Finding your first customer can feel like a big challenge, but it’s all part of the exciting journey of building a business. With so many ways to promote your brand and products, there’s a world of opportunity out there.
When you’re starting an online store, it’s easy to get caught up in the details of your website—spending hours experimenting with colors, fonts, and layouts. But instead of getting lost in the design phase, focus on what matters: launching your store, sharing your brand with the world, and welcoming shoppers through your virtual door.
In this post, learn how to make your first sale by driving traffic that converts to your store.
Source free traffic
One of the first steps for new store owners should be to drive traffic to their website.
Start by targeting free traffic sources. This means tapping into relevant communities, appearing in Google search results, and using incentives to attract your first customers. To get started:
- Share your store with personal networks and relevant online communities
- Offer a discount code to welcome new customers
- Create content that ranks for relevant Google searches
Share your store
Many entrepreneurs find their first sales come from people they know. So, don’t hesitate to announce your new store on your personal social media accounts.
Every online interaction is an opportunity to drive traffic to your store. Add your website link to all your social media bios: Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, Facebook, and X. Use link in bio tools like LinkShop to create a central hub with your best products and most important store links. Pin your store announcement to the top of your profile feeds so it’s the first thing visitors see.
You could also send a direct email to close contacts about your store’s launch, asking them to share your store with others. They don’t need to make a purchase to support your business.
“Our first three or four sales came from friends and colleagues,” shares Jayanti Gupta, founder of Parinita, a saree clothing store. “Within a month, we started receiving inquiries and sales from new customers who found us online.”
Expand your reach by posting on forums like Reddit, joining Facebook groups, and engaging with niche online communities related to your industry. Search for groups where your audience is active. This strategy can be especially effective if your store caters to specific interests, like dog ownership or trail running.
If you’ve spent time building an audience before launching your store, connecting with a community becomes more straightforward. For example, gourmet marshmallow brand XO Marshmallow regularly uses social media for feedback on its upcoming product launches.
“We listen to them not only in terms of responding to their comments or messages, but truly listen to them in terms of creating new products or changing existing products,” says co-founder Lindzi Shanks.
For extra support as you pursue your first sale, join entrepreneurial online communities like r/Entrepreneur on Reddit or the Shopify Community for advice from fellow business owners.
Offer discounts
Consider offering a discount code to draw shoppers to your store. Discounts serve as a powerful incentive for first-time visitors.
Pair your discount strategy with email address collection to build a marketing asset from day one. According to industry benchmarks, email marketing delivers a return on investment (ROI) of up to $36 for every $1 spent, making it one of the highest-ROI channels for new stores. A simple pop-up offering 10% to 15% off in exchange for an email address gives you a direct line to potential customers you can nurture over time.
Alternatively, boost your incentives by creating product bundles, hosting flash sales, or organizing giveaways to increase engagement.
For instance, the jewelry brand Scarlett reached potential customers through LinkedIn by offering $25 gift cards in exchange for submitting an email address and completing a survey:
Avoid spamming your audience with repetitive promotions. Instead, focus on making authentic connections by tailoring messages to your customers’ needs and interests.
Appear in Google search results
If your website shows up at the top of Google for relevant searches, you have a better chance of attracting customers.
The task of appearing in search results is called search engine optimization (SEO). SEO is about identifying which search terms your potential customers are using and creating content that matches those queries. Start by doing keyword research to find popular phrases related to your products.
Then, consider adding a blog to your website or making videos to provide helpful information. For instance, if you sell kitchen gadgets, you could share cooking tips or recipe ideas. Posting helpful content not only boosts your visibility in search results, but also creates a richer website experience.
Run paid ads
Paid ads put your store in front of large, relevant audiences. Most online advertising platforms use a pay-per-click model, where you set a budget and your ads run until they’ve attracted a certain amount of traffic to your store.
Each advertising platform is different, and you should pick channels based on who you’re targeting. If you’re aiming at specific countries, for example, check which social networks are popular in those regions.
Start small when testing paid ads. A budget of $5 to $10 per day on a single platform gives you room to learn what works without overspending. You’ll be able to test different audiences and ad styles and figure out each platform’s mechanics before trying to scale.
This approach mirrors how successful merchants typically grow. In a November 2025 survey* of established Shopify merchants, those earning less than $100,000 found organic social media and expanding their product line most effective. Meanwhile, merchants earning more than $1 million were more likely to point to paid advertising (31%) as their top growth strategy. The pattern is clear: start with organic and small-budget experiments, then increase ad spending as your revenue grows.
Before diving into paid social media marketing on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Google, make sure your profile’s feed is filled with engaging content. Then, start running ads on the platforms most relevant to your audience:
- Invest in targeted Facebook ads
- Build brand awareness with paid Instagram posts
- Appear in relevant search results with Google Shopping Ads
Facebook ads
Facebook is still the most popular global social network, attracting a range of users across age, income, gender, and locations.
Leverage this user data with Facebook’s Audience Insights tool to find people who are likely to be interested in your products. You can choose criteria within demographics, interests, and behaviors. For instance, if your store sells:
- T-shirts decorated with pop culture references, target users who have liked a TV show fan page or are members of a video game community
- Yoga equipment, target users who have shown interest in yoga or selected “yoga teacher” as their job on their profile
- Pet products, target those that are interested in pet adoption or have liked a specific dog breed on Facebook
Focus on creating ads with clear goals. Choose “Awareness” or “Traffic” as your campaign objective if you want people to hear about your store, “Leads” if you want email subscribers, and “Sales” if you want to convert customers. Be sure to test different formats—carousel ads let you showcase multiple products, while single-image ads can spotlight your star product.
See how clothing store United By Blue uses Facebook ads to promote its eco-friendly products to users interested in the environment and conservation. The brand uses carousel formats to showcase product variety while maintaining a consistent brand message about sustainability:
Instagram ads
Instagram’s visual format helps ads blend seamlessly into users’ feeds. The platform’s engaged user base uses the Explore feed to discover new products.
With Instagram ads, you can promote your brand and products while also entertaining users. For example, Revival Rugs uses feed ads to showcase its products from multiple angles:
Try carousel ads to tell your product story across multiple frames. Start by showing the product in use, highlight key features in the middle frames, then finish with a clear call to action. Make your first frame eye-catching—users decide whether to engage in about one second.
You can also experiment with Instagram’s interactive features like polls and countdowns in Stories ads, as well as video ads—especially Reels ads that take over the entire screen.
“Because of my social media background, I knew how to set up Instagram and Facebook ads at a very basic level. I was spending $10 to $15 a day on Instagram ads in our first year,” says Grace Lee, founder and CEO at Birdy Grey. “I was tweaking my audience sets and doing all the things to make the machine work. Surprisingly, it drove $2 million in revenue in our first year."
If you can build a following and use relevant Instagram marketing strategies, organic (unpaid) Instagram posts can also reach a significant audience.
Google Ads
With Google Shopping Ads, you can position your products on search results pages for relevant queries.
As the world’s largest digital ad platform, Google Ads help make your store visible on Google’s search engine, as well as YouTube and a multitude of third-party websites. Choose from text ads or banner ads to display your brand.
Explore other paid advertising platforms like YouTube ads, Pinterest ads, and TikTok ads for a trend-focused audience.
Once your store is live, connect it to social media storefronts so users can browse and buy products without leaving their favorite app.
Establish marketing partnerships
After you’ve promoted your store with social content and paid ads, increase the impact of your marketing by getting others to recommend your brand.
The internet is full of potential marketing partnerships, whether that’s collaborating with influencers, gaining coverage from media outlets, or working with other like-minded brands.
Use these methods to enhance your brand through partnerships:
Reach out to bloggers
With a compelling pitch or press kit, you can forge partnerships with bloggers, product reviewers, and other media websites.
The key to successful outreach is focusing on your niche. Start by identifying bloggers and publications whose audience matches your target customer—use tools like BuzzSumo or simply search for “best [your product category] blogs.” You might find a sponsored content arrangement or a guest posting opportunity, where you share your expertise alongside details of your product.
When reaching out, personalize each message by referencing specific articles on the blog and explaining why your product would interest their readers. Offer to send a free sample with no strings attached—many reviewers won’t cover products they haven’t personally tested.
Alternatively, ask for a product review from a respected voice within your industry. This gives potential customers a trustworthy recommendation, boosting their confidence in the quality of your products.
Try word-of-mouth marketing
Not all marketing needs to be online. Engage with your local community to spread the word about your products.
For instance, if you sell dog collars, consider pinning a flyer at your local dog park or chatting with dog owners about their needs. This direct engagement can lead to valuable insights and increased brand visibility.
If you can produce low-cost products or samples, consider distributing them locally. You could set up your own pop-up shop.
Combining traditional and online marketing tactics can be an effective strategy. Today, it’s straightforward to share a QR code or mention your website address to interested shoppers.
When you start making sales, ask those first customers for testimonials and reviews. Send a simple follow-up email seven to 10 days after delivery, asking, “How are you enjoying your purchase?” Display these testimonials prominently on your homepage and product pages. Social proof from real customers builds trust faster than any marketing copy.
Reviews and testimonials carry particular weight in certain industries. In a survey of established Shopify merchants,* 41% of food and beverage businesses cited positive customer reviews as a key first-year achievement—significantly higher than other verticals.
These efforts can kickstart word-of-mouth marketing, build community goodwill, and potentially lead to sustained interest in your products.
It’s an approach that worked for coffee concentrate store Kloo, which spent time collecting customer feedback and refining its branding before an official launch.
Work with influencers
Big brands aren’t the only ones benefiting from influencer endorsements. Partnering with influencers is a popular way to place your products in front of a relevant and engaged audience.
Explore ways to work with influencers, such as offering your product for review or co-creating content that entertains and informs followers.
While you can approach influencers directly, influencer marketplaces also facilitate connections between brands and creators.
Learn from your efforts
As you launch marketing campaigns and drive traffic to your store, you’ll start to collect performance data. Analyze this data to understand the types of content and marketing channels that are most effective at generating sales.
The key ingredient here is patience. Most new stores don’t see their first sale immediately—it often takes weeks of consistent marketing to build initial momentum. Some products sell faster than others: trending items or solutions to pressing problems might convert within days, while higher-priced purchases often need months of relationship-building.
Use your ecommerce platform’s analytics dashboard alongside ad platform reporting tools to pinpoint where your marketing might not be translating into profit. Understanding customer behavior through data can help you make informed adjustments.
- Enhance ad targeting to reduce bounce rates.
- Use market research to persuade browsers to buy.
- Simplify your checkout process to reduce cart abandonment.
Reduce bounce rates
If your store has a high bounce rate, it could indicate your traffic is low quality or not aligned with your offerings.
To reduce bounce rates, try making your marketing more targeted to attract relevant visitors. Also, review your landing page content to ensure it engages users.
Another common cause of bouncing traffic is that your store might not be loading efficiently. Be sure to optimize your website’s load times by compressing images, reducing unnecessary plug-ins, and using a mobile-responsive design.
Persuade browsers to buy
If visitors are browsing but not adding products to their carts, it could be due to a lack of product-market fit. Alternatively, you may need to revisit how you price products and your pricing strategy.
Conduct market research to ensure your products meet customer needs and expectations.
Ensure your store instills consumer trust, making shoppers feel confident about purchasing from you. These trust signals can help:
- Security badges near your checkout button
- Clearly displayed shipping and return policy
- An “About Us” page that tells your story
- Easy-to-find contact and customer support information
- Customer reviews and star ratings
- User-friendly, professional website design
Reduce cart abandonment
A high rate of abandoned carts could indicate issues with your checkout process. It may also mean your shipping terms are not attractive to shoppers.
Simplify your checkout process by reducing the number of steps and asking only for essential information. Offer multiple payment options and transparent shipping.
For those visitors that abandon their cart even after these tweaks, you can implement a simple cart recovery email sequence to win back lost sales:
- Send your first email within an hour with a friendly reminder.
- Follow up at 24 hours with customer reviews or benefits they may have missed.
- If needed, send a final email after 48 to 72 hours with a small discount.
Around 70% of all carts are abandoned—recovering even a small fraction with these cart abandonment emails can add a significant boost to your revenue.
Build a brand and grow
Making your first sale is a key milestone on a journey to building a brand that’s well-known and loved by shoppers. Keep refining your marketing strategy and engaging with customers, and you’ll set the foundation for a successful business.
Remember, every big brand started with a single sale!
*Survey Methodology: Based on a 2025 survey of 500 Shopify merchants conducted in English across Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, New Zealand, and the United States. Respondents were established merchants with two or more years on the platform. Results reflect the experiences of this specific sample and may not be representative of all merchants.
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Make your first sale FAQ
How long does it take to make a first ecommerce sale?
The timeline varies widely based on your product, marketing efforts, and niche. Some stores make their first sale within days by leveraging personal networks and social media, while others may take several weeks or months.
Stores selling trending products or solutions to urgent problems often see faster results. Most new merchants should expect two to four weeks of consistent marketing before seeing their first sale. Focus on building momentum through multiple channels—social media, email, paid ads, and word of mouth—rather than relying on a single approach.
How much should a new store spend on marketing?
Start small and scale based on results. For paid advertising, begin with $5 to $10 per day on a single platform while you learn what works. This lets you test audiences and creative without significant financial risk. Many successful stores start with primarily free marketing like social media, content creation, email outreach, and community engagement before investing heavily in paid ads.
As you generate revenue and identify which channels drive sales, gradually increase your ad spend. A common guideline is to allocate 5% to 10% of revenue to marketing once you’re generating consistent sales, but this varies by industry and growth goals.
What is the best marketing channel for a first sale?
The best channel depends on your product and audience. Visual products like fashion and home décor perform well on Instagram and TikTok. More technical products often succeed with Google Ads and LinkedIn. Most new merchants find success starting with their personal network and one paid channel. Test one platform thoroughly before spreading the budget across multiple channels.
In a survey of established Shopify merchants,* word of mouth (53%) and building a social media presence (35%) were the most common year-one growth strategies—reinforcing that organic channels often drive first sales before paid advertising becomes effective.
How do ecommerce sales work?
Ecommerce sales start with creating an online store and attracting customers through search engine optimization, content marketing, and paid ads. Encourage purchases with compelling product information and a secure checkout process. After a sale, efficiently process and ship orders. Follow up with customers to build loyalty and encourage repeat business, using email and social media.

