Where do I even start with my own product? Need quick tips

Where do I even start with my own product? Need quick tips

Baseline

New member
Okay listen I just got tired of messing around with CPA networks and want to go solo with my own thing but honestly I dunno where to begin. Do I need to build some crazy funnel or just slap a landing page together? And what about payment processing how do I set that up so I don lose my shirt? I know networks are just middlemen skimming cash but how do I actually make a profit selling my own stuff without getting scammed or crashing and burning? I got some decent traffic but no clue how to turn it into a legit product. Can someone give me the bullet points or point me in the right direction fast before I lose my mind?
 
Honestly, just slapping a landing page and hoping for the best rarely works long term. You gotta understand your audience and what they want. Payment stuff?
 
Listen, slapping a LP and praying is just asking to get burnt. You need to understand your audience, what makes them tick and build around that. As for payment, you gotta go with legit processors that can handle adult or dating stuff without nuking you. Do your homework on whitelists and avoid sketchy CRs or dodgy processors that might leave you holding the bag. Scaling comes from testing and tweaking, not just throwing something up and hoping it sticks.
 
Okay listen I just got tired of messing around with CPA networks and want to go solo with my own thing but honestly I dunno where to begin
Yeah I get it, CPA networks can be a grind, especially when you're just starting to think about flying solo. The thing is, most guys jump into their own product without really knowing what the hell they're doing and end up spinning wheels. You gotta start small, maybe pick a niche you understand or can test easily, build a simple landing page that pre-sells or qualifies, then figure out how to drive traffic without blowing your budget.

You gotta understand your audience and what they want
Payment processing? Pick legit providers early, like Stripe or PayPal if you can get away with it, or go with something more niche if needed. But honestly, the key is testing and learning quick, not trying to build the next Amazon on your first shot. It's a messy game but no way around it.
 
Look I get the frustration but just throwing up a landing page and hoping it sticks is the fast lane to burnout and zero profits. Building your own product is a serious game, not some quick hit. You gotta really understand your audience, what they need, what they're willing to pay for. It's not about slapping some random funnel together but creating something that adds real value. Payment processing? Stick with legit providers, never skimp there or you'll lose your shirt fast. And don't forget, manual outreach and building relationships with payment processors and affiliates is still the best way to secure good margins. Spinning wheels with no plan will burn you out faster than a bad traffic source.
 
It's not about slapping some random funnel together but creating something that adds real value
Value is cool, but most newbies get lost in that idea. Back in my underground club days, I saw plenty of guys trying to 'add value' with fancy decor but forget that crowd just wants a vibe, not a masterpiece. Most adult traffic? They wanna see quick, dirty, no BS content. Same with your product - if you think building some 'meaningful' thing will cash you out, you're wasting time.
 
I got some decent traffic but no clue how to turn it into a legit product
proceed with caution with that line of thinking. traffic alone doesn't mean u have a legit product, it means nothing if u can't convert it or if ur product isn't solid. just slapping smth together wont cut it, u gotta understand ur audience's needs and build around that.

It's not about slapping some random funnel together but creating something that adds real value
speed is key but page speed isn't just an SEO factor, it's a direct conversion killer. dont get lazy or u'll burn out fast. u need a real plan, not just a traffic dump and hope. be careful, in this game u need substance not just traffic.
 
Honestly you gotta start with what you know and build from there. No need for some crazy funnel at first, just get a simple LP that clearly hits your audience's pain. Payment processing? Stripe, PayPal, or crypto if you wanna get tricky. Keep it simple, test, learn what works, then scale.
 
inlay, buddy, I gotta call BS on the whole "understand your audience" spiel. Sure, that's nice if you're selling a boutique coffee or some landers for insurance. But when you're starting out, sometimes you just need to test quick and see what sticks. No point overthinking before you even get your first profit. Keep it simple, scale fast.
 
Start with the offer, not the product. Make sure your LP is converting before you spend on traffic. Don't waste money on branding or fluff until the hook is tight. Test your cloaks fast and dirty, see what sticks. And if you're not tracking post-click, forget about measuring anything. Been there, seen that blown up. No point reinventing the wheel if the fundamentals are broken
 
Where do I even start with my own product.
start with what you can actually measure, find a niche with some data behind it. build a minimum viable offer that solves a specific problem, then test the hell out of it. don't get carried away with fancy features until the numbers tell you it's worth it. remember correlation is not causation but it's a good place to start.
 
Where do I even start with my own product
OH MY GOD, starting with your own product is like jumping into the deep end without knowing how to swim. FIRST, forget the product and focus on the offer. What's the pain point that makes people throw their money at you? Build a quick landing page that hits that pain hard and test it with traffic. If it doesn't convert at least 2 percent, your product idea is dead on arrival.
 
Ok, here's my take... starting with the offer is solid but don't ignore your audience or niche first. If you build a product without knowing what the market actually wants, you're just guessing in the dark. Cyclone is right about MVPs but sometimes you gotta dig a little deeper into what makes people tick, not just what they say they want. Manual testing of creatives and angles beats waiting on some perfect offer.
 
Ok, here's my take
Started with a product once, ended up with a half-dead LP and a ghost campaign. Best to start with the pain point, build a quick offer, test it with cheap traffic. Niche + MVP is the way to not burn a fortune chasing ghosts.
 
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