ideas for skills and trades

5: E-Commerce & Online Sales

Skill Building Series, Part 5: E-Commerce & Online Sales

E-commerce isn’t just for tech-savvy entrepreneurs with big budgets. It’s for anyone who wants to build something they control, from home, on their own timeline, without answering to a boss who doesn’t understand how their brain works.

For autistic and ADHD adults, e-commerce can be a surprisingly good fit. It combines creativity with structure. You can work at your own pace, in your preferred environment, while building something that grows over time.

And here’s the best part: you don’t need to reinvent the wheel. Platforms like Shopify, Etsy, and Amazon have already done the heavy lifting. You just need to show up and learn the system.

Why E-Commerce Works for Autism & ADHD

From my own experience, I can tell you that E-commerce isn’t “easy money.” Anyone who tells you that is selling something.  But it is flexible. And flexibility matters when you’re navigating sensory overload, executive dysfunction, or social anxiety. Here’s what makes it work:

You control the environment. No fluorescent lights. No small talk. No open-plan office chaos.

You can hyperfocus. Product research, listing optimization, design tweaks—these are tasks that reward deep attention.

You can automate repetition. Once you’ve built a system, you can replicate it without having to start from scratch every time.

You can scale slowly. Start with one product. Add another when you’re ready. No pressure to go big before you’re stable.

E-commerce is at least less invasive than an office on your nervous system if you build it that way.

Skill Paths in E-Commerce (Pick One to Start)

Most people fail at e-commerce because they try to do everything at once. Don’t. Pick one skill path (Print on Demand, Drop Shipping, Your Own Crafts). Get comfortable, start selling, then expand.

1. Product Listings

This is the foundation. You’re writing titles, descriptions, and tags that help products show up in search. You’re learning how people search, what words they use, and how to make your product the obvious choice.  Good for: detail-oriented thinkers, people who like research and pattern recognition.

2. Customer Support

Handling messages, questions, and reviews. This is less about “sales” and more about clear communication. You’re answering the same questions over and over, which means you can build templates and systems. Good for: people who like helping others, pattern thinkers, and those who thrive on routine.

3. Store Management

Updating inventory, pricing, and product images. This is operational work. It’s structured, repeatable, and low-pressure. Good for: people who like organization, visual thinkers, and those who prefer backend work over customer interaction.

4. Social Media Promotion

Driving traffic with posts, ads, or collaborations. This is creative work. You’re testing hooks, visuals, and messaging to see what gets people to click. Good for: creative thinkers, people who enjoy experimenting, and those comfortable with trial and error. Although from experience, this can be very stressful when working for other people. Other people can be very picky about what you post and how you post it. It is a good idea to have social media insurance to cover yourself if you intend to charge clients.

5. Print-on-Demand

Selling custom designs on mugs, shirts, and other products without holding inventory. This is the lowest-risk path. You design once, list it, and the platform handles production and shipping. Good for: artists, designers, people who want income without logistics stress.

6. Resale (eBay, WhatNot, Depop)

Selling mugs, shirts, and other products without holding massive inventory. Find one-offs and unique items at thrift stores and auction sites to resell. Take your phone, scan what you find interesting, and find the value instantly. You upload the pictures on the app, set the price, use AI to write the description, and the platform handles shipping rates. Package and mail on time, keep your photos well-lit and descriptions accurate, describe any defects, and wait for the sale. Good for: artists, people who love to find unique and vintage items, people who love thrifting and yard sales, and people who want income without too much logistics stress.

Tools to Get Started (Without too much overhead)

You don’t need to master every platform. Pick one. Learn it. Then decide whether to expand.

Ebay – Sell handmade, vintage, resale, or repurposed items.
Etsy – Best for beginners. Sell handmade items, printables, and digital goods. Built-in traffic. Lower barrier to entry.
Shopify – Build and customize your own online store. More control, but steeper learning curve.
Amazon Seller Central – Access the largest online marketplace. High competition, but massive reach.
Print-on-Demand Apps – Printify, Printful, Gelato. No inventory. No upfront costs. You design, they produce and ship.

I would say start with Etsy if you’re new. It’s the most forgiving. Open a store for $15. List each item for 20 cents and see what happens. 

How to Learn Without Overwhelm

Here’s the truth: most people quit because they try to learn everything before they start. That’s backward. Here’s the sequence I used that did work:

1. Pick one platform. (Etsy is easiest for beginners.) I started on eBay, then expanded to Etsy, then moved to Shopify. I still sell on Etsy, eBay, and Shopify.
2. Learn the basics. How to list products. How to use keywords. How to add images. Check YouTube for tutorials, or Skool platforms, or Reddit. Or go to my stan-store
3. Start with small experiments. List 1–3 products instead of dozens. Focus on professional layouts and mockups. I use Photoroom on my iPhone, and it is fantastic, as well as placeit.com on my computer.
4. Study successful sellers. Look at their descriptions, photos, and pricing. Notice patterns. I have used Everbee to study listings and evaluate traffic.
5. Scale slowly. Find a niche. Once you see sales, expand your product line.

You’re not going to build a business over the weekend; it’s going to take time.

Where the Money Is

Ebay – Sell handmade, vintage, resale, or repurposed items. This is a really low-stress option; the platform is easy to navigate and post to, and you can sell items you source that same day from places like charity stores and resale shops. Sell stuff you no longer need in your house.
Etsy stores – Selling handmade, vintage, or digital products. Digital downloads (templates, planners, journals) are the lowest-stress option because there’s no shipping.
Shopify stores – Dropshipping, print-on-demand, or branded products. More control, but requires more setup.
Amazon FBA – Fulfillment by Amazon handles shipping and storage. You send inventory to their warehouse, and they handle the rest.
Digital downloads – Templates, planners, journals. No shipping. No inventory. Pure margin.

Digital products are the smartest entry point if you’re managing energy carefully.

Avoiding Pitfalls (Learn From My Mistakes)

I’ve seen people burn out fast in e-commerce – myself included. Customers can be really hard to please, packages arrive late or go missing, people forget they ordered from you, they don’t like their item, it doesn’t arrive as expected, or your supplier doesn’t ship on time. There are many pitfalls. Here’s how to avoid it.

1. Trying everything at once. Start with one platform. One niche. Get comfortable. Then expand. Focus on customer service, great products, and great designs.
2. Undervaluing your time. This is HUGE. Never race to the bottom on pricing. Charge what your work is worth, or the work won’t be worth it. If you can’t sell for a profit that replaces your current income, it isn’t worth selling. I see people make this mistake all the time. They underprice their items and end up selling for a loss. Calculate all costs, credit card fees, platform fees, shipping fees, including packaging, and business licenses and taxes.
3. Burnout from too much inventory. Use print-on-demand or digital products to reduce stress. E-commerce rewards patience, not frantic chaos.
4. Forgetting the business side of selling. Get a resale license, register your business, and remember to file taxes.

Free & Low-Cost Training Resources

You don’t need expensive courses. Start here:

  • My Digital products and PDFs share everything I know. Visit my Stan-Store
  • Etsy Seller Handbook (free)
  • Shopify Compass Courses (free tutorials)
  • Coursera: Introduction to Marketing (free audit)
  • YouTube channels: Wholesale Ted, Oberlo, and other e-commerce educators
  • Hubspot Academy and Certifications
  • Ebay Sales

Learn as you go. Don’t wait until you “know enough.”

How to select your niche

Most people pick a niche based on what they like or what feels “aligned.” That’s how you end up with a store full of products nobody buys. Your niche needs to pass three tests before you commit a single hour to it.

✔️ Test 1: Is there existing demand? Don’t guess. Use Google Trends, Amazon Best Sellers, Etsy search volume, or TikTok hashtag views. If nobody’s searching for it, you’re probably in a desert. If you can find consistent searches in Google Trends or Amazon, you might be onto something. Think along these lines: People who like to fish are a niche, but then you can niche down further by saying “Fishermen who like deep-sea fishing, or “fishermen who like ice-fishing.”  Or Nurses: Or the subniche “PICU Nurses.” If you have personal insight, that’s even better.

✔️ Test 2: Can you compete without a massive budget? If the top sellers have 50,000 reviews and professional photography, you’re not breaking in without serious capital. Look for niches where quality matters more than brand recognition, personalized gifts are incredibly good sellers (see AnywherePOD.com), niche hobbies (see the analogies above), and/or underserved subcultures.

✔️ Test 3: Does it solve a specific problem or trigger an emotional response? People don’t buy “nice designs.” They buy solutions to frustrations, gifts that say something meaningful or funny, or products that signal identity. If your niche doesn’t do one of those three things, it might not be scalable. Think adult t-shirts. Adults don’t really buy t-shirts from online stores, unless it resonates: Sarcasm and Star Wars.  Moms with newborns. Moms and Child’s Sport. Dads and Nascar. Dad and child moments. etc. etc.

Pick a lane where demand already exists, competition is beatable, and buyers have a reason to care. Everything else is just expensive trial and error.

How and why you need to charge …

1. Calculate Your Total Costs (COGS)
  • Base Cost: Cost of the blank product + printing (from your POD provider).
  • Shipping Cost: Cost to ship to the customer (often from the POD provider).
  • Platform Fees: Listing fees, transaction fees (e.g., Etsy’s percentage of total sale, including shipping).
  • Payment Processing Fees: Fees from payment gateways (e.g., PayPal, Stripe).
  • Taxes: Sales tax collected and any taxes on your income/fees.
  • Marketing: Ad spend, if any. 
2. Determine Your Selling Price
  • Formula: Selling Price = Total Costs ÷ (1 - Desired Profit Margin Percentage).
  • Example: If costs are $10 and you want 40% profit: $10 ÷ (1 - 0.40) = $10 ÷ 0.60 = $16.67 selling price. 
3. Calculate Your Profit
  • Formula: Profit = Selling Price - Total Costs (after sale).
  • Net Profit: Your profit after all expenses are paid. A simpler way is: Profit = Selling Price - (Base Cost + Shipping + Fees + Taxes). 
4. Use a POD Calculator or Spreadsheet
  • Online Calculators: Use free tools from Printful, Printify, or Etsy, which often have built-in fields for all these costs and can help find your price.
  • Spreadsheets (Excel/Google Sheets): Create columns for each cost, then use formulas to find your total costs and profit per item

Final Thought

E-commerce gives you the chance to turn ideas into real income from a single Etsy listing to a full Shopify store. It’s not about overnight success. It’s about steady growth. With each listing you create and each skill you learn, you’re building a long-term business you control. That’s worth more than any paycheck.

👉 Next in the series: Part 6 – Data Entry & Online Research

Work-at-Home Skill Building for Neurodiverse Adults

Work-at-Home Success Starts with Skill Building: A Guide for Neurodiverse Adults

As this blog has grown older, so have I. Over the years, my focus has shifted from healing and health toward work-at-home skills for autism and ADHD, because I realise that traditional jobs don’t always match neurodiverse strengths. This blog is still our lives, I am still intent on sharing what I’ve learned along the way, and I’ve kept my earlier posts intact because they remind me that even when things didn’t go as planned, my hope and optimism never faded. But now we are moving into a new chapter, and it feels so good.

Discover skills to land real work-from-home jobs for autism and ADHD. Build skills, earn income, and create a sustainable career that fits your strengths.

Looking back over this 21-year journey, I see our story mirrored in so many families walking the same path. New treatments emerge, but the questions often remain the same. I still don’t have all the answers (truthfully, who does?), but I do have more of our journey to share.

The child I never expected to graduate did. The one I never thought would be able to work is working. And the one I couldn’t imagine leaving home is now off at college. These milestones once felt impossible, yet they happened, step by step. If I’ve learned anything, it’s that all things are possible when we keep moving forward, one day at a time.

Along the way, I’ve discovered as much about myself as I have about my children. These days, my priorities look different: peace, quiet, self-care, and creating a family life where we can simply be comfortable being ourselves.

Work from home jobs for autism and ADHD freelance writing and design tools

A New Chapter

Now we’ve entered a new stage, launching into independence, building careers, and finding our own two feet. My rabbit holes no longer revolve only around recovery; they now focus on skills, growth, and opportunity. And as always, I’ll be sharing what I learn along the way. I read this Harvard Business Review, and it really speaks to a mindset. Embrace the competitive advantage our brains offer us, don’t fight it… Neurodiversity as a Competitive Advantage. So over the past year, my focus has shifted toward building skills to gain meaningful work-from-home jobs for the people I love who live with autism and ADHD, because traditional workplaces often don’t match neurodiverse strengths.

So how do we go from where we are to the next step? Learning has never been easier. Many platforms offer low-cost or even free courses, and some provide certification: meta, Google, Udemy, and even LinkedIn. Once you have the certification, you can proudly display it and add it to your resume. Additionally, you now know how to do what you say you can do. It all builds credibility for your job search.

Why Work at Home Skills Matter:

Remote work is no longer just a perk; it has become a standard in the marketplace many of us work in. From customer support to design, from freelance writing to digital marketing, companies are hiring people with specific skills, not just degrees. The key to getting hired or landing clients isn’t “hustling harder.” It’s about learning in-demand skills and demonstrating your ability to apply them. Work-at-home skills can be turned into meaningful careers for everyone, including those who live with autism and ADHD.

Working from home with autism or ADHD isn’t about “fitting into the box.” It’s about building skills that let you work in ways that suit your brain, your pace, and your strengths. I find it challenging to get to work at a consistent time. More to the point, I also find it uncomfortable to wear business-style clothing (especially shoes), and it’s exhausting to have people watching me work or constantly asking me about things I’d rather not discuss. I get my feelings hurt, I overshare, I invest too much of myself in relationships that are just “work” relationships. I’m not suited to an office environment. I work much better with a schedule and a job description. When I am left alone, I complete my tasks and can take a break when I need to (while sitting in my very comfy business casual, day pajamas).

Sustainability, Value and Self-Worth

I believe with the right tools and consistent practice, we can create a steady income stream (not overnight), but for the long haul. This is not a get-rich-quick scheme; it is not a way to make money as an influencer or work fewer hours and travel the world, this skill building guide is a way to find a job that pays you well, allows you to work in an environment that suits your personality and preferences, and a way to advance in a career that continues to support you. This is a journey worth starting. Your skills are valuable, your work ethic impeccable, and the world is actually out there for you to do what you love without sacrificing your mental health.

For those with autism or ADHD, I have found the focus should be on the individual’s learning style, but always offering the following:

      • Structured learning: Courses or programs broken down into manageable steps.

      • Practical application: Building real projects, not just collecting certificates.

      • Strength alignment: Choosing skills that match personal strengths, whether it’s attention to detail, creativity, or problem-solving.

Top Skill Paths to Consider

Here are work-at-home skills worth investing time in because employers and clients will pay for them:

1. Digital Design and Content Creation

  • Tools: Canva, Photoshop, Figma

  • Real Jobs: Social media graphics, ebooks, ads, product design, social media management, digital marketing, and management

  • Why It Fits: Visual thinking and pattern recognition can be a strength for individuals with autism and ADHD.

2. Freelance Writing & Blogging

  • Tools: Google Docs, Grammarly, WordPress

  • Real Jobs: Blog posts, email newsletters, ghostwriting, SEO content

  • Why It Fits: Great for hyperfocus and building routines around topics of interest.

3. Customer Support & Virtual Assistance

  • Tools: Slack, Zendesk, Asana, Trello

  • Real Jobs: Peer Support Specialists, inbox management, tech support, scheduling, client communications, and customer service agents.

  • Why It Fits: Structured tasks and systems can reduce overwhelm while offering steady work.

4. E-Commerce & Online Sales

  • Tools: Shopify, Etsy, Amazon Seller Central

  • Real Jobs: Product listings, order management, customer care, social media management, digital marketing, and management.

  • Why It Fits: Hands-on learning with flexibility, plus potential to grow into your own business.

5. Data Entry & Research

  • Tools: Excel, Google Sheets, Notion

  • Real Jobs: Database management, transcription, online research, data entry, research assistant.

  • Why It Fits: Appeals to detail-oriented thinkers who thrive on organization.

How to Start Without Overwhelm

  1. Pick one path that feels interesting – we can’t overemphasize enough ONE SKILL AT A TIME – resist the urge to load up, one not ten.

  2. Learn with free or low-cost resources: Websites like Coursera, Khan Academy, and YouTube offer practical training.

  3. Practice on real projects: Volunteer, build a portfolio, or take on micro-gigs through sites like Fiverr or Upwork.

  4. Show, don’t tell: Instead of only listing skills on a resume, show completed projects or samples.

What This Series Will Cover

This article is just the beginning. In the following parts, we’ll dive deeper into:

  • Step-by-step beginner roadmaps for each skill area.

  • Free and affordable training options.

  • Tips for neurodiverse learners to avoid burnout while learning.

  • Ways to Turn Practice Projects into Paid Gigs.

Remote skills for neurodiverse adults

What This Guide Isn’t

So we’re not remiss, here’s the truth: there are quick things you can jump into (like surveys, microtasks, or basic data entry) that may bring in a little money while you train. Those can be stepping stones, but often they are hit or miss, poorly paid, and challenging to turn into a career. There is also Instacart, food delivery, Uber, and a host of gig jobs you could turn to, but this is meant to be about elevating yourself above those paycheck-to-paycheck roles and finding something you can use as a foundation to build on.

I will also add this here: I am not an expert in anything except my own life and the way we live here, together, and what works for us. I  wanted to write this guide with substance, not fluff. It is not about chasing low-pay, short-term hustles. I wrote this as I want my kids (and myself) to be successful, productive, and proud of what they do.

I see so many people selling courses, living the dream, driving ideas, and honestly, that all overwhelms me. It is definitely amazing for some, but not for everyone. So, for me, I wanted the real focus here to be on training. Training for sustainable, skill-based work, jobs, and careers that pay fairly, build confidence, and enable you (me, us, everyone) to thrive in an environment that works best for them. Because self-worth doesn’t come from rushing through “easy money” tasks, it comes from doing meaningful work you’re proud of, building a career around your strengths and knowing that your paycheck reflects your real value.

Jobs That Don’t Require Training (Work-from-Home Friendly)

These are not recommendations; we advise doing your due diligence before registering and using with caution.

1. Data Entry Clerk

  • Copying information from one system to another.

  • Requires accuracy but not special training.

  • Many freelance listings are available on Upwork, Fiverr, and FlexJobs.

2. Online Survey Taker / Market Research Participant

3. Website & App Tester

  • Test websites for usability and report feedback.

  • Platforms: UserTesting, TryMyUI.

  • Usually $10–$20 per test (10–20 minutes).

4. Microtask Worker (Short Online Tasks)

5. Customer Service Chat or Phone Support

  • Many companies hire remote workers for live chat or phone support.

  • Requires basic typing and communication skills.

  • No special training beyond company onboarding.

6. Transcription (General Audio)

  • Listen to audio and type what you hear (Medical Transcription and Court Reporting both require skills and certifications).

  • Platforms: Rev, TranscribeMe.

  • No degree required; you improve as you go.

7. Selling Unused Items Online

  • eBay, Mercari, whatnot, Poshmark or Facebook Marketplace.

  • Start with items you already own, no upfront training.

  • Great intro to e-commerce if you want to grow later.

8. Virtual Tasker

9. Captioning Simple Videos

  • Add subtitles to short clips.

  • Some companies hire beginners and provide basic instruction.

10. Social Media Engagement Assistant

  • Replying to comments, liking posts, and basic moderation.

  • Small businesses often hire without requiring experience.

⚠️ Honest note: These jobs typically pay lower wages compared to skill-based freelance work. They’re best used as stepping stones and ways to earn immediate money while you invest in true skill-building (like writing, design, VA work, or coding) that leads to long-term, higher-paying work.

Sign up to receive our next blog post for this series of posts, where I am going to dive into skill building with realistic opportunities, realistic salaries, and job availability, and things that will improve your chances of getting hired.

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