Okay, I need to get some real talk going here. We’re all seeing the same flashy reels and posts – “Generate 20 images in 10 seconds with this one weird trick!” It’s everywhere. Flux, Midjourney, the whole zoo.
But I’m trying to cut through the noise and figure out who’s actually using this stuff to make money, not just to play around.
I have a pretty solid handle on traditional product photography. We’re talking hiring models, booking studio time, scouting locations, buying props, the whole nine yards for a new launch. It’s expensive and it takes forever.
So here’s what I’m really curious about from other sellers actually in the trenches:
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Who’s Actually Using AI for Real Work? Not just for fun profile pics or messing around. I mean for your main images, your A+ Content, maybe even video. Are you actually replacing the photoshoot workflow with AI?
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The Real Cost & Time Savings: If you’ve made the switch, let’s talk real numbers. Compared to a traditional photoshoot for the same quality of image, how much time and money are you genuinely saving? Is it a 10% trim or is it 80%?
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Tool Talk – What’s Actually Working? For those of you on Amazon, what’s your go-to stack? Are you deep in ComfyUI workflows, sticking with Midjourney, or using something else? Are you just generating ideas, or are you producing final, publishable assets?
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Hardware Headaches: This is the part that’s got me hesitating. My current setup is fine for spreadsheets, but for AI, I’d need a new rig. Are you guys running stuff locally on a beast of a machine (goodbye, spare cash), or are you relying on cloud services?
Honestly, from what I can see, a lot of it feels like hype. People posting cool-looking generated images, but I wonder how many of those actually make it onto a live listing and lead to sales.
Then you see a brand like Anker. I was digging through their listings recently, and some of their main images and A+ content clearly have a lot of AI involved. But here’s the thing – it doesn’t look fake or cheap. It looks immersive and high-end. You can tell it’s part of why their listings convert so well. Better click-through, better conversion, it all feeds the flywheel.
For a smaller seller like most of us, that’s the dream, right? But the gap between playing with the tools and executing at an Anker level seems huge.
So, my question to you all is: How do we bridge that gap? How do you actually go from a Midjourney prompt to a listing asset that doesn’t look like generic AI slop?
Specifically for anyone who’s cracked the code:
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How do you get that "real" look, especially with models and complex scenes, without the uncanny valley vibe?
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For a smaller seller with a limited budget for a new computer or expensive tools, is there a practical on-ramp here, or are we just stuck window-shopping the tech?
Let’s hear your experiences, your workflows, or even your reasons for staying old-school. Really curious to get a pulse on this.
Answers (6)
Gotta remember: AI is just a tool. It's not a replacement. Your thinking is what drives it. If you turn your brain off and let it run the show, everything starts looking the same. That's how you lose your edge in the market. You've gotta stay flexible and look at the bigger picture.
Got a solid workflow down using NANO. Start with basic product info, reference images, then generate title and bullet points. From there, I build prompts for each image in the set. Every image prompt can be tweaked individually. Once the images come through, I can regenerate if needed or do inpainting on the ones I like.
Cost-wise, it takes a little time, sure, but total expense is less than a tenth of what I used to pay a designer. And since I'm handling it myself, there's zero back-and-forth or misinterpretation. For simple products, I can knock out a whole image set in about two hours.
Quality wise, it beats at least half the designers out there. Anyone charging under a grand a month isn't touching this level of output. We've hired designers before, and a lot of them work on autopilot—stiff layouts, repetitive ideas, not much real thought about the product. AI helps skip all that. You get a cleaner line from copy to concept to final image.
If you've got some basic dev knowledge, you can use existing AI tools to deploy your own setup. There are free tiers or cheap cloud servers that work fine. For data, just keep everything local. No need for a backend database if it's just for internal use.