Are TikTok ads actually worth it anymore? Getting destroyed on CPA 😕 Need some real talk here because I am clearly missing something.
Been running paid TikTok ads for my personalized jewelry shop for about 3 weeks now. Daily budget around $150-$200. Targeting is pretty broad — fashion, accessories, gifts, etc. It used to work for me so I thought the algorithm would figure it out eventually but so far… not happening.
Getting decent views and clicks, but actual sales are
Are TikTok ads actually worth it anymore? Getting destroyed on CPA 😕 Need some real talk here because I am clearly missing something.
Been running paid TikTok ads for my personalized jewelry shop for about 3 weeks now. Daily budget around $150-$200. Targeting is pretty broad — fashion, accessories, gifts, etc. It used to work for me so I thought the algorithm would figure it out eventually but so far… not happening.
Getting decent views and clicks, but actual sales are weak and CPA is way too high.
Starting to wonder if I should pause ads and focus more on organic + hashtags instead? Or is my structure/targeting just off? Or are TikTok ads genuinely harder now in 2026?
Anyone actually getting consistent results with TikTok ads right now? What’s actually working for you?
Side question: how are you validating TikTok Ads Manager numbers vs actual store revenue? Sometimes the numbers don’t seem to line up.
What both of you are describing is something I see very often working with different sellers, where results aren’t clearly bad, but order volumes are not yet consistent.
After getting the initial orders, moving on to consistent 5 or 6 figures often appears to be the hardest stage. You are clearly ahead of the rest who have yet to receive an order, however you have to make difficult decisions to get ahead.
Curious to hear from others here. How do you personally tell the difference between “still learning” and noise you shouldn’t overreact to? When results feel borderline, what makes you decide to push through vs step back?
Miniso Just Showed You the Future of E-commerce You just don’t realize you’re competing with it yet.
Take a look at their recent numbers:
Record Revenue: ¥21.4B (+26%)
Q4 Growth: +32.7%
Global Footprint: 8,000+ stores
Forecast: High-teens growth guided for next year
This is not just a "retail brand." It is a supply chain and product engine.
Here is what Miniso is actually doing that most dropshippers are entirely missing.
What Miniso is Doing Right 1. Speed is the
Miniso Just Showed You the Future of E-commerce You just don’t realize you’re competing with it yet.
Take a look at their recent numbers:
Record Revenue: ¥21.4B (+26%)
Q4 Growth: +32.7%
Global Footprint: 8,000+ stores
Forecast: High-teens growth guided for next year
This is not just a "retail brand." It is a supply chain and product engine.
Here is what Miniso is actually doing that most dropshippers are entirely missing.
What Miniso is Doing Right 1. Speed is the Real Moat Miniso launches 80 to 100 new SKUs every single week, moving from concept to shelf in just 4 to 8 weeks. This is significantly faster than the average dropshipper’s testing cycle. By the time you find one "winner," they have already tested 300.
2. They Manufacture Demand With over 1,500 suppliers, an in-house design team, and AI-driven social trend scraping, Miniso does not react to trends. They create the supply before you even see the demand.
3. IP is Margin Control, Not Just Branding Over 25–35% of their sales come from Intellectual Property (IP) products. This matters because it utilizes the same factory cost but commands a higher selling price and drives stronger repeat purchases. This is how you turn a commodity into margin.
4. Distribution is the Hidden Advantage Miniso has collapsed logistics and retail into one seamless system through ship-from-store, buy-online-pickup-in-store (BOPIS), and shared inventory. The result is faster delivery, lower cost per order, and a better customer experience. Whether you realize it or not, this is the baseline your customers are starting to compare you against.
5. They Optimize for the Repeat, Not the First Sale Their model thrives on continuous newness. Constant new SKUs, IP-driven collections, and an engaging store experience actively pull people back. Repeat purchases are engineered, not hoped for.
What This Means For Dropshippers Most people in the community think the main problem right now is, "Ads are getting expensive." That is not the real problem. The real shift is this: Your supply chain is slower than your competition.
The New Reality: If your product takes 2–3 weeks to ship, if your supplier only reacts after orders come in, and if your SKU has zero differentiation—you are competing purely on traffic arbitrage.
That layer of the game is getting compressed every single year.
Miniso’s net margin recently compressed to ~10.8%, even at their massive scale. If the best operators in the world are fighting margin pressure, and your only edge is slightly better ads or slightly cheaper sourcing, you will lose over time.
The Practical Shift: What Actually Works Now To survive and scale, you need to adapt your operations immediately.
1. Shorten Your Supply Loop Stop relying on the pure "order → supplier → ship" model. Move toward holding light inventory on your top SKUs, setting up faster replenishment cycles, and working closely with your dropshipping agents to compress fulfillment times and streamline your high-volume communications.
2. Build Product Control You don't need a massive, full-scale brand on day one, but you must break 1:1 comparability. Introduce slight product modifications, create custom bundled offers, or utilize basic private labeling.
3. Engineer Repeat Purchases Miniso doesn't rely on one winning SKU; they rely on seasonal drops and collections. Build your version of this using consumables, logical product bundles, aggressive follow-up offers, and backend email/SMS flows.
4. Think in Systems, Not Products Miniso isn’t asking, "What’s the next winner?" They are asking, "How do we launch 100 products a week consistently?" That is the operational level most dropshippers haven’t even begun to reach.
The Bottom Line You have two paths from here:
Path 1 (The Common Route): Keep chasing short-lifecycle winners (2–6 months) and constantly resetting your business from zero.
Path 2 (The Emerging Route): Control your supply, build small differentiation, stack repeat purchases, and compound your growth over time.
The game is no longer about who finds the product first. The game is about who controls speed, supply, and repeat purchases. Miniso isn’t your direct competitor in the obvious way. They are your directional warning.