r/Passive_Income_Post

Made $79 on day 1 using a stupidly simple $10 "Reverse SEO" loop.
▲ 4 r/Passive_Income_Post+1 crossposts

Made $79 on day 1 using a stupidly simple $10 "Reverse SEO" loop.

Every e-commerce guru tells you the same thing: build a massive store, spend hundreds on Meta ads, and pray the algorithm favors you. I was tired of that loop, so I tried an entirely different experiment yesterday and hit a $79 sale within 24 hours on a tiny $10 ad budget.

My product cost is $24, meaning day one was immediately profitable. No inventory, no stocking the system automatically routes the order to the supplier.

The secret comes down to an operational framework I call Reverse SEO, combined with Claude AI.

What is Reverse SEO?

Traditional SEO takes 3 to 6 months to rank a page. Reverse SEO flips the timeline. Instead of trying to rank a website for a broad keyword, you use Claude AI to scrape highly specific, hyper-targeted long-tail search queries that people are actively typing into Google when they are ready to buy right now, but have zero high-quality search results.

Instead of waiting for Google to index those keywords naturally, you instantly feed those exact, highly calculated keyword clusters directly into your Meta Pixel and run a hyper-targeted, laser-focused $10 ad campaign aimed strictly at those specific search-intent profiles.

You aren't targeting demographics; you are targeting immediate intent.

The workflow looks like this:

3 Hours of Niche Scoping: Finding low-competition, high-intent buyer keywords.

Claude AI Data Synthesis: Feeding those keywords to Claude to build a highly optimized product page copy that mimics exact search intent.

The Instant Automation Loop: Setting up a super streamlined, automated backend workflow so the moment a customer buys, the supplier is notified and ships it out.

Gurus don't share this because they don't want to create competitors for high-intent keywords.

I’m currently mapping out the exact step-by-step Claude prompts and the exact automation workflow I used to connect the supplier backend. Let me know in the comments if you want me to drop the full technical breakdown in a follow-up post!

u/WorkerSome7813 — 5 days ago