top of page
/

Selling on Etsy

/

2

Learn from what already works

Spy Like a Pro with Everbee

Great sellers don’t guess — they reverse-engineer success. By using Everbee to analyse top-performing Etsy listings, you’ll see exactly how the market leaders position themselves.

Learn

In Step 1, you validated demand with eRank, making sure buyers are actually searching for your product. But demand alone isn’t enough. Step 2 adds the second piece: analysing the competition. Together, demand + competition give you a complete picture before you commit. What is Everbee?

Everbee is a Chrome extension built for Etsy sellers. It lets you analyse any Etsy search results or listings to see behind-the-scenes data: estimated monthly revenue, units sold, pricing, tags, and more. Instead of guessing which listings are successful, you can see the numbers for yourself.

This is called competitor analysis. Studying what works for others so you can make smarter choices yourself. By learning from top shops, you see how they price, present, and describe their products and get insights you can adapt to your own business. Disclaimer

The video above is an extract from Selling on Etsy Webinar - Ep 3.

To watch the full webinar, click here.

Practice

You’ll use Everbee to review how leading Etsy shops present, price, and describe similar products, extracting strategies you can adapt for your own listings.

  1. Install the Everbee Chrome extension and connect your Etsy account.

  2. Search your chosen product type on Etsy.

  3. Use Everbee to sort results by monthly revenue and units sold.

  4. Open the top 5 listings and review their pricing, tags, photo style, and variations.

  5. Write down at least 3 strategies you see that you could adapt.

  6. Confirm your product list based on what the market is already rewarding.

Finish this Challenge

You’re ready to progress when you’ve validated all chosen products with Everbee, documented at least three competitive insights for each, and confirmed how these insights apply to your own listings.

If you cannot clearly explain why your products can compete in their market, revisit your research.

bottom of page