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Shopify Dropshipping Checklist

Starting a dropshipping business? This 72-point checklist helps you avoid common mistakes and set up for success.

72 items8 sections

What Is Dropshipping?

Dropshipping lets you sell products without holding inventory. When a customer orders, your supplier ships directly to them. The simplicity of this model masks the complexity of doing it well. Success requires proper planning, reliable suppliers, and realistic expectations.

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Niche & Product Research

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Supplier Selection

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Store Setup

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Legal & Business Setup

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Product Pages

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Customer Experience

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Marketing Setup

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Pre-Launch Final Checks

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Why Proper Preparation Determines Success

The dropshipping failure rate is high because too many people rush in without adequate preparation. They watch success stories online and believe they can replicate results quickly. In reality, the stores that succeed invest significant time in product research, supplier relationships, and building genuine brands.

Startup Budget Breakdown

Realistic budget for launching a dropshipping store:

  • Shopify subscription: £25-79/month
  • Domain name: £10-15/year
  • Product samples: £50-200
  • Essential apps: £50-150/month
  • Initial marketing budget: £500-1,000

Total to launch properly: £1,000-2,000

Why Most Dropshipping Stores Fail

  • 1.Oversaturated products with thin margins and heavy competition
  • 2.Insufficient marketing budget to test and find winning campaigns
  • 3.Poor supplier selection leading to quality issues and slow shipping
  • 4.Copied supplier descriptions instead of unique, compelling content
  • 5.Unrealistic expectations about timeline to profitability

Keys to Dropshipping Success

Find Your Niche

Focus on a specific market segment rather than selling everything. Niche stores build loyal customers and face less competition.

Verify Product Quality

Always order samples before listing products. What looks good in photos may disappoint in reality.

Set Honest Expectations

Be transparent about shipping times. Disappointed customers leave bad reviews and request refunds.

Prioritise Customer Service

Excellent service differentiates you from competitors selling the same products. Respond quickly and resolve issues generously.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, dropshipping remains profitable for those who approach it correctly. The market has matured, meaning generic product stores with poor customer service struggle to compete. Successful dropshippers focus on specific niches, build genuine brands, provide excellent customer support, and invest in marketing that builds long-term customer relationships. Margins have compressed in some categories, so product selection and supplier relationships matter more than ever.
Initial costs include your Shopify subscription (starting at 25 pounds monthly), a domain name (10-15 pounds annually), and potentially a premium theme (150-350 pounds one-time). Beyond that, budget for product samples (50-200 pounds), marketing (minimum 500-1000 pounds to test), and essential apps (50-150 pounds monthly). Realistically, plan for 1000-2000 pounds to launch and test properly. Underfunding marketing is a primary cause of failure.
Start with established platforms like AliExpress for testing, but graduate to direct supplier relationships for scale. Evaluate suppliers by ordering samples, testing communication responsiveness, checking reviews from other sellers, and verifying shipping times with actual orders. For UK customers, consider suppliers with European or UK warehouses to reduce delivery times. Build relationships with backup suppliers for your bestsellers to avoid stockouts.
Standard shipping from Chinese suppliers takes 15-30 days to the UK, though ePacket can reduce this to 10-20 days. European warehouse suppliers offer 5-10 day delivery. Be transparent about shipping times in your policies and product pages. Consider charging for express shipping options. Many failed stores suffer from customer complaints about delivery times that were poorly communicated upfront.
Create a clear return policy before launching. For most dropshipping operations, returning physical items to overseas suppliers is impractical. Common approaches include offering refunds without requiring returns for low-value items, providing partial refunds for minor issues, or maintaining UK-based inventory of your bestsellers for easy exchanges. Budget for returns in your margins and document your process to handle disputes consistently.
Common failure points include choosing oversaturated products with thin margins, insufficient marketing budget, poor supplier selection leading to quality issues or slow shipping, copying supplier descriptions rather than writing unique content, ignoring customer service, and unrealistic expectations about timeline to profitability. Most successful dropshippers treat it as a real business requiring months of testing and optimisation, not a quick money scheme.

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