After working in ecommerce for more than a decade, I’ve reviewed hundreds of Shopify stores, consulted on thousands of product selections, and helped brands scale from zero to seven figures.
One thing is always true: poor product research is the biggest reason Shopify stores fail.
It’s not traffic. It’s not ad fatigue. It’s not design.
If the product doesn’t have demand, profit potential, or a clear edge in the market, the rest of the funnel doesn’t matter. That’s why product research should be treated as strategy — not guesswork.
This guide covers the exact process I use with clients, how I vet product ideas, and the specific tools and criteria I rely on to reduce risk before a product ever hits a store.
Why Product Research Is the Linchpin of Shopify SuccessOver the years, I’ve worked with stores that had brilliant branding and flawless design — but failed to generate sales.
The issue always came back to one thing: the product wasn’t viable.
Here’s what product research solves:
Validates actual customer demand Identifies pricing benchmarks and margin opportunities Reveals saturated markets before investing in traffic Helps align product positioning with real-world dataProduct research isn’t just for dropshippers. I’ve applied the same methodology to clients doing private label, print on demand, wholesale, and even hybrid models.
No matter the business model, success on Shopify starts with knowing what to sell and why.
Go to the top Tools I Recommend for Effective Product ResearchOver the last ten years, I’ve tested dozens of tools — some excellent, many overhyped. These are the tools I keep coming back to for practical, reliable research.
Free Tools for Trend Spotting and Demand Validation AliExpress (Sort by Orders)I typically recommend using one free trend tool, one competitor spy tool, and one analytics tool. That gives you a 360-degree view of the market before committing to any product.
Go to the top The Exact Product Research Process I Use With ClientsClients often ask me, “Where do I start?” This is the structured process I walk them through, step by step.
Step 1: Surface Potential ProductsStart broad — the goal here is volume. Use trend tools and platforms like:
TikTok (Organic and Ad Library) Amazon Movers & Shakers AliExpress + CJ Dropshipping Pinterest trends YouTube “haul” or “best of” videosAt this stage, we’re looking for repeat signals. If a product or type of product shows up on multiple channels, it’s worth shortlisting.
Step 2: Vet for Demand, Longevity, and Trend StabilityTo filter your shortlist:
Check search trends on Google Trends for at least 12–18 months Look at Amazon review velocity (how fast reviews are growing) Use TikTok organic reach to confirm social interest Avoid seasonal spikes unless you’re intentionally launching a seasonal storeAt this point, the goal is to remove short-lived gimmicks and focus on products with proven staying power.
Step 3: Assess Product Viability and Profit MarginThis is where a lot of new sellers fall short — they skip the financial analysis.
I recommend a simple margin calculation:
Profit = Selling Price – Product Cost – Shipping – Ads – Fees
Here's a real-world breakdown:
ProductSelling PriceCostEstimated AdsFeesEstimated ProfitLED Pet Collar$24.99$2.50$12$1.50~$9Silicone Sink Strainer$12.99$1.20$5$1~$5.79I usually advise aiming for $10+ profit per unit if you’re using paid traffic, or 50%+ margin if organic/influencer-led.
Go to the top What Makes a Product Worth Selling in 2025?Over the past decade, product success on Shopify has shifted from just finding viral items to selecting products that check multiple strategic boxes.
Core Traits of a Valid Product Opportunity Solves a clear problemThese categories have consistently performed well across multiple Shopify stores I've worked with.
They strike the right balance between demand, margin potential, and content-friendly features that make them easier to market through paid and organic channels.
Go to the top Testing and Launch StrategyEven when the product looks promising, I advise clients to validate before going all in. Testing doesn’t have to mean large ad budgets or full-blown stores.
Lean Testing Model Build a single-product Shopify store or landing page Use a high-conversion template (Debutify, Refresh, or custom theme) Clear benefit-driven product copy One UGC-style video or demo GIF Run small-scale campaigns TikTok or Instagram influencer (under $150) Meta Ads at $20–$50/day with basic interest targeting Evaluate KPIs MetricTargetClick-Through Rate (CTR)>2%Add to Cart Rate5–10%Purchase Rate2–3%Cost Per PurchaseUnder $15 for most <$30 productsIf a product hits or exceeds those KPIs, it’s ready for scale. If not, pivot or refine the positioning.
Go to the top Mistakes I See Often in Product ResearchWith new sellers—and surprisingly, even experienced ecommerce teams—there are some common mistakes I see again and again during the product research phase.
These missteps are often the reason stores burn through ad budgets without results or waste months chasing unviable products.
Choosing based on personal interest, not dataGood product research doesn’t guarantee a hit every time, but it does remove a lot of avoidable failure.
It creates a foundation where your marketing, branding, and fulfillment can actually perform—and makes the entire business model more predictable.
Go to the top Spreadsheet System for Product ScoutingFor clients managing multiple ideas or teams, I recommend creating a simple scoring system to prioritize products.
Here’s a basic layout:
ProductSourceDemand ScoreMarginVideo AngleRisk (1-10)PriorityPosture CorrectorTikTokHighMediumGood4HighLED Dog HarnessAmazon + RedditMediumHighExcellent3HighPortable JuicerInfluencer TrendsMediumLowPoor7LowEach column is based on pre-defined criteria (backed by the tools earlier). This creates an objective way to shortlist products before testing.
Go to the top Final TakeawaysAfter more than 10 years consulting across ecommerce niches, I can confidently say this:
Product research is not the sexy part of running a Shopify store — but it’s where all real leverage happens.
When done correctly, it reduces guesswork, improves profitability, and shortens the path to validation.
Here’s a condensed framework:
Use 2–3 tools (free + paid) to source ideas Validate through trends, search volume, and organic visibility Calculate profit margin before anything else Test lean before scaling — data beats instinct Track KPIs tightly, and be willing to move on if the numbers don’t workThis process isn’t built on hype or overnight success stories — it’s the product of reviewing over 1,000 stores, working with 6- and 7-figure brands, and seeing what works in real-world ecommerce.
If you’re serious about succeeding on Shopify, your product research process should reflect that.
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