Starting from scratch with my own product, where do I even begin?

Starting from scratch with my own product, where do I even begin?

Forge

New member
Look. Everyone talks about how great it is to go from affiliate to owning your product, like it's some holy grail. But no one really breaks down the 'how'. Do I just pick a niche, slap a product together, and hope it sells? Or do I need some fancy dev team and a massive budget? Honestly, I'm skeptical. Sounds like everyone's just throwing around buzzwords without a real plan. And then there's the question of traffic. Do I build my own list first? Or buy traffic and hope for the best? I keep hearing that the real money's in branding and building trust, but that sounds like a long game. Meanwhile, I got my current CPA networks tanking on quality after some platform update, and I'm supposed to just pivot into owning a product? Yeah, sure. Like that's easy. So, where do I start? Do I do a quick MVP, test waters, or go full-blown with a real product? Honestly, I don't even know if this is worth the hassle or just another scam in disguise. Just seems like everyone's pushing the 'own product' dream but not the reality.
 
And then there's the question of traffic
look, the traffic question is always the same story. build your list, run cold traffic, test offers, and optimize. it's not rocket science, but everyone gets caught up in the shiny object syndrome. nobody wants to put in the work to build trust, and yeah, that takes time. but here's the deal: if you're jumping straight into owning a product without a proven audience or some kind of inbound traffic, you're basically betting on a lucky strike. buying traffic hoping it sticks is just throwing money into the wind. i'll believe it when i see the proof, but most of the 'branding' and 'trust' talk is just fancy words for long-term play that most people aren't willing to put in the grind for. if you're starting from zero, your best move is to test with cold traffic, build your email list, and then nurture that list. that's how you actually create a sustainable product ecosystem. do the work, stop chasing shortcuts, and don't get fooled by the hype. owning a product isn't about just slapping smth together and praying it sells, it's about steady, disciplined traffic and audience building. everything else is noise
 
it's not rocket science, but everyone gets caught up in the shiny object syndrome
Let me unpack that for you. Shiny object syndrome is just a fancy way to say people want quick wins without actually doing the work. Building trust is like planting a tree, not watering a cactus.
 
OH MY GOD, YOU'RE HITTING ALL THE RED FLAGS AT ONCE. PICK A NICHE, THROW SOME SHINY PRODUCT TOGETHER, AND HOPE IT GOES VIRAL? PLEASE.
 
Look, everyone's rushing into owning a product like it's some kinda cheat code but that's not how it works. You don't just slap something together and hope it sells, that's spammy and blind. Building a real product takes research, validation, and yes, some damn patience. You want quick? Fine, MVP, test your waters but don't think that's a shortcut.
 
Everyone talks about how great it is to go from affiliate to owning your product, like it's some holy grail. But no one really breaks down the 'how'.
Color me skeptical on that "how" part. Everyone's yammering about the holy grail, but no one really shows the blood, sweat, and tears behind it. It's like saying, build a rocket, but no one talks about the rocket science or the millions of failed prototypes. You wanna go from affiliate to owning your product? First, stop dreaming and start digging. Pick a niche you actually understand, not just some shiny idea someone spun out of thin air. Then, build a simple MVP, test if anyone even cares before pouring a fortune into a full-blown product. It ain't magic - it's just hard work and some luck.
 
Been there, scaled that. Starting from scratch isn't just about picking a niche and slapping something together. You need research, validation and most of all, a plan that isn't just about hoping for the best. I've built MVPs fast, tested waters, then scaled when I saw real traction. This isn't a get-rich-quick scheme, and it sure as hell isn't a shortcut.
 
PICK A NICHE, THROW SOME SHINY PRODUCT TOGETH
Picking a niche is just the start. Throwing a shiny product together and hoping it sticks is gambling. You need real research, validation, maybe an MVP. Building trust takes time, not shortcuts. Focus on a real plan, not buzzwords.
 
Haha yeah I've been there. Honestly just start with what you can afford to lose and test small. Pick a niche you kinda understand or are interested in so you don't drown in the chaos. Just spitballing here, but maybe focus on a simple MVP that solves a real problem. Then use micro-influencers or sock puppets if you wanna go that route to build some initial buzz. ROAS is gonna be brutal at first so don't get attached to the first few campaigns. Remember, it's all about LTV and finding the right audience who actually cares. Keep it cheap, keep it simple, and don't overthink it.
 
you gotta start somewhere, right? I'd peel back the onion and figure out what problem your product is solving. Pick a narrow niche, validate with a simple MVP, then test and scale.
 
ah, starting from zero huh? that's the classic game. honestly, first thing is to stop overthinking it. most bh products fail because people get stuck in analysis paralysis, trying to perfect everything before even launching. just pick a problem you kinda get and know there's a demand, then build something that solves that, even if it's rough. no need to build the perfect stack day one, just get a barebones version out there, see if anyone cares. once you got something working, then you start adding layers, making it stealthier, faster, or whatever your target niche needs. but remember, it's all about iteration and feedback. you don't need to be the next big thing right away, just focus on that first win. small wins stack into bigger plays later. getting your hands dirty early beats waiting for the perfect plan that never comes.
 
idea is just the start. Validation is key but don't waste too much time there. Build something small, test fast. Own your tech, own your LP. Traffic is king, make sure your offer converts before scaling.
 
Starting from scratch with my own product, where d
i'll concede that starting small and testing is a solid approach. but I'd argue that before you even pick a niche, you need to deeply understand the audience you want to serve. without that insight, you're just throwing darts blindfolded.
 
Starting from zero is like trying to find a needle in a haystack these days. Focus on one pain point, build a simple MVP, and don't get caught up trying to do everything perfect out of the gate. The golden age of arbitrage is dead, now it's all about squeezing blood from a
 
Starting from scratch with my own product, where do I even begin
Starting from scratch can be a trap if you don't have a proven traffic source or a niche with real demand. Are you sure you're not better off testing other offers or angles on existing proven LPs first? Building from scratch means you're betting on your own product's fit, but how do you know what niche or offer even has enough vol? Most of the guys making steady ROI do it by finding a demand, then quickly creating a simple LP to match that demand, instead of trying to invent the product first. Do you have a plan for how to validate the idea fast and get data on whether it's even worth the effort? Because honestly, starting from scratch w/o that data is just a long shot.
 
Starting from scratch sounds romantic until you realize how many moving parts there are. But tell me this - are you 100% sure your niche even has enough demand or traffic potential to justify building from zero? Sometimes folks get caught up in the shiny idea and forget the basics what's the actual search volume, competition, ROI? Building something from nothing can be a huge waste of time if you didn't do your homework first. Prove me wrong, but I've seen too many folks burn months chasing ideas that are basically dead on arrival. Have you validated real demand or just assuming because you like the product idea?
 
smh you wanna start from scratch with your own product and asking where to begin? lol just skip the fluff and go find a pain point that ppl are already paying for. make it a simple solution and test it quick. if you try to overthink the product before even validating demand you gonna waste a lot of time. just build a minimum viable version, run some ads, see if the market bites. too many noobs get stuck trying to make the perfect product first. remember, nobody cares about your product till it solves a real problem. get your hands dirty, test fast, scale fast.
 
Why do you think you need to start from scratch? Couldn't you test existing niches or products first? Sometimes the best move is to find a proven pain point and put your spin on it. Overthinking the product from day one kills your momentum.
 
Hold my beer, starting from scratch sounds like trying to build a spaceship when u haven't even fixed the flat tire. U gotta find a pain point, something ppl already pay for, and then make it better or simpler. Overthinking will eat ur brain faster than a dog with a new toy. U got a niche in mind or just throwin darts?
 
Starting from scratch isn't always the bad idea people make it out to be, if you know what you're doing. Yeah, it's risky, but sometimes chasing proven pain points is just lazy. You build a product around a need, sure, but the question is do you have the innovation or just another copycat? Most guys get caught up in the idea of quick wins, but forget that sometimes creating something new actually sells better if you can add real value. Don't just chase proven markets blindly, sometimes the best way to stand out is to
 
bro starting from scratch is a recipe for a shitshow unless u got a solid niche and product idea that solves a real pain point. most ppl get lost in the fluff instead of just finding something ppl already pay for and improving it. that's just how it be sometimes
 
Starting from scratch with my own product, where do I even begin
Honestly, starting from scratch isn't always a bad idea if you got the bandwidth to do it right. The trap most fall into is chasing quick wins and ignoring the building blocks. I'd say you gotta look for a narrow niche with a problem that bugs a decent sized crowd and then create smth simple but effective. The key is to get something out fast and then improve iteratively instead of trying to build the perfect product on day one. Overthinking the scope is what kills momentum and burns cash. In my experience, even a basic MVP that addresses a core pain point beats a half-baked product with fluff. Just don't get caught up in trying to reinvent the wheel before you even roll it.
 
Back
Top