đ° How I Made Money in My Sleep: The Beginnerâs Guide to Selling Digital Products Online
No inventory, no shippingâjust pure profit from your laptop. Hereâs how to get started (even if youâre a total newbie).

Letâs be honest: the idea of making money while you sleep sounds like one of those overhyped Instagram ads. I used to think the same⌠until I sold my first digital planner on Etsy.
I didnât have a huge audience, zero design experience, and my product? It was just a clean, minimal weekly layout I made in Canva. But when I woke up the next morning and saw my first saleâ$4.99 in my inboxâI was hooked.
Digital products changed the game for me, and the best part? You donât need to be tech-savvy or even super creative to get started.
Let me walk you through it, beginner to beginner.
So, What Are Digital Products Exactly?
Think of digital products as anything you can sell online that doesnât require a box, a stamp, or a trip to the post office.
Some popular examples:
- Ebooks
- Online courses
- Planners and printables
- Templates (Canva, resumes, social media kits)
- Stock photos
- Notion setups
- Lightroom presets
- Sound effects, music loops
You create it once, and then you can sell it over and over again without touching it again. Thatâs the beauty of passive income.
Step 1: Pick Your Product
Now, hereâs the fun part: choosing what to sell.
Don't overthink it. You just need to solve one small problem or make someoneâs life easier.
Ask yourself:
- What do people come to me for advice on?
- What do I enjoy creating?
- What would I personally find useful?
For me, Iâm big on organization, so digital planners were a no-brainer. My best friend loves photography and now sells Lightroom presets on Gumroad. Another friend of mine is a teacher and makes printable flashcards on Teachers Pay Teachers.
Everyone has something valuable to shareâyes, even you!
Step 2: Create It (Even If Youâre Not a Designer)
I promise, you donât need Photoshop or expensive software.
Hereâs what I used starting out:
- Canva â for making planners, checklists, and templates
- Google Docs â for writing ebooks or guides
- Notion â to build productivity planners or templates
- Gumroad/Etsy/Payhip â to actually sell the thing
Pro tip: Keep it simple. Clean design, useful content. Thatâs it. Your first product doesnât have to be fancyâit just has to work.
Step 3: Where to Sell It
Youâve made something awesomeânow letâs get it in front of people.
Here are great beginner-friendly platforms:
- Etsy â for anything visual: planners, templates, art prints
- Gumroad â ideal for ebooks, guides, presets, and more
- Payhip â super beginner-friendly for small digital shops
- Teachable/Thinkific â if youâre going big with online courses
Each platform has its own vibe, so play around and see what feels right. Most are free or only take a small cut when you make a sale.
Step 4: Promote Without Feeling Salesy
Hereâs where most people freeze upââBut how do I get people to actually buy it?â
The good news: you donât need to be a marketing expert.
Hereâs what worked for me:
- Pinterest: I posted a pin for my planner with âOrganize your week in 5 minutesââit brought 500+ clicks in one week!
- Instagram Reels: Show a quick behind-the-scenes of you creating the product.
- TikTok: Share how your product saves time, solves a problem, or helps someone reach a goal.
- Medium/Vocal.Media: Write helpful articles with links to your product (hello, passive promo!).
Start by helping, not selling. Give value, be real, and people will click.
Final Thoughts: Youâre More Ready Than You Think
Creating and selling digital products seemed overwhelming to me at first. I had zero background in business or design. But once I got started? It was surprisingly doableâand honestly, kind of addictive.
You donât need 10 products or a fancy website.
- You just need:
- One simple idea
- One helpful product
- One place to sell
- One way to share it
Start messy. Start now. Youâll learn along the wayâand if youâre lucky, youâll make money in your sleep, too.
About the Creator
Md Zillur Rahaman Chowdhury
âď¸ Blogger | đ° Article Writer | Turning ideas into engaging stories, one word at a time.




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