To make and sell digital products, pick a product people already search for, create it once (AI makes this fast), and sell it on a platform that handles delivery and payment. Digital products — templates, guides, prompt packs, skill files — cost nothing to reproduce, so every sale after the first is almost pure profit.
Here's a practical, step-by-step path from idea to first sale, plus the product types that sell best in 2026.
What counts as a digital product?
A digital product is anything you sell as a file or download instead of a physical item: templates, ebooks and guides, Notion setups, design assets, online courses, and — increasingly — AI assets like prompt packs and skill files. They're attractive because you build once and sell unlimited copies with no inventory or shipping.
Step 1: Pick a product people already want
The biggest mistake is building something nobody searches for. Start from demand: a problem your audience repeatedly has, a task they hate doing, or a template they keep rebuilding. If you have a skill — marketing, finance, design, coding — package the thing people already ask you for.
Step 2: Create it fast with AI
AI collapses production time. Use it to outline a guide, draft an ebook, build a template, or structure a course. The trick is a strong prompt: give the AI a role, the task, your audience, and the format. Not sure how? Paste a rough idea into the free Prompt Optimizer to get a clean, structured prompt — then let your AI produce the first draft. You refine; the AI does the heavy lifting.
Step 3: Choose where to sell
You have two broad options. Run your own store (Shopify, Gumroad, Payhip) for full control and margin, or list on an existing marketplace to borrow its traffic. Marketplaces get you in front of buyers faster; your own store keeps more of each sale. Many sellers do both.
If your product is an AI asset, you can list it on a specialist marketplace. KissMySkills, for example, accepts seller submissions — you can sell a skill file or sell a prompt pack and reach an audience already looking for them.
Step 4: Price it right
Price on value, not effort. Small utilities (a prompt, a template) sell well at $9–19; in-depth guides and toolkits at $29–79; courses higher. Anchor against the time or money your product saves the buyer. Start a little lower to gather reviews, then raise.
Step 5: Market with content
Digital products sell on trust. Publish helpful content around the problem you solve, offer a free version or sample to build an email list, and collect reviews early. A free tool or lead magnet is the classic on-ramp — give value first, then offer the paid product.
The fastest start: sell what you already know
You don't need a big catalog. One genuinely useful product, aimed at a clear buyer, beats ten generic ones. If you've built a prompt or workflow that reliably works, that's a sellable product today — turn it into a prompt pack or a skill file and list it. New to the format? See what Claude Skills are.