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  • Writer's pictureTaylor Reilly

Figuring Out Your Audience

Link to the original article: https://www.oberlo.com/blog/listen-to-data


Getting your target audience right is one of the building blocks of starting a dropshipping business. Your initial research may paint a certain picture, but your ads’ data may end up showing that you weren’t quite on the nose.


And this could be the defining line between failure and success. 

While a winning product does get the ball rolling, if you’re not marketing it to the right people, the chances of it taking off are slim.


Teenagers Taylor Reilly and Lachlan Delchau-Jones are walking proof of this. They started their store with a specific audience in mind. But after their data began to show that they were off the mark, they quickly tweaked their ads, which propelled them to $70,000 in sales.


In this article, we’ll talk about how to validate your product-market fit by striking the right balance between following your instincts and listening to your data. 


Taylor and Lachlan came up with the idea for their store after the niche their product was in suddenly received considerable attention, and Lachlan saw people in stores buying these products in bulk. 


Having already had experience with dropshipping, he knew that the products, which are in the toy and hobbies category, would be easy to source. 

Seeing how quickly they flew off the shelves in stores was further validation that they would be popular online, too. 


While the duo has an established system for choosing winning products, this store actually went against a lot of their normal processes. 


But one thing they did stick to was crafting a clear idea of their target audience. The pair’s guiding principle was that they needed to be able to picture who would buy their product.

“If I don’t know their hobbies, what they like to do on weekends, who their friends are, I won’t be able to run ads to them on Facebook because you need to know those interests.” – Taylor

With a crafted audience in mind, they started working on ads to target the audiences they believed would be their main buyers.


We all have preconceived judgments that often result in blind spots. As much as we want to trust our instincts about our target audience, there must be room for error. 

Start by having an idea of who you think your audience is. But don’t put all your eggs in one basket. 


Lachlan and Taylor were right in foreseeing demand for the product, an influx of sales after the local news featured it was validation of it.


But as data from those sales poured in, the pair realized that the store’s actual target audience was quite different than what they had imagined. 


“Our original thought going into it was that it was parents buying it for their families,” said Taylor.

Rather than sticking to their guns and trying to force their original audience to work, they listened to the data and acted on it.


Without ditching their original audience, Lachlan and Taylor redistributed their budget. They allocated a larger amount to the audience the data indicated to be the better choice while continuing to run ad sets for other audiences. Eventually, they were able to narrow their target audience down to a winner. 


“It was like grandparents just buying it for themselves because they’re bored,” Taylor concluded.

Such adjustments are common, especially as you’re just starting, and Lachlan and Taylor certainly aren’t the only ones who’ve done so.









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