If you’ve ever wondered “What’s in his stack?” — I’ve shared it all in one place.
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Look, I’ve been building digital products for a while now. Not the “get rich in 24 hours” kind—the quiet, consistent kind that solves real problems for real people. If you’re serious about creating something that actually sells (and keeps selling), here’s the exact framework I use. No hype. No exaggeration. Just the steps, the tools, and real examples from my own workflow.
Finding Real Demand Before You Build Anything On Tiktok
Most people start with an idea. I start with evidence.
Real example: Last month, I typed “cash investment for beginners” into TikTok’s search. Not to watch videos—to listen. I found a video with 2.3K comments. Scrolling through, I kept seeing the same phrases: “How do I start with just $50?”, “Which dividend stocks won’t crash?”, “I’m scared of losing money.”
That’s not just engagement. That’s a product brief written by your future customers.
I copied 15 of those comments and pasted them into the Silent Power Detector (part of the Digitech Club suite). In under a minute, it surfaced:
- Emotional signal: Fear of loss + desire for stability
- Audience profile: Beginners with $50–$200 to invest, risk-averse
- Product ideas: “Dividend Starter Checklist,” “$50 Investment Action Plan,” “Safe Stocks Tracker (Google Sheets)”
No guessing. No “I think people might like this.” Just demand, documented.
Spotting the Gaps Everyone Else Misses
Sometimes you already have a niche in mind. Maybe it’s “confidence building for introverts” (one I’ve tested). The problem? That space is crowded with generic eBooks and vague courses.
That’s where Offer Gap Finder comes in. I entered the niche, and it showed me:
- Crowded: “10 Confidence Hacks” PDFs, generic journal prompts
- Golden Gap: “Personalized 30-day action plans for introverts who hate networking”
The tool didn’t just say “there’s an opportunity.” It showed me why: people weren’t buying because existing products felt impersonal. So I built a simple Notion template with customizable prompts based on social energy levels. Sold 87 copies in the first two weeks. Not viral. Just valuable.
Building Your Product Without Coding
You don’t need to be a developer to create something professional.
- For spreadsheets or trackers: I use Genispark.ai. Free tier. I typed: “Create a dividend investment tracker with columns for stock name, yield, payout date, and risk rating.” It generated a clean, functional Google Sheet in 20 seconds. I exported it, added a one-page PDF guide, and bundled them. Done.
- For PDFs, checklists, or cheat sheets: I go to Gemini → Tools → Canvas. Prompt: “Design a one-page ‘Dividend Investing Starter Checklist’ with 5 actionable steps, simple icons, and a clean layout.” It outputs a ready-to-download PDF. No Canva wrestling. No design degree.
Both tools are free. Both save hours. Both produce products people actually use.
If You Want to Go Further: Simple AI Tools
Maybe you want to test a micro-SaaS idea—like a tool that analyzes a user’s portfolio and suggests one safe dividend stock per week.
You don’t need a $200/month OpenAI key to start.
- Free, reliable API access: Groq.com gives you a free API key for a capable chat model. Generous limits. No credit card. I used it to prototype the logic for that dividend suggestion tool in an afternoon.
- Code generation: I prefer Qwen.ai for writing the front-end HTML/JS. Why? It handles longer prompts than some alternatives, and I can paste my entire spec (“Build a simple form where users enter their budget and risk tolerance, then output one stock suggestion”) and get clean, editable code.
This isn’t about building the next unicorn. It’s about testing an idea for under $10 and a weekend.
Getting Your Domain Without Getting Ripped Off
Domains shouldn’t cost more than your coffee habit.
- My go-to: Cloudflare Registrar. A .com costs ~$9.77/year. No markup. No “introductory price” that doubles next year. I’ve registered 4 domains here. Same price, every renewal.
- Solid alternative: Porkbun.com. Also transparent pricing, fun interface. I use this when Cloudflare doesn’t have the exact TLD I want.
Avoid the big-name registrars that hook you with $0.99 year one, then charge $25 year two. This is a business. Control your costs.
Hosting That Won’t Slow You Down
Your digital product lives on your website. If it loads slowly, you lose sales. Period.
I’ve tried cheap shared hosting, overpriced managed WordPress, and everything in between. For digital products (landing pages, simple membership areas, download portals), I use Hostinger.com.(You will get 20% OFF Right Now)
Why:
- Their “Premium” shared plan (~$3/month) handles my traffic spikes without breaking
- One-click SSL, free email, and a clean control panel
- Uptime has been 99.9%+ across my 3 active product sites
It’s not the fanciest. It’s the most reliable for the price. And reliability sells more than fancy features.
Making Your Page Look Professional (Without a Designer)
Your product can be brilliant. If your landing page looks like it was built in 2005, people won’t trust it.
I don’t hire designers. I use UIverse.io.
It’s a library of free, open-source UI components: buttons, loading animations, form styles, cards. All copy-paste HTML/CSS.
Real use: For my dividend tracker sales page, I needed a clean “Before/After” comparison section. Found a card component on UIverse, tweaked the colors to match my brand, pasted it into my Elementor page. Took 8 minutes. Looked custom.
No Figma. No back-and-forth. Just professional polish, fast.
The System I Use to Get Consistent Sales
Building the product is half the battle. Getting consistent sales? That’s a system.
I don’t rely on viral posts or paid ads (at first). I use a simple, repeatable workflow:
- Validate demand (like the TikTok comment method above)
- Build the minimum valuable product (one sheet, one PDF, one simple tool)
- Create a funnel-style survey that qualifies visitors and delivers instant value
- Follow up with a clear, no-pressure offer (my core $27 tier or premium bundle)
- Track what converts, double down, ignore the rest
This isn’t theory. This is the exact process I documented in Digiplaybook—not as a fluffy eBook, but as a step-by-step operational guide. It includes the templates, the survey scripts, the email sequences, and the analytics setup I use to get my first sale, then my tenth, then my hundredth.
If you’re building digital products, you don’t need more ideas. You need a system that turns ideas into income. That’s what this is.
One Last Thing
None of these tools are “secret.” None require a big budget. What matters isn’t the tool—it’s the discipline to:
- Listen before you build
- Ship before you perfect
- Measure before you scale
I’ve made mistakes. I’ve built products nobody wanted. But every time I go back to this framework—demand first, simple build, clear offer—I get results.
Start small. Stay consistent. Let the work speak.

