls data from multiple other tabs and displays it in one visual overview
budget variance
the difference between planned budget and actual spending, often shown with color coding
50/30/20 rule
a budgeting framework where 50% of income goes to needs, 30% to wants, and 20% to savings
bi-weekly
every two weeks
"make a copy" link
a Google Drive share link that prompts the recipient to save their own private copy of the sheet instead of editing the original
PDF
a document format used to deliver instructions; buyers download it from Etsy after purchase
Canva workspace system: 4 documents per listing (workspace, template, marketing, access)New Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 43:35▶ Watch

Canva workspace system: 4 documents per listing (workspace, template, marketing, access)

For each new Etsy listing, creator creates a Canva "project" (folder) with exactly 4 documents in this order:

  1. Workspace — brain dump of inspiration, other templates to reference, design ideas;
  2. Template — the actual deliverable the customer receives (photos removed, name changed to "Your Name");
  3. Marketing — listing photos (all mockups and feature slides);
  4. Access — the PDF delivered to buyer, containing the Canva share link + a TinyURL backup link. This system keeps the workflow organized and predictable across all future listings.
"Project is a folder — in each folder I have four documents: workspace, template, marketing, and access."
Terms
TinyURL
— a free URL-shortening service used to create a short backup link to the Canva template in case the main hyperlink fails
Template delivery for Canva products: PDF with embedded Canva linkNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 44:06▶ Watch

Template delivery for Canva products: PDF with embedded Canva link

Etsy allows up to 5 digital files per listing. For Canva templates, you cannot upload the Canva file itself (it is a web link, not a downloadable file). Workflow:

  1. Design template in Canva.
  2. Create a "template" version: delete sample photos, replace name with "Your Name."
  3. Make 2 color schemes so customers see customizability.
  4. Get the Canva share link ("Use as template" link).
  5. Create a TinyURL backup.
  6. Build a PDF in Canva containing the link, backup link, and screenshots of the template.
  7. Upload the PDF to the Etsy listing as the digital file.
"You're selling a Canva template — you cannot add a Canva template to your Etsy, it's not a file, it's a link to a website."
Terms
Use as template link
— a special Canva share link that lets the recipient copy your design into their own Canva account without editing your original
Always create two color schemes per template for listing photosNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 44:22▶ Watch

Always create two color schemes per template for listing photos

Creator makes 2 color schemes for every template (e.g., one navy/cream, one purple). Reasons:

  1. Shows customers that the template is fully customizable on Canva.
  2. Listing photos become more interesting and diverse.
  3. Demonstrates the "fit your branding" message visually. For the resume template: 4 pages total — resume + cover letter in color scheme A, resume + cover letter in color scheme B. Name changed to a fictional person ("Sarah Jamison") in the second scheme.
"I create two color schemes — so your customer can be like, oh yeah, I can imagine me changing it so it looks like it's my resume."
Differentiation tip: use real sample text instead of lorem ipsumNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 48:17▶ Watch

Differentiation tip: use real sample text instead of lorem ipsum

Many resume templates on Etsy use lorem ipsum placeholder text, which looks generic and makes it harder for buyers to imagine the finished product. Creator's differentiator: write real, plausible sample content for each role (e.g., sorority resume with actual bullet points). Created a Canva page explicitly labeled "No Lorem Ipsum resume cover letter" to use in listing photos. This is a clear competitive advantage in a category full of placeholder-text templates.

"I hate lorem ipsum — I feel like I could make some resume templates with actual sample text."
Listing video: 6–9 seconds, screen-record the Canva template in useNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 51:38▶ Watch

Listing video: 6–9 seconds, screen-record the Canva template in use

Etsy allows one video per listing. Process:

  1. Screen-record yourself scrolling through the Canva template (shows it working, multi-page).
  2. Download one marketing photo for sizing reference.
  3. Edit in CapCut (or DaVinci Resolve) — adjust playback speed, trim to 6–9 seconds (must be longer than 5 seconds).
  4. Export and upload as the listing video. Video must be at least 5 seconds long. Creator prefers DaVinci Resolve but says CapCut works fine for beginners.
"I believe it has to be longer than five seconds — so mine are always between like six to nine seconds."
Terms
CapCut
— a free mobile/desktop video editing app; easy for beginners
DaVinci Resolve
— a professional free video editing software
Digital file upload: deliver actual product file, not listing photosTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 27:04▶ Watch

Digital file upload: deliver actual product file, not listing photos

A critical distinction for new sellers: the listing photos section and the digital files section are separate.

  1. Listing photos = images buyers see while browsing (mockups, design previews).
  2. Digital files section = the actual file(s) that customers receive after purchase. Never upload only the listing photo as the delivered file — customers receive what you upload in the digital files section, not the mockup images. For printable products (art, worksheets, coloring pages): upload PNG, JPEG, or PDF. Recommendation: include multiple sizes and orientations of the design. Ensure resolution is high enough to print at any size without pixelation or graininess.
"Your customers don't want to receive a picture of the product that they expected to receive."
Terms
resolution
— the pixel density of an image; higher resolution allows larger prints without blurring
PNG/JPEG/PDF
— common digital file formats — PNG/JPEG for images, PDF for documents and printables
Delivering editable Canva templates: use clickable PDF with template linkTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 28:43▶ Watch

Delivering editable Canva templates: use clickable PDF with template link

If selling Canva templates (products buyers edit themselves), you CANNOT simply upload a picture of the template — buyers need an editable copy. Correct workflow:

  1. In Canva, create a separate new design (a "landing" or "delivery" page).
  2. Add a button/text saying "Click here to edit your template" (or customize/invitation, etc.) with a hyperlink to the Canva template's share link.
  3. Save/export this delivery design as a PDF — do NOT flatten the PDF (flattening removes clickable links).
  4. Upload this PDF as the digital file in the Etsy listing. When the buyer clicks the link inside the PDF, they get their own copy of the Canva template to customize.
"You want to make sure you don't flatten the PDF because then the link isn't going to be clickable."
Terms
Canva template link
— a special shareable URL that opens a Canva design and gives the recipient their own editable copy
flatten
— saving a PDF in a way that bakes all layers into a static image, removing interactive links
My Designs — POD platform with Printify integrationQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 31:05▶ Watch

My Designs — POD platform with Printify integration

My Designs is an all-in-one POD + digital products platform. Key differentiators vs. Printify standalone:

  1. Catalog of ~600 products (growing to 1,200+ by end of October).
  2. Integrates Printify directly — all Printify catalog available inside My Designs.
  3. Bulk publishing: upload 20–40 designs at once, not one-by-one.
  4. Vision AI auto-generates titles, descriptions, and tags from design images.
  5. Bulk mockup generation.
  6. Connects to Etsy, Shopify, and WooCommerce (TikTok Shops integration coming).
  7. Free account available. Does not charge extra on Printify orders — Printify pricing passes through unchanged.
"My Designs is an all-in-one print on demand and digital products platform."
Terms
My Designs
— a POD and digital products hub that connects Etsy/Shopify to print providers (including Printify) with bulk publishing and AI tools
Printify
— a large print-on-demand marketplace connecting sellers to dozens of print providers worldwide
My Designs setup — connect Etsy and Printify step by stepQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 37:45▶ Watch

My Designs setup — connect Etsy and Printify step by step

Steps to connect My Designs to Etsy and Printify:

  1. Sign up at My Designs (free account).
  2. Go to top-right account name → Account Settings → Shops tab.
  3. Click "Connect Etsy" — make sure you are already logged into Etsy in the browser.
  4. Approve permissions on Etsy, then scroll to bottom → "Grant Access" → redirects back to My Designs.
  5. For Printify: Settings → Print Partners → Click "Connect Printify" → logged into Printify → click Allow → redirect back.
  6. Link shops so orders route correctly. Supported integrations: Etsy, Shopify, WooCommerce; TikTok Shops coming soon.
My Designs bulk POD publishing workflow — step by stepQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 40:25▶ Watch

My Designs bulk POD publishing workflow — step by step

Bulk publish workflow in My Designs:

  1. Go to Listings page → create a folder (name it by niche + date).
  2. Upload all designs at once via drag-and-drop (supports 10–40 designs per batch; max 10 mockup images per Etsy listing).
  3. Click "Publish" → select Print on Demand → choose platform (Etsy) → select product from catalog (e.g., Bella Canvas 3001 t-shirt) → choose print provider.
  4. Set print areas (front, back, sleeve, label).
  5. Select colors and sizes.
  6. Choose or generate mockups (can mix My Designs mockups + Printify mockups; add video mockup by toggling on).
  7. Use Vision AI (model 2.5 recommended) to auto-generate title, description, tags in bulk for all designs simultaneously.
  8. Set pricing — can bulk-set price across all listings or set per variant (e.g., 3XL = $33.98, 2XL = $31.98, standard = $29.99).
  9. Save as a "Publishing Profile" to reuse settings.
  10. Preview and publish → listings go to Etsy Drafts → select all drafts → publish to make live.
"You can do it in a couple minutes."
Terms
publishing profile
— a saved template in My Designs containing product settings, mockups, pricing, and colors for one-click reuse on future batches
Vision AI
— My Designs' AI that scans design images and auto-writes Etsy-optimized titles, descriptions, and tags
Listing a digital product on Etsy — workflow summaryQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:16:46▶ Watch

Listing a digital product on Etsy — workflow summary

After creating the file in Canva and downloading it, list directly on Etsy (no extra software needed, unlike print-on-demand which requires Printify or similar). Steps:

  1. Go to Etsy shop dashboard.
  2. Create a new listing.
  3. Fill in title, all 13 tags, description.
  4. Upload the digital file. When buyer purchases, Etsy automatically sends them a download email. No physical fulfillment or shipping involved.
Train design eye using Pinterest and Canva templatesYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 14:44▶ Watch

Train design eye using Pinterest and Canva templates

Design is a learnable skill — the more you practice, the better you get. Best way to improve quickly: expose yourself to good design. Two methods:

  1. Go on Pinterest and scroll through designs for inspiration.
  2. Browse Canva's thousands of pre-built templates created by professional designers. Over time you absorb how good design is structured and apply those techniques in your own work.
"You're learning from their techniques and then applying those in your own designs."
Canva free vs Pro — when you need Pro for selling templatesYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 15:20▶ Watch

Canva free vs Pro — when you need Pro for selling templates

Canva free version: sufficient for practice. Canva Pro: required if selling Canva templates on Etsy, because only Pro allows generating template links — the shareable link you give customers so they can copy and edit your design. No Pro = no template links = cannot sell Canva templates. Yale uses Canva Pro extensively for product photos and design elements as well.

"If you're planning to sell templates on Etsy, you will need Canva Pro because it's what allows you to generate template links."
Terms
template link
— a Canva Pro feature that creates a shareable URL customers use to copy your design into their own Canva account
Canva folder system to protect final templates from accidental editsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 15:58▶ Watch

Canva folder system to protect final templates from accidental edits

Organize Canva files with a two-tier folder system per product type:

  1. Create a folder named after the product (e.g., "Business Cards").
  2. Inside, create two sub-folders: "Working Project" and "Final Project." Always design inside Working Project. When done, duplicate the design and move the copy to Final Project. Generate the template link only from the Final Project version. Critical reason: once a template link is generated, that file goes live — any accidental edit or deletion immediately updates what customers receive. The Working Project acts as a safe editable copy.
"Once you generate a template link, that file becomes live. Meaning if you accidentally edit or delete something later, your customers will receive that updated version."
Logo template creation workflow step-by-step in CanvaYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 19:22▶ Watch

Logo template creation workflow step-by-step in Canva

Yale creates logo templates as a beginner-friendly product example. Before designing:

  1. Search the product on Etsy to see what competing sellers include and at what value level. Aim to match or exceed that. Design process:
  2. In Canva, click "Create a Design," type "logo" — auto-generates 2,000×2,000 px canvas.
  3. Choose ~4 brand colors and a font first.
  4. Adjust letter spacing (Yale uses minus 56 for a compressed modern look).
  5. Create three variations: Primary logo (full brand name, used most), Secondary logo (alternate layout/variation), Submarks (smaller versions with initials or symbol, often in circle or square).
  6. Filter Canva elements to "free only" so customers without Pro can use the template.
  7. Use "Effects → Curve" to wrap text around a circle shape.
"I don't just create one version. I like to make a few variations."
Terms
submark
— a compact, simplified version of a logo (initials or icon) used in small spaces
letter spacing
— the gap between characters in a text element
Two delivery methods for digital products on EtsyYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 28:34▶ Watch

Two delivery methods for digital products on Etsy

Method 1 — Canva templates:

  1. Create a PDF in Canva (US letter size) as an "access page."
  2. Add logo, short thank-you note, and a line like "Click the button below to access your template."
  3. Create a clickable button.
  4. In your template, click Share → Template Link → Generate link → Copy.
  5. Paste the link onto the button in your PDF.
  6. Download the PDF and upload it to Etsy. When customers download, they click the button and land in Canva to copy and edit the template. Method 2 — Finished products (wall art, printables):
  7. Upload all files to a Google Drive folder.
  8. Click Share, set to "Anyone with the link."
  9. Copy the Google Drive link.
  10. Paste into a PDF (same format as above).
  11. Upload the PDF to Etsy. Use Google Drive because Etsy has file size limits — large or multiple files may not upload directly.
"This keeps your original file untouched while giving them full access to edit."
Terms
template link
— Canva Pro feature; generates a URL that lets someone copy your design as their own without editing your original
Full product build possible in under 3 hoursCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 0:25▶ Watch

Full product build possible in under 3 hours

Creator with hundreds of thousands of dollars in digital product revenue demonstrates live, timed build: zero idea → finished product listed for sale in under 3 hours. Timer is visible on screen throughout. Workflow: research → create → list → market.

"I'm going to show you how you can go from zero idea on what product to create... to knowing exactly what product you can create, how to create it, how to sell it"
Terms
digital product
— a file (PDF, template, video, etc.) sold online that the buyer downloads instantly; live build :: recording of someone completing a real task in real time, not pre-recorded steps
$90k in courses taught: shorter = better productCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 2:52▶ Watch

$90k in courses taught: shorter = better product

Creator invested over $90,000 in courses, mentorships, masterminds, PDFs, and digital guides over 4 years. His key insight: the perfect product for any problem would ideally be one sentence or one page PDF or a 2-minute video. Products should not be over-engineered. A 5-page PDF, short walkthrough video, template, or 3-video mini-course can be created in 2–3 hours and is a complete sellable product.

"The better the solution, the shorter it can be"
Terms
mini-course
— a short course of 2–5 videos covering one skill or topic, not a full multi-week program
PDF is easiest first product type — no camera or gear neededCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 4:25▶ Watch

PDF is easiest first product type — no camera or gear needed

Creator recommends PDF (digital guide/ebook) as the easiest first product because:

  1. Many creators are uncomfortable on camera or lack gear.
  2. Buyers often prefer reading over watching video.
  3. Canva makes designing it free and fast. PDF is preferred over video course or template for total beginners.
"I believe the easiest product that you can actually create is a PDF"
Terms
ebook
— a digital book delivered as a PDF file; Canva :: free online graphic design tool at canva.com used to design ebooks, templates, social media posts, etc.
Save all ChatGPT ideas to Google Doc before buildingCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 5:50▶ Watch

Save all ChatGPT ideas to Google Doc before building

Immediately after generating names, taglines, and structure ideas in ChatGPT, paste everything into a Google Document so nothing is lost and you can reference it while designing the ebook in Canva. Do not rely on browser tabs staying open. Use the Google Doc as the master content source to copy-paste into the design tool.

"I want to save all of our ideas into the Google document file so I'm not going to lose anything"
Terms
Google Doc
— free cloud-based word processor by Google, accessible at docs.google.com
ChatGPT workflow for ebook content: role + structure promptCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 6:14▶ Watch

ChatGPT workflow for ebook content: role + structure prompt

Prompt structure for generating ebook content: Tell ChatGPT to "act as a professional [niche] coach" and "think about the top 3 strategies on how to [solve the problem]" and "create a structure for a simple 5 to 6 page digital guide." Then review the output, add your own ideas, discard weaker sections, and blend for best result. Creator says entire ebook structure is created in under 10 minutes with this method. Use this for every product you create.

"I'm going to ask for a structure from ChatGPT. Then I'm going to throw in my own ideas and from this blend of information I'm going to pick the best thing"
Terms
prompt
— the instruction text you type into an AI tool like ChatGPT to get a specific output
3-strategy ebook structure that came from ChatGPTCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 7:22▶ Watch

3-strategy ebook structure that came from ChatGPT

ChatGPT generated this ebook structure for "viral content ideas for faceless Instagram pages": Step 1 — Reverse engineer viral posts (competitor research method). Step 2 — Expand ideas using ChatGPT and AI tools. Step 3 (Bonus) — TikTok trend mining for more viral ideas. Plus: 3 copy-paste ChatGPT prompts for fast viral hook generation; weekly 30-minute research system to batch ideas; execution checklist on final page; call-to-action page with upsell to coaching/next product. Creator added his own elements and removed weaker sections.

"What I like here as a bonus are three copy-paste ChatGPT prompts for fast viral hook generation"
Terms
batching
— grouping similar tasks together in one session to save time (e.g., finding 30 content ideas in one sitting instead of daily)
Generate ebook content page-by-page, not all at onceCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 9:51▶ Watch

Generate ebook content page-by-page, not all at once

Do NOT paste the structure and ask ChatGPT to "write the entire ebook" in one prompt — output will be low quality and too short. Instead, go page by page: ask ChatGPT to write each page/section individually to get optimal, detailed content. Creator demonstrated the difference: one-prompt output was visibly weak; page-by-page with a professional prompt produced high-quality marketing copy with welcome module, learning outcomes, mindset tips, action steps, and prompts.

"You need to go page by page to actually get the optimal result"
Terms
welcome module
— the opening page of a guide that explains who it's for, what they'll learn, and why it matters
Design ebook in Canva: search "minimalist ebook" for free templatesCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 12:40▶ Watch

Design ebook in Canva: search "minimalist ebook" for free templates

After content is ready, go to canva.com. Search "minimalist ebook" to get 20,000+ free templates. Pick one that fits your style. Steps:

  1. Select template.
  2. Ask ChatGPT to generate a cover image prompt, then generate image in ChatGPT image generator.
  3. Download the image and upload to Canva as cover art.
  4. Ask ChatGPT to extract a color scheme from the cover image.
  5. Apply that color scheme across all ebook pages.
  6. Create one page template and copy-paste it for every content page. Entire design took creator 30 minutes.
"Search for minimalist ebook and this is going to give me 20,000 different Canva templates that I can actually use"
Terms
color scheme
— a set of 3–5 matching colors used consistently throughout a design; template :: a pre-designed layout you customize by swapping in your own text and images
Use ChatGPT image generator for ebook cover artCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 13:50▶ Watch

Use ChatGPT image generator for ebook cover art

When ChatGPT gives bad image results directly, use this 2-step workaround:

  1. Describe the broad idea to ChatGPT and ask it to write you a detailed image generation prompt.
  2. Feed that prompt back into ChatGPT image generator. Creator said prompt quality is what determines image quality. The second attempt using a ChatGPT-written prompt produced a result "100 times better" than the direct attempt.
"It really really about the prompt"
Terms
image generation prompt
— text instructions given to an AI image tool (like ChatGPT's DALL-E) to produce a specific visual
Add strikethrough price + sale price to Canva cover graphicCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 15:37▶ Watch

Add strikethrough price + sale price to Canva cover graphic

On the Canva cover image for listing/sales page, add:

  1. Original price in strikethrough format (e.g., $97).
  2. "Today just" + actual price (e.g., $29.99) in a bright green color.
  3. An arrow element pointing to the price. This creates urgency and perceived value on the product thumbnail/cover image visible on the sales page.
"I want to add a price of $97 like here 97, 0. And then I want to add today just $29.99"
Terms
strikethrough price
— original price shown with a line through it to signal a discount; perceived value :: how much a buyer thinks a product is worth based on presentation, not actual cost
Recommended Canva cover image size for Gumroad listing: 1280x720pxCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 16:15▶ Watch

Recommended Canva cover image size for Gumroad listing: 1280x720px

For the product thumbnail/cover image that appears on the Gumroad sales page listing, create a new Canva design at custom size 1280 x 720 pixels. Use a screenshot of the ebook interior as the main visual. Add a tilted/rotated second page screenshot behind it for depth. Add a border element around pages. Add title text and price elements.

"We are actually creating 1280 to 720 pixels"
Terms
thumbnail
— the small preview image representing a product on a marketplace or sales page; Gumroad :: an online platform to sell digital products directly, handling payments and file delivery without needing a website
Add CTA on final ebook page linking to upsell/affiliate offerCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 10:19▶ Watch

Add CTA on final ebook page linking to upsell/affiliate offer

The last page of the ebook must include a call-to-action upsell. If the buyer just learned viral content strategy, the natural next step is monetization — so the CTA links to a coaching program, membership, affiliate product, or high-ticket offer. This connects the buyer journey: low-ticket ebook ($30) → high-ticket next step (coaching, membership, course). Creator added an affiliate challenge link on the last page of his ebook.

"On the last page you can add, hey, if you enjoyed these viral content ideas and you want to learn more... just go to this link"
Terms
low-ticket
— a product priced low, typically under $50, used to attract buyers; high-ticket :: a product or service priced high, often $500+, such as coaching or mastermind programs
One page template in Canva → copy-paste for all ebook pagesCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 16:24▶ Watch

One page template in Canva → copy-paste for all ebook pages

Design workflow for ebook interior:

  1. Create one master page template in Canva with your color scheme, fonts, and layout.
  2. Duplicate that template for every content page.
  3. Copy-paste text from your Google Doc / ChatGPT output into each page.
  4. Add relevant screenshots or visuals where explaining a step.
  5. Add emojis to improve readability. This reduces design time dramatically — creator built entire ebook in about 2 hours including cover.
"Once we have the template, we can just start copy and pasting everything together"
Terms
master template
— a single reusable design layout used as the base for all pages in a document
Add screenshots of practical steps to ebook pages for clarityCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 18:52▶ Watch

Add screenshots of practical steps to ebook pages for clarity

Recommendation for ebook quality improvement (post-launch polish): for each step in the guide, add a screenshot showing exactly what the reader should see on screen. Example: if step says "find five top faceless pages," add a screenshot of the Instagram search bar. If step says "find their five best-performing posts," add a screenshot of a profile grid. Visuals help readers connect instructions to real actions and increase perceived value.

"It's easier for them to read it and then see a picture of the actual practical process"
Terms
screenshot
— a captured image of a computer screen used to show readers exactly what something looks like in practice
Export ebook from Canva as PDF StandardCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 20:09▶ Watch

Export ebook from Canva as PDF Standard

Final ebook export steps in Canva:

  1. Click Share (top right).
  2. Click Download.
  3. Select file type: PDF Standard.
  4. Select "All pages."
  5. Click Download. This creates the deliverable PDF file to upload to Gumroad. PDF Standard is sufficient — no need for PDF Print quality.
"I want to download all of them as a PDF standard. Just click on download and that's it"
Terms
PDF Standard
— a compressed PDF format suited for screen reading and digital delivery, smaller file size than PDF Print
Total ebook creation timeline from zero to done: ~2h 31minCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 6:28▶ Watch

Total ebook creation timeline from zero to done: ~2h 31min

Actual time breakdown from the live recording: 0–33 min: idea brainstorming and content generation in ChatGPT. 33–54 min: refining structure, blending AI output with own ideas, saving to Google Doc. 54 min–1h 4min: beginning Canva design. 1h 4 min–1h 24 min: cover, table of contents, page template. 1h 24 min–2h 2 min: all pages designed. 2h 2 min–2h 26 min: Gumroad listing, description, cover graphic. Total claimed: 2h 31min accounting for recording pauses.

"In 2 hours 31 minutes, I was able to create the product from absolutely nothing"
ChatGPT content strategy blend: AI structure + creator's own ideasCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 8:45▶ Watch

ChatGPT content strategy blend: AI structure + creator's own ideas

Creator's hybrid content generation method:

  1. Ask ChatGPT for 3+ different ebook structures on the same topic.
  2. Review all outputs — each variation introduces different angles.
  3. Cherry-pick best elements from each.
  4. Add your own knowledge and preferences.
  5. Remove elements you disagree with or that don't fit. This prevents fully AI-generated content while still using AI for speed. Result is a personalized, high-quality guide in minutes.
"I don't want to make it just AI generated. I want to make it so it's the best based on my own preferences"
Terms
AI-generated content
— text or images created by an AI tool like ChatGPT without human input; hybrid approach :: combining AI output with human editing to create better final results
High-quality content matters more than polish in ebook designCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 12:45▶ Watch

High-quality content matters more than polish in ebook design

Creator's design philosophy for ebooks: do not over-invest in design at launch. A 10/10 design with weak content fails; excellent dense information with a clean design wins. Goal is to make text readable and visually scannable — using color highlights, emojis, images — not to create a design portfolio piece. Polish can be added post-launch after first sales confirm product-market fit.

"If it's going to be 10 out of 10 ebook based on design, it's more important to have high-quality information inside"
Terms
product-market fit
— confirmation that real buyers want and pay for your product, discovered only by actually selling it
Three top-selling Google Sheets products to recreate with ClaudeBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 6:00▶ Watch

Three top-selling Google Sheets products to recreate with Claude

The three validated products targeted in this video (all selling daily on Etsy):

  1. Book tracker spreadsheet.
  2. Wedding planner spreadsheet.
  3. Annual budget / financial planning spreadsheet. The wedding planner was the highest monthly revenue winner when sorted in Profit Tree. Goal: use Claude AI to recreate competing versions of all three.
"Eventually, you're going to want to make all versions, right? And even split test each version multiple times with different brand vibes."
Terms
split test
— launching two or more versions of a listing with different images/colors to see which earns more clicks and sales
Step 1 — Download Claude desktop app from claude.com/downloadBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 7:09▶ Watch

Step 1 — Download Claude desktop app from claude.com/download

To use Claude for building spreadsheet products:

  1. Go to claude.com/download.
  2. Select Windows or Mac version.
  3. Click "Download for Windows" — installs to desktop automatically.
  4. Open the installer file, click "Start Setup," and run through all initialization steps. Claude desktop has more power and skills than the browser version for code/creation tasks.
"Step one is obviously just downloading Claude and getting it onto your desktop."
Terms
Claude desktop
— the downloadable app version of Claude AI that runs locally on your computer with expanded coding capabilities
Use the Claude "Code" page, not the Chat page, for buildingBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 7:30▶ Watch

Use the Claude "Code" page, not the Chat page, for building

Once Claude desktop is open, navigate away from the default Chat page to the Code page. The Code page has more capability and skills for actually generating code (like Python scripts that build Excel files). This is the correct environment for creating sellable spreadsheet products.

"Navigate over to the code page. This is where Claude is actually going to be able to create those codes... It has just a little bit more power."
Terms
Claude Code page
— a mode inside Claude desktop optimized for writing and executing code, with stronger technical capabilities than the standard chat interface
Vague prompts produce bad results — define quality upfront in the system promptBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 7:55▶ Watch

Vague prompts produce bad results — define quality upfront in the system prompt

Simply asking Claude "go recreate this product" gives sloppy, unusable results. The correct approach is to write a detailed system/session prompt that defines:

  1. What Claude's role is (premium digital product builder).
  2. What the output goal is ($15–$50 sellable spreadsheet).
  3. What "good" looks like (specific design standards).
  4. What "bad" looks like.
  5. Example product types to infer from. Include screenshots of the competitor listing to show Claude visually what you want.
"We have to define what is good, what is bad, and what is our output goal."
Terms
system prompt
— an initial instruction block given to an AI before the main task that sets its role, rules, and quality standards for the entire session
tokens
— the units of text that AI models process; more back-and-forth iterations consume more tokens and increase cost
Session prompt tells Claude to use Python openpyxl to build Excel filesBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 9:44▶ Watch

Session prompt tells Claude to use Python openpyxl to build Excel files

The crafted session prompt instructs Claude: "You are a premium digital product builder. You create sellable Excel spreadsheet products using Python's openpyxl library. When given an Etsy listing link, you research the product category, all tabs, and features, and build a complete premium product that could be sold for $15 to $50." This forces structured, professional output instead of a plain spreadsheet dump.

"You create sellable Excel spreadsheet products using Python's openpyxl library."
Terms
openpyxl
— a Python library (code package) that creates and styles Excel (.xlsx) spreadsheet files programmatically
Python
— a programming language Claude uses in the background to generate the spreadsheet file
Define premium design standards inside the prompt to hit $15–$50 price pointBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 10:15▶ Watch

Define premium design standards inside the prompt to hit $15–$50 price point

The system prompt explicitly lists what makes a spreadsheet worth $15–$50 instead of $0: grid lines off on every tab, maximum two fonts, tab colors, row heights, spacers, titles, clean interface, interactive elements. These details must be written into the prompt so Claude produces something that looks polished and purchasable, not a raw spreadsheet with filled columns.

"Grid lines off on every tab, maximum two fonts, just things that really make it a different spreadsheet than just an average spreadsheet that takes a day for you to set up."
Terms
grid lines
— the faint lines separating cells in a spreadsheet; turning them off gives a cleaner, designed look
conditional formatting
— automatic cell color changes based on values (e.g., red if over budget, green if under)
Include multiple product examples in the prompt so Claude can infer tab contentBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 11:05▶ Watch

Include multiple product examples in the prompt so Claude can infer tab content

The session prompt includes several example product types (fitness tracker, wedding planner, book tracker, annual budget spreadsheet) so Claude can infer what tabs and features are appropriate for any product it's asked to recreate. The workflow does NOT buy the competitor's product to copy it — it only uses the publicly visible listing screenshots and description to reconstruct a competing version.

"We're not going to just buy the product and replicate it. We're going to actually just give it a link, have it go review the screenshots of the product listing, and then create it."
Terms
infer
— for Claude to figure out logical content (like tab names) from context clues, rather than being told explicitly
Refine the build plan before execution to save tokens and timeBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 11:45▶ Watch

Refine the build plan before execution to save tokens and time

After sending the initial session prompt, Claude responds with a full build plan (tabs, layout, color palette) before building anything. At this stage, review the plan and request any changes — e.g., add a reading challenge metric, add a YouTube instruction video tab. Making changes at the plan stage is free/cheap. Making changes after the file is built consumes many more tokens. This plan-then-build pattern is essential for efficient use of Claude.

"This is the time that you spend with Claude actually tweaking your plan before even implementing it. And this is going to save you a ton of time versus trying to go back and iterate."
Terms
context window
— the total amount of text Claude can hold in memory during one session; a bloated context from too many iterations slows responses and costs more tokens
Drop Etsy listing URL into Claude — it builds the full plan within 3 minutesBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 12:21▶ Watch

Drop Etsy listing URL into Claude — it builds the full plan within 3 minutes

Workflow after sending the system prompt:

  1. Copy the Etsy competitor listing URL.
  2. Paste it into Claude in the Code page.
  3. Claude responds: "Ready to build. Give me an Etsy link or describe the spreadsheet product you want, and I'll identify the category, layout the build plan, and start creating."
  4. Within ~3 minutes, Claude produces a complete tab-by-tab build plan including chosen color palette.
  5. User reviews and approves or modifies before Claude builds.
"Literally within like 3 minutes, we have Claude giving us an entire plan of what's to put in each tab, and it's gone on to choose a color palette that is also selling well."
Terms
color palette
— the set of specific colors Claude picks for the spreadsheet design; it tries to match styles that perform well on Etsy
Add brand screenshots to the prompt to control color scheme and aestheticBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 13:30▶ Watch

Add brand screenshots to the prompt to control color scheme and aesthetic

To customize the product's visual style: submit screenshots of competitor product images alongside the build prompt inside Claude. You can specify color schemes (e.g., "earthy greens plus blush") or include screenshots of competitor thumbnails. Claude will incorporate this visual context to match the aesthetic you want. This is especially useful for staying in a specific niche style (e.g., cottagecore, minimalist, modern).

"If you want a specific brand vibe or color schema, you can also submit screenshots in this plan."
Terms
brand vibe
— the overall visual and emotional feel of a product's design (e.g., earthy/neutral, modern/clean, romantic/floral)
Set Claude's working folder before starting — files save locallyBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 8:48▶ Watch

Set Claude's working folder before starting — files save locally

In Claude Code (desktop), before starting a new session, set a file path for where all generated files will be saved. Recommended: create a dedicated folder called "Etsy" on your computer. In Claude Code, click "New Session," then choose that folder as the working directory. All Excel files Claude generates will automatically save there. Everything runs locally on your machine.

"Just put it to a file path that you want everything to get saved to. This is all running locally, right?"
Terms
file path
— the address of a folder on your computer (e.g., C:/Users/YourName/Etsy) where Claude saves generated files
locally
— files are stored on your own computer, not uploaded to a server
Book tracker output: 7-tab Excel file built from one promptBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 14:08▶ Watch

Book tracker output: 7-tab Excel file built from one prompt

Book tracker spreadsheet produced by Claude in one session: Tab 1 — Instructions page with navigation links. Tab 2 — Setup (reading goal, ranking system, genres, statuses: reading/completed/DNF/TBR/paused). Tab 3 — Book tracker (log each book with title, author, genre, rating, format, start date). Tab 4 — Reading calendar (monthly view, set books to specific days). Tab 5 — Wish list (planned future reads with genres). Tab 6 — Books gallery. Tab 7 — Dashboard (total pages read, averages, goal progress, books count). All generated from one prompt plus Etsy listing URL.

"That's insane with one prompt. That's what we got."
Terms
DNF
— Did Not Finish — a reading status indicating a book was abandoned
TBR
— To Be Read — a reading status for planned future books
"Vibe coding" = AI builds the bones; human adds creative touchBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 16:02▶ Watch

"Vibe coding" = AI builds the bones; human adds creative touch

After Claude produces the initial spreadsheet, the human role in vibe coding is:

  1. Review each tab in Google Drive (drag and drop the downloaded .xlsx file into Google Drive to open it).
  2. Identify visual issues — image overlays, misaligned elements, spacing problems.
  3. Manually fix simple items (delete wrong images, replace with better ones from the web).
  4. Take notes on all remaining issues.
  5. Return to Claude with a specific list of fixes. This human curation layer is what differentiates your product from a raw AI output.
"Claude's going to give you the bones, but the part that defines creativity and breaks you apart from just AI outputs... is because now you get to put your touch on it."
Terms
vibe coding
— a workflow where AI generates the core structure of a product and the human refines aesthetic details and fixes; the term emphasizes creative collaboration over pure automation
Upload generated .xlsx file to Google Drive to review and shareBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 14:10▶ Watch

Upload generated .xlsx file to Google Drive to review and share

After Claude downloads the file locally (e.g., "ultimate_book_tracker.xlsx"), locate it in the Etsy folder on your computer. Drag and drop it into Google Drive. Google Sheets will open it as a Google Sheet for review. This is also the format buyers will use — they do NOT receive a direct link to this sheet; an intermediary delivery page is needed for the Etsy listing.

"We're just going to drag and drop it into Google Drive, and that'll load us in with the book tracker."
Terms
intermediary page
— a separate page (e.g., a PDF instruction file or landing page) that buyers access after purchase, which then links them to the actual Google Sheet template
Wedding planner: 20 sales/day at $10 = $200/day; build in ~3 minBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 17:19▶ Watch

Wedding planner: 20 sales/day at $10 = $200/day; build in ~3 min

The wedding planner was the top revenue product identified in Profit Tree. Sales data at time of video: 20 units sold in last 24 hours, approximately $10/unit = $200/day from one listing. To build:

  1. Open the Etsy listing, scroll through description and images to note all features.
  2. Send same system prompt to a new Claude session.
  3. Paste the listing URL.
  4. Claude analyzes visible listing screenshots and builds the plan.
"20 people bought this in the last 24 hours. That's a $200 a day product that we're about to make in the next 3 minutes."
Claude analyzes listing images and auto-identifies tabs and featuresBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 18:24▶ Watch

Claude analyzes listing images and auto-identifies tabs and features

When given the wedding planner listing URL, Claude reads available screenshots and product descriptions and outputs a comprehensive build plan including: days-left countdown on every sidebar, cross-tab dashboards with six charts, budget variance with conditional formatting, guest and artist/vendor management. Claude identifies these features from the listing images — no purchase of the competitor product required.

"It's really analyzed it pretty well."
Terms
cross-tab dashboard
— a summary sheet that pulls data from multiple other tabs and displays it in one visual overview
budget variance
— the difference between planned budget and actual spending, often shown with color coding
Iterate with short follow-up prompts to add features Claude missedBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 18:50▶ Watch

Iterate with short follow-up prompts to add features Claude missed

After Claude's initial plan, if the user spots missing features from the listing (e.g., pie charts and line graphs visible in competitor screenshots that Claude didn't include), send a short follow-up prompt: "Incorporate more pie charts and line graphs with detailed headers explaining what they're tracking. Incorporate these on pages that have stats or numbers easier to analyze visually. Make sure these are properly spaced, no overlap, and match the same color we have set for this project." This small prompt refines the plan before building begins.

"Incorporate more pie charts and line graphs with detailed headers explaining what they're tracking."
Use a new Claude session for each product — never mix products in one sessionBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 21:15▶ Watch

Use a new Claude session for each product — never mix products in one session

Each product must be built in a completely separate Claude session. Reason: Claude's context window carries all prior conversation. If you build wedding planner and financial planner in the same session, the two projects bleed together, producing mixed or degraded outputs. Also, context grows too large and bloated, slowing Claude and consuming tokens inefficiently. Rule: one product = one session; close and open new session when moving to the next product.

"Each session contains context, right? And you might be trying to create your wedding planner in one conversation, and then your financial planner in the other session. And what ends up happening is the two get mixed together."
Terms
context window
— the active memory of everything said so far in a Claude session; gets "bloated" when too long, reducing output quality
Financial planning toolkit output: multi-tab budget spreadsheet with 50/30/20 ruleBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 22:07▶ Watch

Financial planning toolkit output: multi-tab budget spreadsheet with 50/30/20 rule

Annual budget / financial planning spreadsheet built by Claude: Tab 1 — Instructions/getting started. Tab 2 — Setup (personal info, currency symbol, start month, budget period: monthly/bi-weekly/weekly). Tab 3 — Income sources and expense categories. Tab 4 — Monthly tracker (January through December, each month separate, auto-calculates difference vs budget). Tab 5 — All-in-one dashboard with 50/30/20 breakdown (needs 50%, wants 30%, savings 20%), expense distribution charts, and visual spending breakdowns. Automatically recalculates when numbers are changed.

"Needs 50%, wants 30%, savings 20%. That's awesome. Kind of helps you break it down."
Terms
50/30/20 rule
— a budgeting framework where 50% of income goes to needs, 30% to wants, and 20% to savings
bi-weekly
— every two weeks
Deliver Google Sheets product via an intermediary page, not a direct linkBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 24:05▶ Watch

Deliver Google Sheets product via an intermediary page, not a direct link

Buyers cannot receive a direct editable link to your Google Sheet in an Etsy listing. The delivery workflow:

  1. In Etsy listing setup, mark it as a digital file.
  2. Add a PDF file to the listing as the downloadable attachment.
  3. The PDF contains instructions explaining how to access and use the template (Claude can generate this PDF in the same session since it already has full context of the product).
  4. The PDF links buyers to the Google Sheet template (shared as "make a copy" link). This is the standard intermediary delivery method.
"You're not going to want to send people directly to this page. You're going to want an intermediary page."
Terms
"make a copy" link
— a Google Drive share link that prompts the recipient to save their own private copy of the sheet instead of editing the original
PDF
— a document format used to deliver instructions; buyers download it from Etsy after purchase
Chapter 08

Setting Up Your Etsy Shop

From zero account to a launch-ready, suspension-proof storefront
31 points

The Pain

Opening a shop looks technical and risky - names, policies, payments, taxes, and the horror stories of getting suspended on day one with no warning.

The Relief

It's a guided sign-up. Steps: 1) create account + open shop, 2) set country/currency/language, 3) pick a shop name (broad enough to grow), 4) add a listing (Etsy requires one to finish setup), 5) set up payments (Etsy Payments) + billing, 6) write shop policies (digital = no returns, state it), 7) add branding (banner, logo, About section, profile). Suspensions usually hit for: brand-new account doing too much too fast, VPNs, copyright/trademark violations, or mismatched ID. Go steady, use your real info, avoid trademarked terms, and you're fine.

Mental Picture

Like opening a market stall: you register, get a name on the sign, set your card reader (payments), post your rules (policies), and decorate the booth (branding). Etsy's 'security guard' (Trust & Safety) gets twitchy if a brand-new stall suddenly acts like a wholesaler - so move at a normal pace.

Plain-English Glossary

Shop name
Your store's unique name on Etsy (20 chars max); choose broad so you can expand later.
Etsy Payments
Etsy's built-in system that collects card payments and deposits to your bank.
Shop policies
Your stated rules on returns, delivery, etc. For digital items, you declare no physical returns.
About section
The story/brand area of your shop that builds buyer trust.
Suspension
Etsy freezing your shop for a policy/trust issue; avoidable with real info and steady behavior.
Trademark / copyright
Legal ownership of names/designs; using others' (Disney, brand logos) gets you banned.
listing credit
a free waiver of the $0.20 Etsy listing fee for one item; new sellers can earn 40 credits via referral links
business verification
Etsy's process of confirming a seller's legal business identity using uploaded documents (e.g., business registration, ID)
shop icon
the circular profile photo displayed next to your shop name on Etsy (equivalent to a logo)
privacy policy
a legal statement explaining how you collect and use customer data; Etsy provides a sample template sellers can adapt
sold listings
items a buyer has purchased from your shop; by default Etsy can display these publicly
SEO
Search Engine Optimization — optimizing titles, tags, and descriptions so your listing appears higher in Etsy/Google search results
sole proprietorship
running a business as an individual with no separate legal business entity
LLC
Limited Liability Company — a formal legal business structure that separates personal and business liability
Etsy Plus
an optional Etsy subscription that provides extra shop tools and credits, at an additional monthly fee
listing renewal
Etsy's $0.20 fee charged each time a listing sells or expires (every 4 months), which relists the item for continued visibility
shop section
a named category within your Etsy shop page that groups related listings together for easier customer navigation
Gumroad
a platform for selling digital and physical products directly to buyers
Payhip
a platform for selling digital downloads with some built-in discoverability
Shop Manager
Etsy's backend dashboard where sellers control all aspects of their shop
branding assets
visual elements (logo, banner) that define the look and identity of your shop
banner
the wide header image at the top of your Etsy shop page
real estate
(figurative) valuable visible screen space on a page
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
a section of pre-written answers to common buyer questions
friction
anything that makes it harder or slower for a buyer to complete a purchase
shop banner
the wide image at the top of an Etsy shop's homepage, visible to all visitors
social proof
evidence like reviews or sales counts that builds trust with new buyers
shop sections
custom category tabs you create inside your Etsy shop to group listings (e.g., "Baby Onesies," "Hoodies," "Mugs")
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions section added to an Etsy shop page
conversion rate
the percentage of people who visit your listing and actually buy — e.g., if 100 people view your listing and 3 buy, conversion rate is 3%
branding
the visual identity of your shop — name, logo, colors, fonts, and overall feel
Shop announcement
a short message displayed at the top of your Etsy storefront, visible to all visitors
Processing time
the time between order placement and when you ship; setting a custom range on Etsy lets you show a shorter potential window while protecting flexibility
Calculated shipping
Etsy automatically calculates shipping cost based on package weight, dimensions, and buyer's location — reduces risk of undercharging
Shop setup step-by-step: account, name, Gmail, 40 free listingsNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 40:30▶ Watch

Shop setup step-by-step: account, name, Gmail, 40 free listings

Steps:

  1. Create a new Gmail account if opening a second shop (one email per Etsy account).
  2. Search "Etsy get 40 free listings" and use a referral link from the Etsy community (both you and the referrer each get 40 free listing credits).
  3. During shop creation, Etsy forces you to create a draft listing immediately — fill it with placeholder content, then unlist it afterward (you cannot save as draft; it will go live).
  4. Choose shop name: Google it first to ensure no existing business uses the same name.
  5. Complete all business/individual verification fields.
"You can get 40 free Etsy listings — put https://etsy.me/ and then somebody else's code."
Terms
listing credit
— a free waiver of the $0.20 Etsy listing fee for one item; new sellers can earn 40 credits via referral links
Upload business verification documents immediately to avoid suspensionNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 43:17▶ Watch

Upload business verification documents immediately to avoid suspension

When creating an Etsy shop (especially as a business entity), Etsy requires proof-of-business documents. Creator did not upload these immediately and the shop was suspended. The suspension lasted 5 business days. Pitfall: creator also initially uploaded the wrong document (one that didn't meet Etsy's requirements). After uploading the correct documents, the shop was reinstated. Action: upload verification documents the same day you open the shop.

"Make sure you upload those documents right away — I did not upload those documents right away and then my shop was suspended."
Terms
business verification
— Etsy's process of confirming a seller's legal business identity using uploaded documents (e.g., business registration, ID)
Shop banner and logo: quick Canva build, 35 minutes totalNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 52:05▶ Watch

Shop banner and logo: quick Canva build, 35 minutes total

Steps for banner:

  1. Google "Etsy banner size" — two sizes exist; choose the big banner.
  2. Create a custom-size canvas in Canva.
  3. Browse existing Canva banner templates for inspiration.
  4. Use the same font as your marketing/listing photos for brand consistency. Banner took ~8–10 minutes. Logo (shop icon): same process — browse Canva templates, use consistent font/color. Took ~5 minutes. Total for banner + logo + updating shop settings: 35 minutes.
"The banner, the logo, and updating some settings in my Etsy took 35 minutes."
Terms
shop icon
— the circular profile photo displayed next to your shop name on Etsy (equivalent to a logo)
Shop policies setup: no returns, no exchanges, no cancellations for digital productsNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 53:50▶ Watch

Shop policies setup: no returns, no exchanges, no cancellations for digital products

Steps:

  1. Returns & Exchanges — click "Use Simple Policy," set to no returns and no exchanges (digital products cannot be "returned").
  2. Cancellations — create policy with no cancellations accepted.
  3. Privacy Policy — use Etsy's sample privacy policy as a base, read through it, delete irrelevant sections, update shop name throughout, add formatting (blank lines, bullet points — Etsy's copy-paste strips formatting so manually add bullet characters).
"We're selling digital products so we don't want any returns or exchanges."
Terms
privacy policy
— a legal statement explaining how you collect and use customer data; Etsy provides a sample template sellers can adapt
Hide sold listings from your shop to protect competitive intelligenceNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 55:04▶ Watch

Hide sold listings from your shop to protect competitive intelligence

In Etsy shop settings under Options, change "Show sold listings" to "No — hide them." This prevents competitors from seeing exactly which of your listings are selling and at what velocity. Creator deliberately does this on both shops.

"Competitors can also see what exactly you are selling — so I click no, hide them."
Terms
sold listings
— items a buyer has purchased from your shop; by default Etsy can display these publicly
Shop name should embed a searchable niche keywordTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 4:52▶ Watch

Shop name should embed a searchable niche keyword

When naming your Etsy shop:

  1. Don't overthink it — you can change it later.
  2. Integrate a keyword associated with your niche or product type so the shop name itself aids SEO. Example: if selling digital products for teachers, include words like "classroom," "homeschool," or "lesson plans."
  3. Keep the name short, simple, and easy to spell — a hard-to-spell name makes it difficult for customers to find you directly.
"Try to integrate a keyword if you can."
Terms
SEO
— Search Engine Optimization — optimizing titles, tags, and descriptions so your listing appears higher in Etsy/Google search results
Start as individual seller; form LLC only after consistent incomeTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 6:08▶ Watch

Start as individual seller; form LLC only after consistent income

When filling in the "type of seller" field for tax purposes: if you don't have a formal business entity, select "individual" or "sole proprietorship." Do not rush to form an LLC. The recommended approach is to start as an individual, prove the shop is profitable, and then reinvest earnings into forming a proper business entity once you have consistent passive income each month.

"Make sure that your shop is actually profitable, and once you start making consistent passive income every month, you can reinvest that income into actually setting up an LLC."
Terms
sole proprietorship
— running a business as an individual with no separate legal business entity
LLC
— Limited Liability Company — a formal legal business structure that separates personal and business liability
Skip Etsy Plus subscription at launch; evaluate laterTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 8:39▶ Watch

Skip Etsy Plus subscription at launch; evaluate later

Etsy Plus is an optional paid subscription add-on. Recommendation: skip it at launch to minimize expenses. Instead, run the shop for 30–90 days, evaluate results, then decide whether Etsy Plus features justify the recurring cost.

"For now, I'm not spending any money I don't have to."
Terms
Etsy Plus
— an optional Etsy subscription that provides extra shop tools and credits, at an additional monthly fee
Shop icon minimum 500×500 px; use Canva to createTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 9:43▶ Watch

Shop icon minimum 500×500 px; use Canva to create

When uploading your shop icon (profile/logo image), Etsy requires a minimum of 500 × 500 pixels. Create the logo in Canva and set the canvas size to at least 500 × 500 px to meet this requirement. Do not over-perfect the logo — you can update it later. At minimum, have a banner and an icon ready before opening the shop.

"Make sure that your resolution is 500 by 500 pixels at least."
Use banner as advertisement, not just a logo repeatTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 10:07▶ Watch

Use banner as advertisement, not just a logo repeat

When choosing a shop banner style (big banner vs mini banner), choose the big banner for more display space. Use the banner strategically as advertisement real estate: showcase featured products, highlight seasonal or relevant items, or display a promo/discount code to encourage purchases. Do not just repeat the shop name on the banner.

"I like to put some different products that I'm either proud of or that are relevant to this time of year. Or you could even put like a promo code or a discount code to encourage people to buy."
Set listing renewal to automatic for digital productsTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 38:01▶ Watch

Set listing renewal to automatic for digital products

For the renewal setting on digital product listings, always select "automatic." Reason: every time a digital product sells, Etsy charges a $0.20 listing renewal fee and republishes the listing. With automatic renewal, this happens instantly and the listing stays live without manual intervention. Manual renewal is only useful for physical products with limited inventory (to avoid overselling). Automatic renewal ensures customers can always purchase and the seller does not need to monitor each listing individually.

"By selecting automatic, every time someone purchases, Etsy is automatically going to charge me 20 cents... and then Etsy will automatically republish that listing."
Terms
listing renewal
— Etsy's $0.20 fee charged each time a listing sells or expires (every 4 months), which relists the item for continued visibility
Use shop sections to organize products for customersTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 37:33▶ Watch

Use shop sections to organize products for customers

Utilize Etsy's "shop section" feature to categorize products within your shop by type, theme, or use case. This improves customer experience by allowing buyers to navigate directly to the product type they want rather than scrolling through all listings. Example use cases: sections by product category (planners, wall art, templates) or by occasion/season. Assign each listing to a relevant section during the listing setup process.

"Organizing it in some sort of way that makes sense for your customer is always a good practice."
Terms
shop section
— a named category within your Etsy shop page that groups related listings together for easier customer navigation
Use "Feature This Listing" to pin seasonal or new products to top of shopTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 38:25▶ Watch

Use "Feature This Listing" to pin seasonal or new products to top of shop

The "Feature This Listing" toggle in the listing settings pins that listing to the very top of your shop homepage, making it the first product visitors see. Use cases:

  1. Pin a seasonal product as the relevant season or holiday approaches.
  2. Pin a new bundle or product you want to boost visibility for.
  3. Rotate featured listings strategically. Only one listing can be featured at a time. For a brand new shop with one product, the only listed product will appear at the top by default.
"This is a great feature for if you have like seasonal products, you can go ahead and feature that listing whenever it is relevant or approaching that season or holiday."
Create Etsy seller account FIRST before making productsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 1:57▶ Watch

Create Etsy seller account FIRST before making products

Yale recommends setting up the seller account before designing any products. Reason: some people design everything, then hit issues opening the shop. Confirming the shop can be opened first saves wasted effort. Steps:

  1. Go to etsy.com/sell.
  2. Click "Get Started."
  3. Register with email, name, and password.
"I like to get this part out of the way first just to make sure everything is set up properly before you start putting in the work."
Etsy shop opening fee and setup stepsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 2:13▶ Watch

Etsy shop opening fee and setup steps

One-time fee to open a shop: approximately $26 for Yale, but varies by location — typically $15–$30 USD converted to local currency. Setup sequence:

  1. Click "Start your shop."
  2. Select shop preferences: language, country, currency.
  3. Choose a unique shop name (can be changed later).
  4. Enter personal and banking information.
  5. Select seller type — most beginners choose "individual" or "sole proprietorship."
  6. Fill in name, address, date of birth, and connect bank account.
"There's a one-time fee to open up your shop. For me, it's $26, but this can vary depending on your location."
Terms
sole proprietorship
— selling under your own name without registering a separate business entity
Bank verification and identity verification stepsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 3:14▶ Watch

Bank verification and identity verification steps

After connecting a bank account, Etsy sends a small deposit to verify it — sellers must enter that amount into the system to confirm the account. After banking, sellers must verify identity by:

  1. Uploading a government-issued ID (passport or driver's license).
  2. Taking a quick selfie for verification. Etsy guides through each remaining step after that.
"Etsy will send a small deposit to verify it, and you'll need to enter that amount into the system to confirm the account."
Etsy country availability and alternatives for unsupported countriesYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 3:43▶ Watch

Etsy country availability and alternatives for unsupported countries

Etsy is NOT available in every country — only sellers in supported countries can open a shop; no workaround exists for unsupported countries. For sellers in unsupported countries, alternatives with some built-in traffic: Creative Market, Gumroad, Payhip. Own website is also an option but requires building your own audience. Sellers aged 13–17 can sell on Etsy with parent/guardian permission and supervision; the account must be created under the guardian's information.

"If your country isn't on that list, unfortunately, there's no workaround for that at the moment."
Terms
Gumroad
— a platform for selling digital and physical products directly to buyers
Payhip
— a platform for selling digital downloads with some built-in discoverability
Shop Manager dashboard overview and Etsy seller appYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 6:24▶ Watch

Shop Manager dashboard overview and Etsy seller app

Shop Manager is the central control hub. Main tabs: Listings (create/manage products), Messages (customer communication), Orders (view all sales), Stats (track shop performance), Marketing (run ads/promotions), Finances (earnings and fees), Settings (shop details). Yale also strongly recommends downloading the Etsy Seller app on your phone to manage the shop on the go — check sales, reply to messages, monitor everything without a computer.

"I also highly recommend downloading the Etsy seller app on your phone."
Terms
Shop Manager
— Etsy's backend dashboard where sellers control all aspects of their shop
Set up storefront branding assets in Canva before adding productsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 7:33▶ Watch

Set up storefront branding assets in Canva before adding products

Yale recommends building out the storefront early to make the shop look legitimate and to provide motivation. Three branding assets needed, all created in Canva:

  1. Logo/shop icon — minimum 500×500 pixels; can be shop name styled nicely; search Canva logo templates for inspiration.
  2. Shop banner — 1,200×300 pixels; include brand name and design elements; update later to showcase products.
  3. Receipt banner — 760×100 pixels; appears at top of customer's printed receipt.
"Think of it like a physical store. Before you start putting products on the shelves, you would set up the space first."
Terms
branding assets
— visual elements (logo, banner) that define the look and identity of your shop
Where to upload branding and what fields to fill in Shop ManagerYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 8:44▶ Watch

Where to upload branding and what fields to fill in Shop Manager

Path: Shop Manager → Settings → Info and Appearance. Fill in: Shop title (tagline), Shop icon (upload logo), Receipt banner (upload it), Shop announcement (short welcome message). Also fill "Messages to buyers" — two fields: one for general orders, one specifically for digital items. Recommended content for digital items message: simple download instructions showing customers how to access their files (many buyers don't know how). Then go to actual shop page → "Edit Shop" to upload the shop banner and profile photo (logo or personal photo).

"I highly recommend filling this out, especially for digital products... include simple instructions on how to download their files."
Shop setup: don't overthink branding, focus on presentable not perfectHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 9:15▶ Watch

Shop setup: don't overthink branding, focus on presentable not perfect

When opening an Etsy shop:

  1. Don't need a perfect brand — establish it as you go.
  2. Start with something presentable and clear, then refine over time.
  3. Shop name: don't overthink, can be changed later, just make it clear, easy to read, and memorable if possible.
  4. Banner and logo: don't overthink, just make it match your niche.
  5. The shop only needs to look decent enough that new customers trust it and it doesn't look like a scam.
  6. Pay more attention to listings than branding — listings drive the revenue.
"As long as your shop is at a decent enough level that new customers trust the business and it doesn't look completely rubbish and like a scam, that's going to be good enough."
Shop banner should showcase products, not just logos — use the real estatePatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 5:44▶ Watch

Shop banner should showcase products, not just logos — use the real estate

Most new sellers waste the banner by only showing their logo or a slogan. Better practice: use the banner to showcase a grid of different products OR a current promotion. Reason: the shop logo and shop name already appear below the banner automatically, so repeating it in the banner is wasted space. The banner is valuable first-impression real estate — use it to show buyers immediately what you sell.

"There's no point showing it twice — you might as well take advantage of that real estate and put some product photos in there."
Terms
banner
— the wide header image at the top of your Etsy shop page
real estate
— (figurative) valuable visible screen space on a page
Add an About page and FAQ section — both help trust and SEOPatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 11:22▶ Watch

Add an About page and FAQ section — both help trust and SEO

Two neglected sections most new sellers skip:

  1. About page: Share your story, what inspired the shop, what problem you solve, what makes you unique vs competitors. Buyers want to know who they're buying from. The About page also counts toward Etsy SEO — embed primary keywords naturally.
  2. FAQ section: Answer common buyer questions pre-emptively. Reduces friction (buyers who don't get answers immediately may buy from someone else). To start: copy competitors' FAQ questions, rewrite in your own words. FAQ also contributes to Etsy SEO — include primary keywords.
"A lot of new sellers aren't doing this and reasons why you want to have FAQ is to help answer any of the most common questions for buyers but it also reduces friction."
Terms
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
— a section of pre-written answers to common buyer questions
friction
— anything that makes it harder or slower for a buyer to complete a purchase
Shop banner is prime real estate; only 35% use it for anything beyond branding100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 27:30▶ Watch

Shop banner is prime real estate; only 35% use it for anything beyond branding

Bonus tip 4: Utilize the shop banner. 96 of 100 shops had a banner, but only 35 were using it to promote anything beyond their name/product photos. The active 35 used banners to promote: sales (e.g., "50% off"), bundle deals (e.g., buy 3+ shirts = free standard shipping; 4+ shirts = free priority shipping), time-limited sale countdowns, social proof (e.g., "number 1 ranked Etsy clothing store worldwide," 5-star review count, total orders shipped), business identity (e.g., woman-owned business).

"Your shop banner is valuable real estate for promoting sales, features, coupons, bundles, a newsletter you offer."
Terms
shop banner
— the wide image at the top of an Etsy shop's homepage, visible to all visitors
social proof
— evidence like reviews or sales counts that builds trust with new buyers
98% of top shops have organized shop sections for easy browsing100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 28:21▶ Watch

98% of top shops have organized shop sections for easy browsing

Bonus tip 5: Organize shop sections (categories). 98 of 100 shops had organized shop sections. Well-structured shop categories make it easier for customers to browse and find what they want, improving the shopping experience and purchase likelihood. Considered an important baseline setup step.

"Well-structured shop categories make it easier for customers to browse and buy."
Terms
shop sections
— custom category tabs you create inside your Etsy shop to group listings (e.g., "Baby Onesies," "Hoodies," "Mugs")
73% of top shops have an About section to build trust with buyers100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 28:57▶ Watch

73% of top shops have an About section to build trust with buyers

Bonus tip 6: Add a compelling About section. Etsy states that sharing information about the members and process behind the shop helps shoppers build connection and trust. 73% of the 100 shops had an About section. Best-practice example: seller shares what products she offers, the story of when she started and what inspired it (her daughter), and lists her team/shop members. The About section is an opportunity to share the story of your business in a way that resonates with buyers.

"Sharing information about the members and process behind your Etsy shop helps shoppers build a connection and a sense of trust."
Terms
About section
— a section on an Etsy shop page where the seller can write their story, mission, and team details
97% of top shops have shop policies filled out; 54% have an FAQ section100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 29:57▶ Watch

97% of top shops have shop policies filled out; 54% have an FAQ section

Bonus tip 8: Fill out shop policies. 97 of 100 shops had shop policies filled out. Clear policies build trust with customers and protect the seller. Bonus tip 9: Add Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs). 54 of 100 shops had FAQs. FAQ topics seen: what size to order, shipping times, returns/exchanges, personalization options, cancelling orders, care instructions. Strategy: check successful competitor shops for common customer questions and mirror them in your own FAQs.

"Clear policies not only help build trust with your customers, but can also protect you as a shop owner."
Terms
shop policies
— a section in your Etsy shop where you declare your rules on returns, exchanges, shipping, and custom orders
FAQ
— Frequently Asked Questions section added to an Etsy shop page
Day 3 — Branding: shop name, logo, colors that reflect your valuesNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 4:42▶ Watch

Day 3 — Branding: shop name, logo, colors that reflect your values

Day 3 is dedicated to branding. Tasks:

  1. Name your shop.
  2. Create a logo.
  3. Choose colors. Principles: a) shop name and logo must reflect your shop's values and appeal to your target customer, b) stand out — don't copy competitors' colors or names, c) stay true to your personality, d) don't overthink it — you can always update your logo and branding later. Speaker example: used bright playful colors in a niche where competitors were more muted/serious — resulting in a high conversion rate.
"Don't forget to stay true to your personality and don't be afraid to stand out."
Terms
conversion rate
— the percentage of people who visit your listing and actually buy — e.g., if 100 people view your listing and 3 buy, conversion rate is 3%
branding
— the visual identity of your shop — name, logo, colors, fonts, and overall feel
Step-by-step Etsy shop account creation walkthroughStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 1:35▶ Watch

Step-by-step Etsy shop account creation walkthrough

  1. Go to etsy.com → click Sign In → click Register → enter username and password.
  2. Go to your profile → click "Sell on Etsy" → "Get Started" → skip questions → "Start your shop."
  3. Select language, country, currency — make sure location matches payment account.
  4. Name your shop (it can be changed anytime — don't overthink it; use a placeholder). If your name is taken, append: Co, Collective, Boutique, Shop, Studio, Gallery.
  5. Create a placeholder first listing (any photo, fill minimally) just to unlock the rest of the shop setup.
  6. Enter full payment account info with accurate country of residence.
  7. Can set up as individual or business account — switch later if needed; don't wait for an LLC.
"do not overthink about what you're going to name the shop because you can change this literally at any point"
Terms
LLC
— Limited Liability Company — a legal business structure in the US; you don't need one to open an Etsy shop as an individual
Complete shop profile: banner, about section, policies, FAQ — don't perfectionistStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 3:10▶ Watch

Complete shop profile: banner, about section, policies, FAQ — don't perfectionist

After account creation, complete:

  1. Banner and shop announcement.
  2. About section.
  3. Policies (returns, exchanges, etc.).
  4. FAQ section. Key mindset: don't be a perfectionist — everything can be updated later. Sections to fill out matter for Etsy's trust signals and buyer confidence. The buyer agrees to your shop policies at point of purchase, so having them written protects you legally.
"don't be a perfectionist about any of this cuz you can always update it"
Terms
Shop announcement
— a short message displayed at the top of your Etsy storefront, visible to all visitors
Shop policies
— your stated rules on returns, exchanges, custom orders — buyers agree to these upon purchase
Packaging matters for first orders; set up shipping profiles, not per-product settingsStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 9:28▶ Watch

Packaging matters for first orders; set up shipping profiles, not per-product settings

Shipping setup rules:

  1. Create reusable shipping profiles — do not configure new shipping settings for each individual listing.
  2. Use calculated shipping especially for international orders; input your ZIP code, set processing times using the custom range to create a shorter apparent lead time with a wider actual window.
  3. Select all mail classes but then go to Advanced Shipping Services and pick Ground to protect free-shipping margins.
  4. Packaging quality matters for the first 10 orders — avoid reusing beat-up Amazon boxes. Perception is everything early on.
  5. For print-on-demand sellers: don't worry about packaging — the POD provider handles it; custom packaging from POD is not worth the added cost when pricing competitively.
"your first 10 orders are not the time to be reusing old beat up Amazon packages right perception is everything"
Terms
Processing time
— the time between order placement and when you ship; setting a custom range on Etsy lets you show a shorter potential window while protecting flexibility
Calculated shipping
— Etsy automatically calculates shipping cost based on package weight, dimensions, and buyer's location — reduces risk of undercharging
Chapter 09

Listing Optimization & SEO

Titles, tags, photos and descriptions that get found and bought
65 points

The Pain

You uploaded a great product and... silence. No views. The listing is invisible in search and, when seen, doesn't convince anyone to click 'buy'. You don't know which knobs matter.

The Relief

A listing has two jobs: get FOUND (SEO) and get BOUGHT (conversion). Found: put real buyer keywords in the title, use ALL 13 tags, pick the right category + attributes, write a keyword-rich description. Bought: the thumbnail is everything (it wins the click), so use clean, high-contrast mockups; add multiple images, a video if possible, and a description that sells benefits then explains what's included and how delivery works. Match top sellers' keyword patterns; iterate on listings that underperform.

Mental Picture

Your listing is a billboard on a highway. SEO (title/tags) decides WHICH highway it sits on (will the right drivers pass it?). The thumbnail is the billboard image - it has half a second to make a speeding driver turn their head. The description is the fine print they read after they've already slowed down.

Plain-English Glossary

SEO
Search Engine Optimization - shaping your listing so Etsy search shows it to the right buyers.
Title
The listing headline; pack the most important real keywords near the front.
Tags
13 keyword slots per listing; use all 13 with multi-word phrases buyers actually type.
Long-tail keyword
A specific multi-word phrase (e.g. "boho wedding seating chart template") - less competition, better buyers.
Thumbnail
The first/cover image shown in search; the single biggest driver of clicks.
Attributes
Structured listing details (color, occasion, size) Etsy uses to filter and match searches.
Conversion
Turning a viewer into a buyer; driven by images, price, reviews and the description.
Etsy listing title
up to 140 characters; the first ~40 characters show in search results; keyword placement at the start has higher SEO weight
Etsy tags
up to 13 keyword labels on a listing; Etsy matches buyer searches against these tags along with the title
click-through rate (CTR)
the percentage of people who see your listing in search results and click on it; thumbnail quality is the primary driver
listing photos
the images shown on an Etsy product page; Etsy allows up to 10 photos + 1 video per listing
mockup
a visual showing what a digital product looks like in a real-world context (e.g., printed and framed on a wall, displayed on a phone screen)
Notion
a free/paid note-taking and database web app used for organizing plans, projects, and information
keyword
a word or phrase buyers type into Etsy search; your listing must contain it to appear in results
search volume
number of times a keyword is typed into Etsy per month — higher = more potential traffic
video mockup
a short auto-generated video slideshow of product mockup images attached to an Etsy listing; positively impacts Etsy algorithm ranking
SEO (search engine optimization)
the practice of optimizing text, images, and engagement signals so Etsy's algorithm ranks your listing higher in search results
E-Rank
a third-party Etsy analytics tool that tracks keyword rank, listing performance, and competitor data
SKU
Stock Keeping Unit — a unique identifier assigned to each product variation (e.g., size S = SKU001, size M = SKU002); used by Etsy to track which variation was sold
indexing
the process by which Etsy reads and stores your listing's text so it can return it in relevant searches
keyword product fit
the degree to which your keywords accurately match what a buyer is searching for when looking at your product type
add to cart badge
a label Etsy shows on search results indicating how many shoppers added the item recently, used as social proof
bought today badge
label showing number of purchases in the last 24 hours, visible in search results
conversion rate
percentage of people who clicked on a listing and then actually bought; damaged when buyers feel misled
main image
the first/hero thumbnail shown in Etsy search results
airspace
informal term for the visible area of the thumbnail image; more airspace occupied by the product = better
unique selling point (USP)
the one thing that makes your product distinct and desirable
watermark
a semi-transparent logo or text overlaid on an image to claim ownership
infographic
a product image overlaid with text or icons that communicate key features or selling points
variation option
a buyer-selectable choice within one listing, e.g., color, size, style
pattern interrupt
a marketing technique where you deliberately break from the visual norm so your listing stands out in a sea of similar thumbnails
split test
running two or more listing versions with one variable changed (e.g., different main image) to see which performs better
CTR (click-through rate)
the percentage of times your listing appeared in search results and was clicked on
cohesive branding
using a consistent color palette, font style, and visual mood across all listing images so the shop feels professional and trustworthy
POD (print on demand)
a model where products (shirts, mugs, etc.) are printed only after an order is placed, by a third-party printer; no inventory held
comfort colors
a popular clothing brand known for soft, muted, vintage-toned fabrics; also a visual/color trend on Etsy
social proof
evidence (reviews, testimonials) that others have bought and liked the product, which builds trust
screen record
capturing your computer screen as a video to show software or digital content in action
SEO-optimized
written to include search keywords strategically so the listing ranks higher in results
shop section
a category label inside your Etsy shop that groups listings by type, helping customers navigate
listing template
a reusable framework of mockup layouts, infographic slides, and branding applied to every new listing so they all look consistent
Everbee
a free Chrome browser extension that shows search volume and competition data for Etsy keywords
primary keyword
the single most important search phrase your product should rank for
lifestyle setting
showing the product being used in a real-world context (e.g., a planner open on a desk)
CTA (call to action)
an image or text prompting the buyer to take a specific next step, e.g., "Buy now and get a free bonus"
shop title
a short text field on your Etsy shop homepage that appears below your shop name; it influences Etsy SEO
organic search
unpaid search traffic from buyers typing keywords into Etsy's search bar
flatlay
a photo style where the product is laid flat on a surface and photographed from above
title character count
Etsy allows up to 140 characters in a listing title
Etsy Seller Handbook
Etsy's official free guide for sellers at etsy.com/seller-handbook
listing video
a short video (up to 15 seconds) you can add to an Etsy listing that plays automatically in search results and on the listing page
A/B test
comparing two versions of something to see which performs better; listing fee :: Etsy's $0.20 charge per listing published
URL slug
the custom word/phrase at the end of a URL that identifies the specific page, e.g., gumroad.com/l/faceless-viral-guide
autocomplete
the dropdown suggestions Etsy shows when you start typing in the search bar — based on real searches by real buyers
algorithm
Etsy's automated system that decides which listings to show first in search results based on factors like relevancy, recency, seller activity, and conversion rate
active seller signal
the pattern of regular listing activity that Etsy's algorithm interprets as a reliable, engaged seller
muted tones
low-saturation, soft colors (beige, sage, dusty pink) common in lifestyle/aesthetic Etsy products
On-model mockup
a photo or composite image showing the product worn/held/used by a real person or photorealistic model
Variations
options within a single listing (e.g., size, color, personalization) — use them to affect pricing when relevant
Materials field
a secondary keyword field in Etsy listings that feeds search — don't leave blank
Listing title SEO: put keywords in first 4 words, include "canva" explicitlyNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 56:25▶ Watch

Listing title SEO: put keywords in first 4 words, include "canva" explicitly

Creator's approach:

  1. Take notes during market research on which keywords competitors use in their titles.
  2. Start description/title with the most specific keyword phrase. Example — changed opening from "Get into your dream sorority" to "Editable Sorority Resume Template" for the first 4 words.
  3. Explicitly include the word "canva" in the title/tags since buyers searching for Canva templates will use that word.
  4. Add benefit-oriented language after keywords (e.g., "get into your dream sorority").
"It would be better to actually put editable sorority resume template in the first like four words."
Terms
Etsy listing title
— up to 140 characters; the first ~40 characters show in search results; keyword placement at the start has higher SEO weight
Tags: 20-character limit per tag requires keyword splittingNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 1:00:03▶ Watch

Tags: 20-character limit per tag requires keyword splitting

Etsy tags allow up to 13 tags, each max 20 characters. "Sorority resume template" is 25 characters — too long for one tag. Solution: split into "sorority resume" (16 chars) and "sorority template" (17 chars). This means you cannot capture the full exact-match 3-word phrase in a single tag; work around by mixing 2-word tags. Creator notes this character limit is "really annoying" and requires deliberate planning. Use market research tools to identify the most valuable individual tags.

"You can only have 20 characters — so I can't write something like 'sorority resume template.'"
Terms
Etsy tags
— up to 13 keyword labels on a listing; Etsy matches buyer searches against these tags along with the title
Listing description structure: intro keywords + features + how it works + contactNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 58:46▶ Watch

Listing description structure: intro keywords + features + how it works + contact

Creator's 4-part description template:

  1. Introduction — 1–2 sentences that sound natural but repeat the 2–3 most important keywords 2x each (e.g., "sorority," "template").
  2. Features section — copy bullet points directly from the marketing listing photos (saves time, ensures consistency).
  3. How It Works — numbered steps for how the buyer accesses and uses the Canva template.
  4. Contact invitation — "If you have any questions, send me a message." This mirrors the listing photos in text form.
"For the first paragraph I always try to write something that sounds natural but then has the keywords in it."
Thumbnail is the #1 listing photo — give it the most attentionNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 1:00:42▶ Watch

Thumbnail is the #1 listing photo — give it the most attention

The first/cover photo of the listing is the thumbnail shown in Etsy search results. Creator noticed during final review that a Canva logo was being clipped at the edge of the thumbnail. Fixed it by moving the element to the center, re-exporting, and re-uploading. Principle: spend disproportionate time on the cover/thumbnail image because it determines click-through rate. Check on the actual Etsy preview how the thumbnail looks before publishing.

"That's like the first impression you're going to give to your potential customer — I always want to make sure the thumbnail of the first photo is good."
Terms
click-through rate (CTR)
— the percentage of people who see your listing in search results and click on it; thumbnail quality is the primary driver
Listing photos: show 2/3 of the product, not the full pageNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 46:05▶ Watch

Listing photos: show 2/3 of the product, not the full page

When analyzing competitors' listing photos, creator noticed that most successful sellers do NOT show the full page of a resume template. They show approximately 2/3 of the page — enough to convey quality without revealing every detail. Creator adopted this approach: cropped the resume to show about 2/3, then placed the cover letter smaller alongside it. Also noticed: top performers do not put a title text overlay on the main photo — they let the product visual speak for itself. Cover image should have all key elements fully visible (nothing clipped by the thumbnail crop).

"Most of them are not like a full page resume — they only put two-thirds of the resume, and I think this looks pretty good."
Terms
listing photos
— the images shown on an Etsy product page; Etsy allows up to 10 photos + 1 video per listing
Upload 5–6+ listing photos; more photos = more conversionsTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 12:00▶ Watch

Upload 5–6+ listing photos; more photos = more conversions

Upload as many high-quality listing photos as possible. General rule: more photos is better. If in a hurry to launch, a minimum of 5–6 listing photos is acceptable. The primary photo (first image) is the one buyers see while browsing — it must be clear, high-quality, prominent (no tiny or blurry product), and look professionally and intentionally branded. Create listing photos before launching so the listing setup process is fast. Listings with videos get 2× as many orders as those without.

"A good general rule of thumb for listing photos is the more the better."
Terms
mockup
— a visual showing what a digital product looks like in a real-world context (e.g., printed and framed on a wall, displayed on a phone screen)
listing photos
— images buyers see while browsing (not the actual file they download)
Title strategy: multiple short keyword phrases separated by commasTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 18:44▶ Watch

Title strategy: multiple short keyword phrases separated by commas

Effective Etsy title structure observed from top-selling printable wall art:

  1. Start with the quote or key phrase depicted in the product design.
  2. Follow with 3–5 short descriptive "mini-titles" each containing 2–4 keywords, separated by commas. Each mini-title should read naturally (not like keyword spam). Example: "How lucky are we wall art, Romantic coquette wall art, Vintage lace heart prints, Red striped printable quotes, Digital download." This structure: maximizes keyword coverage, stays readable to buyers, and avoids appearing spammy. Etsy has started encouraging shorter titles, but the seller's experience shows that keyword-rich longer titles are rarely the reason products don't become best sellers.
"It's very rare that a product with a very short title will end up becoming a best seller."
Terms
long-tail keyword
— a multi-word search phrase (e.g., "vintage printable wall decor") that is more specific and often converts better than single-word searches
Ignore Etsy's AI title analyzer; repeat words are fine if naturalTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 26:01▶ Watch

Ignore Etsy's AI title analyzer; repeat words are fine if natural

Etsy's built-in AI title analyzer may flag repeated words and suggest removing them. The seller's position: ignore this advice if the repeated phrase sounds natural and forms important keyword combinations (e.g., "wall art" and "wall decor" are legitimate distinct search phrases even though "wall" repeats). Etsy will not penalize you for not following its title suggestions. The AI analyzer is not yet advanced enough to be reliable. The exception: avoid excessively repeating the exact same word or phrase with no purpose.

"Etsy's not going to penalize you for not following their title advice."
Use Notion planner to track competitor data and keywords per productTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 20:41▶ Watch

Use Notion planner to track competitor data and keywords per product

The seller uses a self-created Notion planner to organize each Etsy product's research data during listing creation. The planner has fields for: product notes, competitor title observations, keywords/tags copied from Profit Tree, and a publishing calendar for posting schedule accountability. The seller pastes copied competitor tags directly into the "keywords and tags" section of each product's entry in the planner before building the listing. A link to this planner template is shared in the video description.

"It is really, really important for you to actually write down all the data."
Terms
Notion
— a free/paid note-taking and database web app used for organizing plans, projects, and information
Fill all 13 tags using exact keywords from title and researchTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 34:54▶ Watch

Fill all 13 tags using exact keywords from title and research

In the Etsy listing tag section:

  1. Start by pulling specific keyword phrases directly from your title.
  2. If free tag slots remain after the title keywords, fill all remaining slots with additional researched phrases.
  3. Use all 13 tags — top sellers always use all
  4. Tags are invisible to buyers browsing Etsy (unless using a tool like Profit Tree Radar), but they are a direct signal to the Etsy algorithm for which searches to rank the listing. For material tags on digital products: enter "digital download" and the file format (e.g., "PNG").
"They're using all 13 and tags are super important. It's a direct line of communication from you the seller to the algorithm."
Description structure: restate title first, then utility contentTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 32:06▶ Watch

Description structure: restate title first, then utility content

Listing description structure recommended:

  1. First 2 lines: rephrase/reorder the listing title using the same keywords in a different arrangement — this reinforces to Etsy's algorithm which long-tail keyword combinations to associate with the listing.
  2. Follow with a keyword-rich short paragraph.
  3. Then: a section detailing everything the buyer receives with the purchase.
  4. Delivery method (for digital: confirm it is an instant digital download).
  5. Disclaimers: state clearly that no refunds are permitted since the digital product is instantly delivered. The first few lines of the description carry the most SEO weight.
"The first few lines of your description carry a lot of weight when it comes to SEO and keywords."
Create low-effort listing video using animated Canva photoTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 13:21▶ Watch

Create low-effort listing video using animated Canva photo

To add a listing video without heavy video production:

  1. Take one of your existing listing photos.
  2. Open it in Canva and apply simple animation effects (e.g., text pop-in, slide).
  3. Export as a video file.
  4. Upload it as the listing video. This animated photo-as-video catches buyers' attention when they hover over the product in search results, making it more engaging than a static image. Etsy says listings with videos get 2× the orders.
"I repurpose that photo as a video. That way when buyers are browsing, if they hover over my product, it'll immediately show that video."
Create low-effort listing video using animated Canva photoTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 13:21▶ Watch

Create low-effort listing video using animated Canva photo

To add a listing video without heavy video production:

  1. Take one of your existing listing photos.
  2. Open it in Canva and apply simple animation effects (e.g., text pop-in, slide).
  3. Export as a video file.
  4. Upload it as the listing video. This animated photo-as-video catches buyers' attention when they hover over the product in search results, making it more engaging than a static image. Etsy says listings with videos get 2× the orders.
"I repurpose that photo as a video. That way when buyers are browsing, if they hover over my product, it'll immediately show that video."
Set category accurately so algorithm matches you to right buyersTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 14:12▶ Watch

Set category accurately so algorithm matches you to right buyers

The listing category field tells the Etsy algorithm exactly what you're selling, which determines which buyers see your product. Choose the most accurate category available. Example for printable art: select "digital prints" under the digital print / wall art / home decor hierarchy. Also select "digital file" (not physical) and set the creation date to the most recent option.

"Being accurate here is going to help Etsy match our products with the buyers that are actually looking for them."
Keyword search volume determines sales potential ceilingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 8:55▶ Watch

Keyword search volume determines sales potential ceiling

Keywords are words buyers type into Etsy's search bar with purchase intent. The more monthly searches a keyword has, the higher your potential sales. High-volume keywords (e.g., "dog collar") give access to more traffic than obscure long-tail terms. This differs from social-media advertising, where buyers are passively scrolling rather than actively searching.

"The more searches per month a keyword has on Etsy, the more potential you have to make more sales."
Terms
keyword
— a word or phrase buyers type into Etsy search; your listing must contain it to appear in results
search volume
— number of times a keyword is typed into Etsy per month — higher = more potential traffic
Video mockups on Etsy listings improve SEOQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 47:25▶ Watch

Video mockups on Etsy listings improve SEO

My Designs can auto-generate a video mockup for each listing — a slideshow that transitions through your mockup images. Toggle it on during the publish step. Videos on Etsy listings are confirmed to help with Etsy SEO ranking. This is generated automatically for all designs in a batch with one toggle.

"You have it on Etsy, which is great. Helps with SEO."
Terms
video mockup
— a short auto-generated video slideshow of product mockup images attached to an Etsy listing; positively impacts Etsy algorithm ranking
Listing comparison — how upsell tiers and low entry price drive clicks and AOVQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:45:26▶ Watch

Listing comparison — how upsell tiers and low entry price drive clicks and AOV

Comparison of 3 competing listings (personalized children's books example). Listings 1 & 2 (top performers): display a low entry price (base product without customization) to earn the click; then upsell via dropdown menus with 15–50 variation options including personalization add-ons. Both have perfect 5-star ratings and fully optimized image slots. Listing 3 (underperformer): only 5 variation options, no upsells, 4.5-star rating, 6 image slots only, no dropdown upsell tier, slower processing time, amateur follow-up imagery. Key insight: a lower displayed entry price earns the click even if the conversion rate is lower, because more clicks = algorithm boost.

Etsy SEO — definition and ranking goalQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:10:26▶ Watch

Etsy SEO — definition and ranking goal

SEO = Search Engine Optimization. On Etsy, the goal is for listings to appear on page 1 of search results for target keywords. ~90% of Etsy sales happen on page 1. Rank is not static — it varies by buyer's IP address/location (e.g., a listing on page 1 in Chicago may be on page 3 in California) and changes constantly. Therefore sellers cannot accurately self-check rank by searching their own store. E-Rank offers approximate rank tracking tools, but self-searches are unreliable for true rank data.

Terms
SEO (search engine optimization)
— the practice of optimizing text, images, and engagement signals so Etsy's algorithm ranks your listing higher in search results
E-Rank
— a third-party Etsy analytics tool that tracks keyword rank, listing performance, and competitor data
Etsy ranking factors — all six elements that affect your positionQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:13:32▶ Watch

Etsy ranking factors — all six elements that affect your position

SEO on Etsy is determined by more than just keywords. All six ranking factors:

  1. Keywords (title, tags, description) — important but overrated; the easiest to fix.
  2. Thumbnail image — instructor considers this the #1 factor for earning the click; 80% of effort should go here.
  3. Conversion rate — what % of people who click actually buy.
  4. Average order value (AOV) — higher AOV = Etsy earns more = algorithm rewards it.
  5. Customer experience (star ratings) — 5-star vs 4-star can make or break ranking.
  6. Etsy ads — running ads contributes to both paid and organic SEO visibility.
Thumbnail vs keywords — imagery is the primary SEO leverQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:14:42▶ Watch

Thumbnail vs keywords — imagery is the primary SEO lever

Counter-intuitive insight: you can find successful Etsy listings with poor keyword optimization but great main images (bestseller badge, "20 add-to-carts," "X bought today"). You cannot find listings with great keywords but poor imagery that perform well. Hypothesis: the algorithm now identifies what you're selling from the image itself, not just text. Therefore: if your listing isn't converting, the problem is almost always design/photography — not keywords. Keywords are "icing on the cake" — easy to fix, but not the root cause of failure.

"80% of your effort should be going into perfecting your imagery, especially your main image."
Etsy listing anatomy — all fields available to optimizeQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:18:12▶ Watch

Etsy listing anatomy — all fields available to optimize

When creating an Etsy listing, every available field should be filled out completely. Full list of optimizable fields:

  1. Title (keyword-rich).
  2. 10 image slots + 1 video slot.
  3. Description.
  4. Personalization field (if applicable).
  5. Variation options (dropdown menus with SKUs).
  6. Category (must be accurate/product-fit).
  7. Attributes (material, color, secondary color, etc.).
  8. Tags (13 total).
  9. Materials field.
  10. Shipping settings. Rule: the more information given to Etsy, the better Etsy can index the listing for SEO.
Terms
SKU
— Stock Keeping Unit — a unique identifier assigned to each product variation (e.g., size S = SKU001, size M = SKU002); used by Etsy to track which variation was sold
indexing
— the process by which Etsy reads and stores your listing's text so it can return it in relevant searches
ChatGPT keyword workflow — title and tags in under 5 minutesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:21:29▶ Watch

ChatGPT keyword workflow — title and tags in under 5 minutes

Recommended workflow for Etsy keyword optimization using ChatGPT:

  1. Open ChatGPT.
  2. Prompt: "Give me all the possible keyword product-fit words I could use if I was selling [product] on Etsy. Write me a keyword-optimized title and description. Here is what I am selling: [product description + image]."
  3. Add image of the product.
  4. Optionally refine: "Give priority to the first four words in the title for being the most keyword-product-fit and highest search volume. Separate long-tail words by commas. Title cannot be over 140 characters. Do not repeat the same word — leave room for more words to expand searchability." First four words in title are the most heavily weighted by Etsy. Title limit: ~140 characters.
Terms
long-tail keyword
— a specific multi-word search phrase (e.g., "personalized baby basket nursery gift") rather than a broad single word; lower competition, higher buyer intent
keyword product fit
— the degree to which your keywords accurately match what a buyer is searching for when looking at your product type
Advanced keyword move — paste competitor URL into ChatGPT to beat themQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:25:55▶ Watch

Advanced keyword move — paste competitor URL into ChatGPT to beat them

Advanced optimization tactic:

  1. Copy the URL of a top-competing Etsy listing.
  2. Paste into ChatGPT with the prompt: "I am competing with this listing. How could I improve the title and description to beat this one?"
  3. Use ChatGPT's competitive breakdown to rewrite your title and description to be stronger. Result: fully optimized title and description in ~3 minutes. Future plan: Profitry will have a built-in ChatGPT-equivalent optimized specifically for Etsy.
Description's dual role — SEO expansion + legal protectionQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:26:10▶ Watch

Description's dual role — SEO expansion + legal protection

The Etsy listing description serves two purposes:

  1. SEO: include all keyword synonyms that couldn't fit in the title (e.g., baby / babies / toddler / children / kids / infant — all different searchable words). The description is where you exhaust remaining keyword options.
  2. Legal protection: include full product details — materials, care instructions, processing times, shipping info. If a buyer complains about something that was in the description, liability falls on the buyer. Treat the description like a policy document.
Thumbnail dos and don'ts — main image rulesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:29:35▶ Watch

Thumbnail dos and don'ts — main image rules

The main listing thumbnail is the single most important listing optimization element. Key don'ts introduced at end of slice: Do not showcase other products in your main image if you do not have the option to vary the thumbnail per variant. (Further rules continue in the next section of the course.) Main image is what the algorithm uses to understand the product and what buyers use to decide to click — it must be outstanding quality.

Algorithm now reads listing images without keywordsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:29:53▶ Watch

Algorithm now reads listing images without keywords

The Etsy algorithm can identify what a listing sells based purely on the main image, even when there is zero keyword optimization in the title or tags. Listings with killer product images and great main photos can show "20 add to carts" and "10 bought today" badges with no SEO at all. The reverse is never true: poor imagery with perfect SEO does not produce the same result. Good imagery > good SEO when it comes to clicks.

"the algorithm knows what you're selling just based off the image alone"
Terms
add to cart badge
— a label Etsy shows on search results indicating how many shoppers added the item recently, used as social proof
bought today badge
— label showing number of purchases in the last 24 hours, visible in search results
Don't show products in main image that can't be purchasedQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:30:34▶ Watch

Don't show products in main image that can't be purchased

Beginner mistake: staging the main thumbnail with multiple items when the customer can only buy one of them. Example — showing two earrings in the main image but only one is actually purchasable in the listing. Danger: customer earns the click believing they can buy both, reaches the listing, discovers they can't — bounce damages conversion rate. Rule: zero confusion about what is for sale in the main image. Extra products can appear in follow-up images (slots 2–8), never in the hero/main image.

"you have a millisecond to earn that click, which is the hardest part"
Terms
conversion rate
— percentage of people who clicked on a listing and then actually bought; damaged when buyers feel misled
main image
— the first/hero thumbnail shown in Etsy search results
Don't zoom out — product must fill 80% of airspaceQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:31:55▶ Watch

Don't zoom out — product must fill 80% of airspace

Do not zoom out just because you love the photo you took. The customer has a quarter of a second (0.25 sec) to understand your product's unique value without reading a single word. The product should fill ~80% of the image frame. Zoomed-out shots (e.g., a birthstone ring shown tiny in the frame) make designs unreadable, confuse the value proposition, and waste the click opportunity. Models' heads, backgrounds, and props distract attention from the product.

"there should be zero confusion about what the unique selling point is of your listing"
Terms
airspace
— informal term for the visible area of the thumbnail image; more airspace occupied by the product = better
unique selling point (USP)
— the one thing that makes your product distinct and desirable
Don't underestimate imagery — weak competitor images = opportunityQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:33:05▶ Watch

Don't underestimate imagery — weak competitor images = opportunity

When researching competitors, do not use their poor imagery as your standard. Seeing a listing with 2 basic images and 2 sales in 24 hours does not mean basic images are acceptable — it means there is an opportunity gap you can exploit with better visuals. Avoid putting your logo/watermark in images: it distracts the eye ("oh what does that say?") and does not prevent copying. Copying of top-selling images and designs is inevitable in e-commerce; do not let fear of copying lower your image standards.

"this is not a standard. This is an opportunity"
Terms
watermark
— a semi-transparent logo or text overlaid on an image to claim ownership
Listing image slot strategy — 10-slot frameworkQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:35:15▶ Watch

Listing image slot strategy — 10-slot framework

Optimal use of the 10 image slots: 1) Main/bundled image — product filling 80% of frame, ideally showing multiple variants to earn the click; historically bundled/multi-product images convert better. 2–8) Variation options (one image per variant; never list a variation without a visual), different product angles, and infographics with selling points. 9) Packaging shot if applicable. 10) Brand storytelling image. Video slot: show the actual product in motion if possible; if not, shoot a generic "maker" storytelling video on iPhone — something is better than nothing (video plays silently on Etsy).

Terms
infographic
— a product image overlaid with text or icons that communicate key features or selling points
variation option
— a buyer-selectable choice within one listing, e.g., color, size, style
Pattern interrupt — use contrasting background to stand outQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:36:34▶ Watch

Pattern interrupt — use contrasting background to stand out

"Pattern interrupt" means deliberately differentiating your main image from the dominant visual style competitors use. Example: if all competitors use white airy backgrounds for portrait prints, test a dark background to break the visual pattern and capture attention. Strategy: split-test the same design staged in 5–6 different environments or backgrounds to find the highest-performing thumbnail. Use Etsy's duplicate listing feature to run multiple versions simultaneously.

"if everyone's putting their portrait on these white airy backgrounds, then maybe I split test a main image with a dark background"
Terms
pattern interrupt
— a marketing technique where you deliberately break from the visual norm so your listing stands out in a sea of similar thumbnails
split test
— running two or more listing versions with one variable changed (e.g., different main image) to see which performs better
CTR vs conversion rate — the two-stage funnelQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:37:30▶ Watch

CTR vs conversion rate — the two-stage funnel

The buyer journey from search to purchase has two measurable stages:

  1. Impression → Click = CTR (click-through rate). The main image drives this.
  2. Click → Purchase = Conversion rate. The listing page experience (follow-up images, description, reviews, branding) drives this. You can win the click with a great image and still lose the sale. CTR and conversion rate are niche-specific — never compare your rates to sellers in a different niche. Always benchmark only against your own previous best metrics.
Terms
CTR (click-through rate)
— the percentage of times your listing appeared in search results and was clicked on
conversion rate
— the percentage of visitors who clicked and then completed a purchase
5 conversion-rate boosters after earning the clickQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:39:20▶ Watch

5 conversion-rate boosters after earning the click

After a buyer clicks, five things determine if they purchase:

  1. Cohesive branding — all follow-up images must match one color palette and visual style; mismatched fonts/mockups can kill the sale.
  2. Variation images synced — when a buyer selects a variation (e.g., "Figaro chain"), the corresponding image should auto-display; set this in listing variation settings.
  3. Zero confusion on how to buy — no false marketing (e.g., don't call it solid gold if it isn't); link image to variation.
  4. No false marketing — misleading descriptions lead to negative reviews.
  5. Five-star reviews — aim for all 5-star reviews especially in the first 100 reviews; if you get a bad review, respond immediately and try to salvage it.
Terms
cohesive branding
— using a consistent color palette, font style, and visual mood across all listing images so the shop feels professional and trustworthy
Buy POD mockups directly from Etsy; use Pinterest for branding trendsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:52:30▶ Watch

Buy POD mockups directly from Etsy; use Pinterest for branding trends

Top print-on-demand sellers source their mockups by purchasing them directly from the Etsy platform — not from third-party sites. For branding inspiration (colors, fonts, mood), use Pinterest: Pinterest naturally surfaces trending aesthetics. Pull colors and fonts from Pinterest trends to set your shop's branding foundation. Current dominant trend cited: "comfort colors" (muted, earthy tones). Warn: bad typography and mismatched colors in infographics can actually scare buyers away — study top sellers' brand vibes before designing infographics.

Terms
POD (print on demand)
— a model where products (shirts, mugs, etc.) are printed only after an order is placed, by a third-party printer; no inventory held
comfort colors
— a popular clothing brand known for soft, muted, vintage-toned fabrics; also a visual/color trend on Etsy
mockup
— a digital composite image showing a design applied to a product (e.g., a t-shirt, mug) used as the product photo
Product photos are the most important listing element for digital productsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 24:43▶ Watch

Product photos are the most important listing element for digital products

Since buyers cannot physically touch digital products, photos are the only tool to convince them to buy. You compete with thousands of listings — if your photo does not grab attention immediately, buyers scroll past without clicking. Etsy allows up to 20 photos per listing; Yale recommends using as many as possible. Recommended image size: minimum 2,000 pixels; Yale uses 2,700×2,025 pixels for all his product photos. Tool: Canva (beginner-friendly, has built-in mockups). Alternative: Placeit (paid, wider mockup variety).

"It's not just about having a good product. You also need strong product photos because that's what actually sells it."
Terms
mockup
— a visual that places your product design onto a real-life object (laptop, frame, phone) so buyers can visualize it in context
Nine types of product photos to include in an Etsy listingYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 25:39▶ Watch

Nine types of product photos to include in an Etsy listing

Mix and match these photo types to answer all buyer questions and drive sales:

  1. Main photo — scroll-stopping first image seen in search; make it count.
  2. Supporting previews — different pages, variations, or angles; include mockups here.
  3. What's included — clearly list everything in the purchase to avoid confusion.
  4. Features — highlight unique or valuable aspects.
  5. Before and after — especially effective for templates, show the transformation.
  6. How it works — walkthrough of how to use or access the product.
  7. FAQ — answer common questions upfront to remove hesitation.
  8. Testimonials — add social proof when available.
  9. Upsell page — suggest related products in your shop. Also include a note: "This is a digital download, no physical product will be shipped."
"If you mix and match these properly, you'll end up with a set of product photos that not only look good, but also answer all the buyers' questions."
Terms
social proof
— evidence (reviews, testimonials) that others have bought and liked the product, which builds trust
How to create product photos from finished designs in CanvaYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 26:45▶ Watch

How to create product photos from finished designs in Canva

Step-by-step:

  1. Export finished designs from Canva as PNG or JPEG.
  2. Create a new Canva project for product photos.
  3. Upload the exported files.
  4. Design listing images: lay designs out, show multiple in one frame, zoom into details, place into mockups (laptop, tablet, phone). The goal is presenting designs in a way that clearly shows exactly what customers are getting.
Add a listing video to stand out — auto-plays on hover in searchYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 27:23▶ Watch

Add a listing video to stand out — auto-plays on hover in search

Adding a video gives a major advantage: when a buyer hovers over your listing thumbnail in Etsy search results, the video automatically starts playing. This lets you showcase the product in more ways than a static image. Creation method for Canva templates:

  1. Go into the actual Canva template.
  2. Screen record yourself scrolling through the pages to give a preview.
  3. In Canva, find a tablet or laptop frame and drag the video into it. Optional enhancement: screen record editing the template (changing text or colors) to show how easy customization is. Takes only a few minutes but makes the listing feel far more real and interactive.
"When someone finds your product in search and hovers over your listing, your video will automatically start playing."
Terms
screen record
— capturing your computer screen as a video to show software or digital content in action
Title, tags, and description — start by reverse-engineering top sellersYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 30:03▶ Watch

Title, tags, and description — start by reverse-engineering top sellers

Core tip: do not start from scratch. Search your product on Etsy, study the top-performing listings, and note which words and phrases appear repeatedly in their titles. These are proven keywords. Use them as a foundation (not a copy-paste). Your title should use the full character limit and include as many relevant terms as possible to appear in more searches. Example for Instagram templates: include terms like "Canva templates, Instagram posts, social media manager, influencer marketing, content creator, boho, minimalist." Think about what the customer types in the search bar.

"If those listings are selling, it means the terms they're using are effective and relevant."
Terms
SEO (Search Engine Optimization)
— the practice of using the right keywords so your listing appears higher in search results
keyword
— a word or phrase buyers type into Etsy search to find products
Use ChatGPT to write SEO-optimized listing descriptionsYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 31:14▶ Watch

Use ChatGPT to write SEO-optimized listing descriptions

Yale's exact ChatGPT prompt for descriptions: "Write an SEO-optimized Etsy product description for a [insert your product] that includes the following terms: [insert your tags]." Then tweak the output to match your voice. Also ensure the description explicitly lists: what is included, sizes, number of pages, file formats provided. More specific = better conversion.

"Write an SEO-optimized Etsy product description for a [product] that includes the following terms [tags]."
Terms
SEO-optimized
— written to include search keywords strategically so the listing ranks higher in results
Use all 13 Etsy tags — reuse title keywords and add extrasYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 31:37▶ Watch

Use all 13 Etsy tags — reuse title keywords and add extras

For tags: reuse the most relevant keywords already in your title, then add any additional relevant terms that did not fit. Etsy allows exactly 13 tags — always use all 13. The simple goal: title + description + tags should all use terms that are relevant to what you are selling.

"Etsy allows up to 13 tags, and I recommend using all of them."
Terms
tags
— short keyword phrases in an Etsy listing that help the algorithm match your product to buyer searches
Step-by-step process for uploading a listing to EtsyYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 33:39▶ Watch

Step-by-step process for uploading a listing to Etsy

  1. Shop Manager → Listings → "Add a listing."
  2. Upload all photos and videos.
  3. Choose category — type product name, Etsy suggests best category.
  4. Select "Digital files" for item type.
  5. For "When was it made," choose 2020–2026.
  6. Paste title.
  7. Upload delivery file (the PDF containing the template link or Google Drive link).
  8. Paste description.
  9. Add all 13 tags.
  10. Enter price.
  11. Set quantity to ~100 (auto-renews, so exact number doesn't matter much for digital).
  12. "Who made it" → I did. "What is it" → Finished product. "How was it created" → By you, or indicate AI if applicable.
  13. Optionally add to a shop section (categories visible to shoppers).
  14. Toggle "Feature this listing" if it's a top product (shows at top of your shop).
  15. Set renewal to automatic.
  16. Click Publish.
Terms
shop section
— a category label inside your Etsy shop that groups listings by type, helping customers navigate
Build a listing template first before creating any listingsHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 11:09▶ Watch

Build a listing template first before creating any listings

Pro sellers on Etsy sometimes spend one full week not listing anything — just perfecting the listing template. A listing template defines:

  1. Which mockups to use.
  2. Which infographics to include and their branding.
  3. What information is conveyed to the buyer.
  4. How many listing images (and what each shows).
  5. How the product is shown in use. The template is built once; afterwards, only create new artwork and insert it into the template. This consistency allows fast, high-quality listing production at scale.
"Pro sellers on Etsy will sometimes even take one week without actually listing anything but just focusing on getting the listing template right."
Terms
listing template
— a reusable framework of mockup layouts, infographic slides, and branding applied to every new listing so they all look consistent
mockup
— a digital image showing your product displayed on a real-world object or scene
infographic
— a listing image with text/icons explaining product features, what's included, or instructions
Use all 13 tags; use Everbee to find high-volume, low-competition keywordsPatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 2:43▶ Watch

Use all 13 tags; use Everbee to find high-volume, low-competition keywords

Every successful Etsy listing uses all 13 available tags. Steps:

  1. Install Everbee (free Chrome extension).
  2. On a competitor's listing, click "Product Analytics" in Everbee.
  3. See all tags being used plus each tag's search volume and competition rate.
  4. Target keywords with the highest search volume AND the lowest competition rate — these become your primary keywords.
  5. Use primary keywords in listing title, tags, and description.
"Every successful Etsy shop, every successful Etsy listing will capitalize on all 13 tags."
Terms
tags
— up to 13 keyword phrases you attach to a listing to tell Etsy's search engine what the product is
Everbee
— a free Chrome browser extension that shows search volume and competition data for Etsy keywords
primary keyword
— the single most important search phrase your product should rank for
Add listing video to increase conversion ratePatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 4:00▶ Watch

Add listing video to increase conversion rate

Top shops add a video to listings (Etsy allows 1 video + 10 images per listing). Use the video to:

  1. Show step-by-step instructions on how the product is used after purchase.
  2. Demonstrate how to edit a template.
  3. Demonstrate how to export/download.
  4. Show the product in a lifestyle setting. Adding a video increases conversion rate because buyers know exactly what they get and what to do next.
"Adding a listing video for your shop can really help increase your conversion rate."
Terms
conversion rate
— the percentage of people who view your listing and actually buy
lifestyle setting
— showing the product being used in a real-world context (e.g., a planner open on a desk)
Use all 10 listing images; each image must have a specific purposePatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 4:33▶ Watch

Use all 10 listing images; each image must have a specific purpose

Every Etsy listing allows 10 images + 1 video. Every successful shop uses all

  1. Each image should have a distinct intention:
  2. Lifestyle/product-in-use shot.
  3. Instructions or how-to.
  4. What's included (features list).
  5. CTA (call to action) or bonus offer.
  6. Mockup showing the product clearly. Key insight: most buyers swipe through images and never read the description — so all critical info (what's included, post-purchase steps, unique features) must be IN the images, not just the description.
"Most of the buyers are going to be swiping through the images and may not even get down to the description."
Terms
CTA (call to action)
— an image or text prompting the buyer to take a specific next step, e.g., "Buy now and get a free bonus"
mockup
— a visual showing your digital product displayed on a physical object or realistic scene
Add SEO keywords to shop title field (not just a slogan)Patterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 6:25▶ Watch

Add SEO keywords to shop title field (not just a slogan)

Below the shop name there is a "shop title" field. Most sellers use it for a slogan. Successful shops use it for SEO-friendly primary keywords, because this field contributes to Etsy's organic search ranking. Step:

  1. Use Everbee to identify your primary keywords.
  2. Add those primary keywords directly into the shop title field. This increases the shop's visibility in search results beyond individual listing tags.
"You want to add some SEO friendly keywords in here because this also attributes to SEO."
Terms
shop title
— a short text field on your Etsy shop homepage that appears below your shop name; it influences Etsy SEO
organic search
— unpaid search traffic from buyers typing keywords into Etsy's search bar
91% of top shops use professional mockups; 58% use flatlay-only style100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 11:46▶ Watch

91% of top shops use professional mockups; 58% use flatlay-only style

Strategy 3: High-quality mockups. 91 of 100 shops had professional listing photos (professional mockups or actual product photos). Mockup type breakdown for most-sold listing: 58% flatlay only; 10% model mockups only; 19% combination of flatlay + model; 13% actual product photos taken by seller. Flatlays were the majority winner, contrary to the researcher's prediction. The speaker also mentioned their own mockup shop called "Malama Mox" on Etsy for affordable professional mockups.

"The most successful shops invest in professional mock-ups rather than using generic ones."
Terms
flatlay
— a photo style where the product is laid flat on a surface and photographed from above
mockup
— a digital or physical template used to display a design on a product (e.g., showing a design printed on a t-shirt)
96% of top shops use all 13 tags; 74% use 130+ title characters100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 17:38▶ Watch

96% of top shops use all 13 tags; 74% use 130+ title characters

Strategy 6: Maximizing keywords and SEO. Title character analysis: 74% used 130 or more characters (out of 140 max) in their best-selling listing title; range was 78–140 with median 130.5. Tag usage: 96% used all 13 tags; 2% used 12 tags; 1% used 11 tags; 1 shop had zero tags. Title separator style breakdown: 73 used "comma space"; 16 used dashes; 6 used no separator; 3 used "comma, no space"; 2 used periods.

"Top sellers maximize the 140 characters in their title and use all 13 tags allowed by Etsy."
Terms
tags
— up to 13 keyword phrases you add to an Etsy listing to help it appear in search results
title character count
— Etsy allows up to 140 characters in a listing title
Etsy rep: title/tags/categories/attributes all work together; no need to repeat exact phrases100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 19:00▶ Watch

Etsy rep: title/tags/categories/attributes all work together; no need to repeat exact phrases

An Etsy representative confirmed that older Etsy advice saying "repeat keywords in both title AND tags for a ranking boost" is now outdated. Currently, keywords in titles, tags, categories, and attributes all work together as one system. Repeating exact phrases across title and tags is not necessary for ranking. What matters now: use clear, descriptive, relevant keywords. Use multi-word long-tail keywords. Think about "who is it for, what is it for, is it a gift and when, what makes it unique." Etsy's Seller Handbook contains detailed SEO resources.

"The keywords in your titles, tags, categories, and attributes all work together. So repeating exact phrases isn't needed for ranking."
Terms
long-tail keyword
— a specific multi-word search phrase (e.g., "personalized baby shower gift for girl") vs. a broad term (e.g., "baby gift")
Etsy Seller Handbook
— Etsy's official free guide for sellers at etsy.com/seller-handbook
attributes
— Etsy listing fields like color, size, occasion, material that also feed the search algorithm
Etsy rep confirms commas in title do not hurt search ranking100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 20:52▶ Watch

Etsy rep confirms commas in title do not hurt search ranking

Some sellers remove all punctuation from titles to avoid "wasting" characters and to expose hidden keyword combinations from adjacent words. However, an Etsy representative confirmed: using commas in the title will not hurt search ranking; punctuation does not impact how many keywords you can rank for; Etsy's official resources do not mention punctuation affecting keyword matching. The only real downside of commas is using up some of the 140-character count. Of 100 shops, 73 separated title keywords with "comma space," 16 used dashes, 6 used no separator, 3 used "comma no space," 2 used periods.

"Punctuation doesn't impact how many keywords you can rank for."
48% of top shops use all 10 listing photos; 91% include a size chart image100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 23:27▶ Watch

48% of top shops use all 10 listing photos; 91% include a size chart image

Bonus tip 2: Use all 10 listing images plus a video. Photo stats from 100 shops' most-sold listings: 48 used all 10 photos; range was 2–10 with median 8.5. 91% included a size chart photo. 80% had additional informational photos beyond size chart (shipping time estimates, coupon codes, lifestyle shots, close-ups, "thank you for supporting a small business," review testimonials). 49 of 100 shops had a listing video. Etsy states listing videos improve how listings appear in search. Best practice: use all 10 photos + video, include size guide, shipping info, product detail close-ups, and address common buyer objections.

"More photos equals higher engagement and better conversions."
Terms
listing video
— a short video (up to 15 seconds) you can add to an Etsy listing that plays automatically in search results and on the listing page
96% of top shops have thorough product descriptions with all key info100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 26:26▶ Watch

96% of top shops have thorough product descriptions with all key info

Bonus tip 3: Write thorough product descriptions. 96 of 100 shops had a thorough description. What to include: shipping times, materials, care instructions, how to order, return/exchange policies, personalization details, fabrication info. Best-practice example structure: lead with "Ships next business day" at top, then use labeled sections — "When should I expect my order?", "Details", "Fabrication/Materials", "Care Instructions", "Personalization", "Return Policy." Benefits: minimizes customer questions, builds shop credibility, increases buyer confidence.

"Having a thorough product description can help minimize customer questions, give your shop more credibility."
60% of top shops match tags to title keywords — but Etsy says it's no longer required100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 19:07▶ Watch

60% of top shops match tags to title keywords — but Etsy says it's no longer required

Of 100 shops, 60 matched their tags to their title keywords in their most-sold listing. This was based on older Etsy advice that said repeating a keyword in both title and tags increases its power. However, an Etsy rep confirmed this is now outdated. The strategy still appears to work (those 60 shops had success), possibly because good keywords kept them consistently relevant for the right searches. Either repeating keywords or using distinct keywords can work as long as the keywords are strong and descriptive.

"60 of these shops repeated keywords but still had success."
Three marketplace basics that drive sales if all done right90-day new shop case study⏱ 12:04▶ Watch

Three marketplace basics that drive sales if all done right

No shortcuts needed — stick to three basics for marketplace success:

  1. Have a solid product idea that clearly solves a problem.
  2. Take listing photos that stand out from the competition.
  3. Get SEO right. If all three are done correctly, sales will eventually come. Seller emphasizes Etsy is still beginner-friendly — new shops can still get sales against established ones.
"if you get all three of these things right the sales will eventually come"
Terms
SEO (Search Engine Optimization)
— choosing the right keywords in titles and tags so Etsy's search algorithm shows your listing to relevant buyers
Lesson 3: Listing photos are your sales pitch — treat them as a sales funnel1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 11:10▶ Watch

Lesson 3: Listing photos are your sales pitch — treat them as a sales funnel

Buyers cannot experience the product before purchase; all they have are your photos. Thumbnail must stop someone mid-scroll. Secondary images and video must answer: what's included, how does it work, is it editable, does it come with instructions. The more questions answered in images, the more confident buyers feel. Seller created a reusable listing photo template system. Result: healthy conversion rate of 5%. Treat the image gallery as a sales funnel, not a formality.

"your listing images are the product, or at least the pitch. Your thumbnail has to be able to stop someone midscroll"
Terms
conversion rate
— percentage of listing visitors who actually buy (seller's was 5%); sales funnel :: a sequence of information that moves someone from interested to purchasing; thumbnail :: the main/cover image of a listing shown in search results
Lesson 4: A/B test listings — two variations per product with different title, tags, thumbnail1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 12:20▶ Watch

Lesson 4: A/B test listings — two variations per product with different title, tags, thumbnail

A listing is not a product — it is an advertisement for a product. Strategy: create two separate listings for each product. Version 1: unique title, set of tags, specific thumbnail aesthetic. Version 2: different title, different tags, distinct thumbnail image. Covers more search behaviors and visual tastes. Cost: extra $0.20 listing fee. Result: sometimes the version seller expected to win didn't; the other version drove sales. Once a winning formula is found, replicate across other listings.

"Your listing is actually an advertisement for your product. Having more than one listing for a product gives it a better chance at being seen"
Terms
A/B test
— comparing two versions of something to see which performs better; listing fee :: Etsy's $0.20 charge per listing published
Use ChatGPT to write the Gumroad sales page descriptionCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 23:27▶ Watch

Use ChatGPT to write the Gumroad sales page description

Ask ChatGPT to "create a high-converting sales page description for [product name and subtitle]." Use the output directly as the Gumroad product description. Structure the description with: a headline (formatted as Heading 2), body copy with bullet points, "Perfect for" section listing target buyers, and a "Your next step" CTA section. Creator said: this was not hard at all and took only a few minutes.

"We are going to get a high converting Gumroad sales page description and I can already see this is a banger"
Terms
CTA (call to action)
— text or button prompting the buyer to take the next step (e.g., "I want this"); sales page :: a web page designed to convince a visitor to buy a product
Gumroad product URL: set a memorable custom slugCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 26:45▶ Watch

Gumroad product URL: set a memorable custom slug

When creating the Gumroad listing, set the product URL slug to something descriptive and memorable — e.g., "faceless-viral-guide" — so it's clear what the product is when sharing the link. Gumroad also offers a custom domain option (not demonstrated in this video). The slug appears at the end of the Gumroad product URL and is the link you share for direct sales.

"I know what exactly is this product all about"
Terms
URL slug
— the custom word/phrase at the end of a URL that identifies the specific page, e.g., gumroad.com/l/faceless-viral-guide
Keyword research for titles: use Etsy's autocomplete search barNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 7:15▶ Watch

Keyword research for titles: use Etsy's autocomplete search bar

To find the right keywords for product titles and descriptions:

  1. Type your product into the Etsy search bar.
  2. Look at the autocomplete suggested searches — these are what real buyers are typing.
  3. These are called "long-tail keywords."
  4. Integrate the most relevant long-tail keywords into your product title AND description. Warning: if you don't use relevant keywords, your listing will not rank in search and you will not get sales.
"If you don't use relevant keywords your product is not going to rank in search."
Terms
long-tail keyword
— a specific multi-word search phrase (e.g., "wedding planner printable A4 minimalist") that has less competition and attracts buyers who know exactly what they want
autocomplete
— the dropdown suggestions Etsy shows when you start typing in the search bar — based on real searches by real buyers
Days 16–30 — List a new product every 3 days to boost algorithm rankingNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 8:54▶ Watch

Days 16–30 — List a new product every 3 days to boost algorithm ranking

The core algorithm hack from day 16 to day 30: publish a new product at minimum every 3 days. This signals to the Etsy algorithm that you are an active seller. Etsy rewards active sellers with higher search placement because active sellers = better customer experience = customers more likely to return to Etsy. Pre-built inventory from weeks 1–2 makes this pace achievable — draft products are ready to publish on schedule.

"The secret sauce to making sure that your Etsy listings get pushed up in the Etsy algorithm is to post a new product at least every 3 days."
Terms
algorithm
— Etsy's automated system that decides which listings to show first in search results based on factors like relevancy, recency, seller activity, and conversion rate
active seller signal
— the pattern of regular listing activity that Etsy's algorithm interprets as a reliable, engaged seller
Mockups and fonts must look like a current brand, not a 2019 templateWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 9:18▶ Watch

Mockups and fonts must look like a current brand, not a 2019 template

Shops that struggle often have mockups and fonts that haven't been updated since 2019–2021. Signs of outdated shops: mockups look like a template, not a brand; fonts haven't changed in years. The fix: update and replace fonts every year. Ensure mockups look like a current brand's imagery, not a static template from years past. Etsy's visual environment evolves — sellers' visual identity must evolve with it or listings look outdated and get passed over.

"your mock-ups matter. Your fonts also matter. You should be updating and replacing fonts every year"
Terms
Mockup
— a composite image showing your product on a model, in a lifestyle setting, or on a device — used as the listing photo
Flatlay
— a photo of products laid flat on a surface, photographed from above — less effective than on-model mockups
Listing thumbnail is the #1 factor for earning the clickBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 25:05▶ Watch

Listing thumbnail is the #1 factor for earning the click

To create thumbnail strategy:

  1. Go to Profit Tree listing tracker folder (e.g., "Google Sheets digital downloads").
  2. Zoom into the cover images of top competitors.
  3. Observe that top-performing listings use "comfort color muted tones" (earthy, neutral palettes).
  4. Consider testing a brighter-tone thumbnail as a differentiator.
  5. Create 3–4 different thumbnail variations (different colors, fonts, layouts) for the same product.
  6. Launch as separate listings and split test to find the winner.
"This thumbnail image is going to make or break whether or not you earn the click or not."
Terms
muted tones
— low-saturation, soft colors (beige, sage, dusty pink) common in lifestyle/aesthetic Etsy products
thumbnail
— the main product image displayed in Etsy search results
Listing photos: 10 types, product fills 80% of frame, on-model beats flatlayStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 3:52▶ Watch

Listing photos: 10 types, product fills 80% of frame, on-model beats flatlay

Photo strategy for each listing:

  1. Have 10 different types of listing photos per listing to maximize conversion.
  2. Product should fill at least 80% of the square in each photo.
  3. Use bright, crisp photos — natural lighting near a window is best.
  4. No props needed.
  5. Mockups are fine; on-model typically outperforms flatlays.
  6. Real-person mockups vs. AI mockups — use a mix, or lean toward real-person.
  7. Include a video in addition to photos.
  8. Etsy's own platform has up-to-date, trendy mockup resources.
"product itself is taking up at least 80% of the square footage on that listing photo"
Terms
Flatlay
— an overhead photo of products arranged on a flat surface — lower conversion than on-model shots
On-model mockup
— a photo or composite image showing the product worn/held/used by a real person or photorealistic model
Listing creation: publish SEO-ready listings only; never publish unoptimized onesStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 4:55▶ Watch

Listing creation: publish SEO-ready listings only; never publish unoptimized ones

Critical rookie mistake: filling the shop with listings that aren't SEO-optimized, then facing a mountain of work to redo them. Correct order:

  1. Write title with perfect SEO first.
  2. Upload all 10+ photos plus video.
  3. Write description answering all buyer questions.
  4. Add personalization text box if applicable.
  5. Set pricing and quantities (set quantity as high as possible — signals revenue potential to Etsy's algorithm).
  6. Add variations for pricing options.
  7. Select appropriate category (very important) and attributes (less critical).
  8. Fill all 13 tags; keep consistent with SEO keywords; also use materials field for keywords.
"whatever you do do not publish listings that are not ready to go"
Terms
Tags
— Etsy's 13 keyword slots per listing used for search matching — all 13 should be filled
Variations
— options within a single listing (e.g., size, color, personalization) — use them to affect pricing when relevant
Materials field
— a secondary keyword field in Etsy listings that feeds search — don't leave blank
Chapter 10

Pricing & Profit

What to charge, how to bundle, and what you really keep
27 points

The Pain

You have no idea what to charge. Price too low and you leave money on the table (and look cheap); too high and nobody buys. And after Etsy's fees, you're not sure anything's left.

The Relief

Price on VALUE, not effort. Check what proven sellers charge and sit in that range. Use bundles and tiered offers to raise the average order. Remember the fee math: on a $10 sale Etsy keeps roughly $1.20-$1.50 (so you net ~$8.50+); digital margins are still excellent because there's no cost of goods. Running a near-permanent 'sale' (e.g. list at $12, 'on sale' for $8) is a common psychological tactic. Don't race to the bottom - low prices attract low-quality buyers and signal low value.

Mental Picture

Pricing is like seating in a theatre. The cheapest seats (race-to-the-bottom) fill with the rowdiest crowd and barely cover costs. Mid and premium seats (value pricing + bundles) bring the audience that respects the show and pays more. You're choosing which audience your price invites.

Plain-English Glossary

Value-based pricing
Setting price by the outcome/benefit to the buyer, not the hours it took you.
Perceived value
How valuable the product LOOKS (via design, bundle size, presentation) before purchase.
Bundle / upsell
Combining products or offering a bigger package to increase the order total.
Cost of goods (COGS)
The per-unit cost to deliver a product - near $0 for digital, which is why margins are high.
Coupon / sale
A discount (often near-permanent) used to trigger urgency and the "deal" feeling.
listed price
the original full price shown crossed out in Etsy
sale price
the discounted price buyers actually pay during a sale event
average order value (AOV)
the average dollar amount a buyer spends per transaction; raising it via bundles increases revenue without needing more customers
bundle
multiple related digital files sold together as one listing at a slightly higher combined price
flywheel effect
a growth loop where early sales generate reviews and algorithm signals, which attract more buyers, accelerating growth
loss leader
a product priced at break-even or minimal profit to attract buyers into your shop, then upsell them to higher-margin products
upsell
encouraging a customer to buy a more expensive version or add-on
downsell
offering a cheaper alternative to a customer who may not buy the premium item
COGS
Cost of Goods Sold — the total direct cost to make or procure a product, including materials, labor, and inbound shipping
SKU
Stock-Keeping Unit — a short internal code that uniquely identifies one specific product variant (e.g., color, size, material combination)
cash basis accounting
recording expenses when cash leaves, regardless of when goods are sold — can distort monthly profit figures for inventory businesses
operating profit
profit after all operating costs but before discretionary marketing/ad spend
pre-marketing profit %
what percentage of revenue remains as profit before factoring in ad costs
Profit Tree
a paid third-party analytics tool for Etsy sellers that calculates real profit after all fees, costs, and ads
ROAS
Return On Ad Spend — revenue from ads divided by ad cost
SKU attribute
one component of a SKU code (e.g., color, size, material) — chosen based on what product dimensions you want to track
listing report
Profit Tree view aggregating all variation sales within a single Etsy listing
product report
Profit Tree view showing sales/profit of each individual SKU across all listings it appears in
buyer psychology
how pricing perception affects a buyer's judgment of quality and willingness to purchase
product ladder
a range of products at different price points within one niche, designed so customers enter at a low price and can upgrade to higher-priced items
average order value
the mean dollar amount spent per customer transaction
price anchoring
a pricing strategy where a high-priced item makes lower-priced items feel more reasonable by comparison
variant
a version of a product (different size, color, or option) listed under the same listing
listing
a single product page on Etsy
free shipping threshold
minimum order amount a buyer must spend to get free shipping (e.g., "free shipping on orders over $35")
E-Rank
a third-party Etsy analytics tool at e-rank.com
profit margin
what percentage of the sale price you keep as profit after subtracting costs
race to the bottom
when sellers keep lowering prices to beat each other until no one is profitable
undercutting
pricing your product slightly cheaper than competitors to steal their customers
Pay-to-play
a system where you must spend on ads to get visibility, with organic reach being very limited
Advanced Shipping Services
a hidden Etsy setting under shipping profile setup; lets you designate Ground as the free-shipping method so faster shipping options remain paid
Shipping profile
a saved shipping configuration in Etsy that can be reused across multiple listings — do not create new settings for each product
Pricing a new listing with no reviews: match market midpointNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 57:40▶ Watch

Pricing a new listing with no reviews: match market midpoint

For the sorority resume template, competitor prices ranged from $3 to $20 (with some at $8, $11, $15). Creator chose $10 because:

  1. It is near the market midpoint.
  2. A new shop has no reviews, so charging the top price is risky.
  3. Price can always be raised later as reviews accumulate. Key principle: do not undercut to $3 just to get sales — pick a price that reflects value while acknowledging newness of the shop.
"I don't have any reviews so I just put ten dollars — you can always go back and change the price later."
Price-match top competitor, then run immediate sale at launchTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 36:19▶ Watch

Price-match top competitor, then run immediate sale at launch

Simple pricing strategy for new listings:

  1. Find the best-selling competitor in Profit Tree.
  2. Note their listed price and their current sale price. Example observed: best-seller listed at $7.40, running a 55% off sale = effective price of $3.33.
  3. Set your listing price to match the competitor's full listed price ($7.40).
  4. Immediately run a sale at the same discount percentage when you publish. Result: your effective price is competitive ($3.33) while your listed/crossed-out price ($7.40) signals perceived value to shoppers. Set digital product quantity to 999 (near-maximum) to avoid having to constantly update stock.
"I'm going to list my listing at 740. And then whenever I go to publish this listing, I will immediately run a sale."
Terms
listed price
— the original full price shown crossed out in Etsy
sale price
— the discounted price buyers actually pay during a sale event
Digital download pricing — lower price points, use bundles to raise AOVQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:01:50▶ Watch

Digital download pricing — lower price points, use bundles to raise AOV

Digital downloads are typically priced lower than physical or POD products. To increase average order value (AOV), sell bundles (e.g., multiple planners packaged together). Example: a seasonal bucket list bundle sells well throughout the year. Bundles are the primary lever for raising revenue per transaction in the digital download model.

"There are some hacks to increase order value, like selling bundles."
Terms
average order value (AOV)
— the average dollar amount a buyer spends per transaction; raising it via bundles increases revenue without needing more customers
bundle
— multiple related digital files sold together as one listing at a slightly higher combined price
Pricing reality — $3 to $22 bundles; avoid under $2Q4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:28:03▶ Watch

Pricing reality — $3 to $22 bundles; avoid under $2

Printable prices range from $3 (simple single file) to $22 (bundles). High-volume model: 400 sales × $3 = meaningful profit given near-zero production cost. Instructor recommends pricing at $3 minimum; dislikes under-$2 printables (can boost raw sale count for flywheel effect, but margins are too thin). Recommended starter goal: $1,000/month = $30/day = either 10 × $3 printables or 2 × $15 printables sold per day.

Terms
flywheel effect
— a growth loop where early sales generate reviews and algorithm signals, which attract more buyers, accelerating growth
How to choose price — use competitor data range, not gut feelQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:49:11▶ Watch

How to choose price — use competitor data range, not gut feel

Pricing method:

  1. Look at Profitry data for top-performing listings in your niche.
  2. Identify the cheapest and most expensive top sellers.
  3. Price within that proven range. If both cheap and mid-tier prices appear among top sellers, you have flexibility — you do not need to be the cheapest. Price competitiveness matters less than imagery and product quality.
Always have tiered upsells and downsells in every listingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:45:25▶ Watch

Always have tiered upsells and downsells in every listing

Structure product pricing with a low-price entry point AND higher-priced options in the same listing. Etsy displays the cheapest variation price in search results — this is the hook. Once inside the listing, offer the full-set/bundle option for the upsell. Strategy for high-ticket sellers: add a lower-ticket variation to bring in more buyers, then upsell the premium product. Strategy for low-ticket sellers: add a premium tier so buyers can upgrade. Example used: listing shows $15 for one item; inside listing, all variations available individually plus a full-set option up to $450. Showing multiple products in the main image historically performs better.

"always have a tier of upsells"
Terms
loss leader
— a product priced at break-even or minimal profit to attract buyers into your shop, then upsell them to higher-margin products
upsell
— encouraging a customer to buy a more expensive version or add-on
downsell
— offering a cheaper alternative to a customer who may not buy the premium item
Bonus module 3: build a trackable business from day oneQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:39:53▶ Watch

Bonus module 3: build a trackable business from day one

A "trackable business" means: at the end of each month, you know exactly what you sold and how much profit each product generated. It is very hard to backtrack this later when you have hundreds of listings and thousands of variations. Set up tracking from the start. The three things to prioritize from day one:

  1. SKU system.
  2. Cost of goods sold (COGS) per product.
  3. Business breakdown (gross sales minus COGS, Etsy fees, ads, shipping = true profit).
"90% of Etsy shop owners fly blind — they rely solely on revenue, clicks, and favorites to guide decisions."
Terms
COGS
— Cost of Goods Sold — the total direct cost to make or procure a product, including materials, labor, and inbound shipping
SKU definition and what it enablesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:43:00▶ Watch

SKU definition and what it enables

A SKU (stock-keeping unit) is a unique internal code assigned to every distinct product variation. It allows you to:

  1. Identify exactly what sold without reading titles or looking at images.
  2. Track cost of goods sold per variation.
  3. Consolidate sales of the same physical item across multiple listings.
  4. See profit by variation, not just by listing. Without SKUs, you cannot know whether different price-point variations are individually profitable. Even POD sellers should carry over the Printify/Printful SKU into their Etsy listings.
"A SKU identifies your product. Even if you didn't look at an image, a title, or a description, your SKU should tell you exactly what it is."
Terms
SKU
— Stock-Keeping Unit — a short internal code that uniquely identifies one specific product variant (e.g., color, size, material combination)
Cost of goods sold (COGS): what to includeQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:45:00▶ Watch

Cost of goods sold (COGS): what to include

COGS = product cost = all direct costs to make/procure one unit: materials, labor, inbound shipping of raw materials to your location. Do NOT expense all inventory purchases in the month you buy them (cash basis error). Instead, associate each order with the cost to fulfill that specific order. This gives a true monthly profit figure. Common mistake: spending $1,000 on inventory and $1,000 in sales, concluding "I made $0" — incorrect because that inventory will generate future revenue.

Terms
cash basis accounting
— recording expenses when cash leaves, regardless of when goods are sold — can distort monthly profit figures for inventory businesses
Business breakdown: know your pre-marketing profit % before running adsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:47:58▶ Watch

Business breakdown: know your pre-marketing profit % before running ads

Full business breakdown: Gross sales − COGS − Etsy transaction fee (6.5%) − listing fees ($0.20) − payment processing fees − shipping costs − discounts/refunds = Operating profit (pre-marketing). This pre-marketing profit % is your "room to play" for ad spend. Large companies allocate up to 20% of sales price to marketing. If your pre-marketing profit margin is only 10%, there is almost no room for ads without going unprofitable. The example shown had a 34% operating profit; if ads hit 40–50% of revenue, profit would be wiped out.

"Your marketing cost can make or break an Etsy shop."
Terms
operating profit
— profit after all operating costs but before discretionary marketing/ad spend
pre-marketing profit %
— what percentage of revenue remains as profit before factoring in ad costs
Well-run Etsy ads should double or triple profit for healthy shopsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:49:37▶ Watch

Well-run Etsy ads should double or triple profit for healthy shops

A dialed-in Etsy shop with good products already performing organically should, at worst, double or triple its profit when Etsy ads are properly activated. Most people turn ads off within days because they cannot interpret their shop data. The lack of profit tracking (not the ads themselves) is the root cause of ads feeling uncomfortable and unprofitable.

"A really dialed-in Etsy shop…would at very worst double or triple profit when they have Etsy ads on."
Profit Tree: first real-time profit tracking tool for Etsy sellersQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:57:01▶ Watch

Profit Tree: first real-time profit tracking tool for Etsy sellers

Profit Tree is a third-party dashboard that connects to your Etsy shop and shows: transaction fees, payment processing fees, shipping costs, ad costs, COGS, profit, profit %, ROAS, and average order value — all compared to the previous time period. Listing report shows profit by individual listing. Product report shows profit by SKU across all listings. Free one-month trial included with the course. For POD sellers: one-click integration with Printify or Printful to auto-import COGS.

Terms
Profit Tree
— a paid third-party analytics tool for Etsy sellers that calculates real profit after all fees, costs, and ads
ROAS
— Return On Ad Spend — revenue from ads divided by ad cost
SKU system: build a meaningful code from product attributesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:58:06▶ Watch

SKU system: build a meaningful code from product attributes

A SKU is built from concatenated attributes unique to that product. Example for jewelry: material (Gold/Silver) + product type (Earring) + style (Hoop) + size (1in) + detail (2mm) → "GLD-EAR-HOP-1IN-2MM". Attributes should be the specific characteristics you want to track in your business (e.g., color, size, material). Course includes a free SKU generator tool and training. POD sellers: publish the Printify/Printful SKU directly into Etsy listing fields.

Terms
SKU attribute
— one component of a SKU code (e.g., color, size, material) — chosen based on what product dimensions you want to track
Third-party platforms show you data that "feels good" — use independent trackingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 5:00:21▶ Watch

Third-party platforms show you data that "feels good" — use independent tracking

Etsy's own stats are designed to show sellers favorable data. The same is true for Amazon, Wayfair, and other marketplaces. Always track profit independently (e.g., via Profit Tree) rather than relying solely on the platform's built-in analytics, because the platform's goal is to keep you selling on their platform, not to show you your true profitability.

"They're going to give you your stats in a way that makes it feel really good, and they're going to manipulate the data."
Profit Tree listing vs. product report: different rankings reveal hidden insightsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 5:03:48▶ Watch

Profit Tree listing vs. product report: different rankings reveal hidden insights

In Profit Tree:

  1. Listing report — ranks listings by profit. A listing in revenue position #4 may be in profit position #3 because it has lower fees.
  2. Product report — ranks individual SKUs by profit across all listings. Sometimes 3 individual items each outsell a "bundle" because bundles have higher COGS. Use product-level data to decide which individual SKUs to bundle next and which to feature in main images.
Terms
listing report
— Profit Tree view aggregating all variation sales within a single Etsy listing
product report
— Profit Tree view showing sales/profit of each individual SKU across all listings it appears in
Pricing strategy — benchmark competitors and compete on value not priceYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 32:00▶ Watch

Pricing strategy — benchmark competitors and compete on value not price

Starting point: search your product on Etsy, look at top-performing listings, note their prices AND what's included. If your product offers similar value, price in the same range. If you include less, price slightly lower; if you include more, price slightly higher. Avoid pricing too low for two reasons:

  1. Low price per sale makes meaningful income very hard to achieve.
  2. Buyer psychology: low price signals low quality — buyers assume the product is cheaper in quality too. Higher prices feel more premium. Strategy: make the product worth the price (strong designs, high-quality photos, good content) and price to reflect value, not just to beat competitors.
"I believe in competing on value. When something is priced very low, people often assume it's lower quality, even if that's not actually true."
Terms
buyer psychology
— how pricing perception affects a buyer's judgment of quality and willingness to purchase
Use a product ladder: low-, mid-, and high-ticket items within one nicheHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 14:15▶ Watch

Use a product ladder: low-, mid-, and high-ticket items within one niche

Within the same niche, build a "product ladder" with three tiers:

  1. Low-ticket products (e.g., $2–3 PNGs / clip art).
  2. Mid-ticket products.
  3. High-ticket products. Purpose: increase average order value, encourage repeat purchases, and build toward full-time income. Selling only $2–3 listings will never generate a full-time income. Low-ticket items serve as the entry point that leads customers up to higher-value products.
"You're not going to get very far if you're only ever selling two or three dollar PNGs."
Terms
product ladder
— a range of products at different price points within one niche, designed so customers enter at a low price and can upgrade to higher-priced items
average order value
— the mean dollar amount spent per customer transaction
Price anchoring: use multiple price points to lift average order valuePatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 0:50▶ Watch

Price anchoring: use multiple price points to lift average order value

Successful shops show varying prices within the same shop (e.g., $3, $4, $11, $14). Reason 1: different buyers want different scopes (full bundle vs. single item). Reason 2: more listings = more keyword variety = broader search reach. Reason 3: price anchoring. Example A (2 items): $10 and $30 — buyer sees $30 as expensive, picks $10. Example B (3 items): $10, $30, and $60 — the $60 becomes the anchor; the $30 now looks like the reasonable middle option and more buyers choose it, increasing average order value.

"That $60 listing will become your price anchoring product — not everyone is going to buy that $60 product, however a lot of people will see that as the expensive item and you'll look at the $30 item as the middle average price point."
Terms
price anchoring
— a pricing strategy where a high-priced item makes lower-priced items feel more reasonable by comparison
average order value
— the mean amount a customer spends per purchase
93 of 100 top shops run a permanent sale of 25%+100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 0:55▶ Watch

93 of 100 top shops run a permanent sale of 25%+

Strategy 1: Running a sale, usually 25% or more. Of 100 shops studied: 93 were running a sale; 84 had a sale of 25% off or higher; 78 applied the sale to their entire shop. Sale percentages ranged from 10% to 75% with a median of 38.5%. Based on Etsy's May 2023 analysis, sellers offering at least 25% off received more orders during their sale period.

"93 of them were running a sale with 84 of them having a sale of 25% off or higher."
59% of top shops show a low-priced variant to appear cheap in search100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 3:07▶ Watch

59% of top shops show a low-priced variant to appear cheap in search

Strategy 2a (pricing): 59 of 100 top shops had a strategically lower-priced product as their most sold item to appear cheaper in search results. Examples: (1) shirt shows $11.65 in search but real price is ~$20 — the $11.65 is for a rarely-sold color/size variant; (2) shirt shows $7.33 but that is for a 3–6 month onesie, actual shirt is $15; (3) sweatshirt shows $5.72 but that is for a back-print-only option; (4) socks show $4.99 but that is for a blank pair with no custom face; (5) custom embroidered sweatshirt shows $27.99 but that is digital-file-only, actual embroidered sweatshirt costs $71–$91.

"The shops are being very strategic on how they're building out their listing in order to show up cheaper in search results."
Terms
variant
— a version of a product (different size, color, or option) listed under the same listing
listing
— a single product page on Etsy
81% of 100k-sales shops charge for shipping; 67% keep it under $6100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 6:58▶ Watch

81% of 100k-sales shops charge for shipping; 67% keep it under $6

Of 100 shops studied: 19% offered free shipping; 81% charged for shipping. Shipping charges ranged from $3.55 to $11.33 with a median of $5.70. 67% charged less than $6 (qualifying for Etsy's prioritized search). 54% offered free shipping over a $35 order threshold to incentivize larger purchases. Top 5 Etsy clothing sellers (found via E-Rank) all charged for shipping under $6 on their top-performing listings and all had the free-shipping-over-$35 guarantee enabled.

"81% of the shops were charging for shipping with 67% of them charging less than $6."
Terms
free shipping threshold
— minimum order amount a buyer must spend to get free shipping (e.g., "free shipping on orders over $35")
E-Rank
— a third-party Etsy analytics tool at e-rank.com
High profit margin enables reinvestment; low margin = constant treadmill90-day new shop case study⏱ 4:07▶ Watch

High profit margin enables reinvestment; low margin = constant treadmill

Low-margin businesses must constantly keep costs low and operations efficient, leaving no room for experimentation or risk. High-margin businesses can include bonuses, promos, experiment with new product lines, and go above and beyond for customers. Digital products have near-100% margins (no cost of goods per unit), allowing more creative flexibility. Contrast: sticker pack costs $1–$2 to make, sells for $15–$20. Digital products have even better margins.

"running a business selling products with a low profit margin can feel like you're constantly Treading Water"
Terms
profit margin
— what percentage of the sale price you keep as profit after subtracting costs
Price a 6-page PDF at $29.99 — value is in the solution, not lengthCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 22:40▶ Watch

Price a 6-page PDF at $29.99 — value is in the solution, not length

Creator priced a 6-page PDF at $29.99. Reasoning: if the product solves the problem (finding viral content ideas), it's worth it regardless of page count. Said he "wouldn't be scared" of pricing up to $67–$97. Price is subjective — charge based on the value of the problem solved, not the physical size of the product.

"If you can solve the problem of finding the viral content just by buying this ebook for 30 bucks, is it worth it? For me, 100%"
Terms
price anchoring
— setting a high "original" price so that the actual selling price feels like a bargain
Create two pricing tiers on Gumroad: ebook + coaching upsellCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 27:08▶ Watch

Create two pricing tiers on Gumroad: ebook + coaching upsell

On Gumroad, create two product variations within the same listing:

  1. Base tier — the ebook alone at $29.99.
  2. Premium tier — ebook + coaching/bonus at $497–$499.90. This allows buyers to self-select into a higher-priced offer. If you offer coaching or consulting, the premium tier captures that revenue automatically from the same sales page without extra marketing.
"You can create two different variations so this one could be the faceless viral blueprint... and then you can add second version what is going to be viral faceless viral coaching plus blueprint"
Terms
upsell
— offering a more expensive product/service alongside the main product to increase revenue per customer; pricing tier :: different versions of a product at different price points
Never compete on price — add more value insteadNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 3:34▶ Watch

Never compete on price — add more value instead

Undercutting competitors by $1–$2 is a "race to the bottom" that actually hurts sales because buyers assume lower price = lower quality. Example: if a competitor sells 25 Canva Instagram templates for $8, don't sell 25 for $5 — instead sell 30 templates for $8 or 50 templates for $10. Always match or beat competitors on quantity/value, not on price. Speaker tested undercutting and it reduced her sales.

"Doing this is a race to the bottom and when I've tried to do this it actually hurt my sales."
Terms
race to the bottom
— when sellers keep lowering prices to beat each other until no one is profitable
undercutting
— pricing your product slightly cheaper than competitors to steal their customers
Etsy's fee/pricing friction was a deal-breaker; moved to direct sales$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 2:40▶ Watch

Etsy's fee/pricing friction was a deal-breaker; moved to direct sales

The speaker previously sold handmade earrings on Etsy and chose NOT to use Etsy for digital products due to: listing fees, "race to the bottom" pricing pressure, and the pay-to-play model (needing ads to stand out). For ebooks with high perceived value, a direct sales model (own checkout page) preserved margins and pricing power. This is a deliberate platform choice for the ebook niche.

"I absolutely hated the listing fees, the race to the bottom pricing, and the pay-to-play model to stand out in the crowd"
Terms
Race to the bottom
— when many competing sellers keep lowering prices to undercut each other, driving margins toward zero
Pay-to-play
— a system where you must spend on ads to get visibility, with organic reach being very limited
Pricing: start humble; build in free shipping rather than threshold of $35Start on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 7:55▶ Watch

Pricing: start humble; build in free shipping rather than threshold of $35

Pricing rules for new sellers:

  1. Include costs (materials, time, shipping) in your pricing calculation.
  2. Don't overprice as a brand-new shop with zero reviews.
  3. If offering free shipping, build the cost into the item price — don't rely on the "free shipping over $35" threshold.
  4. Instead, use shipping profiles with "Advanced Shipping Services" → select Ground shipping — this means free-shipping customers get the slowest/cheapest option (Ground), but if they want priority they pay full shipping. This setting is hidden under Advanced Shipping options.
  5. Recommend free domestic shipping only; avoid free international shipping when starting — risk of losing money.
"I actually don't recommend doing the free shipping over $35 I recommend just choosing either free shipping or not"
Terms
Advanced Shipping Services
— a hidden Etsy setting under shipping profile setup; lets you designate Ground as the free-shipping method so faster shipping options remain paid
Shipping profile
— a saved shipping configuration in Etsy that can be reused across multiple listings — do not create new settings for each product
Chapter 11

Launch & The First 90 Days

Getting the first sales, first reviews, and early momentum
19 points

The Pain

Your shop is live but it feels like shouting into a void. No sales, no reviews, no proof anyone will ever buy. The first 90 days are where most people lose faith and quit.

The Relief

Early momentum is engineered. Launch with several listings (not one) so you have multiple search entries. Etsy often gives new listings a temporary visibility boost - use it by listing steadily. Get your first reviews fast (deliver value, encourage feedback within policy). Track what gets views vs sales and double down. Expect a slow ramp: a few visits, then a trickle of sales, then compounding. The 90-day case studies in Chapter 16 show the realistic curve.

Mental Picture

Push-starting a car on a hill. The first few metres are all effort and no engine - you're shoving (manual listing, first reviews). Then the engine catches (the algorithm starts trusting you), and momentum carries it. Most quitters let go of the bumper right before it catches.

Plain-English Glossary

Launch
Publishing your first batch of listings and opening the shop to buyers.
New listing boost
A temporary search visibility bump Etsy often gives freshly published listings.
First review
Your shop's first public rating - critical social proof that unlocks more sales.
Momentum / compounding
Early sales and reviews feed the algorithm, which sends more traffic, which makes more sales.
Traction
Early evidence (views, favorites, first sales) that the shop is starting to work.
Etsy sale
a time-limited discount applied to one or more listings; displays a green badge in search results when ending soon
abandoned cart
when a shopper adds items to their Etsy cart but does not complete the purchase; Etsy can automatically send a discount code to recover the sale
favorited item
when a buyer clicks the heart icon on a listing to save it; Etsy can send a promo code to these shoppers
visibility boost
a temporary period when Etsy's algorithm shows new shops more prominently in search results
listing cover photos
the product images buyers see while browsing (not the actual digital file delivered)
draft
a completed but unpublished Etsy listing saved in your account, ready to publish at any time
listing seasoning
informal term for the process of a new Etsy listing accumulating engagement signals (clicks, saves, sales) that improve its algorithm rank over time
KPI
Key Performance Indicator — a measurable metric used to track progress toward a goal
cost of goods sold (COGS)
the direct cost of producing or acquiring the product you sell, used to calculate profit margin
Etsy Stats
the analytics section of Shop Manager showing views, favorites, traffic sources, and sales performance per listing
pre-launch
before you have published any listings — still in setup/creation phase
ideal customer
the specific type of person most likely to buy your products — think of one real person with specific needs, age, lifestyle
listing cover
the main image buyers see when browsing Etsy search results — equivalent to a product photo; determines whether someone clicks your listing
inventory
here used metaphorically — the set of digital products you have created and ready to publish
stats
Etsy's analytics dashboard showing views, visits, conversion rate, and revenue for your shop and individual listings
conversion
when a shopper who clicked on a listing actually makes a purchase
waitlist
a list of people waiting to hire you because you are fully booked; referrals :: new clients sent to you by existing satisfied clients
iterate
to improve your product step-by-step based on real feedback rather than one big perfect launch
Customer-first approach
a product strategy where you identify your target buyer's consistent needs before creating or selecting products
Vintage
items at least 20 years old, a specific Etsy category
Organic traffic
visitors who find your listing through unpaid Etsy search or external social media — free, but takes time
Etsy ads
paid advertising within Etsy's platform; bids on keywords to show your listing at the top of search results
Review rate
the percentage of buyers who leave a review; 25% is the minimum target
Run a daily sale to add urgency badge and stand out in searchNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 1:02:10▶ Watch

Run a daily sale to add urgency badge and stand out in search

Strategy: create a sale every single day (even 10–15% off). Etsy displays a green "sale ends in X hours" badge on listings in search results when a sale is active and ending soon (within ~12–24 hours). This badge makes listings more eye-catching among non-sale listings that show in plain black text. Creator runs this on both shops. Setup: create 30 separate daily sales at the start of each month (takes ~10 minutes). Discount amounts used: 10%, 15%, 20%, 30%, sometimes 40%. Reasoning: buyers of $10–$20 products are not monitoring your shop daily for sales; they just see the badge in the moment and it nudges them to click.

"Usually I do like 10, 15, 20 — sometimes I'll do 30 or 40 percent — and then I'll name it like for example it's a sale for July 1st to July 1st."
Terms
Etsy sale
— a time-limited discount applied to one or more listings; displays a green badge in search results when ending soon
Set up abandoned cart, favorited item, and thank-you promo codes at launchNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 1:04:40▶ Watch

Set up abandoned cart, favorited item, and thank-you promo codes at launch

In addition to daily sales, creator configures automated promo codes at shop setup:

  1. Abandoned cart promo code — sent to shoppers who added item to cart but didn't buy.
  2. Favorited item promo code — sent to shoppers who favorited (wishlisted) an item.
  3. Thank-you promo code — sent to buyers after purchase to encourage repeat orders. These are automated by Etsy and require one-time setup in the shop's marketing/promotions section.
"Now I am making abandoned cart promo codes, favorited item, and thank-you promo codes."
Terms
abandoned cart
— when a shopper adds items to their Etsy cart but does not complete the purchase; Etsy can automatically send a discount code to recover the sale
favorited item
— when a buyer clicks the heart icon on a listing to save it; Etsy can send a promo code to these shoppers
Do research + create products BEFORE opening shopTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 1:18▶ Watch

Do research + create products BEFORE opening shop

Do NOT create your Etsy shop as the very first step if your goal is profit. Etsy gives a large visibility boost to new shops in its algorithm, and that boost starts the moment the shop is created and lasts for the first 30 days. If you open the shop before having products ready, you waste this boost. Before opening, complete three things in order:

  1. Do niche/product research and decide exactly what to sell, who to sell to, and how to differentiate.
  2. Create at least 10 high-quality products (including listing cover photos) from start to finish — shoot for 20 if products are quick to make.
  3. Prepare branding minimums: a shop banner and a shop icon/logo.
"Setting up your shop actually shouldn't be your first step."
Terms
visibility boost
— a temporary period when Etsy's algorithm shows new shops more prominently in search results
listing cover photos
— the product images buyers see while browsing (not the actual digital file delivered)
Draft all products first; publish in batch within first 24h of launchTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 39:42▶ Watch

Draft all products first; publish in batch within first 24h of launch

After setting up the first listing, do NOT publish immediately if you have more products ready. Instead:

  1. Draft all remaining inventory products.
  2. Publish the first product.
  3. Immediately publish 2–3 more products alongside it. This gives the shop enough inventory for customers to buy multiple items in one visit. All first-batch products should be published within the first 24 hours of launch because the first 30 days of a new shop carry the highest algorithm visibility boost. Consistent posting throughout that 30-day window is critical.
"I definitely want to get my first batch of products published within the next 24 hours because... your first 30 days after launching are the most crucial for your visibility."
Terms
draft
— a completed but unpublished Etsy listing saved in your account, ready to publish at any time
Green flag #1 — list seasonal products 6–8 weeks earlyQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:22:12▶ Watch

Green flag #1 — list seasonal products 6–8 weeks early

For seasonal/holiday products, list 6–8 weeks before the relevant date to give the listing time to "season" (accumulate clicks, sales, reviews). Exception: some products sell even at the last minute (e.g., Halloween trick-or-treat sign listed the night of Halloween still made a sale). General rule: earlier is safer; early listing = more algorithm momentum before peak demand.

Terms
listing seasoning
— informal term for the process of a new Etsy listing accumulating engagement signals (clicks, saves, sales) that improve its algorithm rank over time
Goal-setting framework using Profitry shop tracker — quarterly breakdownQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:57:03▶ Watch

Goal-setting framework using Profitry shop tracker — quarterly breakdown

Step-by-step goal-setting process using Profitry's shop tracker:

  1. Identify 1–3 true competitor shops (not just any big shop — shops you can realistically emulate and compete with on 80%+ of products).
  2. Note competitor's age, total sales, and total revenue (example: 2-year-old shop, 25,000 sales, $252,000 total revenue ≈ $126,000/year).
  3. Set a conservative Year 1 target (e.g., $70,000).
  4. Estimate profit: Etsy fees ≈ 9.5% off top; if product cost ≈ 40%, profit margin ≈ 50.5%; Year 1 profit on $70K ≈ $35,000 (before marketing).
  5. Break into quarterly: $70K ÷ 4 ≈ $17,500 revenue/quarter; profit/quarter ≈ $8,750.
  6. Set listing target: competitor has 89 listings → your Year 1 goal: 100 listings (≈ 25/quarter).
  7. Set sales target: competitor had 25,000 in 2 years → your Year 1 goal: 10,000 sales.
Terms
KPI
— Key Performance Indicator — a measurable metric used to track progress toward a goal
cost of goods sold (COGS)
— the direct cost of producing or acquiring the product you sell, used to calculate profit margin
Use stats data to spot patterns and double down on what worksYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 42:00▶ Watch

Use stats data to spot patterns and double down on what works

As you add more listings, monitor Etsy Stats to gather real performance data. Watch which products get: more views, more favorites, more sales. Look for patterns — a certain design style, product type, or category that repeatedly performs better. Once those patterns emerge, double down: create more in that category, expand on that style, build variations of the winning product type. Learning which products sell makes future product creation increasingly effective.

"Once you see what's working, that's when you double down. Create more of that product, expand on that style, build variations of it."
Terms
Etsy Stats
— the analytics section of Shop Manager showing views, favorites, traffic sources, and sales performance per listing
First 25–50 high-quality listings is enough to start; quantity is not the goalHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 12:46▶ Watch

First 25–50 high-quality listings is enough to start; quantity is not the goal

You do not need 300 listings in the first few weeks. 50 high-quality listings can be enough to achieve daily sales. Clients have made 500+ sales in the first 1–2 months without a massive catalog. What makes a high-quality listing: a) A product with proven demand. b) High-quality design backed by research. c) Presented with high-quality mockups and infographics. d) Niche-consistent (not random). 10 great + 40 mediocre ≠ 50 high-quality. Every listing must meet the bar.

"50 high-quality listings can be enough on its own to get you daily sales coming in."
Launch imperfect product immediately — improve after first saleCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 19:15▶ Watch

Launch imperfect product immediately — improve after first sale

Critical mindset for launch: do NOT wait until the product is perfect. Get it live and selling as fast as possible. After the first sale, take a 24-hour pause and then improve it. Waiting weeks or months to perfect the product before listing is the most common beginner mistake. The product can always be updated after feedback from real customers.

"Once you make the very first sale, you can just postpone it by 24 hours. You can go back to the ebook and make it the best banger ebook on the planet earth"
Terms
launch
— making a product publicly available for purchase for the first time
30-day plan to hit 100 Etsy sales from zeroNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 0:12▶ Watch

30-day plan to hit 100 Etsy sales from zero

The video presents a structured 30-day strategy targeting 100 Etsy sales for both shops with zero sales and pre-launch shops. The plan is divided into four distinct phases/weeks, each with a specific focus. The core principle: treat your shop like a business, not a hobby.

"I'm going to break down exactly what you need to do step by step day by day to make sure that 30 days from today your Etsy shop has at least 100 sales."
Terms
pre-launch
— before you have published any listings — still in setup/creation phase
Day 1 — Business mindset: treat shop as a business not a hobbyNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 0:50▶ Watch

Day 1 — Business mindset: treat shop as a business not a hobby

The single most consistent separator between successful and unsuccessful Etsy sellers: successful ones treat their shop like a business; unsuccessful ones treat it like a hobby. Day 1 action: write down

  1. what you are selling,
  2. who you are selling it to,
  3. a list of five product ideas your ideal customer would want to buy.
"The one thing that consistently separates successful Etsy sellers from unsuccessful Etsy sellers are that successful Etsy sellers treat their shop like a business."
Terms
ideal customer
— the specific type of person most likely to buy your products — think of one real person with specific needs, age, lifestyle
Days 4–16 (13 days) — Build inventory of 5–15 high-quality productsNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 5:50▶ Watch

Days 4–16 (13 days) — Build inventory of 5–15 high-quality products

For the next 13 days (rest of week 1 + all of week 2), the only focus is creating inventory before listing anything. For a digital product shop, build 5 to 15 high-quality products. Each product must be completed fully:

  1. Create the actual product (high demand, relatively low competition).
  2. Create high-quality, attractive listing cover/thumbnail for each product.
  3. Write the product title using relevant keywords.
  4. Write the product description using relevant keywords. Don't list yet — build the full arsenal first.
"I want you to create each product from start to finish."
Terms
listing cover
— the main image buyers see when browsing Etsy search results — equivalent to a product photo; determines whether someone clicks your listing
inventory
— here used metaphorically — the set of digital products you have created and ready to publish
Day 15 — Launch day: list top 3 products simultaneouslyNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 8:09▶ Watch

Day 15 — Launch day: list top 3 products simultaneously

On day 15 (first day of week 3), list your top 3 products on the same day simultaneously. Reason: listing multiple products at once maximizes the chance that a visitor buys more than one product. After listing, do NOT obsessively check stats — it will only cause anxiety. Expect your first sale to take a few days. Once the first sale comes, momentum builds quickly.

"I want you to list all three of these products on the same day — maximize your chances of people visiting your shop and potentially even purchasing multiple products."
Terms
stats
— Etsy's analytics dashboard showing views, visits, conversion rate, and revenue for your shop and individual listings
Split test 3–4 listing variations per product to find the winning thumbnailBuild products fast with Claude AI⏱ 26:00▶ Watch

Split test 3–4 listing variations per product to find the winning thumbnail

For each digital product built, don't launch just one listing. Launch 3–4 versions of the same product with different thumbnails (different color schemes, fonts, layouts). Run them concurrently to discover which image earns the most clicks and conversions. This applies even within the same niche — e.g., one budget tracker listing with a beige aesthetic, one with a modern blue aesthetic, one with brighter tones.

"I wouldn't just make one listing. I would actually split test that listing three or four times with different images, with different colors, and different fonts to try to see which one is actually going to win."
Terms
conversion
— when a shopper who clicked on a listing actually makes a purchase
Freelancing — start with one client, referrals build a waitlist5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 11:07▶ Watch

Freelancing — start with one client, referrals build a waitlist

You do not need to build an audience or make inventory to start freelancing. You just need one client with a real problem and a skill that solves it. If you do good work, they tell their friends. One good client often turns into three, then five, then referrals come without asking. Eventually you'll have a waitlist and clients do your marketing for you. Also: offer fewer services — specificity makes you more attractive, not less. Offering one thing implies you do it really well.

"One good client often turns into three and then five and then referrals start coming in without you even asking"
Terms
waitlist
— a list of people waiting to hire you because you are fully booked; referrals :: new clients sent to you by existing satisfied clients
Launch fast but with care — intention not perfectionism5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 14:00▶ Watch

Launch fast but with care — intention not perfectionism

Two ideas must be held simultaneously:

  1. Launch before it's perfect — real people interacting gives feedback and data; what you think is good may not align with what customers care about.
  2. Don't launch without care — set a high bar, be intentional, don't release something you know is poor just to make fast money. Ask: "How can I make this genuinely helpful? How can I make this better for the person on the other side?" Iterate from real feedback.
"Launch before it's perfect, but don't launch without care"
Terms
iterate
— to improve your product step-by-step based on real feedback rather than one big perfect launch
Customer-first approach: choose WHO to sell to before deciding WHAT to sellStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 3:36▶ Watch

Customer-first approach: choose WHO to sell to before deciding WHAT to sell

Instead of brainstorming what products to sell, first decide who your customer is. Key filter: choose customers with consistent income so your income becomes consistent. Product selection flows from customer selection, not the other way around. Product categories available on Etsy: handmade items, supplies, print-on-demand (classified as handmade), digital downloads, vintage, or a combination.

"I recommend a customer first product second approach so instead of trying to think of what to sell on Etsy I would decide who you want to sell to"
Terms
Customer-first approach
— a product strategy where you identify your target buyer's consistent needs before creating or selecting products
Vintage
— items at least 20 years old, a specific Etsy category
Traffic sequence: SEO first → organic social → Etsy ads last; max $1–3/dayStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 10:15▶ Watch

Traffic sequence: SEO first → organic social → Etsy ads last; max $1–3/day

Correct traffic-building sequence for new Etsy shops:

  1. SEO first — optimize all listings; results appear within 3–4 weeks of updating SEO.
  2. Organic social media second — drive external traffic to your listings.
  3. Etsy ads third — only after exhausting SEO and organic social. Etsy ads are not available in the first couple weeks after opening. When you do run ads, start at $1/day; max recommended starting budget $2–$3/day. Don't overthink the ad goal setting — speaker has seen no significant difference between goals. Ads can be paused and turned back on at will.
"I recommend starting with SEO first and then organic traffic from social media second I would not even touch Etsy ads until you've completely exhausted these first two"
Terms
Organic traffic
— visitors who find your listing through unpaid Etsy search or external social media — free, but takes time
Etsy ads
— paid advertising within Etsy's platform; bids on keywords to show your listing at the top of search results
Customer service: treat first 100 sales like Four Seasons hotel experienceStart on Etsy the right way (avoid rookie mistakes)⏱ 10:50▶ Watch

Customer service: treat first 100 sales like Four Seasons hotel experience

Once orders come in: deliver Five-Star customer service for every order, especially the first 100. Frame: "pretend you are working for the Four Seasons and you are brand new and you want to impress everyone who walks in the door." Target a review rate of at least 25% (1 in 4 buyers leaves a review). Go above and beyond to get reviews — they are social proof that feeds future sales. Do NOT watch stats daily or weekly; review stats in minimum 3-week (preferably 30-day) windows. First month: active data-collection and customer feedback phase — do not sit and wait.

"we really want to wow them to get amazing reviews go above and beyond especially your first 100 sales"
Terms
Review rate
— the percentage of buyers who leave a review; 25% is the minimum target
Stats
— Etsy's seller dashboard showing visits, views, orders, revenue, conversion rate, etc.
Chapter 12

Marketing & Traffic

Etsy SEO vs Pinterest, social, email and ads - what actually moves sales
48 points

The Pain

Should you spend hours on Pinterest? Run ads? Build an email list? Post on TikTok? Everyone says something different, and you can't afford to waste effort on channels that don't pay off.

The Relief

There are two traffic sources: INSIDE Etsy (SEO - free, highest-intent buyers) and OUTSIDE Etsy (Pinterest, TikTok/Reels, email, offsite ads - extra reach). Master Etsy SEO first; it's where ready-to-buy shoppers already are. External channels are amplifiers, not foundations - some six-figure sellers do almost none. Pinterest suits visual products and compounds slowly; an email list lets you sell again to past buyers; offsite ads are automatic but cost 12-15%. Pick one external channel that fits your product and ignore the noise.

Mental Picture

Etsy SEO is fishing in a stocked pond where the fish are already hungry. External marketing is casting nets in the open ocean - bigger water, but most casts come up empty. Beginners drown trying to fish the ocean before they've emptied the pond.

Plain-English Glossary

Etsy SEO (internal traffic)
Free traffic from Etsy's own search - the highest-intent, do-this-first channel.
External traffic
Visitors you bring from outside (Pinterest, TikTok, email) to your Etsy listings.
Pinterest
A visual search engine where pins can drive long-term traffic to product listings.
Email list
Contacts you own and can market to repeatedly - the most durable marketing asset.
Offsite Ads
Etsy-run ads on Google/social; pay only on resulting sales (12-15%).
Etsy Ads (onsite)
Paid promotion inside Etsy search where you set a daily budget and pay per click.
outcome-based marketing
framing a product by the result the buyer wants, not the features the product has
customer retention
keeping existing buyers coming back vs. constantly finding new ones
PPC (pay-per-click)
an ad billing model where you are charged only when someone clicks your ad, not when it is merely shown (impressions)
purchase intent
the state of mind where a shopper is actively looking to buy, not just browsing for inspiration
daily ad budget
the maximum amount you are willing to spend per day on Etsy ads; Etsy will not exceed this but will typically spend less
outbid
in PPC ad auctions, paying a higher cost-per-click than competitors so your listing appears above theirs
retargeting
showing ads specifically to people who have already visited your shop or clicked your listing — lower cost because these audiences are already warm
transaction fee
Etsy's 6.5% cut of every sale price (including shipping charged to buyer)
CPA (cost per acquisition)
the total ad dollars spent to get one sale; the lower the CPA relative to sale price, the more profitable the ads
ROAS (return on ad spend)
revenue generated for every dollar spent on ads; e.g., ROAS of 3 = $3 revenue per $1 ad spend
TACOs
Total Advertising Cost of Sale; ad spend divided by total revenue from all sources attributed to that listing, organic included — the true measure of ad profitability
ROAS
Return on Ad Spend; the metric Etsy's marketing tab shows, which is misleading because it excludes organic revenue
attribution window
the time period after an ad click during which purchases are credited to that ad
marketing tab
the "Marketing" section in Etsy Seller Hub where you manage and analyze your Etsy ads; its revenue figure is ad-attributed only, not total store revenue
locked-in TACOs
a stable, consistent ad cost percentage reached after enough data has accumulated (typically several months of spending); it's the baseline you can confidently scale from
downward trending
a listing whose sales volume is consistently declining compared to the same period in the prior year
listing lifespan
the period during which a listing remains competitive and generates profitable sales; varies by niche and trend cycles
threshold of uncomfortability
the ad spend amount at which you personally have collected enough data to make a keep/kill decision on a listing — varies per seller and sale price
organic sale
a purchase made without any paid promotion; driven entirely by Etsy search ranking
impressions
the number of times your listing appeared in search results (shown to buyers), whether or not they clicked
CTR (click-through rate)
impressions that resulted in a click, expressed as a percentage; indicates how compelling your thumbnail is
print-on-demand (POD)
fulfillment model with higher base product costs and typically 15–30% profit margins, leaving less room for ad spend
digital download
a product with near-zero product cost (just creation time), enabling high profit margins that can absorb higher ad cost percentages
business moat
a durable competitive advantage that makes it hard for competitors to displace you; in Etsy context, built by accumulating reviews, sales history, SEO indexing, and ad data
algorithm filtering
the organic process by which Etsy's algorithm decides which of your listings to promote based on quality signals
biomarkers
measurable health indicators for a business (borrowed from medicine)
value proposition
the bundle of benefits that makes a buyer choose your product over a competitor's
micro-commitment
a small action taken by a customer that deepens their psychological attachment to a brand
product insert
a physical card placed inside a shipped package with a CTA and offer
POD
Print on Demand — printing and shipping handled by a third-party provider (e.g., Printify, Printful)
UGC
User Generated Content — photos or videos created by customers featuring your product
micro-influencer
a social media account with a small but engaged following (typically 1k–50k)
ambassador
a loyal customer who represents and promotes a brand organically in exchange for perks (e.g., discount codes, community access)
bit.ly
a free URL shortener/tracker at bit.ly.com that shows how many people clicked a link
CTR
Click-Through Rate — percentage of people who clicked a link out of those who received it
Pinterest board
a named collection on Pinterest where you group pins by topic or category
vertical pin
a tall image format (1,000×1,500 px) that takes more visual space in Pinterest's feed
share and save link
a special Etsy URL that credits external traffic and reduces seller fees when the purchase originates from that link
pay-per-click (PPC)
an advertising model where you are only charged when someone actually clicks your ad
conversion
when a visitor takes the desired action (buying), not just visiting the listing
Shopify
a separate e-commerce platform requiring sellers to drive their own traffic, unlike Etsy which has built-in buyer traffic
TikTok gurus
social media influencers teaching that posting frequently on TikTok is required for Etsy success
Share and Save
Etsy program where sellers get a reduced transaction fee (3% instead of 6.5%) on sales generated through their own external links/sharing
offsite referral
a buyer who comes from outside Etsy (e.g., from Instagram or Pinterest) via your shared link
organic traffic
visitors who find your product without you paying for ads, through search, social media, or referrals
paid ads
advertisements on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, or Google where you pay per click or impression to reach potential buyers
AI influencer
a fictitious social media persona generated entirely by AI tools — not a real person — used to grow an audience and sell products
digital twin
an AI-generated video avatar that looks and sounds like a real person
Midjourney
an AI image-generation tool that creates photorealistic images from text prompts
prompt
a text description you give to an AI tool to tell it what to create
omni reference
a Midjourney feature that uses an uploaded photo as a face anchor so all new images show the same person
aspect ratio
the width-to-height proportion of an image (e.g., 9:16 = tall vertical for mobile)
starting frame
a Midjourney video setting that uses a specific image as the first frame of the video clip
motion prompt
a text instruction that describes how the character should move in the generated video
text overlay video
a short video where text words appear on top of a video clip — no voiceover needed
CapCut
a free video editing app/software popular for creating short-form social media videos
hook
the very first line of a video or post designed to grab attention and stop scrollers
DM bot / comment automation
software that automatically sends a direct message to anyone who comments a specific keyword on your post — platforms like ManyChat enable this
CTA (call to action)
an instruction in your content telling the viewer exactly what to do next (comment, click link, download)
Leads
potential customers who have shown interest (e.g., watched a video, clicked a link) but haven't purchased yet
Long-form content
videos/articles that are longer and more in-depth (vs. short-form like TikTok clips)
Email opt-in
when a visitor gives their email address in exchange for a freebie or newsletter subscription, adding themselves to your email list
Pre-sell
selling a product before it is fully created to validate demand and generate upfront revenue
Freebie (lead magnet)
a free downloadable resource offered in exchange for an email address
charm necklace business
a physical jewelry product business selling customizable/add-on necklace charms
Sell the outcome in listing photo copy, not the product featuresNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 48:30▶ Watch

Sell the outcome in listing photo copy, not the product features

Marketing principle demonstrated: the listing photo headline should state what the buyer will achieve, not what the product is. For sorority resume template, instead of "Canva Resume Template," creator wrote "Get into your dream sorority." The product is a resume; the desire is sorority membership. This applies to any Canva template: identify the buyer's underlying goal and make that the headline. Same principle carried into the description opening.

"When you're selling something you're not selling the product — what do people actually want when they're buying this resume template? They want to get into a sorority."
Terms
outcome-based marketing
— framing a product by the result the buyer wants, not the features the product has
Include a digital thank-you card to funnel buyers to email listTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 30:37▶ Watch

Include a digital thank-you card to funnel buyers to email list

Include a digital "thank you card" as an extra file delivered with every product purchase (applicable to digital and physical products). Purpose: customer retention and email list building. The thank-you card should:

  1. Thank the buyer.
  2. Funnel them to join your email list (so you can notify them of new products/sales directly, bypassing Etsy).
  3. Include a discount code (e.g., 50% off next purchase) to incentivize return purchases. Rationale: acquiring a new customer costs far more than retaining an existing one. Directing repeat customers to purchase via email rather than returning to Etsy reduces exposure to competitors.
"In a little thank you card, I will funnel customers to my email list."
Terms
email list
— a list of customer email addresses you own and can market to directly, independent of Etsy's platform
customer retention
— keeping existing buyers coming back vs. constantly finding new ones
Etsy ads are the lowest-hanging fruit for scaling — reason whyQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:05:45▶ Watch

Etsy ads are the lowest-hanging fruit for scaling — reason why

Etsy ads target buyers who are already on etsy.com with wallets open and purchase intent — the hottest traffic on the internet. By contrast, social media scrollers (Pinterest, Instagram, TikTok) are not in purchase mode. Etsy ads show for keywords already in your listing (relevance guaranteed). They are charged PPC (pay-per-click) — you only pay when you earn a click in competition with other sellers. Facebook/Google ads spend your budget regardless of intent. Social media ads to drive Etsy traffic = paying Etsy's 6.5% fee AND paying ad costs elsewhere — double expense.

"Etsy ads are showing your ad to the hottest traffic people on the internet"
Terms
PPC (pay-per-click)
— an ad billing model where you are charged only when someone clicks your ad, not when it is merely shown (impressions)
purchase intent
— the state of mind where a shopper is actively looking to buy, not just browsing for inspiration
Max Etsy ads daily budget is $1,000/day — set it thereQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:12:20▶ Watch

Max Etsy ads daily budget is $1,000/day — set it there

Etsy's maximum daily ad budget is $1,000/day. Setting it to $1,000 does NOT mean you will spend $1,000 — Etsy will only spend what it can competitively bid and win clicks for. Instructor's shop at $1,000 limit actually spends only $150–$200/day. The reason to set it high: it signals to Etsy that you are willing to outbid competition, which gives your listings preferential ad placement. The only way to fully discover your store's profit potential is to max out the budget. A store at $1,000/day is fundamentally different from one relying on organic only.

"the only way you can hit your max profit potential on Etsy is by getting your Etsy ad budget maxed out to $1,000 a day"
Terms
daily ad budget
— the maximum amount you are willing to spend per day on Etsy ads; Etsy will not exceed this but will typically spend less
outbid
— in PPC ad auctions, paying a higher cost-per-click than competitors so your listing appears above theirs
Social media should NOT drive traffic directly to Etsy storeQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:17:35▶ Watch

Social media should NOT drive traffic directly to Etsy store

Using social media ads (Facebook, TikTok, Instagram) to drive traffic to your Etsy store is inefficient: you pay Etsy's 6.5% transaction fee for traffic acquisition AND pay the social platform for ads. If you have strong social/influencer traffic, send it to your own website (Shopify etc.) to avoid the 6.5% Etsy fee. The only cheaper traffic than Etsy ads is:

  1. retargeting past customers, and
  2. viral/organic social content. Social media retargeting (showing ads to people who already visited) is acceptable and efficient.
"you pay Etsy a 6 and a half percent selling fee for Etsy to solve a problem for you, and that problem is called traffic"
Terms
retargeting
— showing ads specifically to people who have already visited your shop or clicked your listing — lower cost because these audiences are already warm
transaction fee
— Etsy's 6.5% cut of every sale price (including shipping charged to buyer)
Cost-per-acquisition and off-site ads fees are cheap vs. alternativesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:22:15▶ Watch

Cost-per-acquisition and off-site ads fees are cheap vs. alternatives

The ad fee you pay to acquire a customer is called cost per acquisition (CPA). Off-site ad fees of 12–15% are very competitive: launching a new Shopify store or TikTok Shop from scratch will cost far more than 12–15% CPA — typically much higher until a product goes viral. Only the top 1% with viral products can beat these rates on other platforms. After 6+ years in e-commerce, the only traffic cheaper than Etsy ads is retargeting past customers and organic viral content.

Terms
CPA (cost per acquisition)
— the total ad dollars spent to get one sale; the lower the CPA relative to sale price, the more profitable the ads
ROAS (return on ad spend)
— revenue generated for every dollar spent on ads; e.g., ROAS of 3 = $3 revenue per $1 ad spend
TACOs is the only Etsy ads metric that mattersQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:24:20▶ Watch

TACOs is the only Etsy ads metric that matters

TACOs = Total Advertising Cost of Sale. Formula: ad spend ÷ total store revenue (including organic sales + ad-attributed sales + cross-sales from ad clicks). This is different from the Etsy marketing tab "revenue" column, which only counts revenue from the ad-clicked listing (excludes organic sales). Etsy does NOT show TACOs natively. Tool: Profit Tree calculates TACOs per listing. TACOs is the same metric top Amazon sellers use. Decision rule: if a listing's TACOs exceeds your target (e.g., 14%), turn that listing's ads off. If TACOs is below target, keep or increase budget.

"tacos is the total advertising cost of sale"
Terms
TACOs
— Total Advertising Cost of Sale; ad spend divided by total revenue from all sources attributed to that listing, organic included — the true measure of ad profitability
ROAS
— Return on Ad Spend; the metric Etsy's marketing tab shows, which is misleading because it excludes organic revenue
attribution window
— the time period after an ad click during which purchases are credited to that ad
Why the Etsy marketing tab revenue column is misleadingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:25:15▶ Watch

Why the Etsy marketing tab revenue column is misleading

The "revenue" column shown in your Etsy marketing/ads tab is NOT your total store revenue. It only counts: a) revenue from buyers who clicked your ad and purchased that specific listing, and b) revenue from buyers who clicked your ad and then bought something else from your shop. It does NOT include organic sales. Do not use this column to calculate your ad cost percentage or decide which listings to turn off — you will make wrong decisions and potentially kill profitable ads. The correct metric is TACOs (ad spend ÷ total store revenue including organic), calculated in Profit Tree or manually.

Terms
marketing tab
— the "Marketing" section in Etsy Seller Hub where you manage and analyze your Etsy ads; its revenue figure is ad-attributed only, not total store revenue
Scaling ad budget proportionally — PPC quality stays constantQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:27:05▶ Watch

Scaling ad budget proportionally — PPC quality stays constant

Key insight: because Etsy charges PPC (pay per click earned in competition), the quality and intent of buyers clicking your ads is IDENTICAL at $10/day, $100/day, or $1,000/day — the same types of shoppers see and click your listing. Therefore, once your TACOs percentage is locked in over ~3 months, increasing your daily budget should proportionally scale revenue without raising the TACOs percentage. Example: locked in 14% TACOs at $10/day → raise to $100/day → revenue ~10x, TACOs stays ~14%. Warning: rapidly increasing budget (e.g., from $10 to $1,000 overnight) can temporarily shake performance, but it self-corrects. Never yo-yo the budget (up then down then up) — always trend upward.

"the data sample of people clicking on your listings at $10 a day versus $1,000 a day is the same quality"
Terms
locked-in TACOs
— a stable, consistent ad cost percentage reached after enough data has accumulated (typically several months of spending); it's the baseline you can confidently scale from
Declining listings have "lifespans" — don't keep bad-TACOs ads onQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:39:00▶ Watch

Declining listings have "lifespans" — don't keep bad-TACOs ads on

All listings have natural lifespans. Bestsellers from last year may not sell next year. Use Profit Tree listing reports to identify listings on a downward revenue trend year-over-year. For those declining listings: if their TACOs is exceeding your target %, turn their ads off — don't stay emotionally attached. Keeping ads running on dying listings wastes budget that should go to profitable listings. A listing's TACOs rising over time = signal that it is becoming harder and more expensive to convert customers through ads for that product. Only a few options to revive a dying listing (reshooting images, repositioning).

Terms
downward trending
— a listing whose sales volume is consistently declining compared to the same period in the prior year
listing lifespan
— the period during which a listing remains competitive and generates profitable sales; varies by niche and trend cycles
Determining when and how much to spend per listing before decidingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:43:00▶ Watch

Determining when and how much to spend per listing before deciding

Before deciding to turn off ads for a new listing, invest at least your average sale price in ad spend. If average order value is $100, spend at least $100 before making a judgment. For a brand-new shop with zero reviews, invest up to 2x the sale price. For products priced $0–$100, $50 ad spend should generate enough data to evaluate TACOs. Starting budget recommendation: $15/day per listing (instructor's own start). Safer option: start at any amount (even $5/day) and only run ads on listings that have already made at least one organic sale first — organic sales are the safest signal to test with ads.

Terms
threshold of uncomfortability
— the ad spend amount at which you personally have collected enough data to make a keep/kill decision on a listing — varies per seller and sale price
organic sale
— a purchase made without any paid promotion; driven entirely by Etsy search ranking
CTR use: diagnose image quality; views are secondaryQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:44:55▶ Watch

CTR use: diagnose image quality; views are secondary

Inside your Etsy ads account, two visible metrics are CTR (click-through rate) and views. Use CTR diagnostically: a listing with high CTR compared to your other listings signals a strong main image — analyze what visual elements made it earn more clicks and replicate those elements. Views: only use views as a sanity check that the listing has been shown enough times (a few thousand impressions) to make your ad spend decision. Views alone are not a performance indicator. Never use views or CTR as primary metrics to keep/kill an ad — only TACOs matters for that decision.

Terms
impressions
— the number of times your listing appeared in search results (shown to buyers), whether or not they clicked
CTR (click-through rate)
— impressions that resulted in a click, expressed as a percentage; indicates how compelling your thumbnail is
TACOs target: under 14% for general; under 10% for POD/low-marginQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:37:00▶ Watch

TACOs target: under 14% for general; under 10% for POD/low-margin

Your target TACOs percentage depends entirely on your product's profit margin:

  1. High-margin products (e.g., handmade, digital): TACOs can be 14% or even higher and still generate more profit than no ads.
  2. Print-on-demand (low-margin space): keep TACOs below ~10%; be strict — every ad dollar should only go to listings with the lowest ad cost percentage.
  3. Digital downloads: often appear to have bad ROAS on the Etsy marketing tab but actually have excellent TACOs because there is no product cost, making profit margins very high. The key principle: set YOUR target TACOs based on your own business's expense breakdown (pie chart), then mechanically turn off any listing exceeding that target.
Terms
print-on-demand (POD)
— fulfillment model with higher base product costs and typically 15–30% profit margins, leaving less room for ad spend
digital download
— a product with near-zero product cost (just creation time), enabling high profit margins that can absorb higher ad cost percentages
Waterfall model — Etsy ads goal: grow the "profitable ads" poolQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:29:30▶ Watch

Waterfall model — Etsy ads goal: grow the "profitable ads" pool

Visualize your Etsy shop as a waterfall with three layers: Top → listings launched (all new designs). Middle → listings that make regular organic sales (10–20% of all listings). Bottom pool → listings that make financial sense WITH ads (5–10% of organic sellers). Goal: continuously feed new listings at the top, let the algorithm filter them, and grow the bottom pool of profitable-ads listings. As the bottom pool grows, the business "moat" strengthens. Safe strategy: only turn ads on for listings that have already made at least one organic sale. Unsafe (but faster) strategy: turn ads on for all listings immediately.

Terms
business moat
— a durable competitive advantage that makes it hard for competitors to displace you; in Etsy context, built by accumulating reviews, sales history, SEO indexing, and ad data
algorithm filtering
— the organic process by which Etsy's algorithm decides which of your listings to promote based on quality signals
Turn off ads on downward-trending listingsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:48:30▶ Watch

Turn off ads on downward-trending listings

Monitor listings for downward revenue/profit trends. If a listing's TACOS is rising above your target threshold, turn the ad off and replace it with a new bestseller. Listings have natural lifespans — a bestseller last year may not be one next year. Do not stay attached to dying listings.

"It's better to replace that product with a new bestselling product and keep that filtration system going."
Terms
TACOS
— Total Ad Cost of Sale — ad spend divided by total revenue (not just ad-driven revenue), expressed as a percentage
Profit Tree dashboard shows holistic shop healthQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:49:41▶ Watch

Profit Tree dashboard shows holistic shop health

Profit Tree tool shows key biomarkers on its dashboard: return on ad spend (ROAS), profit margins, and average order value over time. A healthy shop shows all three increasing period-over-period. Use these metrics to spot where to optimize, not just revenue figures.

"Profit Tree is giving some great biomarkers just on the dashboard that show you holistic health of your shop."
Terms
ROAS
— Return On Ad Spend — revenue generated per dollar spent on ads
biomarkers
— measurable health indicators for a business (borrowed from medicine)
Fix "budget increase stopped spending" by raising budget graduallyQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:50:25▶ Watch

Fix "budget increase stopped spending" by raising budget gradually

If you drastically increase your Etsy ad budget in one day (e.g., from $10 to $1,000), the algorithm can freeze and stop spending. Fix: put the budget back down, then increase in smaller increments (e.g., $25/day at a time). If left alone for a few weeks it often self-corrects.

Not all listings spend on ads — this is normalQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:51:00▶ Watch

Not all listings spend on ads — this is normal

Out of 100 listings with ads on, only a percentage will be favored by the algorithm, and only a sub-percentage will be profitable with ads. Do not turn off non-spending listings prematurely — leave them on unless they have not spent in ~6 months, because they can pick up randomly after 90+ days. Judge ad performance on month-over-month data, not a few weeks.

Ads myth: ads cannot save a shop with no organic salesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:52:00▶ Watch

Ads myth: ads cannot save a shop with no organic sales

If your shop has made hardly any sales organically after a couple of months, running ads will not fix the problem — it just wastes money. Prove organic sales first before investing in ads, especially if ad spend feels financially uncomfortable. Ads amplify what already works; they do not compensate for weak products or listings.

"If you cannot make sales organically, ads won't solve anything for you."
Myth debunked: "I make more money with ads off"Q4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:52:38▶ Watch

Myth debunked: "I make more money with ads off"

This claim usually means the seller is not calculating correctly — they see ad spend and revenue but skip the full math. With TACOS tracking it becomes black-and-white: ads increase both revenue and profit when the product selection is right. The real issue is usually the current product selection, not ads themselves.

"Now with TACOS, it's very black and white."
What makes ads cheaper: strong value propositionQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:54:04▶ Watch

What makes ads cheaper: strong value proposition

Cheaper ad costs come from building highly competitive products with a strong value proposition. The bulk of effort before running ads should go into: product quality, listing images, video, storytelling, branding, variation options, and pricing strategy. Each element alone is small but collectively creates a powerful value proposition that raises conversion rates and lowers cost-per-click.

Terms
value proposition
— the bundle of benefits that makes a buyer choose your product over a competitor's
Bonus module: post-sale follow-up builds brand loyalty via micro-commitmentsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:20:17▶ Watch

Bonus module: post-sale follow-up builds brand loyalty via micro-commitments

After every sale, keep the conversation going. Each action a customer takes post-purchase is a "micro-commitment" that increases brand loyalty subconsciously. Examples of micro-commitments:

  1. Follow on Instagram.
  2. Tag on Instagram.
  3. Buy a second product (upsell).
  4. Join an ambassador program.
  5. Join a community group (Facebook, Slack, Telegram).
  6. Leave a review. More micro-commitments = more loyal customers.
"The more micro-commitments you can get someone to make post-sale, subconsciously, the more loyal they are becoming to your brand."
Terms
micro-commitment
— a small action taken by a customer that deepens their psychological attachment to a brand
Post-purchase Etsy messenger follow-up message templateQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:22:19▶ Watch

Post-purchase Etsy messenger follow-up message template

Immediately after a purchase, send a message via Etsy Messenger: "Thank you for supporting our small family-owned business. Your order ships in [X] time. Follow us on Instagram and we'll DM you [offer]." Include a link to your social account. The goal is an Instagram follow so you can build a hyper-targeted follower base of people who have already spent money with you.

Instagram follow funnel: 10–15 followers per 100 sales for freeQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:23:35▶ Watch

Instagram follow funnel: 10–15 followers per 100 sales for free

Out of every 100 sales, expect roughly 10–15 customers to follow your Instagram via the post-purchase message. No paid ads or content creation required. Past buyers are the highest-quality followers — they have already spent money and are likely to spend again. One seller's first company grew to 4,000+ Instagram followers using this method alone.

"Your hottest traffic of people that are going to spend money with you again are people that have already spent money with you."
Product insert key attributes and QR code ruleQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:26:04▶ Watch

Product insert key attributes and QR code rule

Product insert (physical thank-you card in the package) should include:

  1. Thank you message.
  2. Care instructions (if applicable).
  3. A single call to action (e.g., tag on Instagram or upsell — pick ONE, not both).
  4. An offer (discount code).
  5. A QR code linked to wherever the CTA leads. Rule: always embed a link or QR code — never make the customer manually search for you. Missing a QR code/link increases drop-off significantly. Printify now supports product inserts for POD sellers.
"If you make people have to do work, you're going to increase the drop off."
Terms
product insert
— a physical card placed inside a shipped package with a CTA and offer
POD
— Print on Demand — printing and shipping handled by a third-party provider (e.g., Printify, Printful)
Full post-sale funnel example: Instagram follow → 15% off → tag → 40% offQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:27:45▶ Watch

Full post-sale funnel example: Instagram follow → 15% off → tag → 40% off

Proven funnel for a jewelry shop:

  1. Post-purchase Etsy message: "Follow us on Instagram for 15% off."
  2. Monitor Instagram; DM each new follower a discount code (use a single reusable code labeled as "one-time").
  3. Customer buys again with 15% off → Etsy sees repeat buyer → SEO boost.
  4. Product insert arrives: "Tag us on Instagram/story for a one-time 40% off code."
  5. Customer tags → UGC + potential micro-influencer exposure + third purchase. Offer must get progressively more attractive down the funnel (15% → 40%), never less.
Terms
UGC
— User Generated Content — photos or videos created by customers featuring your product
micro-influencer
— a social media account with a small but engaged following (typically 1k–50k)
Ambassador program: 150+ people funneled into Facebook communityQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:33:57▶ Watch

Ambassador program: 150+ people funneled into Facebook community

Post on Instagram story/feed every few weeks: "Looking for ambassadors — DM us the code word 'love'." Send responders a link to a private Facebook group. Ambassadors receive a 15% discount code on all purchases, discuss favorite styles, give product feedback, and create organic content. This works best for identity-based niches (jewelry, dogs, specific hobbies) and less well for generic home décor. The seller funneled 150+ ambassadors into a Facebook group this way.

Terms
ambassador
— a loyal customer who represents and promotes a brand organically in exchange for perks (e.g., discount codes, community access)
Real-world funnel example: bread baking kit → community → upsellsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:35:22▶ Watch

Real-world funnel example: bread baking kit → community → upsells

A non-Etsy market seller applied a complete post-purchase funnel:

  1. Customer buys bread baking starter kit.
  2. CTA: "Join our Telegram community of bread makers."
  3. Inside the package: upsell for tools (pan, thermometer, scraper).
  4. More upsells: new recipe bundles (pizza, bagels).
  5. Community contest: "Post your best bread this week — winner gets a prize." This model applies to candles, soaps, gardening, DIY niches on Etsy.
Track every funnel element with bit.ly links and trackable discount codesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:37:05▶ Watch

Track every funnel element with bit.ly links and trackable discount codes

To test and optimize your post-sale funnel:

  1. Set up discount codes in Etsy to track redemptions.
  2. Wrap Instagram/Etsy links in bit.ly (free) to count clicks.
  3. Use QR codes that link to a bit.ly URL to track product insert scans.
  4. Test offers in batches of 100 (e.g., 100 messages with 15% off vs. 100 with 20% off).
  5. Optimize against your last best score. Rule: every marketing action must be trackable.
"Anything you do in the marketing world, you want to make it trackable."
Terms
bit.ly
— a free URL shortener/tracker at bit.ly.com that shows how many people clicked a link
CTR
— Click-Through Rate — percentage of people who clicked a link out of those who received it
Pinterest marketing strategy for Etsy shops — free long-term trafficYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 35:34▶ Watch

Pinterest marketing strategy for Etsy shops — free long-term traffic

Pinterest is a search engine, not a social platform — pins continue driving traffic weeks or months after posting. Setup steps:

  1. Create a Pinterest business account (or convert existing personal account) to get analytics access.
  2. Set up profile: logo, business name, bio explaining what you sell, Etsy shop link.
  3. Create boards organized by product type (e.g., "Instagram Templates," "Branding Kits") — name boards using words buyers search for. Pin creation: use Canva, either reuse existing Etsy product photos or create vertical pins at 1,000×1,500 pixels (vertical performs better — takes more screen space, more eye-catching). Pin title: use main keywords the target customer searches. Pin description: include as many relevant keywords as possible, can use ChatGPT to generate ideas.
"Pinterest works more like a search engine. So when people search for things like templates, printables, or digital products, your pins can show up and continue bringing in traffic even weeks or months later."
Terms
Pinterest board
— a named collection on Pinterest where you group pins by topic or category
vertical pin
— a tall image format (1,000×1,500 px) that takes more visual space in Pinterest's feed
Use Etsy "share and save" link for Pinterest pins to reduce feesYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 37:35▶ Watch

Use Etsy "share and save" link for Pinterest pins to reduce fees

When adding a product link to a Pinterest pin, do NOT copy the regular Etsy URL. Instead use the "share and save" link: go to your Etsy listing → click gear icon → select Share → Copy link. If someone clicks through this specific link and buys, you save on Etsy fees. For each product, create multiple pins with different designs/variations and spread them out over several days rather than posting all at once. Use Pinterest's built-in scheduler to plan posts ahead without being on the platform daily. Shortcut: can also pin directly from Etsy (Listing → gear icon → "Share to Pinterest"), but custom vertical pins perform better.

"If someone clicks through Pinterest and buys, you'll actually save on Etsy fees."
Terms
share and save link
— a special Etsy URL that credits external traffic and reduces seller fees when the purchase originates from that link
Etsy Ads — pay-per-click system inside the platformYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 38:41▶ Watch

Etsy Ads — pay-per-click system inside the platform

Etsy Ads are built-in ads that place your listing in more visible positions within Etsy search results. Two types:

  1. Etsy Ads (internal) — pay-per-click model; only pay when someone clicks; no click = no cost; beginner-friendly.
  2. Offsite Ads — Etsy runs ads for you on Google or Pinterest; no upfront payment, but Etsy charges an additional fee when someone clicks and purchases. Wait period: must wait 15 days after opening a shop before running Etsy Ads. Yale uses Etsy Ads consistently and says the revenue return far exceeds his ad spend.
"The return I get from them far outweighs what I spent. It's been a big factor in increasing my overall revenue."
Terms
pay-per-click (PPC)
— an advertising model where you are only charged when someone actually clicks your ad
offsite ads
— ads Etsy places on external platforms (Google, Pinterest) on your behalf
Ads only amplify what already works — set up and monitor strategicallyYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 40:00▶ Watch

Ads only amplify what already works — set up and monitor strategically

Critical warning: ads do not fix a weak listing. They only amplify what is already there. If photos, title, or offer are not strong, ads will drive traffic that still does not convert. Only run ads on listings already showing signs of life — getting views, favorites, or early sales. Setup: Shop Manager → Marketing → Etsy Ads → set daily budget (start with $1–$3/day while testing). By default Etsy turns ads on for all listings — turn this off and select only your strongest products so budget is focused. After a few weeks, evaluate: if revenue > ad spend, keep running; if spending money with no sales, turn it off; if clicks but no purchases, improve photos/pricing/offer.

"Ads don't fix a weak listing. They only amplify what's already there."
Terms
conversion
— when a visitor takes the desired action (buying), not just visiting the listing
Myth 3 — you need to be everywhere (Shopify + TikTok + Pinterest); Etsy SEO alone suffices$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 8:35▶ Watch

Myth 3 — you need to be everywhere (Shopify + TikTok + Pinterest); Etsy SEO alone suffices

Guru advice says: "Etsy is saturated, you need your own website and social media." Speaker tried this:

  1. Opened a Shopify store (homepage, theme, domain, apps).
  2. Spent hours on TikTok trying to record one 2-minute video.
  3. TikTok gurus required posting at least 3 times per day to be seen. Result: working harder for fewer sales. Conclusion: if you master Etsy's internal search engine, you do NOT need a social media strategy, a custom website, or Pinterest spam. Etsy's built-in traffic is already there — learn to get in front of it with strong SEO. "You need to be where people are already searching for what you sell."
"I thought I was leveling up, but I was really just working harder for fewer sales."
Terms
Shopify
— a separate e-commerce platform requiring sellers to drive their own traffic, unlike Etsy which has built-in buyer traffic
TikTok gurus
— social media influencers teaching that posting frequently on TikTok is required for Etsy success
Link socials to Etsy shop; use Etsy's "share and save" code to cut fees100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 29:33▶ Watch

Link socials to Etsy shop; use Etsy's "share and save" code to cut fees

Bonus tip 7: Link social media accounts (Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest) and/or your own website to your Etsy shop page. 51 of 100 shops had linked socials or a website. Bonus: when sharing your shop or listings externally (outside Etsy), use Etsy's unique referral code found at Shop Manager > Marketing > Share and Save. This code reduces the fees you pay when an external referral converts to a sale.

"If you share your shop or listings outside of Etsy, use Etsy's unique code to save on fees."
Terms
Share and Save
— Etsy program where sellers get a reduced transaction fee (3% instead of 6.5%) on sales generated through their own external links/sharing
offsite referral
— a buyer who comes from outside Etsy (e.g., from Instagram or Pinterest) via your shared link
Email list of 13k → confident of 10–30 sales within 3 hoursCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 30:00▶ Watch

Email list of 13k → confident of 10–30 sales within 3 hours

Creator has an email list of 13,000 subscribers. Strategy for immediate sales:

  1. Ask ChatGPT to write a promotional email for the product.
  2. Copy-paste the generated email into your email provider.
  3. Send to your list. Creator is confident this approach would generate 10–20 (possibly
  4. sales within 30 minutes of sending. Demonstrates email list as the single fastest sales channel for a new digital product.
"I could easily go to my email list where is 13,000 people. I could just send one simple email... and I'm pretty confident to say that there would be at least 10, 20, maybe 30 sales"
Terms
email list
— a collection of subscribers who have opted in to receive emails from you; email provider :: a service for sending bulk marketing emails (e.g., Mailchimp, ConvertKit, ActiveCampaign)
3 free traffic strategies for beginners with no audienceCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 30:35▶ Watch

3 free traffic strategies for beginners with no audience

For sellers starting with zero audience, no social following, no email list, and no ad budget, the creator directs to 3 free strategies (via YouTube videos linked in description). He explicitly states all three work from zero. Does not name them in the video but confirms they exist and work for complete beginners. Recommends building any one channel (email list, social following) as fast as possible since owned audience = fastest future sales.

"These three tutorials are going to show you how to start from zero"
Terms
organic traffic
— visitors who find your product without you paying for ads, through search, social media, or referrals
Distribute Gumroad link via email, ads, social, or referralsCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 28:31▶ Watch

Distribute Gumroad link via email, ads, social, or referrals

Once the Gumroad product URL is live, ways to drive traffic:

  1. Email your existing list with a ChatGPT-written promotional email.
  2. Run paid ads.
  3. Send to friends/contacts who know people with money.
  4. Post on social media.
  5. Use any marketing channel you already have. The Gumroad link is a direct buy page — no website needed. Copy the URL from Gumroad's "Copy product URL" button and share it anywhere.
"You can just go to your audience, to your email list. You can start running ads, start sending it to your friends"
Terms
paid ads
— advertisements on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, or Google where you pay per click or impression to reach potential buyers
AI influencer as 24/7 automated sales personWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 5:56▶ Watch

AI influencer as 24/7 automated sales person

Instead of showing your face, you build an AI character (AI influencer / digital twin) whose entire purpose is to sell products on social media 24/7. Examples cited: "Maddie" — an AI influencer making over $100,000/month from simple AI-generated content. The AI character gets tens to hundreds of thousands of views per post. Speaker built his own AI YouTube channel that appears fully human.

"The future of selling products online doesn't involve you."
Terms
AI influencer
— a fictitious social media persona generated entirely by AI tools — not a real person — used to grow an audience and sell products
digital twin
— an AI-generated video avatar that looks and sounds like a real person
Step-by-step: create AI character with ChatGPT + MidjourneyWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 7:26▶ Watch

Step-by-step: create AI character with ChatGPT + Midjourney

  1. Go to ChatGPT and prompt it to generate an AI persona profile (name, age, appearance, backstory, character traits, personality) matched to the digital product and target audience. Example: woman aged 30–50, alcohol-addict-to-alcohol-free transformation story.
  2. Ask ChatGPT to generate a Midjourney image prompt for the character.
  3. Go to Midjourney → Create → paste prompt → set image size 1:1 or 9:16 for vertical → HD quality → Generate.
"We basically get the entire backstory, character traits and personality of this AI persona."
Terms
Midjourney
— an AI image-generation tool that creates photorealistic images from text prompts
prompt
— a text description you give to an AI tool to tell it what to create
Omni Reference trick: consistent AI character across all imagesWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 9:15▶ Watch

Omni Reference trick: consistent AI character across all images

Midjourney's Omni Reference feature locks a character's face across multiple generations. Steps:

  1. Generate initial character images.
  2. Pick the best image.
  3. Click the small image icon at top of Midjourney prompt box → Omni Reference.
  4. Upload chosen image into Omni Reference.
  5. Now every new generation keeps the same person's face. Can switch between 1:1 (square) and 9:6 (vertical/Instagram-friendly) aspect ratios using the settings panel.
"Omni Reference is going to create every single generation with a person on this image."
Terms
omni reference
— a Midjourney feature that uses an uploaded photo as a face anchor so all new images show the same person
aspect ratio
— the width-to-height proportion of an image (e.g., 9:16 = tall vertical for mobile)
Generate video from AI image using Midjourney's video modeWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 10:39▶ Watch

Generate video from AI image using Midjourney's video mode

To animate the AI character:

  1. Write a motion prompt (e.g., "her sipping from the glass").
  2. In Midjourney, select the still image → choose "Starting Frame" (so the video begins from that exact image).
  3. Paste motion prompt → submit. Result: short video clip of the character performing the action, looks 100% natural. 99% of viewers cannot tell it is AI-generated.
"You can see she's sipping from the glass looking 100% natural."
Terms
starting frame
— a Midjourney video setting that uses a specific image as the first frame of the video clip
motion prompt
— a text instruction that describes how the character should move in the generated video
Text overlay video: simplest viral content format for beginnersWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 12:33▶ Watch

Text overlay video: simplest viral content format for beginners

Text overlay videos are 7-second background clips of the AI character with a triggering headline text overlaid. These regularly get tens to hundreds of thousands of views. To make one:

  1. Ask ChatGPT to write 3 "banger 7-second scripts" (hook headlines).
  2. Download the AI-generated video.
  3. Open Canva or CapCut → import video → add text from ChatGPT. Time required: 5 minutes per video. Example hook: "Most women don't realize how one glass of wine changes your next day."
"These videos are just made of a 7-second background video of our AI character and then there is a text overlay."
Terms
text overlay video
— a short video where text words appear on top of a video clip — no voiceover needed
CapCut
— a free video editing app/software popular for creating short-form social media videos
hook
— the very first line of a video or post designed to grab attention and stop scrollers
Comment keyword automation: best way to convert viewers to buyersWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 14:17▶ Watch

Comment keyword automation: best way to convert viewers to buyers

The highest-converting selling method for AI content:

  1. In video caption, tell viewers to "comment below [KEYWORD] if you want X."
  2. When a viewer comments the keyword, an automation (comment-triggered DM bot) starts a conversation with them.
  3. Automation sends them the affiliate or product link. Alternative: link product in bio for direct click access. Speaker's Mr. 6to9 faceless account got 2 million views using this approach without an AI persona (even better results expected with AI persona).
"By far the best way is to be actually using the chat automation."
Terms
DM bot / comment automation
— software that automatically sends a direct message to anyone who comments a specific keyword on your post — platforms like ManyChat enable this
CTA (call to action)
— an instruction in your content telling the viewer exactly what to do next (comment, click link, download)
Sellers must drive their own traffic; Etsy won't do it for you17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 4:10▶ Watch

Sellers must drive their own traffic; Etsy won't do it for you

A common beginner mistake is assuming Etsy will automatically bring traffic and sales. It won't — especially now. You must actively drive your own traffic via social media (YouTube, Pinterest, Instagram, TikTok, offline promotion, etc.). External traffic signals also help Etsy's algorithm notice your shop organically, which can generate more internal Etsy traffic in a virtuous cycle. Momentum must be created by the seller.

"you are going to have to drive your own traffic ... pick it lean into it and that will actually help bring in the organic sales"
Terms
External traffic
— visitors coming to your Etsy listing from outside Etsy (e.g., via social media or Pinterest links)
YouTube is now the best platform for digital product leads and sales$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 3:20▶ Watch

YouTube is now the best platform for digital product leads and sales

After testing all major platforms (originally used blogging + Pinterest when it worked years ago), the speaker concluded that YouTube is currently the strongest platform for generating leads and sales for digital products. Reasons: no-BS culture, long-form content builds deep trust, content lives forever (unlike social posts), and viewers come ready to learn. Even though she was camera-shy as a photographer, she pushed through and grew to 100,000+ subscribers.

"the platform that is working the best for leads and sales is YouTube"
Terms
Leads
— potential customers who have shown interest (e.g., watched a video, clicked a link) but haven't purchased yet
Long-form content
— videos/articles that are longer and more in-depth (vs. short-form like TikTok clips)
5-step system to sell digital products from scratch with no following$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 4:15▶ Watch

5-step system to sell digital products from scratch with no following

The speaker's full step-by-step system:

  1. Post educational YouTube videos weekly on your niche topic — start immediately, do not wait for an audience.
  2. Create a freebie (short downloadable guide/checklist) gated behind an email opt-in.
  3. Use the freebie to build your email list; at ~200 subscribers, send a Google Forms survey to identify the audience's #1 pain point.
  4. Survey your email list to validate what paid product to create.
  5. Pre-sell the digital product before building it — create a checkout page with delivery date 2–4 weeks out; if people buy, build it; if not, iterate.
"it wasn't magic, it was simply a system"
Terms
Email opt-in
— when a visitor gives their email address in exchange for a freebie or newsletter subscription, adding themselves to your email list
Pre-sell
— selling a product before it is fully created to validate demand and generate upfront revenue
Freebie (lead magnet)
— a free downloadable resource offered in exchange for an email address
Getting more eyes — build a charm necklace business without social media5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 22:20▶ Watch

Getting more eyes — build a charm necklace business without social media

For those who still feel they need more people to see their work but don't want to build a business around posting all the time, the host references a separate video about how she built her own charm necklace business without using social media — focused on "what actually moves the needle when it comes to getting paid for your work."

"I want you to watch this next video where I talk about how I built my own charm necklace business without using social media"
Terms
charm necklace business
— a physical jewelry product business selling customizable/add-on necklace charms
Chapter 13

Scaling & Growth

From a trickle of sales to a real, compounding business
27 points

The Pain

You have a few sales but it's stuck. You don't know whether to add more products, more variety, or more marketing - or how the big shops got to thousands of sales.

The Relief

Scaling is mostly VOLUME + SYSTEMS. The 100k-sale shops studied share patterns: many listings (often hundreds), more than one product type, relentless SEO, and consistent new uploads. Batch your work (design 10 at once), template your process, reinvest profit, and double down on proven winners while retiring duds. Growth compounds: each good listing is another fishing line in the pond, and the catalogue keeps selling while you build the next.

Mental Picture

A shop with 5 listings is a busker with one song. A shop with 300 listings is a radio station with a full playlist - something is always playing for someone. The big shops didn't find one magic song; they built the whole station, track by track.

Plain-English Glossary

Scaling
Growing sales systematically - usually via more listings and repeatable processes.
Catalogue / listing count
Your total number of listings; more (good) listings = more search entries.
Batching
Producing many products in one focused session to work efficiently.
Systems / SOP
Repeatable step-by-step processes so growth doesn't depend on memory or mood.
Reinvesting
Putting early profit back into tools, ads, or more products to grow faster.
value proposition
a clear statement of why a buyer should choose your product over a competitor's — the combination of price, quality, features, and presentation that makes yours the better deal
duplicate listing
an Etsy feature that copies an existing listing so you can test variations without rebuilding from scratch
organic sales
sales made without any paid advertising, driven purely by Etsy's search algorithm showing your listing naturally
relisting / renewing
re-uploading or refreshing a stale listing with new images or repositioning to trigger fresh algorithm exposure
rerun
re-launching a modified duplicate of an existing listing to get a fresh algorithmic evaluation
horizontal scaling
growing a business by adding more products/listings rather than increasing prices or upsells on existing ones
more-for-less
a pricing/image strategy where a bundle of two identical items is shown at a slight discount to raise average order value
SKU (stock-keeping unit)
a unique product code assigned to each distinct variation, allowing per-product profit tracking
80/20 principle (Pareto principle)
the observation that roughly 80% of outcomes come from 20% of causes — in Etsy context, a small number of listings drive most revenue
average order value
the average dollar amount a customer spends per transaction in your shop
bundling
packaging multiple related products together as one higher-value listing
sections
category groupings within your Etsy shop that appear as navigation filters for buyers
generalist shop
a shop selling products across many unrelated categories
specialist shop
a shop focused on one audience/niche, positioned as an authority in that space
cohesive branding
a consistent visual style (colors, fonts, layout) applied uniformly across all listings so the shop feels unified
mood board
a visual collection of design inspirations used as a reference guide
product creation hamster wheel
the trap of endlessly creating new listings without optimizing existing ones, leading to many unoptimized listings and few sales
six-figure sale milestone
having sold 100,000 or more individual items (not revenue)
print-on-demand
a fulfillment model where products are only printed and shipped after a customer orders — no inventory held
Printify
a print-on-demand platform that connects Etsy sellers with printing facilities
Bella Canvas 3001
a popular unisex t-shirt blank used in print-on-demand
high-converting listing
a listing that turns a high percentage of viewers into buyers
print-on-demand (POD)
a service that prints and ships a physical product only when an order is placed, so seller never holds inventory
plateau
when growth stops and performance stays flat; reactivation fee :: Etsy charges $0.20 to relist an expired listing
favorites
when a buyer saves a listing to their Etsy favorites without purchasing; visibility :: how often a listing appears in search results
sales channel
any platform or method through which you sell products (e.g., Etsy, your own website, Instagram shop)
endurance phase
the long-term consistency stage after initial launch — no longer about setup, just steady creation and listing
product arsenal
the collection of completed ready-to-publish products you have built up as a buffer
Value proposition — what it is and factors that increase itQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:40:21▶ Watch

Value proposition — what it is and factors that increase it

Value proposition = the perceived value of your product vs the price paid. You do not always need the cheapest price; higher prices require justification (quality, personalization, branding). Factors that increase perceived value:

  1. Quality materials.
  2. Storytelling in images (show yourself making the product).
  3. More variation/personalization options than competitors.
  4. Cohesive, on-trend imagery and videography.
  5. Bundling (buy-two discount or bundle multiple items at a slightly lower combined price).
  6. Competitive but not always lowest price point.
Terms
value proposition
— a clear statement of why a buyer should choose your product over a competitor's — the combination of price, quality, features, and presentation that makes yours the better deal
Balancing variation options — too many can cause confusion and drop salesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:51:37▶ Watch

Balancing variation options — too many can cause confusion and drop sales

Having 50+ variation options can overwhelm buyers and lower conversion rates, even if it earns more clicks. The sweet spot: enough options to showcase value and enable upsells, but clear enough that buyers understand how to purchase and customize immediately. If a buyer has to ask how to buy or can't find the personalization field easily, you lose the sale. Keep the listing unambiguous and the buying process obvious.

Two proven ways to scale on Etsy — consistent listings + Etsy adsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:53:44▶ Watch

Two proven ways to scale on Etsy — consistent listings + Etsy ads

On Etsy specifically, there are two scaling levers:

  1. Consistent product launches — keep posting new listings at a pace realistic for your schedule (e.g., 5/week or 2/month); consistency matters more than speed to 1,000 listings.
  2. Scale Etsy ads. Product photography (thumbnail imagery) is the single most important factor for earning the click; instructor says 80% of effort should go into imagery, 20% into keyword optimization.
Launch testing system — 3 main images per new designQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 2:57:00▶ Watch

Launch testing system — 3 main images per new design

Every new design should yield at least 3 separate listings with 3 different main images to test:

  1. Product by itself,
  2. Product duplicated ("2 for a slightly cheaper price"),
  3. Product bundled with a different complementary product. Then run a second round: same designs, different environments (indoor vs. outdoor, different backgrounds/couches). One design can produce 6+ listings to split-test. Pick a consistent system (e.g., always 3 mockups per design) and stick to it without burning yourself out. The duplicate listing feature on Etsy is explicitly allowed for testing purposes.
"every single time we design something that is going to yield three different main images"
Terms
duplicate listing
— an Etsy feature that copies an existing listing so you can test variations without rebuilding from scratch
Listing filtration system — only 10–20% of listings sell regularlyQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:00:03▶ Watch

Listing filtration system — only 10–20% of listings sell regularly

Think of your listings as a filtration system/funnel: of every 100 listings posted, only 10–20% will make regular daily sales — this is normal across all niches, especially print on demand. Of those 10–20 that sell, only 5–10% will make financial sense with Etsy ads running. Goal: maximize the number of listings in the "profitable with ads" bucket (the bottom of the funnel). Consistency of new launches matters more than total count. Validate what sells by checking competitor shops to see which of their listings actually sell.

Terms
organic sales
— sales made without any paid advertising, driven purely by Etsy's search algorithm showing your listing naturally
Three types of monthly listing launches — New, Renew, New CustomerQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:03:00▶ Watch

Three types of monthly listing launches — New, Renew, New Customer

Every month, structure launches across three buckets:

  1. New — a brand-new product or concept.
  2. Renew — a proven product re-photographed or re-staged (same design, fresh image/thumbnail, new shot at the algorithm). Example: a declining listing reshooted in a different setting that starts selling again.
  3. New customer — same design, different target audience. Example: a gaming design first targeted at dads, then relaunched targeting moms; or a baby onesie design, then a twin onesie version. Winning = launching consistently to whatever realistic number you chose, not a massive burst.
"the winning is that you just stay consistent"
Terms
relisting / renewing
— re-uploading or refreshing a stale listing with new images or repositioning to trigger fresh algorithm exposure
Two scaling levers for an Etsy shop — listings + adsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:02:10▶ Watch

Two scaling levers for an Etsy shop — listings + ads

There are exactly two ways to scale an Etsy shop:

  1. Consistent new product/listing launches — adding to the filtration funnel.
  2. Maximizing Etsy ads budget on profitable listings. Consistency in launching beats any specific number of listings per month. Set a realistic monthly listing goal (e.g., 10 listings/month) and hit it every month rather than posting 100 one month and nothing the next. The end-of-month number matters less than showing up consistently. Quality over quantity — 10 excellent listings consistently beats 1,000 mediocre listings launched in a panic.
Terms
scaling
— growing a business's revenue systematically by increasing inputs (listings, ad budget) in a controlled, repeatable way
"Rerun" strategy — re-launch existing products with new main image or keywordsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:56:42▶ Watch

"Rerun" strategy — re-launch existing products with new main image or keywords

A "rerun" = take an existing listing, change the main image (and/or keywords/value proposition), DUPLICATE it (do NOT edit the original), and publish the duplicate as a fresh listing so it gets a new shot at the algorithm. Always compete against your last best metric. Rule: never edit the existing listing when doing a rerun — the original has already been judged.

"A rerun is when you run the same product again with either a different main image or a new value proposition."
Terms
rerun
— re-launching a modified duplicate of an existing listing to get a fresh algorithmic evaluation
Keep a consistent launch schedule; mix new products with rerunsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:57:38▶ Watch

Keep a consistent launch schedule; mix new products with reruns

Etsy is a horizontal scaling business — the only way to grow after maxing ads is to add more listings. Pick a realistic launch number and stick to it consistently (e.g., 10/month or 50/month). Instead of always launching 100% new products, split your launch schedule: e.g., 5 new + 5 reruns per month. This ensures existing products are fully explored before being abandoned.

"It's a marathon and not a sprint. Pick a launch number that's realistic to you and stick to it."
Terms
horizontal scaling
— growing a business by adding more products/listings rather than increasing prices or upsells on existing ones
Three rerun types: Falling Star, Trendsetter, Product InspirationQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:03:55▶ Watch

Three rerun types: Falling Star, Trendsetter, Product Inspiration

  1. Falling Star — product that historically performed well but is on a downward trend; rerun by split-testing a new main image.
  2. Trendsetter — product on an upward trend but not fully explored; rerun by trying bundles, "more for less" positioning, or featuring the best-selling variation in the main image.
  3. Product Report Inspiration — product-level data reveals a new bundle or variation combo that doesn't yet exist as its own listing.
Reviving a Falling Star: change main image, duplicate firstQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:05:35▶ Watch

Reviving a Falling Star: change main image, duplicate first

For a falling-star listing:

  1. In Profit Tree, sort listings by most profitable.
  2. Identify a listing on a harsh decline vs. previous period.
  3. Duplicate the listing.
  4. Change the main image (brighter, better-staged photo).
  5. Publish the duplicate as a new listing. If tested 1–2 times with new images and nothing changes, the product's demand has dried up — put it to rest. Images are the #1 lever for reviving declining listings.
"This is the only way I've ever seen products come back from the dead."
Trendsetter rerun: bundle and "more for less" tacticsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:10:26▶ Watch

Trendsetter rerun: bundle and "more for less" tactics

When a single product is on a steep upward trend (spotted in Profit Tree listing report):

  1. Check which variation sells most (e.g., 20-inch pillow = 50%+ of sales).
  2. Split test showing two of the same item in the main image with a slight bundle discount.
  3. If no bundle version exists yet, create one listing showing the pair.
  4. Also explore adding the top variation to an existing bundle if missing.
Terms
more-for-less
— a pricing/image strategy where a bundle of two identical items is shown at a slight discount to raise average order value
Product-level rerun: match main image to top-selling variationQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 4:13:45▶ Watch

Product-level rerun: match main image to top-selling variation

In Profit Tree's product report (not listing report), sort by most profit. If the #1 profit-driving SKU is a white female shirt but the main listing image shows a tan male shirt, duplicate the listing and change the main image to match the top-selling variation. This low-effort swap often unlocks significantly more sales by reducing friction for the buyer who is already purchasing that variant most.

Terms
SKU (stock-keeping unit)
— a unique product code assigned to each distinct variation, allowing per-product profit tracking
Scaling = keep adding products; Etsy is a numbers gameYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 41:18▶ Watch

Scaling = keep adding products; Etsy is a numbers game

After launching, the next step is to add more products and repeat the research/creation process. Etsy is a numbers game — a shop with fewer than 10 products will struggle to build solid income. Most successful Etsy shops have hundreds or even thousands of products. Mental model: each listing is a "door" into your shop — more products = more doors = more chances to be discovered and make a sale. Not all products will sell — Yale has hundreds of products but only a small percentage drive most sales. This follows the 80/20 principle: ~80% of results come from ~20% of products. Goal: create enough listings to discover which ones become best sellers, then double down on those.

"Every listing you create is like a door into your shop. The more products you have, the more doors people have to discover you."
Terms
80/20 principle (Pareto principle)
— the observation that roughly 80% of outcomes come from 20% of causes — in Etsy context, a small number of listings drive most revenue
Bundling strategy to scale faster and increase order valueYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 42:52▶ Watch

Bundling strategy to scale faster and increase order value

Bundling = taking multiple related products and selling them together as a set. Two benefits:

  1. Increases average order value (customer pays more per transaction).
  2. Creates more listings without starting from scratch — repackages already-made products into a higher-value offer. Additional benefit: gives customers options — some prefer individual items, others prefer bundles for slightly better value. Overall scaling goal: build a shop with enough products to generate consistent traffic and develop multiple best sellers with steady sales.
"Bundling is when you take multiple products that make sense together and sell them as a set."
Terms
average order value
— the average dollar amount a customer spends per transaction in your shop
bundling
— packaging multiple related products together as one higher-value listing
Add shop sections using primary keywords to help SEO and buyer navigationPatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 7:55▶ Watch

Add shop sections using primary keywords to help SEO and buyer navigation

Sections group your listings into categories visible on the left side of the shop page. Two benefits:

  1. Buyer experience — shoppers can easily filter/navigate to what they want.
  2. SEO — section names count toward Etsy search ranking. Best practice: name sections using your primary keywords (e.g., "daily planners," "recipe books," "notion templates") rather than generic labels. Also note: a shop with only 9 listings can succeed if it's in a low-competition category — speaker recommends starting with 16–24 listings.
"This shop only has nine listings which is very little listings and they're able to have a lot of success by just having so little products."
Terms
sections
— category groupings within your Etsy shop that appear as navigation filters for buyers
Top 0.1% shops are specialist shops, not generalist shops; run multiple niche shopsPatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 9:15▶ Watch

Top 0.1% shops are specialist shops, not generalist shops; run multiple niche shops

Pattern across all 100+ studied successful shops: they specialize in one niche rather than trying to sell everything. Being a specialist signals authority to buyers. If you have multiple product ideas in different niches, the solution is NOT to mix them in one shop — it's to open separate shops for each niche. Speaker personally runs 5 different shops, each in a different niche/category, each with its own branding targeting a different demographic.

"They have a specialist shop — they're not being a generalist, they're not trying to sell everything under the sun."
Terms
generalist shop
— a shop selling products across many unrelated categories
specialist shop
— a shop focused on one audience/niche, positioned as an authority in that space
Cohesive branding across all listings is a key success driverPatterns of the top 0.1% of shops⏱ 10:35▶ Watch

Cohesive branding across all listings is a key success driver

All top shops maintain a consistent visual identity: same color palette, same font choices, same aesthetic across every listing thumbnail. Method:

  1. Create a mood board (use Pinterest to collect color palettes, branding ideas, typefaces).
  2. Use the mood board as reference when creating every listing image. This keeps all listings visually cohesive. Example: one studied shop used an orange background with a marbling style + minimalistic/clean aesthetic across all listings.
"Cohesive branding is another key driver that what makes your shop successful."
Terms
cohesive branding
— a consistent visual style (colors, fonts, layout) applied uniformly across all listings so the shop feels unified
mood board
— a visual collection of design inspirations used as a reference guide
Myth 5 — you need many products to make sales; Etsy promotes individual listings not shops$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 11:45▶ Watch

Myth 5 — you need many products to make sales; Etsy promotes individual listings not shops

Critical insight: Etsy promotes individual listings, not the shop. A buyer can find your product in search, buy it, and never click your shop name. Therefore: quality of individual listings matters far more than total listing count. Evidence: Speaker's student Mimi made first sales with only 4 products. Speaker personally made significant revenue with fewer than 10 digital products. Students with 100+ listings have barely made 10 sales because they focused on quantity over optimization. Recommendation for beginners:

  1. Start with just 1 product.
  2. Make sure it solves a real problem.
  3. Make sure it passes the TAP test.
  4. Post it, optimize it, let Etsy work.
"Etsy doesn't promote your shop. Etsy promotes individual listings."
Terms
product creation hamster wheel
— the trap of endlessly creating new listings without optimizing existing ones, leading to many unoptimized listings and few sales
Study of 100 shops with 100,000+ sales reveals 6 patterns100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 0:14▶ Watch

Study of 100 shops with 100,000+ sales reveals 6 patterns

The creator analyzed 100 Etsy shops, each with at least 100,000 sales (six-figure sale milestone). After hours of research, six repeated strategies were identified. The study focused on each shop's most sold item using the Everbe Chrome extension to sort by total sales.

"I looked at 100 of Etsy's most successful stores with 100,000 sales or more."
Terms
six-figure sale milestone
— having sold 100,000 or more individual items (not revenue)
97% of 100k-sales shops sell 2+ product types; 85% sell 5+100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 13:26▶ Watch

97% of 100k-sales shops sell 2+ product types; 85% sell 5+

Strategy 4: Selling more than one product. Of 100 shops: 97% offered two or more product types; 85% offered more than five product types; 63% offered multiple products or product variations within their single most-sold listing. Printify (print-on-demand service) was recommended as a tool to offer variety with 1,000+ product catalog. Specific popular products on Printify: Bella Canvas 3001, Gildan 18,000, Comfort Colors (for t-shirts/sweatshirts); Gildan 18,500 (hoodies); Gildan 5000 and Gildan 64,000 (t-shirts).

"97% offered two or more products in their shop and 85% offered more than five."
Terms
print-on-demand
— a fulfillment model where products are only printed and shipped after a customer orders — no inventory held
Printify
— a print-on-demand platform that connects Etsy sellers with printing facilities
Bella Canvas 3001
— a popular unisex t-shirt blank used in print-on-demand
74% of 100k-sales shops have 500+ listings; median is 1,611100 shops with 100k+ sales: the patterns⏱ 15:53▶ Watch

74% of 100k-sales shops have 500+ listings; median is 1,611

Strategy 5: Having 500+ listings. Of 100 shops: 74% had more than 500 listings; 60% had more than 1,000 listings; 29% had more than 2,000 listings. Listing counts ranged from 45 to 7,365 with a median of 1,611. Example shops: 260,000 sales / 2,467 listings; 112,000 sales / 847 listings; 230,000 sales / 2,097 listings; 176,000 sales / 1,570 listings; 147,000 sales / 1,947 listings. Advice: aim to make each new listing 1% better than the last; by listing 1,000 you will have mastered high-converting listing creation.

"Each new listing should be 1% better than the last. By the time you reach a thousand plus listings, you'll have mastered the art of creating high converting listings."
Terms
high-converting listing
— a listing that turns a high percentage of viewers into buyers
Next step: add print-on-demand to convert digital files to physical90-day new shop case study⏱ 8:53▶ Watch

Next step: add print-on-demand to convert digital files to physical

Seller's plan to grow: partner with a print-on-demand (POD) provider to sell physical versions of digital designs. Logic: people are more willing to spend on physical items than digital, so physical versions can command higher prices. POD adds no extra fulfillment work — the POD service handles printing and shipping. This strategy layers revenue without additional labor.

"I feel like if I can do that I can actually make more profit on each sale since people are more willing to spend on physical things"
Terms
print-on-demand (POD)
— a service that prints and ships a physical product only when an order is placed, so seller never holds inventory
Shop plateaued at ~250 active listings; over-focus on low-competition hurt growth1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 5:45▶ Watch

Shop plateaued at ~250 active listings; over-focus on low-competition hurt growth

By mid-year seller had 250 constantly active listings (300+ total created), deactivating seasonal ones to avoid reactivation fees. Shop started to plateau. Root cause: over-focused on low-competition products, meaning many listings had little demand. Also, too many seasonal listings rotating in/out. Lesson: need to also target higher-demand products, even if more competitive.

"I noticed that my shop was starting to plateau. I think it's because I focused too much on low competition products"
Terms
plateau
— when growth stops and performance stays flat; reactivation fee :: Etsy charges $0.20 to relist an expired listing
Lesson 5: Use shop stats to find signals — favorites, keywords, conversion rates1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 13:46▶ Watch

Lesson 5: Use shop stats to find signals — favorites, keywords, conversion rates

Monitor which listings get the most views, which keywords drive traffic, which listings have the best conversion rates. Specific signal: products that get favorited even without selling = pent-up interest, lean into that style more. If a keyword has high visibility but low conversions, tweak the title or thumbnail. Data tells you what to do next — don't guess.

"the data is always trying to tell you something, so don't just guess what to do next. Use your own shop's behavior as your guide"
Terms
favorites
— when a buyer saves a listing to their Etsy favorites without purchasing; visibility :: how often a listing appears in search results
Alternative marketplace sites: use as additional channels, not replacements$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 20:15▶ Watch

Alternative marketplace sites: use as additional channels, not replacements

Strategic framework for using Etsy-alternative sites: use them as additional sales channels, NOT as replacements for your main platform. Analogy: "like fishing lines — the more you have out there, the better the chances of catching a sale." Assets built on your own website (product photos, pricing, sizing info, descriptions) can be reused directly on marketplace listings — no need to recreate from scratch.

"think of them like fishing lines — the more you have out there the better the chances of catching a sale"
Terms
sales channel
— any platform or method through which you sell products (e.g., Etsy, your own website, Instagram shop)
Week 4+ — Endurance phase: 1 hour/day, 1–2 new products/weekNo sales? How to hit the ground running⏱ 10:02▶ Watch

Week 4+ — Endurance phase: 1 hour/day, 1–2 new products/week

From week 4 onwards, the weekly rhythm is:

  1. Beginning of week = research phase: compare bestsellers vs. poor sellers, read reviews, identify improvements.
  2. Mid and end of week = create new products with more value than competitors.
  3. Aim to publish 1–2 products per week minimum. Consistency is the non-negotiable factor. One high-value product per week beats two mediocre ones. This cycle repeats indefinitely.
"Every week you need to set aside at least one hour a day to recreate the steps that you've already taken to launch your business."
Terms
endurance phase
— the long-term consistency stage after initial launch — no longer about setup, just steady creation and listing
product arsenal
— the collection of completed ready-to-publish products you have built up as a buffer
Chapter 14

Beyond Etsy & Other Models

Your own website, other platforms, and adjacent businesses
20 points

The Pain

You've heard Etsy can suspend you or take a big cut, and you wonder if you should sell elsewhere - but building your own site sounds hard and you don't know the alternatives.

The Relief

Etsy is the best STARTER because it brings the traffic. Once you have buyers, you can diversify: your own site (Shopify, Payhip, Stan, Gumroad) keeps more margin and the customer relationship but YOU must drive traffic. Other marketplaces (Creative Market, your own store) and adjacent creative businesses (templates, print-on-demand, courses, services) reuse the same skills. Smart sellers start on Etsy for traffic, then build an email list and a home base they fully control.

Mental Picture

Etsy is renting a stall in someone else's busy mall - easy customers, but their rules and rent. Your own website is owning a corner shop on a quiet street - all the profit and control, but you must bring the crowd yourself. The pros do both: rent for traffic, own for freedom.

Plain-English Glossary

Own website / storefront
A site you control (Shopify, Payhip, Gumroad, Stan) - higher margin, but you drive the traffic.
Shopify
A paid platform for building your own branded online store.
Payhip / Gumroad / Stan
Low-cost tools to sell digital products directly, often with low or no monthly fee.
Print-on-demand
A model where a partner prints/ships physical goods per order - no inventory for you.
Customer relationship / ownership
Having buyers' contact info so you can sell to them again (you own it off-platform).
payment gateway
a service that processes credit card payments (e.g., Stripe, PayPal); URL slug :: the custom text at the end of a web address, e.g., gumroad.com/l/faceless-viral-guide
marketplace
a shared platform (like Etsy) where many sellers list products side-by-side
own website
a standalone store you build and control entirely (e.g., Shopify, Hostinger)
email marketing
sending promotional or follow-up emails to past customers to generate repeat sales
conversion rate
the percentage of website visitors who actually make a purchase
traffic
the number of visitors coming to your online store
built-in traffic
existing shoppers already on a marketplace platform (like Etsy) who may find your shop without any marketing effort
account suspension
when Etsy (or any marketplace) closes your shop, often without warning, removing your ability to sell and potentially withholding funds
theme
a pre-designed website template you customize with your own colors, logo, and content
transaction fee
a percentage of each sale taken by the platform (e.g., Etsy takes 6.5%)
AI Builder
a tool that uses artificial intelligence to automatically generate a website layout, product listings, and descriptions based on your inputs
mobile-responsive
a website that automatically adjusts its layout to look and work correctly on smartphones
WooCommerce
a free plugin added to WordPress that adds online store functionality
product variants
different versions of the same product (e.g., different sizes or colors, each with its own price/inventory)
checkout page
the final step where a customer enters payment and shipping info to complete a purchase
Maker Place
an online marketplace backed by Michaels (the craft supply retail chain), focused on handmade goods
Go Imagine
a small handmade/vintage marketplace that donates 2% of sales to charity
affiliate
a person who promotes someone else's product and earns a commission (percentage of the sale price) for each sale they generate
commission
the cut of the sale price you keep when someone buys through your link
Social proof
evidence that others have bought and trust your product (reviews, sales count) — reduces purchase hesitation for new buyers
Traction
the point where a shop has consistent sales, reviews, and growth momentum — the launchpad for expanding beyond Etsy
recurring value
a product bought repeatedly by the same customer, generating ongoing revenue without re-acquiring that customer
domain name
the web address you own (e.g., myshop.com); .store :: a domain extension specifically for shops/e-commerce sites
freelancing
selling your skills to multiple clients on a project-by-project basis rather than being employed full-time
polymer clay
a type of oven-hardening modeling clay used to make jewelry, figurines, etc.; laser printing :: using a laser-cutting/engraving machine to create designs on wood, leather, acrylic, etc.
articulate
to explain something clearly; empathy :: understanding and sharing the feelings/struggles of another person
one-on-one
working directly with a single client or student at a time
perceived value
how much a customer believes something is worth, which can exceed the actual production cost; comparison shopping :: when a buyer checks multiple sellers to find the best price
base product
the underlying physical item (mug, shirt, canvas) before personalization is added
print on demand (POD)
a fulfillment model where products (shirts, mugs, etc.) are printed and shipped only after an order is placed, with no inventory held; mockup photos :: digitally composed images showing a product design applied to an item without physical production; fulfillment :: the process of receiving, packaging, and shipping orders to customers
Sell on Gumroad: no website, payment gateway, or verification neededCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 21:05▶ Watch

Sell on Gumroad: no website, payment gateway, or verification needed

Gumroad.com is a free platform to sell digital products without building a website, setting up payment gateways, or complex verification. Steps to list on Gumroad:

  1. Go to gumroad.com → "Start selling."
  2. Sign up with Google.
  3. Click "Create first product."
  4. Choose type "Ebook."
  5. Add product name and subtitle.
  6. Set price.
  7. Click Next → Customize.
  8. Add description (use ChatGPT to write a sales page description).
  9. Set custom URL slug (e.g., "faceless-viral-guide").
  10. Upload cover image (1280x720 from Canva).
  11. Upload PDF file.
  12. Click Publish.
  13. Copy product URL. You can immediately share this link to start selling.
"You can just upload your product and start selling it without too many verifications, without creating any payment methods"
Terms
payment gateway
— a service that processes credit card payments (e.g., Stripe, PayPal); URL slug :: the custom text at the end of a web address, e.g., gumroad.com/l/faceless-viral-guide
Two main ways to sell online: marketplace vs own website$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 1:05▶ Watch

Two main ways to sell online: marketplace vs own website

Two fundamental models:

  1. Marketplace sites (e.g., Etsy) — you are one of hundreds of thousands of shops sharing a platform's existing traffic.
  2. Own website — it's just you, full control. You can do both, but starting with multiple platforms at once leads to mediocre results everywhere. Speaker's advice: pick ONE platform, master it, turn it into a sales machine, then expand.
"trying to master multiple platforms at once especially when you're just starting out usually leads to mediocre results everywhere"
Terms
marketplace
— a shared platform (like Etsy) where many sellers list products side-by-side
own website
— a standalone store you build and control entirely (e.g., Shopify, Hostinger)
Own website pros: no direct competition, full control$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 1:40▶ Watch

Own website pros: no direct competition, full control

Advantages of your own website:

  1. No direct price competition — competitors can't undercut you on the same page.
  2. Nearly total control over shop design and pricing strategy.
  3. Advanced coupon codes.
  4. Build a loyal customer base of repeat buyers.
  5. Collect customer emails for email marketing. Speaker notes: over 20% of her sales came from email marketing.
"more than 20% of my sales came from email marketing"
Terms
email marketing
— sending promotional or follow-up emails to past customers to generate repeat sales
conversion rate
— the percentage of website visitors who actually make a purchase
Own website con: you must generate your own traffic$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 2:40▶ Watch

Own website con: you must generate your own traffic

The main drawback of your own website is you must drive your own traffic — no built-in audience. However, own-website visitors who arrive specifically for you are far more likely to buy than marketplace browsers who are window-shopping across thousands of stores and buying the cheapest option. Marketplace traffic is completely out of your control and driven by algorithms that change constantly.

Terms
traffic
— the number of visitors coming to your online store
built-in traffic
— existing shoppers already on a marketplace platform (like Etsy) who may find your shop without any marketing effort
Etsy risk: shop can be shut down without notice, earnings withheld$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 4:30▶ Watch

Etsy risk: shop can be shut down without notice, earnings withheld

Real documented risk: speaker is coaching a client who started selling on Etsy, hit the ground running with dozens of sales, then Etsy shut down her store without any notice and did NOT pay her for the sales already made. This happens regularly. The key long-term business principle: focus on investing time/money/energy into things YOU control, not platforms that can shut you down at any moment.

"the key to building a long-term business that lasts for years... is to focus on investing in things you have control over"
Terms
account suspension
— when Etsy (or any marketplace) closes your shop, often without warning, removing your ability to sell and potentially withholding funds
Shopify: best own-website platform, but expensive at $39/month$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 5:45▶ Watch

Shopify: best own-website platform, but expensive at $39/month

Shopify pros: pioneered online commerce, easy to use (choose a free theme, customize colors, create listings, set up store pages like About/Contact/Policies, configure settings), fast site speed, large user base so easy to get support. Shopify cons: $39/month base price; speaker's own Shopify bill runs $300–$500/month. Many shops close because they can't sustain monthly costs while still learning how to get traffic.

Terms
Shopify
— a dedicated e-commerce platform where you build and own your own standalone online store
theme
— a pre-designed website template you customize with your own colors, logo, and content
Hostinger AI Builder: full store in 20 minutes, zero transaction fees$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 9:26▶ Watch

Hostinger AI Builder: full store in 20 minutes, zero transaction fees

Hostinger is a website builder with an AI Builder feature. Key specs:

  1. Price: a few dollars per month (fraction of Shopify's $39).
  2. Transaction fees: 0% — Hostinger takes no cut of sales.
  3. Setup speed: speaker built an almost-complete working store in 20 minutes.
  4. AI Builder workflow: enter shop name + description → AI generates full site structure, mobile-responsive layout, product listings with AI-written descriptions from uploaded photos.
  5. Additional AI tools: logo generator, AI writer for product descriptions with custom prompts.
  6. Inventory tracking included.
  7. Payment methods: PayPal and Stripe supported.
  8. Shipping: set by weight or order price.
  9. Discounts system included.
"zero transaction fees — this is completely unheard of"
Terms
transaction fee
— a percentage of each sale taken by the platform (e.g., Etsy takes 6.5%)
AI Builder
— a tool that uses artificial intelligence to automatically generate a website layout, product listings, and descriptions based on your inputs
mobile-responsive
— a website that automatically adjusts its layout to look and work correctly on smartphones
Website builder comparison: Wix, Squarespace, Big Cartel, WordPress — all worse than Shopify/Hostinger$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 14:20▶ Watch

Website builder comparison: Wix, Squarespace, Big Cartel, WordPress — all worse than Shopify/Hostinger

Speaker evaluated four alternatives:

  1. Wix — makes pretty websites but e-commerce features are an afterthought; checkout is clunky (most important part of a store); requires paid apps for basic storefront; e-commerce pricing starts at $27/month (nearly Shopify's price).
  2. Squarespace — beautiful templates but limited inventory management, very limited product variants, no checkout page customization; premium price for mediocre e-commerce.
  3. Big Cartel — affordable, artist-focused, but incredibly basic; you'll outgrow it fast; limited product variations and shipping options; actually more expensive than Hostinger.
  4. WordPress + WooCommerce — flexible but requires technical knowledge or a developer; every update can break the site; malware/virus attacks leave you on your own; not worth it unless you love tinkering.
Terms
WooCommerce
— a free plugin added to WordPress that adds online store functionality
product variants
— different versions of the same product (e.g., different sizes or colors, each with its own price/inventory)
checkout page
— the final step where a customer enters payment and shipping info to complete a purchase
Etsy alternatives: most marketplace sites not worth it in 2025$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 18:55▶ Watch

Etsy alternatives: most marketplace sites not worth it in 2025

Speaker researched dozens of marketplace sites. Most are not worth it in 2025 due to: very low traffic, poor maintenance, or being flooded with mass-produced items. Two exceptions worth considering:

  1. Maker Place by Michaels — backed by a huge corporation (Michaels craft stores), focused on handmade/unique items, far less competition than Etsy, free to list products, lower fees than Etsy. Speaker has made over $10,000 in sales there.
  2. Go Imagine — handmade/vintage/craft supplies focus (what Etsy used to be), 2% of all sales donated to children in need, free plan up to 12 listings, paid plan $5–$15/month for unlimited listings.
Terms
Maker Place
— an online marketplace backed by Michaels (the craft supply retail chain), focused on handmade goods
Go Imagine
— a small handmade/vintage marketplace that donates 2% of sales to charity
OfferLab marketplace: find affiliate digital products to promoteWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 4:26▶ Watch

OfferLab marketplace: find affiliate digital products to promote

OfferLab is a marketplace (application-only, not open signup) where sellers can find ready-made digital products to promote as affiliates. Categories include: e-commerce, digital goods, courses & coaching, experiences (retreats, live workshops, virtual challenges). Product commissions shown: $48.50/month recurring, $78 flat, ~$200 flat, $30–$900/year recurring, $1,350 flat (Unstoppable U 8-week alcohol-free program).

"You can just go to marketplace like this, find the product I'm interested in, and in five minutes I can start promoting it."
Terms
affiliate
— a person who promotes someone else's product and earns a commission (percentage of the sale price) for each sale they generate
commission
— the cut of the sale price you keep when someone buys through your link
Etsy is a launchpad, not forever home; expand after gaining tractionWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 11:10▶ Watch

Etsy is a launchpad, not forever home; expand after gaining traction

Etsy is framed as the fastest way to build momentum, revenue, and a customer base — not necessarily a permanent home. Recommended sequence:

  1. Start on Etsy — access 95 million buyers with zero ad spend and no website build needed.
  2. Use Etsy to test products, learn what customers want, build social proof (reviews), and generate consistent revenue.
  3. Once consistent profit exists, expand to Shopify, Amazon, or other channels. Without initial Etsy momentum, there is nothing to expand. Etsy can be built in the margins of a full-time job if time is used intentionally.
"Etsy's not necessarily meant to be your only home forever. It's meant to be your fastest way to build momentum and revenue and a customer base"
Terms
Social proof
— evidence that others have bought and trust your product (reviews, sales count) — reduces purchase hesitation for new buyers
Traction
— the point where a shop has consistent sales, reviews, and growth momentum — the launchpad for expanding beyond Etsy
Business type 1 — products with recurring (repeat) value5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 1:38▶ Watch

Business type 1 — products with recurring (repeat) value

Products that people naturally need to buy again and again. Examples: tea, candles, chocolate, dog treats, supplements. These work because the customer does not need to redecide every purchase — the decision is made once and they keep buying. Subscriptions follow the same logic (customer buys until they cancel).

"products that people naturally need to buy again and again"
Terms
recurring value
— a product bought repeatedly by the same customer, generating ongoing revenue without re-acquiring that customer
Own your home base — don't tie everything to platforms5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 4:31▶ Watch

Own your home base — don't tie everything to platforms

Building something meant to last requires owning your home base. Do not tie everything to platforms you don't control (like Etsy or Instagram). Practical tip from speaker: first thing when creating a new business or product idea is to buy the domain name — it makes the idea real and creates accountability to actually start. Normally recommend .com, but .store domain is an alternative when good .com names are taken.

"one of the first things I personally do whenever I'm creating a new business or a product idea is buy the domain name"
Terms
domain name
— the web address you own (e.g., myshop.com); .store :: a domain extension specifically for shops/e-commerce sites
Business type 2 — niched freelancing/creative services5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 8:55▶ Watch

Business type 2 — niched freelancing/creative services

Second business type: freelancing and services for creative tasks — video editing, social media management, design, photography. Despite appearing saturated, there is a massive gap between how many business owners need help and how few truly skilled, reliable service providers exist. The gap is not about cheap help but good help: talented people with unique style who communicate well, don't need micromanaging, and care about outcomes.

"there is actually a huge gap between how many business owners need help and how few truly good service providers there are"
Terms
freelancing
— selling your skills to multiple clients on a project-by-project basis rather than being employed full-time
Business type 3 — teaching your craft5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 16:15▶ Watch

Business type 3 — teaching your craft

Third business type: teaching your craft. Can include: sculpting, ceramics, polymer clay, sewing, knitting, laser printing, woodworking — virtually anything. Teaching can be very profitable but only done with care and intention. Key point: you do not need to be the best in the world or top 1%. You just need to be a few steps ahead of the person you're teaching and be good at explaining things in a way someone at that earlier stage understands.

"You don't need to be the top 1%. You just need to be a few steps ahead of the person you're teaching"
Terms
polymer clay
— a type of oven-hardening modeling clay used to make jewelry, figurines, etc.; laser printing :: using a laser-cutting/engraving machine to create designs on wood, leather, acrylic, etc.
Teaching skill ≠ craft skill — clarity and empathy are the real product5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 17:05▶ Watch

Teaching skill ≠ craft skill — clarity and empathy are the real product

Being good at something and being good at teaching it are two very different skills. Many people with incredible skills fail at teaching because they cannot articulate what they know or put themselves in students' shoes. People paying for teaching are not just paying for information — they are paying to:

  1. skip confusion,
  2. avoid making costly mistakes,
  3. save time,
  4. feel less alone while figuring something out. Clarity and empathy = the actual value delivered.
"People aren't just paying for information. They're paying to skip confusion and they're paying to avoid making all of those mistakes"
Terms
articulate
— to explain something clearly; empathy :: understanding and sharing the feelings/struggles of another person
Teaching can start small — one-on-one, PDF guide, or small workshop5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 19:02▶ Watch

Teaching can start small — one-on-one, PDF guide, or small workshop

Teaching does not have to start big. Small starting formats:

  1. one-on-one sessions,
  2. small group workshops,
  3. a simple blog post,
  4. a PDF guide. Something that helps one person do one thing better is a valid start. You don't need a massive audience, especially if the model is primarily one-on-one work.
"Teaching doesn't have to start big. It can start very small, like doing one-on-one sessions or a small group workshop, even a simple blog post or a PDF guide"
Terms
one-on-one
— working directly with a single client or student at a time
Business type 4 — personalized products5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 19:20▶ Watch

Business type 4 — personalized products

Fourth business type: personalized products. This category keeps working year after year because people like buying things that feel made specifically for themselves or for someone else. Why personalization works:

  1. instantly makes a product feel more meaningful,
  2. raises perceived value,
  3. makes comparison shopping harder (you can't easily compare a custom item),
  4. people are happy to pay more. Also a strong moat — someone can copy a general mug or t-shirt design, but cannot easily copy your process, systems, or how thoughtful the final result feels.
"Personalization instantly makes a product feel more meaningful. It raises the perceived value and it makes comparison shopping harder"
Terms
perceived value
— how much a customer believes something is worth, which can exceed the actual production cost; comparison shopping :: when a buyer checks multiple sellers to find the best price
Personalized products — emotional layer + quality base = unbeatable business5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 19:55▶ Watch

Personalized products — emotional layer + quality base = unbeatable business

Where most personalized products fail: the base product (the mug, t-shirt, framed canvas without the personalization) is just not very good quality. The personalized layer is powerful because it symbolizes a special moment, memory, or milestone — that emotional layer attracts buyers. But coupling emotional personalization with an excellent base product creates an "undefeatable business." Because you can charge more, you don't need a ton of sales — fewer orders at a higher price point is more sustainable.

"when you couple that with also having an amazing product, that's when you have an undefeatable business"
Terms
base product
— the underlying physical item (mug, shirt, canvas) before personalization is added
Business type 5 — print on demand (with a big caveat)5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 20:45▶ Watch

Business type 5 — print on demand (with a big caveat)

Fifth business type: print on demand (POD). Big caveat: POD does not work if you do what everyone else is doing. Common failing pattern: making trendy Gen Z quotes or using the same stock mockup photos in listings. Where POD can work: treat it like a real creative business first; POD is just the production and shipping method. Requirements for POD to work:

  1. clear specific niche,
  2. thoughtful design and good quality product,
  3. good branding and intentional website,
  4. take your own product photos and videos showing the product in real life.
"Print on demand does not work if you do what everyone else is doing. If everyone else is zigging, you need to zag"
Terms
print on demand (POD)
— a fulfillment model where products (shirts, mugs, etc.) are printed and shipped only after an order is placed, with no inventory held; mockup photos :: digitally composed images showing a product design applied to an item without physical production; fulfillment :: the process of receiving, packaging, and shipping orders to customers
Chapter 15

Mistakes, Pitfalls, Legal & Mindset

The traps that sink beginners - and the mindset that doesn't
27 points

The Pain

You're terrified of invisible landmines: copyright strikes, a banned account, wasting months on the wrong thing, or just losing motivation and quitting like everyone warns you will.

The Relief

Most failure is predictable and avoidable. Top traps: using copyrighted/trademarked content, listing only a handful of products, skipping research, copying others exactly, pricing in a race to the bottom, and quitting before the ramp. Legal basics: only sell what you have the rights to (your designs, commercial-licensed assets, public-domain works). Mindset: this is a 6-12 month build, winners come from a few listings out of many, and consistency beats intensity. Treat it as a business, not a lottery ticket.

Mental Picture

A minefield with a posted map. The mines (copyright, one-product shops, quitting at week 3) are exactly where everyone steps. The map (this chapter) shows where they are - walk the marked path and you cross safely while others get blown up.

Plain-English Glossary

Copyright infringement
Selling work (images, characters, text) you don't have the rights to - a fast route to a ban.
Commercial license
Permission to use an asset (font, graphic) in products you sell.
Public domain
Works whose copyright has expired and are free to use commercially.
Rookie mistakes
The common avoidable errors (no research, one product, trademark use) that sink new shops.
Mindset / consistency
The psychological habits - patience, showing up, treating it as a business - that separate winners.
external ads
paid advertising on platforms outside Etsy (Facebook, Google, TikTok, Pinterest Ads) used to drive shoppers to your Etsy listings — not recommended given Etsy's 6.5% fee structure
commercial use license
legal permission to use an asset in products you sell
trademark
a legally registered name, logo, or symbol owned by a brand or individual
algorithm indexing
the process by which Etsy's search engine reads, categorizes, and decides where to show a new listing in search results — this can take days to weeks
active shop signals
actions on Etsy (listing updates, responding to messages, running promotions) that tell the algorithm your shop is engaged, without necessarily requiring new listings
piracy
illegally copying and distributing someone else's digital product for free
Etsy ads
paid promotion within Etsy that shows your listing higher in search results; social proof :: reviews and ratings that signal trustworthiness to future buyers
algorithm
Etsy's automated system that decides which listings to show to which buyers in search; seasonality :: predictable rises and falls in sales depending on time of year
perfectionism trap
the tendency to keep improving a product instead of shipping it, which delays revenue indefinitely
faceless brand
an online business/social media presence where the real owner never appears on camera — the brand is built around an AI character or anonymous persona
impostor syndrome
belief that you got lucky and don't deserve your success — common among self-taught online sellers
9-to-5
shorthand for a conventional salaried job with fixed hours
self-disqualifying
the habit of listing reasons you are not good enough before even attempting something
Etsy Bots
Etsy's automated moderation/enforcement system that flags, suspends, or removes listings and shops without human review
Alibaba/AliExpress
Chinese wholesale/retail platforms; Etsy bots scan them for duplicate product photos
Trend wave
a temporary surge in demand for a product type that eventually fades; lasting ~1–2 years at most on Etsy
Tipping point
the moment when accumulated effort finally produces visible, rapid growth — it looks like overnight success but is not
Keyword tools
software like eRank, Marmalead, or Alura that shows what customers search on Etsy; limitation is these reflect past/current Etsy data, not what's about to trend
Visual identity
the consistent look of your shop — fonts, colors, mockup style, banner — which signals brand quality to buyers
social proof
using others' visible success (likes, views, followers) as evidence that something works
word-of-mouth
customers recommending your product to others without you paying for it
passive income
money earned with minimal ongoing effort after initial setup; the term is often misapplied to teaching which requires active ongoing work
brand-first
building a clear identity, niche, and visual style before worrying about production methods
Mindset: stop over-researching and start — you can always pivotNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 37:18▶ Watch

Mindset: stop over-researching and start — you can always pivot

Creator spent exactly 5 hours on market research and then forced herself to stop and decide. Key principle: you cannot do market research indefinitely — you must commit to a niche and launch. You can always pivot if it does not work. Even if the niche fails, the learning (Canva skills, resume writing, listing optimization) has value. Reframe: "Even if it doesn't sell, I will have learned a lot of things." Doubts are normal — creator also experienced fear (will people buy? too competitive? too much work?) and pushed through anyway.

"You can't keep doing market research for months and not starting your Etsy shop — you've got to start somewhere, you can always pivot later."
Etsy is a marathon — avoid fast blind decisionsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 9:45▶ Watch

Etsy is a marathon — avoid fast blind decisions

New sellers tend to rush and make decisions without data. The winning approach is: learn, evolve, and improve incrementally every day. Small consistent improvements over long periods outperform sprint-style attempts. Emotional, unfounded decisions are a primary failure pattern.

"This game is so much not a sprint. It's a marathon."
Red flag #1 — not validating your product idea firstQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:19:24▶ Watch

Red flag #1 — not validating your product idea first

Most common mistake: choosing a product you want to make rather than one with proven demand. Fix: open Profit Tree, search for a product type, confirm demand + estimated revenue before creating anything. "The most important time you're spending in this entire process is just starting out from the gate with something that has a good chance of selling."

Red flag #2 — not understanding the product you're makingQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:19:52▶ Watch

Red flag #2 — not understanding the product you're making

Example: baby-shower wine labels. Sellers who don't understand the use case (labels are gifted in packs of 4–6 at baby showers, each label carrying a milestone phrase like "first night out," "baby sleeps through the night") create wrong products — e.g., single labels or wrong themes. Research the end-use: search the product online, look at top listings, understand why buyers buy it before designing.

Red flag #3 — poor listing thumbnail / main imageQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:21:41▶ Watch

Red flag #3 — poor listing thumbnail / main image

Main listing image is the only factor the buyer uses to decide to click your product in search results. Sellers often rush the thumbnail after tiring from product creation. Warning: do not cut corners on the main image. It determines click-through rate, which in turn drives algorithm ranking. Push through fatigue and make the thumbnail high-quality.

Green flag #2 — seek feedback early, join communityQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:22:57▶ Watch

Green flag #2 — seek feedback early, join community

Sellers who share listings with others (coaches, community members) early get faster course-correction. Mistake: being secretive and protective of listings when you have only 2 sales. Better to learn your listing images are off after 10 days than after months. Recommended: join a seller community, get feedback loops early. Sellers who do this outperform solo sellers.

Mindset — set goals pre-launch or risk random, unfocused effortQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:57:50▶ Watch

Mindset — set goals pre-launch or risk random, unfocused effort

Launching without defined goals leads to: shiny object syndrome (chasing every new idea), mismanagement of time (your biggest resource as a side hustler), and no accountability mechanism. Top sellers have clear defined goals from day one. Business in a nutshell: set a goal → execute → diagnose why you missed → improve. If you miss a quarterly revenue target, reverse-engineer: did you miscalculate COGS? Did you only launch 10 listings instead of 25? Use deductive reasoning to course-correct.

"Setting a goal, trying to hit the goal, and figuring out why you didn't hit your goal — this is literally business on the highest level."
Don't run external ads (Facebook/Google) to Etsy — it's a double costQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:14:40▶ Watch

Don't run external ads (Facebook/Google) to Etsy — it's a double cost

Running Facebook, Google, or TikTok ads to drive traffic to an Etsy listing is a strategic mistake for most sellers: you pay the external ad platform AND Etsy still charges its 6.5% transaction fee on every sale (which exists specifically to pay for the traffic Etsy generates for you). Exception: if you have strong influencer-level social media following and can generate viral/free traffic, drive it to your own website (not Etsy) to avoid paying the 6.5%. Playing the Etsy "game" correctly means using Etsy's own ad system, not outsourcing traffic acquisition to other platforms.

"you're paying Etsy a 6.5% selling fee for Etsy to solve a problem for you, and that problem is called traffic"
Terms
external ads
— paid advertising on platforms outside Etsy (Facebook, Google, TikTok, Pinterest Ads) used to drive shoppers to your Etsy listings — not recommended given Etsy's 6.5% fee structure
Copyright and licensing rules for Etsy digital product sellersYale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 17:12▶ Watch

Copyright and licensing rules for Etsy digital product sellers

Downloading an image or graphic does not grant right to resell it. Prohibited: using graphics from Pinterest, Google, or random websites in products for sale — risks listing takedown or shop suspension. Safe approach with Canva: most Canva elements are licensed for commercial use (can be included in products for sale), BUT you cannot sell a single Canva element on its own. You must transform it into a new design by adding text, combining elements, changing colors, adjusting layout, including photos. Always check fonts and illustrations for commercial-use license — "personal use only" means cannot sell. Trademarks strictly forbidden: no brand names, logos, celebrities, Disney, Taylor Swift, Nike, etc. Etsy is getting stricter about enforcement.

"If you don't have the rights to use it commercially, don't use it."
Terms
commercial use license
— legal permission to use an asset in products you sell
trademark
— a legally registered name, logo, or symbol owned by a brand or individual
Consistency uploading high-quality products is non-negotiable for successHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 17:15▶ Watch

Consistency uploading high-quality products is non-negotiable for success

"You will not get success on Etsy if you cannot find a way to upload high-quality products on a consistent basis." The barrier to entry on Etsy is genuinely low — simple, basic products sometimes become bestsellers. But you must combine: consistent uploads + high quality + data diagnosis. The key variables that separate success from failure are the seller's mindset and consistency. Two people given the exact same course: one can earn $20,000/month, the other quits after 2 months.

"You will not get success on Etsy if you cannot find a way to upload high-quality products on a consistent basis."
Myth 4 — if product doesn't sell in first week it's a failure; Etsy runs on delayed timelines$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 10:22▶ Watch

Myth 4 — if product doesn't sell in first week it's a failure; Etsy runs on delayed timelines

Etsy works on a delayed timeline: the algorithm takes time to categorize new listings, index keywords, and start testing them in search results. Sometimes fast, sometimes weeks. Many of the speaker's products made little-to-no sales for months before becoming bestsellers earning hundreds of dollars/month. Warning: do NOT delete slow-selling listings. If listings haven't sold, the correct response is:

  1. Edit the SEO.
  2. Update listing photos.
  3. Give it time. Deleting prematurely = quitting right before Etsy starts doing the heavy lifting. Student example: Mimi listed 4 digital products, went away for weeks, came back to find 2 sales in one day.
"Don't be the seller that quits right before Etsy is about to do the heavy lifting."
Terms
algorithm indexing
— the process by which Etsy's search engine reads, categorizes, and decides where to show a new listing in search results — this can take days to weeks
You don't need to post new listings weekly to stay in search; just stay "active"$27k without niching down or Pinterest⏱ 13:27▶ Watch

You don't need to post new listings weekly to stay in search; just stay "active"

Common misconception: "I must list a new product every week to rank higher in search." How Etsy actually works: Etsy only requires that you stay "active" — it does not require weekly new listings. There are multiple ways to stay active without rushing to create new products. Consistently posting rushed, low-quality products is counterproductive. Better: have 10 high-quality listings that solve real problems than 100 listings nobody is searching for. Action: update existing listings (SEO edits, photo updates), engage with messages, run sales/promotions to signal activity.

"You don't have to consistently post new products to stay in search results. Etsy just wants to see that you're active."
Terms
active shop signals
— actions on Etsy (listing updates, responding to messages, running promotions) that tell the algorithm your shop is engaged, without necessarily requiring new listings
Copying is rampant and easy in digital; piracy is a real risk90-day new shop case study⏱ 6:42▶ Watch

Copying is rampant and easy in digital; piracy is a real risk

On Etsy, less successful shops routinely copy more successful ones. With physical products, copying is harder because competitors may lack the same machines or processes. With digital, a competitor can buy your product, make small tweaks, and resell it. Digital files are also easy to pirate — buyers can share or post them for free downloads. Seller says you must accept some lost profit from piracy.

"all it takes is for a competitor to buy one of your items, make some small tweaks and put it up on their shop"
Terms
piracy
— illegally copying and distributing someone else's digital product for free
Running Etsy ads early with no reviews is risky but can accelerate first review1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 2:57▶ Watch

Running Etsy ads early with no reviews is risky but can accelerate first review

In August, seller ran Etsy ads even without any reviews, which is normally not recommended. The goal was not immediate profit but to get that first 5-star review to build trust. The first review came only after 20+ sales. Seller accepted being unprofitable during this period, treating ad spend as an investment in social proof.

"I didn't expect immediate returns. I just really wanted to get that first five-star review to build trust with future buyers"
Terms
Etsy ads
— paid promotion within Etsy that shows your listing higher in search results; social proof :: reviews and ratings that signal trustworthiness to future buyers
Lesson 6: Progress is not linear — algorithm changes, seasonality, trends affect results1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 14:37▶ Watch

Lesson 6: Progress is not linear — algorithm changes, seasonality, trends affect results

Running an Etsy shop is a roller coaster, not a steady climb. Some months everything goes right and sales dip anyway. A dip is not a failure — it's the nature of online business. Contributing factors: trends shift, buyer behavior changes, Etsy algorithm updates (seller noted ~2 major algorithm changes in one year). What matters is consistency of effort, not consistency of results. Sellers who make it are those who stay through slow seasons.

"a slow month isn't a failure. It's just part of the process and the sellers who make it are usually the ones who stick around long enough"
Terms
algorithm
— Etsy's automated system that decides which listings to show to which buyers in search; seasonality :: predictable rises and falls in sales depending on time of year
Biggest beginner mistake: perfecting ebook for months before sellingCreate & sell a product in under 3 hours⏱ 19:43▶ Watch

Biggest beginner mistake: perfecting ebook for months before selling

Most common failure pattern observed across creator's students: spending weeks or months creating and refining an ebook without ever listing it for sale. The correct order is create → list → sell → then improve with customer feedback. Perfectionism before launch = zero revenue. Products can always be updated post-sale.

"spending weeks and months and years as I saw it in some other creators and even my students, they spend so much time creating the ebook and not actually selling it"
Terms
perfectionism trap
— the tendency to keep improving a product instead of shipping it, which delays revenue indefinitely
In 2025 age, location, face-showing are no longer barriersWhy 99% of beginners fail (and the 1%)⏱ 16:42▶ Watch

In 2025 age, location, face-showing are no longer barriers

The speaker's conclusion: in 2025, you do not need to show your face on social media, you do not need to become a content creator in the traditional sense, you do not need followers or an audience. You can build a brand and sell digital products from anywhere in the world regardless of age or location — purely by leveraging AI tools.

"In 2025, it doesn't really matter where you are from, how old you are. You can build your brand."
Terms
faceless brand
— an online business/social media presence where the real owner never appears on camera — the brand is built around an AI character or anonymous persona
Fear kept her in the 9-to-5 for a full extra year despite success$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 6:38▶ Watch

Fear kept her in the 9-to-5 for a full extra year despite success

Even after earning more than her corporate salary from Etsy, the speaker stayed in her draining 9-to-5 for a full additional year because:

  1. Fear of leaving something stable she had done her whole adult life,
  2. Impostor syndrome — convinced she was "not a real designer" and buyers would eventually stop,
  3. Working on Etsy only during weekends and nights. This is a documented psychological barrier many sellers face.
"I stayed in that draining 9 to 5 for a full year while working on selling digital products during weekends and nights."
Terms
impostor syndrome
— belief that you got lucky and don't deserve your success — common among self-taught online sellers
9-to-5
— shorthand for a conventional salaried job with fixed hours
Self-doubt is the #1 barrier — not skill or credentials$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 6:08▶ Watch

Self-doubt is the #1 barrier — not skill or credentials

Speaker's lesson: most people talk themselves out of starting before they begin. Common self-disqualifying thoughts: "I'm not qualified," "I'm not creative," "I'm not smart enough." Her counter-argument: she had zero design background and was in finance, yet succeeded. Takeaway: you will never know unless you start. "The worst thing that can happen is you learn something."

"Most of us talk ourselves out of trying before we even start."
Terms
self-disqualifying
— the habit of listing reasons you are not good enough before even attempting something
Etsy is run by bots; expect automated false suspensions17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 1:30▶ Watch

Etsy is run by bots; expect automated false suspensions

Etsy's enforcement is fully automated. Bots can shut down a shop before a single listing goes live. Your handmade items may be flagged simply because the same photos appear on Alibaba or AliExpress — Etsy's bots assume you are the one copying. Getting reinstated is possible but slow; Etsy's customer service is notoriously unresponsive. This is not personal — the system gets it wrong frequently. Strategy: be patient, keep contacting support, and don't give up if it's a genuine mistake.

"there are no people looking at individual shops going yep we don't like that one shut it down ... it's all automated and it gets it wrong a lot"
Terms
Etsy Bots
— Etsy's automated moderation/enforcement system that flags, suspends, or removes listings and shops without human review
Alibaba/AliExpress
— Chinese wholesale/retail platforms; Etsy bots scan them for duplicate product photos
Constant adaptation is the defining trait of Etsy survivors17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 6:55▶ Watch

Constant adaptation is the defining trait of Etsy survivors

The one difference between successful handmade sellers and those who fail is willingness to adapt. Everything changes: the algorithm, buyer behavior, buyer budgets, promotional methods, and trending products. Adaptation may need to happen yearly, monthly, or even faster. Sellers must carve out dedicated time each week/month to innovate and update products. Never rely on any single trend — even a strong trend wave lasts at most ~2 years.

"the difference between the successful handmade sellers and the ones that unfortunately fall by the wayside it usually boils down to this the willingness to adapt and change"
Terms
Trend wave
— a temporary surge in demand for a product type that eventually fades; lasting ~1–2 years at most on Etsy
Long-term mindset is mandatory; there is no overnight success17 years on Etsy: is it still worth it?⏱ 8:38▶ Watch

Long-term mindset is mandatory; there is no overnight success

Running an Etsy (or handmade) business is a marathon, not a sprint — Kim argues it is actually a lifestyle. "Overnight success" stories always have years of invisible effort behind them; what looks sudden is simply a tipping point after long groundwork. Sellers must make decisions with a 1–3+ year horizon in mind. Both short-term and long-term goals need to coexist.

"it's a marathon it's not a sprint in fact I'd even argue that it's a lifestyle"
Terms
Tipping point
— the moment when accumulated effort finally produces visible, rapid growth — it looks like overnight success but is not
Shops fail by running 2021 strategies in 2026; must update annuallyWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 7:58▶ Watch

Shops fail by running 2021 strategies in 2026; must update annually

A major failure pattern: sellers who did well in 2020–2021 are still using the same strategies, fonts, mockup styles, and SEO from that era. The problems:

  1. Etsy is one of the last platforms to reflect trends — by the time something is a bestseller on Etsy, it's been 6–8 months into the broader market.
  2. Fonts and visual identity must be refreshed every year.
  3. Customer search language has evolved post-2022 — old keyword strategies make listings invisible.
  4. Copying "trending" items from keyword tools means joining a race that has already started or ended.
"a huge percentage of Etsy sellers who are struggling are not failing because Etsy is a bad platform. They're failing because they are running a 2021 Etsy shop in 2026"
Terms
Keyword tools
— software like eRank, Marmalead, or Alura that shows what customers search on Etsy; limitation is these reflect past/current Etsy data, not what's about to trend
Visual identity
— the consistent look of your shop — fonts, colors, mockup style, banner — which signals brand quality to buyers
Profitable businesses are not exciting or viral — don't be fooled5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 3:14▶ Watch

Profitable businesses are not exciting or viral — don't be fooled

Many truly profitable creative businesses are not glamorous or viral. Do not use social media popularity (Instagram reels getting tons of views) as evidence of what actually pays an income. Focus instead on products/services that make something easier, faster, more thoughtful, or more personal for someone else — those sell without heavy convincing.

"A lot of profitable creative businesses aren't exciting. They are not what's going to go viral or get tons of views on an Instagram reel"
Terms
social proof
— using others' visible success (likes, views, followers) as evidence that something works
Selection criterion 4 — quality is the moat and the marketing5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 12:03▶ Watch

Selection criterion 4 — quality is the moat and the marketing

Quality is a cross-business criterion. When a product is actually good: people come back, tell friends, and word-of-mouth keeps the business alive for years instead of failing after 1-2 years. When a product is mediocre: people buy once out of curiosity, don't return, don't spread the word, and all marketing pressure falls on the seller alone — every sale feels heavy, every launch feels exhausting. "Doing a good job is the marketing."

"When sales feel hard, it is often not a marketing problem. It is usually because the product or the offer itself wasn't very good to begin with"
Terms
word-of-mouth
— customers recommending your product to others without you paying for it
Teaching is NOT passive income — it takes real care and responsibility5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 18:10▶ Watch

Teaching is NOT passive income — it takes real care and responsibility

Common misconception: teaching online = passive income. The host explicitly rejects this. Teaching takes work and real responsibility. Students are real people, eager but vulnerable. If you don't genuinely enjoy helping people, answering questions, and making things clearer, teaching will feel very heavy very fast. Do not enter teaching just for the money.

"Teaching is not passive income... You are working with real people who are eager but also vulnerable"
Terms
passive income
— money earned with minimal ongoing effort after initial setup; the term is often misapplied to teaching which requires active ongoing work
POD fails when approached production-first not brand-first5 profitable creative businesses for 2026⏱ 21:50▶ Watch

POD fails when approached production-first not brand-first

Most people approach print on demand with the production aspect first, thinking it will be easy and fast. The result: their shop looks exactly like everyone else's, which is precisely why standing out is an opportunity. The root problem is not lack of ideas but lack of focus — being too broad, trying to appeal to too many people, relying on volume and visibility instead of clarity to carry the business.

"Most people don't have a business idea problem. They have a focus problem. They're too broad"
Terms
brand-first
— building a clear identity, niche, and visual style before worrying about production methods
Chapter 16

Real Case Studies & Numbers

Documented seller journeys with their actual figures and lessons
26 points

The Pain

Tutorials show you the 'how' but you don't believe the 'how much' or 'how long'. You need real, unedited numbers from real people to calibrate your expectations and stay motivated.

The Relief

Here are documented journeys with real figures: a 90-day new shop (month-by-month visits and dollars), a 1-year attempt at $10k/mo (honest, didn't hit it), a $50 first sale that grew into six figures, a $59 ebook that became $500k+, a $560k year across platforms, and a $300k-since-2022 seller. The pattern across all: slow start, a few breakout products, compounding once SEO + reviews kick in, and consistency over months - never overnight.

Mental Picture

A 'before and after' wall at a gym - but with the messy middle photos included. These aren't airbrushed results; they're the real curve: flat, flat, small bump, then a climb. Seeing the actual shape stops you from quitting during the flat part that everyone goes through.

Plain-English Glossary

Revenue vs profit
Revenue is total sales; profit is what's left after fees/costs. Headline numbers are usually revenue.
Visits / traffic
How many people viewed the shop - the top of the funnel that turns into sales.
Conversion rate
The % of visitors who buy; a few % is normal for digital products.
Case study
A real, documented example of one seller's actual results over time.
Compounding curve
The slow-then-steep shape of growth as listings, reviews and ranking build on each other.
digital downloads
files a buyer gets instantly after purchase, no physical shipping
Etsy SEO
using keywords in titles/tags/descriptions so Etsy's search shows your listing to buyers
TPT (Teachers Pay Teachers)
an online marketplace specifically for educational printables and resources, separate from Etsy
profit margin
profit expressed as a percentage of revenue (e.g., 35% margin on $300k revenue = $105k profit)
Profit Tree
a third-party real-time profit tracking tool for Etsy sellers that shows profit after all fees, shipping, and product costs
visits
the number of times people viewed the shop/listings in Etsy's analytics dashboard
trajectory
the path/pattern of growth a business takes over time
ad spend
money paid to Etsy for promoted/advertising listings; profit :: revenue minus all fees and costs
orders
number of individual purchases; revenue :: total money received from sales before subtracting costs
passive income
money earned repeatedly from a product created once, without ongoing active work
Instagram templates
pre-designed Canva post layouts that customers download and customize for their own Instagram account
Etsy
an online marketplace primarily for handmade, vintage, and digital/downloadable products
private equity
investment in companies that are not publicly traded on a stock exchange — a high-end finance sector
impostor syndrome
the feeling that your success is luck and others will soon discover you're not as capable as they think
Amazon FBA
Fulfillment by Amazon — a model where you send physical products to Amazon's warehouse and they ship orders for you
lash technician
a beauty professional who applies eyelash extensions
listing
a product page on Etsy — includes the title, photos, description, price, and the actual digital file for download
Canva
a free-to-use online design platform with drag-and-drop templates — no graphic design experience needed
revenue
total money received from sales before any fees or costs are subtracted
passive income (repeat)
money that continues to come in from products created earlier, even when you're not actively working
content creation
making videos, posts, or other media for social media platforms
resellable digital products
files that come with a license allowing you to sell them as your own product and keep the revenue
PLR (private label rights)
a license that lets you take someone else's digital product, brand it as your own, and sell it
IP (Intellectual Property)
legal ownership of a creative work (e.g., an ebook); it can be bought and sold separately from the seller's brand
Ebook
a digital book delivered as a downloadable file (PDF, etc.) with no printing or shipping required
Product-market fit
when a product precisely matches what a specific customer group urgently needs and is willing to pay for
Model Call Method
the speaker's branded framework for photography client booking — the subject of her $500k+ ebook
Roth IRA
a US retirement savings account funded with after-tax dollars; contributions grow tax-free
401k
a US employer-sponsored retirement savings plan; maxing it means contributing the IRS annual limit
Net-worth millionaire
total assets minus total debts equals $1,000,000+ (not necessarily cash on hand)
Profit vs revenue
revenue = total sales income; profit = what remains after subtracting all costs (fees, materials, ads, etc.)
Zappos / Zulily
major US e-commerce companies; working there provided corporate-grade e-commerce knowledge
Case study: new Etsy shop built in 12 hours, suspended mid-buildNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 0:45▶ Watch

Case study: new Etsy shop built in 12 hours, suspended mid-build

Creator built a brand-new second Etsy shop selling Canva-template digital downloads (sorority resume templates). Total active working time: 12 hours over 15 calendar days (worked 9 of the 15 days, rest days in between). Got suspended in the middle of the build; took 5 business days for the shop to be unsuspended. First shop (kept private, started 8 months earlier) had made more than $3,000 CAD using only Etsy SEO — no social media promotion.

"It took me more than 12 hours to create this new shop from doing the market research to making the template."
Terms
digital downloads
— files a buyer gets instantly after purchase, no physical shipping
Etsy SEO
— using keywords in titles/tags/descriptions so Etsy's search shows your listing to buyers
Case study time breakdown: 12 hours active work over 15 calendar daysNew Canva-template shop in 2 weeks (case study)⏱ 1:05:16▶ Watch

Case study time breakdown: 12 hours active work over 15 calendar days

Actual time log for building the second shop: Market research = 5 hours (over first 4 working days, including 30 min watching tool tutorials). Designing the resume template = 2 hours 30 minutes. Creating marketing/listing photos = 1 hour 35 minutes. Shop setup (account, banner, logo, policies, settings) = 35 minutes + 15 minutes = 50 minutes. Uploading the listing = 35 minutes. Other tasks (access PDF, video) = ~20 minutes. Total: ~12 hours. Calendar span: 15 days (worked 9, rested 6). Creator estimates a first-timer would need 3–5x longer (~30–60 hours) because they start from scratch on every skill.

"From starting this from scratch to having my shop published with one listing it took 12 hours."
Seller context: 2-year top Etsy seller launching new niche from scratchTop seller starts a brand-new niche (behind the scenes)⏱ 0:13▶ Watch

Seller context: 2-year top Etsy seller launching new niche from scratch

The video documents a seller with 2+ years of experience as a top seller in one digital product niche, who is deliberately starting a brand-new Etsy shop in a completely different niche (printable wall art) on camera. Goal: reach $5,000 in revenue within the first 90 days of the new shop. The experiment is conducted without any audience traffic advantage — shop name and identity are blurred to ensure results are replicable for normal sellers. Starting balance after shop setup: -$29 (shop setup fee).

"I'm documenting my process of trying to make $5,000 within the first 90 days of launching this new shop."
Case study — Cody's shop: $700 in one week, $2,500/week in 4 monthsQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:24:05▶ Watch

Case study — Cody's shop: $700 in one week, $2,500/week in 4 months

Cody (instructor's business partner) started a new Etsy shop from scratch, listing Valentine's Day products in the lead-up to the holiday. Results: made over $700 in one week while on a ski vacation. Documented the journey daily on Instagram. Hit $1,000/month recurring income goal in 4 months. By end of month 4, hit $2,500 in one week.

Case study — Chelsea: former teacher, $50K selling printablesQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:26:18▶ Watch

Case study — Chelsea: former teacher, $50K selling printables

Chelsea (former teacher, now course coach) left her teaching job after having her third child. Revenue milestones on Etsy: first sale in 6 days; 100 sales in 2 months; 500 sales by end of May; 700 two weeks later; 1,000 the next month; 1,500 by September; 2,000 by November; 3,000 by January 11th. Also made $1,000 on Teachers Pay Teachers (TPT) in her first 8 months. Total: ~$50,000 selling printables and digital products (mostly Etsy + some TPT).

Terms
TPT (Teachers Pay Teachers)
— an online marketplace specifically for educational printables and resources, separate from Etsy
Additional student income benchmarks — Rachel, Emily, ClaudineQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 1:27:38▶ Watch

Additional student income benchmarks — Rachel, Emily, Claudine

Three other documented results from the course community: Rachel — $14,000/month in passive income. Emily (course coach) — $54,000/month on Etsy. Claudine — $25,000 total selling digital products and printables.

Real numbers: $107k profit in 2023 after $43k ad spendQ4 -> 2026 Etsy Blueprint (5-hour course)⏱ 3:09:15▶ Watch

Real numbers: $107k profit in 2023 after $43k ad spend

Instructor's second company in 2023 (tracked via Profit Tree): Total profit = $107,000 AFTER deducting $43,000 ad spend + $28,000 shipping costs + all Etsy fees (transaction, listing, processing). Total revenue was approximately $300,000. Without that $43k ad spend, they would have missed $150,000+ in additional revenue — reducing profit to $72,000 (a $34,000+ minimum profit loss). Profit margin WITH ads: ~35%. Without ads: ~50% margin but only on $145k revenue = $72k profit. Takeaway: higher margin % without ads does not mean more total profit dollars.

"this is not revenue. This is profit that we would have lost"
Terms
profit margin
— profit expressed as a percentage of revenue (e.g., 35% margin on $300k revenue = $105k profit)
Profit Tree
— a third-party real-time profit tracking tool for Etsy sellers that shows profit after all fees, shipping, and product costs
Yale made $300k selling digital products since 2022Yale's $300k beginner masterclass⏱ 0:05▶ Watch

Yale made $300k selling digital products since 2022

Seller Yale has earned over $300,000 from selling digital products on Etsy since 2022. He presents this as a full beginner-friendly masterclass covering the complete pipeline from product choice to scaling.

"I've made over $300,000 from it."
Speaker credentials: $300k+ on Etsy, 5-figure months, student resultsHow the Etsy algorithm really works (2026)⏱ 0:48▶ Watch

Speaker credentials: $300k+ on Etsy, 5-figure months, student results

The speaker has made over $300,000 on Etsy over a few years, with over five figures (i.e., $10,000+) earned in the most recent month alone. Students in the Etsy Accelerator community have replicated results: Sugier (7,000 euro months), Craig (over £12,000 GBP in one month), Sharda (19,000 Canadian dollars per month).

"I've made over $300,000 on Etsy over the last few years. I made over five figures on Etsy just last month."
90-day new digital shop: monthly visits and revenue figures90-day new shop case study⏱ 0:08▶ Watch

90-day new digital shop: monthly visits and revenue figures

New Etsy digital products shop started from zero. Month 1 (December): 351 visits, $182.40 revenue. Month 2 (January): 560 visits, $283 revenue. Month 3 (February): 983 visits, $75.70 revenue. Total over 3 months: 1,938 visits, $1,165 revenue. Shop had zero audience and no prior digital-product experience.

"my total lifetime stats 3 months in is $1,938 visits and $1,165 in Revenue"
Terms
visits
— the number of times people viewed the shop/listings in Etsy's analytics dashboard
Mindset: don't compare your trajectory to others90-day new shop case study⏱ 12:43▶ Watch

Mindset: don't compare your trajectory to others

Every business has its own trajectory: some start slow and take off, some start fast and burn out, some are steady, some are roller-coaster. Results depend on experience level — seller notes they weren't truly starting from zero because they had 3 years of Etsy experience from their sticker shop. Don't get discouraged if your business doesn't match what you see online. Each business is different.

"it really doesn't do any good to compare — every business has its own trajectory"
Terms
trajectory
— the path/pattern of growth a business takes over time
1-year Etsy journey: $11,945 revenue, $4,282 actual profit1-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 0:09▶ Watch

1-year Etsy journey: $11,945 revenue, $4,282 actual profit

Seller (Guy, graphic designer in Philippines) opened shop mid-July 2024 aiming for $10k/month. Total year revenue: $11,945. After Etsy fees and ad spend, actual profit: ~$4,282. Monthly profit averaged ~$400–$600. Works 15–20 hours/month. Philippines minimum wage is $250–$300/month, so this income is meaningful locally. Goal of $10k/month was not hit.

"my Etsy shop made $11,945 in revenue. After all the Etsy fees and ad spend, that leaves me with about $4,282 in actual profit"
Terms
ad spend
— money paid to Etsy for promoted/advertising listings; profit :: revenue minus all fees and costs
Month-by-month breakdown: July 2024 through June 20251-year journey toward $10k/month⏱ 1:13▶ Watch

Month-by-month breakdown: July 2024 through June 2025

July 2024: 2 sales, $10 revenue (rough start, no plan). August: 26 orders, $161 (started Etsy ads even without reviews). September: 90 orders, $769 (hit ~100 listings). October: 153 orders, $1,116 (best month, crossed $1k first time). November: 141 orders, $969. December: 99 orders, $654 (business templates niche slow in holidays). January: 180 orders, $1,210 (new year bounce). February: 206 orders. March: 215 orders. April: 222 orders. May: 236 orders. Revenue Feb–May: $1,400–$1,600/month. June: 131 orders, $950 (drop, ads becoming expensive).

"October was actually my best month for the year 2024 — I got 153 orders and crossed the $1,000 mark in revenue"
Terms
orders
— number of individual purchases; revenue :: total money received from sales before subtracting costs
Speaker made $560,000 in 2024 selling online$560k in 2024 across beginner platforms⏱ 0:06▶ Watch

Speaker made $560,000 in 2024 selling online

The presenter generated $560,000 in total online sales in 2024 using multiple beginner-friendly platforms. She has 19 years of selling online experience and owns three Etsy shops, having made over $1 million on Etsy across those three shops combined.

"I'm sharing exactly how I made $560,000 in 2024 selling my products online using these super simple platforms"
Terms
passive income
— money earned repeatedly from a product created once, without ongoing active work
$50 first sale → six-figure business: the origin story$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 0:10▶ Watch

$50 first sale → six-figure business: the origin story

Speaker (from Philippines, moved to Canada at 18) started in December 2021 with 9 Instagram template listings on Etsy. Two days after uploading, she got her first sale: someone bought two templates for $50. She had zero design background, was working in finance at the time, and only knew Canva from doing branding for previous side hustles. That $50 sale was the proof of concept that changed everything.

"Someone bought two templates for $50. And I just sat there kind of in shock."
Terms
Instagram templates
— pre-designed Canva post layouts that customers download and customize for their own Instagram account
Etsy
— an online marketplace primarily for handmade, vintage, and digital/downloadable products
Speaker's background: McDonald's → banking → finance, no design degree$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 0:39▶ Watch

Speaker's background: McDonald's → banking → finance, no design degree

Before Etsy, the speaker worked at McDonald's (rose to manager), multiple coffee shops, a chocolate shop, then moved into banking, and finally a trust company handling private equity (39th floor downtown building). She had zero design background, zero business degree, and zero built-in audience. Relevant because it proves no specialist credentials are needed to succeed with digital products.

"No business degree, no special skills, no trust fund, no built-in audience waiting to buy what I made."
Terms
private equity
— investment in companies that are not publicly traded on a stock exchange — a high-end finance sector
impostor syndrome
— the feeling that your success is luck and others will soon discover you're not as capable as they think
Side hustles tried before Etsy: all failed to scale$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 3:01▶ Watch

Side hustles tried before Etsy: all failed to scale

Before finding Etsy digital products, the speaker tried: wedding photography (~1 year), Amazon FBA, baking and selling cakes, event decorating, being a lash technician, studio photography. None became a full-time business. But each attempt gave proof that money could be made outside a 9-to-5.

"Each one gave me something I really needed. Proof. Proof that I could make money outside of a 9 to 5."
Terms
Amazon FBA
— Fulfillment by Amazon — a model where you send physical products to Amazon's warehouse and they ship orders for you
lash technician
— a beauty professional who applies eyelash extensions
December 2021: first nine listings, first sale in 2 days$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 4:07▶ Watch

December 2021: first nine listings, first sale in 2 days

While everyone was enjoying the holidays in December 2021, the speaker created her first few digital products (Instagram templates) at home. She uploaded 9 listings to Etsy and within 2 days received her first sale. No prior Etsy experience. No marketing. Just the listings live and Etsy's built-in search traffic found her.

"I uploaded them to Etsy, crossed my fingers, and didn't think much of it. And then 2 days later, I got my first sale."
Terms
listing
— a product page on Etsy — includes the title, photos, description, price, and the actual digital file for download
Within months: Etsy income exceeded full-time corporate salary$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 5:32▶ Watch

Within months: Etsy income exceeded full-time corporate salary

A few months after December 2021, the speaker realized her Etsy income already exceeded her full-time corporate job salary. She initially dismissed it as a fluke. Eventually she made double her salary in a single month from Canva templates designed in her living room — despite having no professional design training.

"One day, I made double my salary in just one month from Canva templates I designed in my living room."
Terms
Canva
— a free-to-use online design platform with drag-and-drop templates — no graphic design experience needed
January 2023: $17,000 in one month from one Etsy shop — quit trigger$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 8:13▶ Watch

January 2023: $17,000 in one month from one Etsy shop — quit trigger

The tipping point came in January 2023: the speaker hit $17,000 revenue from a single Etsy shop in one month. She had prayed for a clear sign, and this was it. She submitted her resignation on a Sunday night. The decision to quit was also emotionally triggered by getting her dog Zoe and not wanting to leave her home alone.

"$17,000 from just one Etsy shop. That was the sign I needed."
Terms
revenue
— total money received from sales before any fees or costs are subtracted
Life after quitting: time freedom, income not tied to hours$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 8:54▶ Watch

Life after quitting: time freedom, income not tied to hours

After quitting the 9-to-5, the speaker describes: no fixed alarms, work when/where she wants, vacation whenever she feels like it. Income is now not tied to hours worked but to what she has built. She acknowledges: workload is not lighter (she also started content creation), but the work is enjoyable. She would accept lower income for this lifestyle.

"My income isn't tied to my hours anymore. It's not about how long I sit at a desk. It's about what I've built."
Terms
passive income (repeat)
— money that continues to come in from products created earlier, even when you're not actively working
content creation
— making videos, posts, or other media for social media platforms
Free starter pack of 10 resellable digital products offered$50 sale -> six-figure business⏱ 12:52▶ Watch

Free starter pack of 10 resellable digital products offered

The speaker offers a free starter pack of 10 resellable digital products that viewers can immediately sell as their own. This is available via a link in the video description. Getting the pack also gives early access to a larger digital product business resource she is building. This illustrates the PLR (private label rights) / resell model as a quick entry point.

"Yes, you can resell them as your own. And yes, I am giving them away for free."
Terms
resellable digital products
— files that come with a license allowing you to sell them as your own product and keep the revenue
PLR (private label rights)
— a license that lets you take someone else's digital product, brand it as your own, and sell it
$59 ebook → $500k+ revenue; no following, no ads$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 0:12▶ Watch

$59 ebook → $500k+ revenue; no following, no ads

Molly (the speaker) started selling a $59 ebook as a side project alongside a photography business. She had no large audience and ran no paid ads. That single ebook went on to generate over $500,000 in total revenue over its sales lifetime. She later sold the intellectual property (IP) of the ebook to another photography educator when she pivoted niches. This is the case study framing the entire video.

"that little $59 ebook went on to make over $500,000 in revenue"
Terms
IP (Intellectual Property)
— legal ownership of a creative work (e.g., an ebook); it can be bought and sold separately from the seller's brand
Ebook
— a digital book delivered as a downloadable file (PDF, etc.) with no printing or shipping required
The survey lesson: assumed demand ≠ real demand; validate first$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 6:05▶ Watch

The survey lesson: assumed demand ≠ real demand; validate first

Molly's near-failure lesson: before surveying, she tried to launch a paid posing guide for photographers (her assumed product). It flopped badly. Survey results revealed the real pain point: photographers wanted to learn how to book more clients, not improve posing. She then created a 13-page "Model Call Method" ebook on booking clients. First launch made tens of thousands of dollars. Key insight: do not assume you know what the audience wants — survey them directly using Google Forms (free tool).

"don't just assume you know what your audience wants... You need to ask your audience and create a digital product that actually solves their most painful problem"
Terms
Product-market fit
— when a product precisely matches what a specific customer group urgently needs and is willing to pay for
Model Call Method
— the speaker's branded framework for photography client booking — the subject of her $500k+ ebook
Life transformation from digital products: millionaire at 30, location freedom$59 ebook -> $500k+⏱ 12:55▶ Watch

Life transformation from digital products: millionaire at 30, location freedom

Molly's outcomes from the digital products business: relocated from cold Wisconsin to sunny New Mexico (location freedom); travels overseas 1–2 times per year; maxes out Roth IRA and 401k annually; became a net-worth millionaire at age 30. Starting point was 81 cents in bank account, college dropout living with grandmother, driving a 1987 Chrysler New Yorker. Argues no degree, certification, or large following is required — only knowledge, experience, willingness to show up, and a replicable system.

"I became a net worth millionaire at 30 ... I went from 81 cents in my bank account, a college dropout living with my grandma"
Terms
Roth IRA
— a US retirement savings account funded with after-tax dollars; contributions grow tax-free
401k
— a US employer-sponsored retirement savings plan; maxing it means contributing the IRS annual limit
Net-worth millionaire
— total assets minus total debts equals $1,000,000+ (not necessarily cash on hand)
Jillian's credentials: $1M+ profit, 6k sellers coached, 13 yrs e-commerceWhy some sellers win and others can't⏱ 1:05▶ Watch

Jillian's credentials: $1M+ profit, 6k sellers coached, 13 yrs e-commerce

Speaker Jillian Jaris has: sold on Etsy for 9 years; $1 million+ in profit on Etsy; $1.7 million in Etsy revenue; additional hundreds of thousands through Shopify and Amazon; previously worked at Zappos and Zulily (corporate e-commerce); coached 6,000+ Etsy sellers (from $0 to $10,000/month, up to $500,000/year); ran online trainings for 50,000+ sellers. Frames everything as profit-focused, not revenue-focused.

"I've made over $1 million in profit on Etsy and sold over 1.7 million dollars in revenue"
Terms
Profit vs revenue
— revenue = total sales income; profit = what remains after subtracting all costs (fees, materials, ads, etc.)
Zappos / Zulily
— major US e-commerce companies; working there provided corporate-grade e-commerce knowledge
No points match your filter.