Ecommerce Store

Case Study: Ghizaayat Ghar — Premium Panjeeri (E-commerce)

Ghizaayat Ghar was a seasonal e-commerce store selling premium panjeeri , Desi foods— a traditional winter nutrition food made with high-quality nuts and ingredients. With a 3-month winter selling window and a product priced above budget competitors, the challenge wasn’t just running ads — it was proving why premium was worth it.

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The Strategy

  • Phase 1 (Nov – first 1.5 months): 60% budget on awareness, 40% on sales — built custom audiences, educated people on ingredient quality, and collected real customer reviews to build trust
  • Location testing: Ran ads nationally, then identified Islamabad and Kashmir as highest-intent regions — shifted to 80% budget there, 20% held for testing new locations
  • Keyword testing: Tested 10 keywords in batches of 3 to find what actually drove intent
  • Creative testing: Iterated on ad creative based on performance before scaling
  • Phase 2 (2 months): Shifted fully from awareness to sales-focused campaigns to convert the audience built in Phase 1

The Challenge

  • Premium, high-quality ingredients meant our production cost matched competitors’ selling price — a tough position to market from
  • Needed to prove superior quality and health value in a short 4-month winter selling season
  • Highly seasonal product with a narrow window to build both awareness and sales

The Results

  • PKR 200,000 invested (all expenses included)
  • PKR 320,000 profit generated over the 3-month season
  • Turned a premium-cost product into a profitable seasonal business by building trust before asking for the sale

Case Study: Home & Lifestyle Products (E-commerce)

A home niche store selling trending decor, kitchen gadgets, and everyday-use products — from ambient lighting (Sunset Projection Lamps, Galaxy Projectors) to kitchen tools (Stanley Tumblers, Roti Makers, USB Blenders).

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The Strategy — Product Research First

Instead of guessing what might sell, every product was validated before listing:

  • Studied competitor ads directly from the Facebook feed — checking how long an ad had been running (a strong signal of profitability)
  • Analyzed engagement levels and comment sentiment to gauge real buyer interest
  • Checked sourcing difficulty — prioritizing products that were easy to get but not easily available in local markets
  • Only launched products that passed all three checks

Campaign Approach

  • Ran lean, low-budget Meta campaigns — total monthly cost (ads + product + shipping) kept to PKR 10,000–15,000
  • Focused spend on proven demand signals from research rather than broad testing
  • Prioritized fast-moving, low-competition products within the niche

The Results

  • PKR 10,000–15,000 total monthly cost
  • PKR 30,000–40,000 net profit per month
  • Sustained for 6 months of consistent, profitable operation
Store was eventually shut down — not from losses, but from hitting a scaling ceiling: the low-budget, manual research model that made it profitable didn't translate into a system that could scale further

Case Study: Bike & Car Accessories (E-commerce)

A store built around bike and car accessories, starting with anti-theft and security items after spotting strong early demand in that category.

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The Strategy

  • Started small: tested a single anti-theft product with PKR 4,000 ad spend
  • That test alone generated PKR 60,000 in sales off a PKR 15,000 total investment — strong enough signal to justify building a full store
  • Expanded into a full bike & car accessories catalog once the first product proved demand
  • Categorized products by type and ran catalog-style ads based on category rather than single-product ads
  • Targeted bike and car owners as the core audience across campaigns

The Challenge

  • Niche, specific audience (bike and car owners) rather than a broad consumer market
  • Needed to validate demand before committing to a full store build

The Results

  • Initial product test: PKR 15,000 invested → PKR 60,000 in sales
  • Full store (5 months): ~2.3x ROAS with a 45% conversion rate
  • Store was eventually closed — not from losses, but because margins had thinned to the point of only covering running costs, without room to scale further

The Lesson

The single-product test-before-you-invest approach worked — it’s the reason the store launched with real evidence of demand instead of a guess. But once scaled to a full catalog, thin margins in a competitive accessory market meant the business stayed profitable without becoming truly scalable.

Case Study: Home & Lifestyle Products (E-commerce)

A home niche store selling trending decor, kitchen gadgets, and everyday-use products — from ambient lighting (Sunset Projection Lamps, Galaxy Projectors) to kitchen tools (Stanley Tumblers, Roti Makers, USB Blenders).

2
1

The Strategy — Product Research First

Instead of guessing what might sell, every product was validated before listing:

  • Studied competitor ads directly from the Facebook feed — checking how long an ad had been running (a strong signal of profitability)
  • Analyzed engagement levels and comment sentiment to gauge real buyer interest
  • Checked sourcing difficulty — prioritizing products that were easy to get but not easily available in local markets
  • Only launched products that passed all three checks

Campaign Approach

  • Ran lean, low-budget Meta campaigns — total monthly cost (ads + product + shipping) kept to PKR 10,000–15,000
  • Focused spend on proven demand signals from research rather than broad testing
  • Prioritized fast-moving, low-competition products within the niche

The Results

  • PKR 10,000–15,000 total monthly cost
  • PKR 30,000–40,000 net profit per month
  • Sustained for 6 months of consistent, profitable operation
Store was eventually shut down — not from losses, but from hitting a scaling ceiling: the low-budget, manual research model that made it profitable didn't translate into a system that could scale further