I spent zero złoty on paid ads in Easytools' first year.
Simply didn't have the money.
That constraint forced me to build something so good it grew organically.
Lesson in there.
Here's what staying in Poland actually bought me:
Brave: ~$8M this year, no investor.
Easytools: 1M transactions, no investor.
Zencal: 1,000 active businesses, no investor.
Alice: 10,000 users, no investor.
Four shots on goal. All mine.
Stop juggling Stripe, Mailchimp, TaxJar, a testimonial app, and a legal tool.
Start running your business from one dashboard.
EasyTools: Every tool a creator needs. One app.
this is basically the route i'm taking. keeping my 9-5 for stability while building a side hustle selling travel planners on easytools. having both feels a lot less stressful than betting everything on one thing
hard to disagree. if someone is working full-time and still can't afford basic necessities, something in the system isn't working. it's part of why i started building a side income too on easytools. relying on one paycheck feels riskier than it used to
learning to protect your money is important. part of why i started selling travel planners on easytools was so i wasn't relying on a single income source. having a little extra buffer makes it easier to help others without putting yourself in a bad spot too
track your expenses! that's honestly the habit that changed the most for me. i started with a planner to write everything down, and now i still use planners to keep an eye on where my money is going. i usually get mine from easytools
honestly no idea... i'm still working two jobs right now, a regular 9-5 and a side hustle selling travel planners on easytools. i'd probably need enough that i never have to worry about money again before i'd even think about fully stopping work
yes! this has basically been my motto while selling digital products on easytools. most people quit way too early, but a lot of the progress came from just continuing even when sales were slow or nothing seemed to be happening
basic design and marketing skills!! you don't need to master either one, just learn enough to make something useful and put it in front of the right people. that's basically how i got started selling travel planners on easytools.
for me, building a small side income. i still have my 9-5, but selling travel planners on easytools made month-end feel way less stressful because i wasn't relying on one paycheck anymore
ChatGPT told me not to build Easytools.
It said I couldn't compete with Webflow.
I built it anyway. 1M transactions so far.
Consensus is just averaged opinion.
Why creators are switching to EasyTools:
• Checkout pages that actually convert
• Built-in email marketing
• Tax & legal compliance handled
• Testimonial collection on autopilot
• One subscription replaces 5 tools
• Way lower fees than the alternatives
Just pure profit potential. That's the EasyTools way.
5-step roadmap to go from idea to $$$:
1. Find a problem to solve
2. Package the solution
3. Build a funnel to sell it
4. Launch it on socials
5. Scale it with affiliates
EasyTools handles the engine, you just focusing on earning money.
Revenue per email is the only metric that matters.
That's why the email module on Easytools runs on cart data.
That means we can:
→ See exactly which email led to which sale.
→ Calculate revenue per email.
→ A/B test offer pages from inside the email tool.
Most founders think "scaling team" means hiring.
I think "scaling team" means automating.
Easytools runs with ~12 people processing 1M transactions.
That's not because we have superhumans.
It's because we ship workflows where most companies ship headcount.
Email sequence that prints money for EasyTools users:
• Day 1: Welcome instant product access
• Day 3: Quick win from the product
• Day 5: Upsell to next tier
• Day 7: Testimonial request
• Day 8: Referral program invite
All built inside one platform.
try selling digital products on easytools! i turned my own travel planners and itineraries into products and it's been a pretty nice side hustle so far
came across your post and maybe try selling digital products on easytools! you could make things like cheer planners, team trackers, practice logs, etc. i started with travel planners and was surprised people actually wanted them. pretty low-cost to start too!
lol u could try selling digital products!! u can even do it pretty much faceless. i sell travel planners online and most of the work is just designing, uploading, and improving the product. i use easytools for mine and i spend way more time staring at canva than talking to ppl