Get Noticed. Build Trust. Make Sales. How to Find Clients Online in 2026
Author: Tanya Ganian
Tuesday, August 18, 2025
9:00 am
POINT7DIGITAL Montreal Digital Marketing Company
The 2026 Product Landscape in One Breath
By the time you finish this manual, millions of new products will have been launched online.
That’s the pace now: e-commerce is exploding. Shopify stores, TikTok Shops, and Instagram feeds are flooded with new products every second.
Here’s what you’re up against:
You’re not just competing with other sellers, you’re competing with algorithms and attention spans.
This manual applies the Point 7 Method™ to product sellers.
Step-by-step, no fluff, with examples you can execute immediately.
There are thousands of marketing strategies out there. Most are either too broad (corporate-level strategy) or too narrow (single-channel hacks). Product sellers need something different: a repeatable, structured system that works whether you’re selling candles, jewelry, apparel, or planners.
That’s where the Point 7 Method™ comes in.
The Point 7 Method™ turns chaotic, overwhelming marketing into a predictable growth engine for product sellers.This manual shows you exactly how to apply it to your products in 2026.
Here we go:
Before you grow, you need clarity. Most product sellers assume they know how they’re seen online. In reality, customers, competitors, and search engines may see something totally different.
>> A seller thought their main appeal was “handmade.” Reviews showed buyers loved “fast shipping” more. When that phrase became a headline, their sales rose 20%.
>> A small candle business thought their differentiator was “eco soy wax.” Customers actually kept mentioning “the scent lasts longer than others.” When they highlighted “long-lasting fragrance” in ads, CTR jumped 30%.
Generic = Invisible.
Most product sellers lose sales not because their product is bad—but because their message is bland. If your description reads like everyone else’s (“high quality,” “affordable,” “unique”), customers tune out. Shoppers don’t buy features; they buy outcomes, feelings, and transformations.
Think about it: no one wants “a stainless-steel bottle.” They want “ice-cold water all day without leaks.”
No one buys a “planner.” They buy “the relief of finally feeling in control of their day.”
When you sharpen your message, you stop blending in and start standing out. Every ad, post, or product page becomes a magnet for attention because it speaks directly to what customers want most.
An apparel seller shifted from “cotton T-shirt” to “The softest tee you’ll ever own, guaranteed comfort wash after wash.” CTRs doubled.
Not everyone is your buyer.
Most product sellers make the mistake of thinking “everyone” is their customer. That mindset dilutes your message and wastes marketing dollars. In reality, customers buy products because they solve specific needs or desires. The sharper you define your ideal buyer, the easier it is to create content, run ads, and design offers that speak directly to them.
When you know exactly who you’re selling to: what they value, where they shop, and what language they use, you stop guessing and start connecting. Instead of shouting into the void, you’re whispering into the ear of the person who’s already looking for you.
>> A home décor brand targeted “women 20–50.” Too broad. They refined to “first-time homeowners decorating small spaces.” Sales and engagement aligned overnight.
One of the biggest questions product sellers face is: “Do I really need a full website, or should I just build a funnel? Or both?”
Here’s the truth: they serve different purposes, and the best sellers use them together strategically.
If you only have a funnel, you risk losing buyers who want to “check you out” first. If you only have a website, you miss out on the simplicity and higher conversion rates a funnel creates. That’s why the Point 7 Method recommends building both: one for trust, one for speed.
>> A skincare seller doubled conversions by running ads to a single-product funnel (serum), while using her full Shopify store to house reviews, education, and upsells.
Content is demand fuel.
Content is everywhere. But not all content sells. Product sellers often waste time posting “pretty” images or generic tips that get likes but don’t move buyers closer to checkout. The right question isn’t “How much content should I make?” but “What kind of content actually drives sales?”
Here’s the breakdown:
Without a mix of these four types, your content either entertains without converting or sells without trust. The Point 7 Method helps you blend them strategically so every post, email, or ad has a purpose in the sales journey.
>> A kitchenware brand launched “Recipe Wednesdays” using their tools. Shares exploded and organic reach tripled.
>> A product seller shifted from random lifestyle posts to a 50/30/20 content mix: 50% education, 30% proof, 20% offers. Within 90 days, her engagement doubled and sales increased by 42%.
If you’re not searchable, you’re not sellable.
In today’s world, it’s not enough to just show up on social media, you also need to appear in Google search results and AI-generated answers (like ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Gemini). These platforms are rapidly becoming the new “search engines” where buyers go to discover, compare, and decide on products.
So the key question is: “How do I make sure my products show up where people are already searching?”
Example:
❌ “Planner Notebook”
✅ “2025 Daily Productivity Planner for Busy Entrepreneurs (Undated)”
AI edge: Tools like ChatGPT and Google Gemini now answer buyer questions directly. Sellers with FAQ content, comparisons, and use-case guides get cited first.
>> A skincare seller optimized her top-selling product pages with descriptive titles and FAQs, then published a blog post called “How to Choose the Best Vitamin C Serum for Sensitive Skin.” Within 3 months, her product page started ranking on Google and showing up in AI search results for “vitamin C serum for sensitive skin.”
Growth is iteration.
You’ve built your foundation. Now it’s time to make sure it’s working and scale it up. The golden rule of digital marketing is simple: you can’t improve what you don’t measure.
For product sellers, this step is about tracking results, refining what works, and investing in growth channels (like paid ads) once your system is proven.
Paid ads amplify what’s already working. They are not a magic switch for broken offers or unclear branding. You’re ready to run ads when:
Once you check those boxes, ads become a growth engine—not a money pit.
Think loops, not funnels. Content feeds itself.
>> A jewelry shop tested “Shop Now” vs. “Make It Yours.” The second CTA boosted conversions by 22%.
>> A seller of handmade candles tracked her store analytics and saw her “lavender candle” page converted at 4%: twice the average. She created a retargeting ad for visitors who abandoned their carts, spending $15/day. Within 30 days, she generated $2,300 in extra revenue, proving she could scale ads without guessing.
Yes. Marketplaces are great, but you don’t own the customer data: Amazon and Etsy do. A website gives you control over branding, emails, and repeat sales. Think of your site as your “home base” and Etsy/Amazon/social as traffic sources, not your whole business.
Start with what you can control: organic content, SEO, and email marketing. These are low-cost, high-return strategies. Paid ads should come after you know your best-selling product, proven messaging, and working funnel.
It depends on consistency. Many product sellers see small wins (better engagement, more traffic) in 30–60 days, and bigger wins (steady sales, stronger SEO ranking) in 3–6 months. The more consistently you apply the method, the faster it compounds.
Absolutely. In fact, a single-product store can grow faster because the focus is clear. You’ll just need to build content, SEO, and ads around that one flagship product. Later, you can expand your line.
Not always. Tools like Shopify, Squarespace, and Canva make it easier than ever for non-tech founders to DIY their store and marketing. If tech overwhelms you, start simple: one product page, one lead magnet, one email sequence. You can hire help later to optimize.
Check your analytics. If you’re getting traffic from search engines (Google, Bing) and you test questions in AI tools (like “best organic face cream” in ChatGPT) and start seeing your brand pop up, you’re making progress. Remember, it’s a long game. SEO/AI takes time to compound.
A website is your brand’s home base. It’s where people browse, learn, and buy. A funnel is a focused, step-by-step path (like a lead magnet → email nurture → sales page) designed to convert a specific visitor into a buyer. Most sellers need both: a website for credibility + discovery, and funnels for focused conversions.
Competition means demand exists. That’s good news. The key is positioning: your brand story, unique product features, and the way you connect with your audience. You don’t have to compete on price. You can win with experience, packaging, values, and community.
If you want growth, 50/50 is a good rule of thumb. Half your time on creating, half on marketing. If marketing feels like a time suck, batch it: create a month of content in one weekend, schedule posts, and automate emails.
You can, but it’s a recipe for wasted money. Ads amplify what already works. If your site doesn’t convert, ads won’t fix it. They’ll just burn cash. Do the groundwork first, then layer on ads for scale.
AI tools pull from trusted sources: websites with clear content, structured data, and authority. To show up:
The clearer and more authoritative your content, the more likely AI engines recommend your products.
Email is often the #1 revenue driver after organic search. Unlike social media, you own your list. Use it to:
Even a small list of 500 people can bring consistent sales if you nurture them.
It depends on your goals.
Huge. In e-commerce, packaging is part of your marketing. Customers film unboxings, leave reviews, and share on social media. Great packaging increases perceived value, encourages word-of-mouth, and makes repeat orders more likely. Treat it like a marketing channel, not just a shipping box.
Scaling isn’t just about ads. It’s about tightening systems.
Focus on:
Yes. People buy from people. A visible founder builds trust, loyalty, and relatability. Even simple behind-the-scenes videos or photos of you using your product can make your brand stand out against faceless competitors.
Ads help you accelerate but they aren’t mandatory. If you can’t run paid campaigns yet, double down on organic marketing:
Plenty of brands hit six figures organically before ever turning on ads.
Quality > quantity. Posting 3–4 strong, value-packed posts per week is better than daily weak ones. Stick to this rotation:
Consistency matters more than posting every day.
You win by going niche.
Being “the best at one thing” (e.g., sensitive skin serums, sustainable candles, minimalist jewelry) helps you stand out instead of being drowned out.
Build trust step by step:
⚡ Tip: Starter → Subscription → Premium. Move buyers upward gradually.
If you’ve been feeling like paid ads on Facebook or Google are oversaturated and getting pricier every quarter, this could be your fresh playing field.
The early adopters, the ones who understand how to make ads work in a conversational AI environment, will set the benchmarks for everyone else.
AI platforms aren’t just changing the way people search. They’re about to change the way we advertise. The time to start planning is now.
Let’s build you a strategy that actually converts.
👉 Reach out to us to book a free strategy call, and let’s map out an ad plan built for results, not regrets.
So is the best solution still SEO or is SEO Dead?
About the Author
Tanya Ganian is the founder of Point7digital.com, Shopify seller and sales expert, and author of The Ultimate Branding Workbook and 50 Marketing Strategies to Build Your Brand & Boost Sales. With over 18 years of experience in marketing and a background in psychology, she helps business owners build smart online strategies that increase visibility, attract aligned clients, and generate consistent sales—without the overwhelm.
Created by Tanya Ganian, founder of Point7 Digital
The Point7 Method™ is a proprietary 7-step marketing framework designed to help businesses get found online, build trust with their audience, and convert more sales.
It combines brand clarity, audience targeting, content strategy, conversion funnels, scalable advertising, smart automation, and continuous optimization into one complete growth system.
Digital Marketing strategy for Growth and Visibility
Ecommerce
Shopify Store Builds
Product Launch Funnels
Email Sequences
Paid Ad Campaigns (Meta, TikTok)
30-Day Content Strategy
SEO & Blog Content
Marketing Automation
Copywriting that Sells
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