see you soon at 50k days

M

mikeperry271

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Just posting this here to motivate you guys to make money
Read my last thread and my discussion with pseudo-intellectual @Seth Walsh for laughs:

I won't respond to your dms and I won't answer your questions, so don't even bother
Just some motivation for you guys to start dropshipping
You can make money without having to sell a course :)

I
IMG 2957


see y'all at 50k days next
 
Last edited:
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: Arsene, CEO, Coeus and 1 other person
Just posting this here to motivate you guys to make money
Read my last thread and my discussion with @Seth Walsh for laughs:

I won't respond to your dms and I won't answer your questions, so don't even bother
Just some motivation for you guys to start dropshipping
You can make money without having to sell a course :)

IView attachment 3703521

see y'all at 50k days next
larp
 
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: Alexios, Cleetus Cornfield, Seth Walsh and 1 other person

Debunking the $41,988 Shopify Analytics Screenshot​

1746362015067

Visual Authenticity of the Screenshot​




Figure: Screenshot of the alleged Shopify store analytics (from the Looksmax.org thread) showing “Yesterday, 81 visitors” and $41,988.85 in total sales. On close inspection, the UI elements and formatting contain several inconsistencies that point to image editing:



  • Number formatting: The sales figure is shown as “$41.988,85”, mixing a European-style decimal comma with a dollar sign. In Shopify’s English interface, USD/CAD values would normally use commas for thousands and a period for the decimal (e.g. $41,988.85). This mismatch is a red flag – as noted by forum analysts, Shopify’s US‑dollar locale would not display a comma decimal with the “$” symbollooksmax.org.
  • Missing metric values: The Orders and Conversion panels each show only a green “+8%” arrow but no numeric value. In the real Shopify admin, each widget always displays the actual count or percentage (e.g. “24 orders” or “3.2% conversion”) next to the arrow. The blank fields here imply that the text has been deleted or coveredlooksmax.org.
  • Graph overlay issues: The sales graph shows a solid blue line (today’s data) and a dotted grey line (comparison). However, the grey baseline never crosses the $1K mark while the blue line peaks near $3K – this is inconsistent scaling. As pointed out in the forum, this indicates the graph elements were overlaid from different imageslooksmax.org. In a genuine Shopify chart, the dotted line would be aligned on the same scale, not artificially truncated under $1K.
  • Uniform percentage values: All three summary cards (Sales, Orders, Conversion) oddly display +8%. It’s highly unlikely that revenue, order count, and conversion rate would each rise by exactly 8% compared to the previous period. This uniformity suggests the “+8%” arrows were copy-pasted onto the screenshot, rather than being automatically generated metrics.

Collectively, these UI inconsistencies – especially the unusual number format and missing data fields – strongly suggest the screenshot has been doctored rather than captured directly from Shopify.


Feasibility of $41,988 in Sales from 81 Visitors​


  • Implausible conversion/AOV: Earning ~$42K from only 81 visitors would require either nearly every visitor to make a purchase or an exceptionally high spend per order. For example, if all 81 visitors bought something (100% conversion), the average order would still be about $518. By comparison, typical Shopify stores have an average order value (AOV) around $90, with only the top 10% of stores reaching about $326chargeflow.io. An AOV over $500 is unheard-of in most shops. If conversion were lower (say 20%), then each of roughly 16 orders would need an AOV of ~$2,600 to hit $42K – even more extreme.
  • Normal conversion rates: Real-world e-commerce conversion rates are usually 1–3%. Shopify analysts note a typical online store conversion is about 1.5%looksmax.org. With only 81 visitors, a 1.5% conversion yields roughly 1–2 orders. To reach $42K on just 1–2 orders, each order would need to be around $21K, which is absurd. Even at a generous 10% conversion (8 orders), each order would have to average $5,250. In short, achieving $41,988 from 81 visits would require conversion and AOV far beyond industry norms.
  • Benchmark comparison: One forum analysis pointed out that just 32 visitors generating ~$38,888 would imply 32 orders (100% conversion) at about $1,215 each, compared to a top-10% AOV of $326looksmax.org. Scaling that logic, 81 visitors yielding ~$42K is similarly unrealistic. These figures dwarf normal benchmarks, making the sales total virtually impossible under ordinary conditions.
  • Traffic discrepancy: The OP claims “35–40k CAD in revenue a day” from paid ads in Canada, but only 81 visitors are shown. Typically, spending tens of thousands on ads would drive hundreds or thousands of visitors, not dozens. This severe mismatch between claimed ad performance and actual traffic suggests the analytics are not genuine.

Evidence of Metric Manipulation​


  • Blank values reveal editing: In the screenshot, the Orders and Conversion cards show only an arrow icon and “+8%” text – the actual numbers are missing. Shopify always displays the raw value (e.g. “10 orders” or “5.5%”) alongside the percent change. The forum notes that “blank fields indicate the text layer was deleted”looksmax.org. In other words, someone likely erased the numbers to make the figures look more impressive or to hide the true (much lower) values.
  • Identical percentage changes: All three metrics report an 8% increase. It’s extremely unlikely for revenue, orders, and conversion rate to all rise by exactly the same percentage. This uniformity is a telltale sign of copy-paste. In a real report, these would vary. The matching arrows and “+8%” signs likely indicate someone overlaid the graphic rather than reporting genuine analytics.
  • Chart scale mismatch: The dotted grey line (usually representing a previous period) is on a visibly different scale than the blue line. The grey line stays under $1K even when the blue line reaches $3K peaks. A genuine Shopify chart would scale both lines together. This misalignment strongly suggests the chart was composited from separate images – literally “dragged in a graphics editor” as one analyst wrotelooksmax.org.

Graph Data Patterns vs. Normal Behavior​


  • Incomplete time range: The x-axis shows hours up to 8:00 PM and then stops, even though “Yesterday” should cover midnight through 11:59 PM. A real dashboard would plot all 24 hours. The cutoff implies the screenshot may have been cropped or taken before the day ended, which is odd if the intention was to display a full-day summary.
  • Unlikely sales spikes: The chart shows several sharp peaks near $3K throughout the day. If only 81 visitors in total came, seeing multiple multi-thousand-dollar surges is implausible. Realistic sales from so few visitors would be sporadic and smaller. The pattern here looks smoothed and repetitive rather than the jagged, sparse pattern one would expect from just a few buyers.
  • Mismatch in comparison line: The dotted grey line (last period) should mimic the same scale as the blue line. Here, the grey “baseline” never crosses $1K on the axis while the blue line reaches $3K. This visual glitch is a strong indicator the graph components were misaligned during editinglooksmax.org. In genuine Shopify analytics, the comparative trend lines would share the same Y-axis scaling.

OP’s Claims vs. Analytics Data​


  • Visitor count vs. revenue: The OP claims ~$40K/day revenue, but the data shows only 81 visitors. Forum members immediately flagged this: even 32 visitors for ~$39K implies 32 purchases of ~$1,200 each – “every single one” would have had to buy something, an event with “near zero” probabilitylooksmax.org. With 81 visitors, the discrepancy is even larger. The analytics simply do not support the OP’s bragged figures.
  • Profit and “wealth” claim: The OP boasts about creating “generational wealth,” but the numbers don’t back that up. At a 15% profit margin on ~40K CAD, daily profit is only about 6K CAD gross (roughly 4.4K after tax)looksmax.org. That’s a modest income, not a fortune. It certainly couldn’t fund large hiring or wholesale lifestyle upgrades. In short, the financial math is vastly overstated.
  • Ads and payout implausibility: Achieving $40K in sales would require huge advertising spend. Yet the OP provides no ad reports or receipts. Industry veterans note that new stores rarely skyrocket ad spending to five figures overnight without triggering account reviews. Additionally, Shopify/Stripe typically hold payouts for new, rapidly growing accounts (often 2–7 days)looksmax.org. The OP’s mention of “seeing daily payouts” contradicts these standard practices. Taken together, the logistical details in the thread don’t hold up to scrutiny.

In summary, multiple lines of evidence disprove the screenshot’s claim. The visual anomalies (incorrect number format, missing values, misaligned chart) indicate the image was edited. The sales figures themselves are statistically impossible given the tiny traffic (typical conversion/AOV benchmarkslooksmax.orgchargeflow.io). And the OP’s narrative about profits, ads, and growth contains exaggerations that forum experts have called out. All signs point to fabrication rather than a genuine Shopify report.


Conclusion: The purported Shopify analytics snapshot is not authentic. Technical inconsistencies in the UI, impossible conversion/average‐order metrics, and contradictory claims in the thread make it clear the $41,988.85 sales figure is fraudulent. The supposed data has been manipulated, and the scenario as described by the OP is statistically and operationally implausiblelooksmax.orglooksmax.org.
 
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  • JFL
Reactions: CEO, maximum cope31, Cleetus Cornfield and 2 others

Debunking the $41,988 Shopify Analytics Screenshot​

View attachment 3703562

Visual Authenticity of the Screenshot​




Figure: Screenshot of the alleged Shopify store analytics (from the Looksmax.org thread) showing “Yesterday, 81 visitors” and $41,988.85 in total sales. On close inspection, the UI elements and formatting contain several inconsistencies that point to image editing:



  • Number formatting: The sales figure is shown as “$41.988,85”, mixing a European-style decimal comma with a dollar sign. In Shopify’s English interface, USD/CAD values would normally use commas for thousands and a period for the decimal (e.g. $41,988.85). This mismatch is a red flag – as noted by forum analysts, Shopify’s US‑dollar locale would not display a comma decimal with the “$” symbollooksmax.org.
  • Missing metric values: The Orders and Conversion panels each show only a green “+8%” arrow but no numeric value. In the real Shopify admin, each widget always displays the actual count or percentage (e.g. “24 orders” or “3.2% conversion”) next to the arrow. The blank fields here imply that the text has been deleted or coveredlooksmax.org.
  • Graph overlay issues: The sales graph shows a solid blue line (today’s data) and a dotted grey line (comparison). However, the grey baseline never crosses the $1K mark while the blue line peaks near $3K – this is inconsistent scaling. As pointed out in the forum, this indicates the graph elements were overlaid from different imageslooksmax.org. In a genuine Shopify chart, the dotted line would be aligned on the same scale, not artificially truncated under $1K.
  • Uniform percentage values: All three summary cards (Sales, Orders, Conversion) oddly display +8%. It’s highly unlikely that revenue, order count, and conversion rate would each rise by exactly 8% compared to the previous period. This uniformity suggests the “+8%” arrows were copy-pasted onto the screenshot, rather than being automatically generated metrics.

Collectively, these UI inconsistencies – especially the unusual number format and missing data fields – strongly suggest the screenshot has been doctored rather than captured directly from Shopify.


Feasibility of $41,988 in Sales from 81 Visitors​


  • Implausible conversion/AOV: Earning ~$42K from only 81 visitors would require either nearly every visitor to make a purchase or an exceptionally high spend per order. For example, if all 81 visitors bought something (100% conversion), the average order would still be about $518. By comparison, typical Shopify stores have an average order value (AOV) around $90, with only the top 10% of stores reaching about $326chargeflow.io. An AOV over $500 is unheard-of in most shops. If conversion were lower (say 20%), then each of roughly 16 orders would need an AOV of ~$2,600 to hit $42K – even more extreme.
  • Normal conversion rates: Real-world e-commerce conversion rates are usually 1–3%. Shopify analysts note a typical online store conversion is about 1.5%looksmax.org. With only 81 visitors, a 1.5% conversion yields roughly 1–2 orders. To reach $42K on just 1–2 orders, each order would need to be around $21K, which is absurd. Even at a generous 10% conversion (8 orders), each order would have to average $5,250. In short, achieving $41,988 from 81 visits would require conversion and AOV far beyond industry norms.
  • Benchmark comparison: One forum analysis pointed out that just 32 visitors generating ~$38,888 would imply 32 orders (100% conversion) at about $1,215 each, compared to a top-10% AOV of $326looksmax.org. Scaling that logic, 81 visitors yielding ~$42K is similarly unrealistic. These figures dwarf normal benchmarks, making the sales total virtually impossible under ordinary conditions.
  • Traffic discrepancy: The OP claims “35–40k CAD in revenue a day” from paid ads in Canada, but only 81 visitors are shown. Typically, spending tens of thousands on ads would drive hundreds or thousands of visitors, not dozens. This severe mismatch between claimed ad performance and actual traffic suggests the analytics are not genuine.

Evidence of Metric Manipulation​


  • Blank values reveal editing: In the screenshot, the Orders and Conversion cards show only an arrow icon and “+8%” text – the actual numbers are missing. Shopify always displays the raw value (e.g. “10 orders” or “5.5%”) alongside the percent change. The forum notes that “blank fields indicate the text layer was deleted”looksmax.org. In other words, someone likely erased the numbers to make the figures look more impressive or to hide the true (much lower) values.
  • Identical percentage changes: All three metrics report an 8% increase. It’s extremely unlikely for revenue, orders, and conversion rate to all rise by exactly the same percentage. This uniformity is a telltale sign of copy-paste. In a real report, these would vary. The matching arrows and “+8%” signs likely indicate someone overlaid the graphic rather than reporting genuine analytics.
  • Chart scale mismatch: The dotted grey line (usually representing a previous period) is on a visibly different scale than the blue line. The grey line stays under $1K even when the blue line reaches $3K peaks. A genuine Shopify chart would scale both lines together. This misalignment strongly suggests the chart was composited from separate images – literally “dragged in a graphics editor” as one analyst wrotelooksmax.org.

Graph Data Patterns vs. Normal Behavior​


  • Incomplete time range: The x-axis shows hours up to 8:00 PM and then stops, even though “Yesterday” should cover midnight through 11:59 PM. A real dashboard would plot all 24 hours. The cutoff implies the screenshot may have been cropped or taken before the day ended, which is odd if the intention was to display a full-day summary.
  • Unlikely sales spikes: The chart shows several sharp peaks near $3K throughout the day. If only 81 visitors in total came, seeing multiple multi-thousand-dollar surges is implausible. Realistic sales from so few visitors would be sporadic and smaller. The pattern here looks smoothed and repetitive rather than the jagged, sparse pattern one would expect from just a few buyers.
  • Mismatch in comparison line: The dotted grey line (last period) should mimic the same scale as the blue line. Here, the grey “baseline” never crosses $1K on the axis while the blue line reaches $3K. This visual glitch is a strong indicator the graph components were misaligned during editinglooksmax.org. In genuine Shopify analytics, the comparative trend lines would share the same Y-axis scaling.

OP’s Claims vs. Analytics Data​


  • Visitor count vs. revenue: The OP claims ~$40K/day revenue, but the data shows only 81 visitors. Forum members immediately flagged this: even 32 visitors for ~$39K implies 32 purchases of ~$1,200 each – “every single one” would have had to buy something, an event with “near zero” probabilitylooksmax.org. With 81 visitors, the discrepancy is even larger. The analytics simply do not support the OP’s bragged figures.
  • Profit and “wealth” claim: The OP boasts about creating “generational wealth,” but the numbers don’t back that up. At a 15% profit margin on ~40K CAD, daily profit is only about 6K CAD gross (roughly 4.4K after tax)looksmax.org. That’s a modest income, not a fortune. It certainly couldn’t fund large hiring or wholesale lifestyle upgrades. In short, the financial math is vastly overstated.
  • Ads and payout implausibility: Achieving $40K in sales would require huge advertising spend. Yet the OP provides no ad reports or receipts. Industry veterans note that new stores rarely skyrocket ad spending to five figures overnight without triggering account reviews. Additionally, Shopify/Stripe typically hold payouts for new, rapidly growing accounts (often 2–7 days)looksmax.org. The OP’s mention of “seeing daily payouts” contradicts these standard practices. Taken together, the logistical details in the thread don’t hold up to scrutiny.

In summary, multiple lines of evidence disprove the screenshot’s claim. The visual anomalies (incorrect number format, missing values, misaligned chart) indicate the image was edited. The sales figures themselves are statistically impossible given the tiny traffic (typical conversion/AOV benchmarkslooksmax.orgchargeflow.io). And the OP’s narrative about profits, ads, and growth contains exaggerations that forum experts have called out. All signs point to fabrication rather than a genuine Shopify report.


Conclusion: The purported Shopify analytics snapshot is not authentic. Technical inconsistencies in the UI, impossible conversion/average‐order metrics, and contradictory claims in the thread make it clear the $41,988.85 sales figure is fraudulent. The supposed data has been manipulated, and the scenario as described by the OP is statistically and operationally implausiblelooksmax.orglooksmax.org.
dnrd
probably chatgpt response with false assumptions I debunked in discussion in last thread
 
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Reactions: CEO
Sales, number of orders, and conversion are all up 8% from the day prior?

Cool coincidence to get exactly +8% in all three!

That's some great growth and scaling, especially for one day. At this rate, you'll scale to infinity and beyond.
 
Sales, number of orders, and conversion are all up 8% from the day prior?

Cool coincidence to get exactly +8% in all three!

That's some great growth and scaling, especially for one day. At this rate, you'll scale to infinity and beyond.
I will buddy
 
@Seth Walsh I can hire you for my customer service
we work with zendesk
pay starts from $3.5 per hour
 
@Seth Walsh I can hire you for my customer service
we work with zendesk
pay starts from $3.5 per hour
You could probably run the zen desk.

The amount of time you spend replying to me SHOULD be taking away from time NEEDED to operate a $10M+ per year revenue generating business.

Do you want to give anyone motivation to turn water into wine? :lul:
 
You could probably run the zen desk.

The amount of time you spend replying to me SHOULD be taking away from a $10M+ per year revenue generating business.
you're right on the time spent here, back to work
I spend 30-45 minutes on here max, only weekends as most of my team is not working

got 7 VA's fulltime on the cs, dw buddy

will probably schedule this account for deletion soon, so if you have any things to say lmk before monday
 
Last edited:
  • JFL
Reactions: Seth Walsh
I won't respond to your dms and I won't answer your questions, so don't even bother
Just some motivation for you guys to start dropshipping
You can make money without having to sell a course :)
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i thought the two of you came to an agreement

i do believe seth speaks on stuff he doesn’t know much about at times, but your claims sound sketchy asf. i’m still giving you the benefit of the doubt because you’re not trying to sell anything.

- what gives your biz an edge over other businesses
- how many hours do you put into this business on a daily basis currently and how many daily hours did you work back at its conception
- are you selling health, wealth, relationships or expensive hobbies
- why do you wanna get rich?
- where did you meet teenage overachievers from the ecom space who became millionaires at 16 and fuck hot girls while ltn on a regular basis
 
i thought the two of you came to an agreement

i do believe seth speaks on stuff he doesn’t know much about at times, but your claims sound sketchy asf. i’m still giving you the benefit of the doubt because you’re not trying to sell anything.
I'll respond to this cause you seem genuine.
Please don't take Seth too serious. He is an old alcoholic pseudo-intellectual that just dumps a lot of chatgpt content on here.
He knows absolutely nothing about Shopify. I debunked literally everything he said.

- what gives your biz an edge over other businesses
This supplement I am currently selling is actually not hard to source. I just slapped my own brand label on it.

My marketing however is supreme imo. We spew out around 500 new creatives a week (most of these are just variations and iterations of each other, so not actually 500 unique creatives.)
I am also currently hiring actual content creators on payroll to actually create a face for this brand. I already work with a bunch UGC creators.
Will also try to get this product on TikTok shop if I can link up with a good agency for this as I see huge potential there. I don't have much experience on TIkTok shop myself as I always focused on European markets before where TikTok shop is not really known, so a reliable agency for this seems like the only way rn.

- are you selling health, wealth, relationships or expensive hobbies
Health niche, you might have seen something similar on your social media feed before
It's not a gym related supplement

- why do you wanna get rich?
Why not?
To be real, I was never actually satisfied with my life when I was broke. Couldn't go on vacations, couldn't move out my parents' house. I already achieved that.
Now I just want to build something legit that I can exit for 7 or maybe 8 figures and not work again.

- where did you meet teenage overachievers from the ecom space who became millionaires at 16 and fuck hot girls while ltn on a regular basis
I didn't meet all of them irl, many of them I only know online (discord, telegram, whatsapp communities). I also post quite a lot about my ecommerce business on my public instagram where people sometimes DM me.
The people I know IRL is also just coincendences:
For example, I switched gyms a few months back and one day I was talking with a guy while working in between sets with him. He asked what I do for a living and I told him ecommerce. He told me a good friend of his did the same and asked I wanted to connect with him. So he gave me his contact details and I just went to grab a coffee with the guy. Through him I also met some other ecom entrepreneurs, agency owners, etc.
 
Last edited:
  • +1
Reactions: Coeus
Advice for someone just getting started?

And any tips to progress in this field and stay motivated
 
Just posting this here to motivate you guys to make money
Read my last thread and my discussion with pseudo-intellectual @Seth Walsh for laughs:

I won't respond to your dms and I won't answer your questions, so don't even bother
Just some motivation for you guys to start dropshipping
You can make money without having to sell a course :)

IView attachment 3703521

see y'all at 50k days next
Bump to support. Good work. ☕:yes:

tumblr_inline_osj0mj11xS1r6xb6e_500.gifv
 

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