28 months ago i was broke…
But i had only one thing on my mind: how can i save my mother?
My mother was 55 years old and had cancer. The only reason I'm telling you this is because everyone has problems, but unfortunately, nobody cares, and I knew nobody would save me.
I improved my English, started learning marketing in 2023, and with the development of artificial intelligence, especially after 2024, I completely dedicated myself to learning marketing and AI. And everything started to change. At the end of 2024, I earned my first $10,000 and saved my mother. That stress was finally off my shoulders. Thinking about her hospital bills was exhausting me.
I entered 2025 with great ambition, and in March, I earned my first $100,000. And in this way, I had the opportunity to meet new people. I bought my dream Lamborghini and Rolex.
A year later, I raised the bar to $400,000 in monthly revenue.
Now I try to help other people. I want to meet new people and help them retire their families. So I made a very cheap e-book and put everything I know in it. I hope it saves your life, because nobody's going to come to save you. And finally,
‘’it's okay to lose, but it's not okay to try’’
See you at the top…
You can start an AI digital products business with $0 upfront and be making $15K–$80K/month within 90 days and nobody talks about how simple the actual setup is
here's the exact sequence:
Day 0: Pick a niche and audience. Women 35–65. Ecom operators. YouTube creators. Doesn't matter. Takes 3 minutes.
Day 1: Use AI to generate a 200-page ebook on that niche's #1 pain point. Takes 15 minutes. Price it at $300.
Day 2: Create an X theme page for that niche. Faceless. AI-generated content. Takes 10 mins to set up.
Day 3: Use AI to generate 300 tweets in 15 minutes. Schedule them out. Page runs on autopilot.
For 30 days, post 3–5 times per day. Educational value. No selling yet. You're building what Twitter's algorithm rewards: consistent activity and engagement signals.
Day 30: Turn on the auto-DM software. Every person who likes or comments gets an instant personalized DM with a link to buy.
AI bots handle the entire conversation. Objections. Follow-ups. Closing. 24/7 without you touching it.
Results from one of my pages targeting women 35–65:
Without the system (random posting, no automation):
Sales: 0
Followers gained: minimal
Revenue: $0
Same niche, WITH the full system running:
Less than 5,000 total views on 1 post
17 sales at $300 each
$5,100 from a brand new page with almost no reach
The cost to build this entire operation: under $45/month in tools
The AI generates the content. The AI generates the product. The bots do the selling. You collect the money.
Here's the full sequence for maximum output:
Week 1: Set up page, generate ebook, load 300 tweets into scheduler
Week 2: Page posts automatically while you do nothing
Week 3: Layer in auto-DM software, connect to sales page
Week 4: First sales start hitting. Optimize the DM sequence.
Month 2: Add a second page in a second niche. Stack the income. then third. keep repeating.
Month 3: You have 3–5 pages each generating $15K–$80K/month
Total time investment after setup: 3-7 hours per week
Every "make money online" guru tells you to grind content manually, build an audience slowly, and hope something converts. Nobody mentions that AI can do 95% of the work and the pages that win aren't run by humans at all.
Because the gurus are selling you their time-for-money model. This is the leverage model. Completely different game.
if you want the full gameplan, then
comment "X" and I'll DM it to you
**must be following + retweet
You don't need 100,000 followers to sell a $200 ebook.
You need 1,000 real ones.
Here's the math:
1,000 followers
× 2% conversion rate (industry standard for warm audiences)
× $200 price
= $4,000 per launch
That's $4,000 from a single email or post.
No ads. No warehouse. No supply chain.
The people with 500 followers who "can't sell" aren't failing because of their audience size.
They're failing because:
1. Their offer isn't specific enough
2. Their audience doesn't know the product exists
3. They launched once and gave up
4. They priced it at $9 because they were scared
Here's what actually works:
→ Post about your topic daily for 60 days
→ Document a real result you got
→ Build a waiting list before you build the product
→ Use scarcity: "first 20 buyers get a 1-hour call with me"
→ Launch to your email list first (email converts 4x better than social)
→ Collect 10 testimonials from early buyers
→ Relaunch at full price
This isn't theory. It's what every creator making $10K+/month is doing.
Follow me + retweet this to get the exact 30-day content calendar I use to warm up an audience before every product launch.
"Nobody will pay $200 for an ebook."
Let me destroy this belief with receipts.
Dan Koe sells digital guides for $150–$500. Millions in revenue.
Justin Welsh sold a $150 LinkedIn course. $1.7M+.
Nicolas Cole's writing guides: $200–$500. Sold thousands of copies.
Kieran Drew's copywriting ebook: $197. Sold out in 48 hours.
The people saying nobody pays $200 for an ebook are trying to buy a $200 ebook for $0.
The market for premium digital knowledge is MASSIVE.
The global e-learning market is $325 billion in 2025.
It's projected to hit $602 billion by 2030.
People pay thousands for college courses that teach them nothing useful.
They pay $200 for an ebook that gives them a proven, specific system?
That's not expensive. That's a bargain.
The difference between a $9 ebook and a $200 ebook isn't length.
It's specificity, positioning, and the outcome promised.
A $9 ebook: "How to lose weight"
A $200 ebook: "The exact 12-week protocol I used to drop 22 lbs while working 60-hour weeks, with daily meal plans and gym-free workouts"
Price is a perception game. You choose where you play.
Follow me + retweet this and I'll send you the exact positioning framework I use to price digital products at $200+.
The One Thing Everyone Misses
You believe digital products are about the product. They're about the funnel...
A mediocre $97 guide with a 40-person email list (sold to 15 people) makes more than an incredible $497 course with no list (sold to 3 people). $1,455 vs. $1,491 same ballpark.
But scale the email list to 50,000 and the mediocre guide hits $590k.
The funnel, not the product, determines winners.
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
Why Courses Beat Coaching
Coaches make $150k-300k/year max (capped by hours). Course creators hit $500k-2M (uncapped). Same knowledge.
Different model.
I tested: coaching at $3k/month (5 clients = $15k) vs. course at $497 (300+ buyers = $149k).
One scales by hiring staff. One scales by launching.
Courses > services
because your expertise sells infinitely.
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
Why Digital > Physical/Services
You think consulting scales better.
False...
My digital product: sold to 1,200 people
1200 × $497 = $596k
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
You don't need 100,000 followers to sell a $200 ebook.
You need 1,000 real ones.
Here's the math:
1,000 followers
× 2% conversion rate (industry standard for warm audiences)
× $200 price
= $4,000 per launch
That's $4,000 from a single email or post.
No ads. No warehouse. No supply chain.
The people with 500 followers who "can't sell" aren't failing because of their audience size.
They're failing because:
1. Their offer isn't specific enough
2. Their audience doesn't know the product exists
3. They launched once and gave up
4. They priced it at $9 because they were scared
Here's what actually works:
→ Post about your topic daily for 60 days
→ Document a real result you got
→ Build a waiting list before you build the product
→ Use scarcity: "first 20 buyers get a 1-hour call with me"
→ Launch to your email list first (email converts 4x better than social)
→ Collect 10 testimonials from early buyers
→ Relaunch at full price
This isn't theory. It's what every creator making $10K+/month is doing.
Follow me + retweet this to get the exact 30-day content calendar I use to warm up an audience before every product launch.
Most chase big audiences. Wrong metric. I target 500 people instead of 50,000.
Here's the difference: 50k audience = 2-3% conversion = 1,000-1,500 sales × $97 = 145k.
500 niche audience = 32% conversion = 160 sales × $997 = $159k. Smaller, hotter audiences make more money.
You don't need everyone. You need the right everyone.
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
"Nobody will pay $200 for an ebook."
Let me destroy this belief with receipts.
Dan Koe sells digital guides for $150–$500. Millions in revenue.
Justin Welsh sold a $150 LinkedIn course. $1.7M+.
Nicolas Cole's writing guides: $200–$500. Sold thousands of copies.
Kieran Drew's copywriting ebook: $197. Sold out in 48 hours.
The people saying nobody pays $200 for an ebook are trying to buy a $200 ebook for $0.
The market for premium digital knowledge is MASSIVE.
The global e-learning market is $325 billion in 2025.
It's projected to hit $602 billion by 2030.
People pay thousands for college courses that teach them nothing useful.
They pay $200 for an ebook that gives them a proven, specific system?
That's not expensive. That's a bargain.
The difference between a $9 ebook and a $200 ebook isn't length.
It's specificity, positioning, and the outcome promised.
A $9 ebook: "How to lose weight"
A $200 ebook: "The exact 12-week protocol I used to drop 22 lbs while working 60-hour weeks, with daily meal plans and gym-free workouts"
Price is a perception game. You choose where you play.
Follow me + retweet this and I'll send you the exact positioning framework I use to price digital products at $200+.
The One Thing Everyone Misses
You believe digital products are about the product. They're about the funnel...
A mediocre $97 guide with a 40-person email list (sold to 15 people) makes more than an incredible $497 course with no list (sold to 3 people). $1,455 vs. $1,491 same ballpark.
But scale the email list to 50,000 and the mediocre guide hits $590k.
The funnel, not the product, determines winners.
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
In 2022, creating a digital product was a side hustle.
In 2026, it's the most asymmetric income opportunity most people will ever ignore.
People assume you need years of expertise.
People assume you need a design team.
People assume you need a large platform.
People assume you need startup capital.
Here's what you actually need:
One specific problem you know how to solve.
One afternoon with Claude AI to build the product.
One Whop page to sell it — no website, no code.
One email sequence to turn buyers into repeat customers.
One piece of content per day to drive traffic.
That's the entire business.
The math that should make you uncomfortable:
A creator who started 18 months ago with zero audience,
following this exact system,
in the AI productivity niche,
now makes $43,000/month.
Month 1: $340 (2 sales, pure validation)
Month 3: $2,800 (email list at 200, first momentum)
Month 6: $9,100 (upsell added, system working)
Month 12: $27,000 (affiliate program launched)
Month 18: $43,000 (membership at 290 members × $97)
Not a single paid ad.
Not a single viral post.
Not a single lucky break.
Just a system, executed consistently.
The window for building a digital product business with low competition and high margin
is not closing slowly.
It is closing fast.
Every month you wait, 10,000 more people enter your potential niche.
Every month you wait, the first-mover advantage shrinks.
Every month you wait, the creator who started today
gets one month closer to owning the space you're still thinking about entering.
The tools exist.
The market is hungry.
The barrier to entry has never been lower.
The only thing standing between you and that $43,000/month
is the decision to start — and the system to follow once you do.
Like this post and I'll DM it.
Why Courses Beat Coaching
Coaches make $150k-300k/year max (capped by hours). Course creators hit $500k-2M (uncapped). Same knowledge.
Different model.
I tested: coaching at $3k/month (5 clients = $15k) vs. course at $497 (300+ buyers = $149k).
One scales by hiring staff. One scales by launching.
Courses > services
because your expertise sells infinitely.
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
The refund rate everyone is scared of is not what kills digital product businesses.
It's the silence.
People assume high refund rates mean bad products.
People assume low refund rates mean happy customers.
People assume if nobody asks for a refund, everybody loved it.
Wrong.
The average digital product has a 6% refund rate.
The average digital product also has a 71% completion rate of zero.
Meaning 7 out of 10 customers never even open what they bought.
They feel guilty.
They don't ask for a refund.
They just disappear.
And they never buy from you again.
And they never tell anyone about you.
This is the real metric nobody tracks:
The silent failure rate.
The creators making $50,000+ per month obsess over one thing instead:
The 30-day result rate.
What percentage of customers get a real, tangible result within 30 days?
Because customers who get results in 30 days:
→ Leave testimonials (your best marketing)
→ Buy your next product (3x more likely)
→ Refer others (zero acquisition cost)
→ Join your membership (recurring revenue)
A 40% result rate on 100 customers creates 40 walking advertisements.
A 5% result rate on 100 customers creates 95 people who quietly regret the purchase.
Stop measuring refunds.
Start measuring results.
The business that produces the most transformation
always out-earns the one that produces the most content.
Like this post and I'll DM it.📩
Why Digital > Physical/Services
You think consulting scales better.
False...
My digital product: sold to 1,200 people
1200 × $497 = $596k
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
The digital product model everyone teaches is broken.
They tell you: build a product, grow an audience, launch, repeat.
That's the slow road.
That's why 95% of digital product creators make under $500/month after a year of effort.
Here's what the top 5% actually do differently:
They never sell a standalone product.
They sell an entry point into a system.
The system looks like this:
→ Free lead magnet (solves one micro-problem in 10 minutes)
→ $27 tripwire offer (shown immediately after opt-in)
→ $297 core product (the main transformation)
→ $997 premium tier (done-with-you or accelerated version)
→ $97/month membership (ongoing support and community)
→ $3,000–$5,000 coaching (for the most committed buyers)
Each step is designed to pull the right buyer deeper.
The math on 1,000 email subscribers:
600 download the lead magnet.
180 buy the $27 tripwire = $4,860.
54 buy the $297 core = $16,038.
11 buy the $997 premium = $10,967.
8 join the $97/month = $768/month recurring.
2 buy $3,000 coaching = $6,000.
Total first-month revenue: $38,633.
Recurring from memberships: $768/month and growing.
From 1,000 subscribers.
No ads. No viral moment. No luck.
Just a system that meets each buyer where they are
and offers them the next step when they're ready.
Stop selling products.
Start building systems.
That's the difference between a launch and a business.
Like this post and I'll DM it.📩
Most chase big audiences. Wrong metric. I target 500 people instead of 50,000.
Here's the difference: 50k audience = 2-3% conversion = 1,000-1,500 sales × $97 = 145k.
500 niche audience = 32% conversion = 160 sales × $997 = $159k. Smaller, hotter audiences make more money.
You don't need everyone. You need the right everyone.
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩
Everyone is building digital products in 2026.
Almost none of them will last past month three.
And it's not because of competition.
It's not because the market is saturated.
It's not because AI is replacing them.
It's because they picked the wrong type of product.
There are two categories:
Vitamin products: nice to have. Buy once. Use maybe twice. Forget.
Painkiller products: solve an urgent, specific, painful problem. Used daily. Talked about constantly.
Vitamin: "How to be more productive."
Painkiller: "How to close your first $10K freelance client in 30 days."
Vitamin: "A guide to healthier eating."
Painkiller: "The exact meal system for working moms with under 20 minutes per day."
Vitamin products sell to curious people.
Painkiller products sell to desperate ones.
Curious people browse.
Desperate people buy.
The vitamin creator spends 3 months on content and makes $800 at launch.
The painkiller creator spends 3 weeks on positioning and makes $8,000 at launch.
The difference isn't the information inside the product.
It's the urgency of the problem outside it.
Before you build anything, ask one question:
Is this a problem someone is actively searching to solve right now?
Or is it just something they'd vaguely like someday?
One of those answers builds a business.
The other builds a PDF that lives in someone's downloads folder unopened.
Like this post and I'll DM it. 📩