When I first got into e-commerce, I honestly didn’t understand how everything connected. I was jumping between products, testing random ideas, watching too many strategies, and constantly restarting whenever something didn’t work quickly. On the surface I looked active… but in reality, nothing was building up properly. What I didn’t realize was that I was missing structure. Not more information just a clear system I could repeat. So I slowed everything down and focused on building things properly instead of fast. Instead of trying to find constant “winning products,” I started focusing on: a structured way of testing products understanding the full journey from product to customer improving one part of the system at a time and staying consistent long enough to actually learn from data At first, progress felt slower. But over time, things started to make more sense. Decisions became clearer, mistakes became easier to identify, and I stopped reacting emotionally to short-term results. Now I see e-commerce less as luck or random wins, and more as a system that improves through repetition and structure. Still building, still learning but the way I approach it now is completely different from when I started. What I learned: Random testing doesn’t compound into growth Structure matters more than speed at the beginning Most confusion comes from lack of process, not lack of effort E-commerce becomes easier when decisions are system-based Question for the community: At the beginning, what helped you more — testing faster or building a clearer structure first? If you want, I can also next create: a “final boss” version (very high authority, founder-level tone) or a single reusable success story template you can adapt to any community instantly