30-Second Product Research Workflow
The complete tab-by-tab workflow for evaluating any AliExpress product in 30 seconds. Discovery → Niches → Verdict → Profit → Risk → Compare — in the right order, for the right reason.
Most dropshippers research products in the wrong order. They land on a product page, immediately jump to the Verdict tab, see a green badge, and feel excited — without ever checking whether the keyword has real search demand, whether the margin holds up, or whether the seller has been on the platform for more than three months. This guide fixes that. The 30-second workflow is a six-step sequence that routes you through every analysis tab in the exact order that eliminates bad candidates as fast as possible.
Why Order Matters
Each step is a gate. You should only proceed to the next step if the current one passes. If a product fails at step 3 (Verdict), there's no point running the Profit simulator on it. If it fails at step 5 (Risk), there's no point comparing suppliers. This is the core insight that makes the workflow fast: you're not doing six steps on every product, you're doing one step on most products and only reaching step 6 on the few that deserve it.
The most common mistake beginners make is treating Discovery and Niches as optional side tabs. They're not — they're your pre-screening layer that filters out products before you spend any mental energy on analysis.
Step 1 — Discovery Tab: Find Candidates
Open the Discovery tab on any AliExpress page. This tab shows a real-time feed of products currently gaining traction across AliExpress. You're looking for two signals:
- Winning badge — the gold star icon next to a product title means the AI has already pre-screened it
- Sales Velocity 10+ — anything below 10 units in the velocity window is too early to validate
Scroll through the feed and click only the products that hit both criteria. Open each one in a new tab. You're building a candidate shortlist, not doing deep research yet. A good session generates 8–12 candidates in under five minutes.
Pro tip: use the category filter at the top of the Discovery tab to focus on a single niche. Scattered research across 20 categories produces unfocused ad accounts. Pick 2–3 niches and dominate them.
Step 2 — Niches Tab: Validate Search Demand
Switch to the Niches tab and search the primary keyword for each candidate (e.g., "portable blender" for a blender product). This tab shows keyword search volume, competition density, and a list of real product listings sorted by Niches Score.
Set the delivery filter to your target market (e.g., United States). You need to confirm two things:
- The keyword has meaningful search volume (look for the demand indicator — green means sufficient, orange means thin)
- The top results in the list are different sellers, not one dominant supplier
If the keyword shows low demand or the Niches Score for the top result is above 85 with a single seller monopolizing the first eight positions, this product is likely already locked up by someone with more data and more cash than you. Move to the next candidate.
This step alone eliminates roughly 40% of candidates before you ever open the Verdict tab.
Step 3 — Verdict Tab: Read the AI Summary
Now open the Verdict tab. This is where most people start — but you've already pre-filtered your list to products with real demand and an open competitive landscape, so every product you evaluate here has already passed two gates.
Read three things in order:
- Badge — Strong Buy (green), Buy (light green), Hold (yellow), or Pass (red). Disqualify immediately if Hold or Pass. Don't rationalize. Move on.
- Winning Score — the number in the center of the radar. Disqualify anything under 65. Between 65–74 is "test with a small budget." 75–84 is "confident test." 85+ is "prioritize this."
- Market Opportunity radar — five axes: Demand, Margin, Competition, Trend, Trust. A product strong on Demand but weak on Margin means you'll get sales but keep very little. A product strong on Trend but weak on Trust means seller risk. You want a balanced radar, not one spiking spike.
The Winning Score and radar together take about 15 seconds to read once you've done it 50 times. The goal at this step is binary: proceed or discard.
Step 4 — Profit Tab: Model the Unit Economics
Switch to the Profit tab. Every cost line is pre-populated — product cost, shipping, payment processing fees. Your only job is to type in your target retail price.
For AliExpress impulse products, the standard pricing formula is 3–5x the product cost. A blender that costs $8.40 on AliExpress should retail for $25–$42. Start at the midpoint.
Check three numbers:
- Net margin — must be 30%+. Below 30% leaves no buffer for refunds, chargebacks, and the inevitable ad campaigns that don't hit target ROAS. Below 25% is a hard stop.
- Break-even ROAS — this is the minimum return on ad spend to stay profitable. Note it. Write it down. You'll use it as your ad campaign kill switch.
- Monthly projection at 10 orders/day — if 10 orders/day doesn't produce meaningful absolute profit, the product isn't worth your attention regardless of margin percentage. $300/month at 40% margin is not a business.
The portable blender example: AliExpress cost $8.40, shipping $3.20, processing $0.75, fees $0.20, estimated CPA $11.00 = $23.55 total. Retail at $34.99. Net profit per unit: $11.44 (32.7% margin). At 10 orders/day: $3,432/month. Break-even ROAS: 1.74. These numbers justify a test.
Step 5 — Risk Tab: Check the Seller
The Risk tab catches things the Verdict score misses — specifically seller-side red flags that have nothing to do with product quality.
Read the Risk Score first (0–100, lower is better). Under 30 is clean. 30–60 is caution. Above 60 is a significant risk — either the seller is new, has unusual dispute patterns, or the product has import/safety issues.
Then read the risk flags individually. The flags that matter most:
- Seller age under 12 months — newer sellers disappear faster. They also have less leverage with suppliers to maintain quality. For your first order, require at least 12 months.
- High dispute rate — above 4% dispute rate on a seller means one in twenty-five buyers had a problem. That's a refund rate that will destroy your margins.
- No business license — for higher-volume ordering (50+ units/month), prefer sellers with verified business licenses. It signals stability.
- Copyright flag — if the product has a potential IP flag, AliExpress may pull it. Your store will suddenly have a broken product page.
If Risk Score is above 60 or two or more hard flags are present, discard. Don't negotiate with risk flags.
Step 6 — Compare Tab: Find the Right Supplier
You've now confirmed: the product has demand, a real keyword, strong AI verdict, good margins, and a trustworthy seller. The last step is finding the cheapest supplier that still meets your quality bar — which is NOT the same as finding the absolute cheapest price.
Open the Compare tab. It shows multiple sellers offering the same or similar product, ranked by a SmartMatch score that factors price, seller rating, shipping speed, and dispute history.
Look at the top three results. Compare:
- Price difference (often $1–3 between cheapest and safest)
- Seller rating (4.7+ is safe, below 4.5 is a warning)
- Processing time (3 days vs. 10 days is a meaningful customer experience difference)
- Shipping method options (ePacket vs. AliExpress Standard Shipping have very different tracking reliability)
Choose the supplier in position 1 or 2 — not position 5. The $2 savings rarely justify the fulfillment risk. Save the product URL and the supplier link to your testing pipeline.
Full Worked Example: Portable Blender
Here is the complete six-step run on a specific portable blender (500ml, USB-C charging, stainless blade, $8.40 base cost):
- Discovery — appeared in the feed with a Winning badge and Sales Velocity 14. Opened in new tab.
- Niches — searched "portable blender." US market shows green demand signal. Four distinct sellers in top 8. Passed.
- Verdict — badge: Strong Buy. Winning Score: 81. Radar: Demand 85, Margin 78, Competition 62, Trend 74, Trust 80. Passed.
- Profit — retail $34.99. Net margin 32.7%. Break-even ROAS 1.74. Projection at 10/day: $3,432/month. Passed.
- Risk — Risk Score 22. Seller age 28 months. Dispute rate 1.8%. No IP flags. Passed.
- Compare — position 1 supplier at $8.10 (SmartMatch score 94), rating 4.8, 2-day processing. Selected.
Total research time: 4 minutes 20 seconds (this was a careful first run, not compressed mode).
The 30-Second Mode
Experts who have done this workflow 200+ times compress it to about 30 seconds per product by reading only the gating numbers and skipping everything else unless something unusual appears:
- Discovery: Sales Velocity 10+ and Winning badge → open tab
- Niches: green demand signal → proceed
- Verdict: score 75+, Strong Buy or Buy → proceed
- Profit: margin 30+%, break-even ROAS noted → proceed
- Risk: Risk Score under 30 → proceed
- Compare: position 1 supplier → save
The 30-second mode only works after you've done the full six-step workflow enough times that your eye automatically lands on the right number on each tab. Don't rush to 30 seconds. Get comfortable at 4 minutes first.
What to Do With Products That Pass
Add them to a structured testing pipeline:
- Order a sample (1–2 units) and verify quality before ad spend
- Create a Shopify product page using the Export tab's photos, video, and specs
- Launch 3 ad sets with different angles (use Trend tab → Ad Angles for inspiration)
- Set your campaign kill switch at break-even ROAS from step 4
- Run for 5 days minimum before making optimization decisions
What to Do With Products That Fail
The step at which a product fails tells you something useful:
- Fails at Discovery (no Winning badge, low velocity) — too early. Bookmark and check again in two weeks.
- Fails at Niches (no demand) — wrong market or ahead of trend. Not worth ad spend.
- Fails at Verdict (score under 65) — hard pass. The AI has seen patterns you haven't. Trust the score.
- Fails at Profit (margin under 30%) — try a higher retail price before discarding. Sometimes 10% more on retail changes the math.
- Fails at Risk (Risk Score 60+) — go back to Compare and check if a different supplier reduces the score. If the product itself has a copyright flag, hard pass.
- Fails at Compare (no trustworthy supplier at a workable price) — the product exists but the supply chain doesn't support your margin. Move on.
Related Guides
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does the workflow start with Discovery instead of Verdict?
Per the guide, Discovery and Niches act as pre-screening gates that eliminate roughly 40% of candidates before you ever open the Verdict tab.
Starting with Verdict means you are doing deep analysis on products that have no keyword demand or no open competitive landscape — wasted effort.
The six-step order is specifically designed so that each step only takes time on products that passed the previous step, which is how the total workflow compresses to 30 seconds for experienced users.
What Winning Score threshold should I use to disqualify a product?
Per the guide, disqualify immediately at under 65.
Between 65–74 justifies a small-budget test only. 75–84 is a confident test. 85+ means prioritize this product over other candidates.
The guide is explicit: don't rationalize a Hold or Pass badge and don't negotiate with a score below 65.
The AI has processed patterns across thousands of products and a low score almost always reflects a structural problem — oversaturation, declining trend, or trust issues — that manual research rarely catches.
What net margin is the minimum before I should walk away?
Per the guide, below 30% is dangerous and below 25% is a hard stop.
The 30% threshold exists because it leaves buffer for refunds (5–8% on impulse products), chargebacks, and ad campaigns that miss target ROAS in the first week.
The portable blender example in the guide cleared 32.7% margin at a $34.99 retail price, which is the minimum comfortable zone.
If your retail price can't be set high enough to hit 30% margin without being uncompetitive, the product economics don't work.
How do I build a pipeline from products that pass all six steps?
Per the guide, the test pipeline has five steps: order a sample (1–2 units) to verify quality before ad spend; build a Shopify product page using the Export tab's photos, video, and specs; launch 3 ad sets using the Ad Angles from the Trend tab as creative hooks; set your campaign kill switch at the break-even ROAS noted in step 4; and run for a minimum of 5 days before making optimization decisions.
Cutting tests short at day 1 or 2 is the most common reason good products get discarded prematurely.