Updated June 2026
Marketplaces got flooded with generic AI art and “write a book with AI” ebooks a couple of years ago — and most of it doesn’t sell anymore. But specific categories of AI-assisted digital products are doing well in 2026. Here’s the honest breakdown.
⚡ Quick overview
- Works: templates, prompt packs, niche functional assets, AI-assisted (not AI-only) products.
- Doesn’t work well: generic AI art, mass-produced low-effort ebooks, anything indistinguishable from a thousand competitors.
- The winning pattern is AI for production speed + human for niche judgment.
What sellsWhat doesn’tWhere to sellValidate demandPrice the offer30-day launchRights and disclosureSourcesFAQ
What actually sells
- Prompt packs for specific tools — e.g., a pack of 50 tested prompts for a specific AI image model, organized by use case (real estate listings, product photography).
- Templates & frameworks — Notion templates, spreadsheet trackers, presentation decks, where AI assisted the design but the structure solves a real problem.
- Niche functional graphics — patterns, icon sets, planner pages for a specific audience (teachers, small business owners) rather than generic “wall art”.
- Automation templates — pre-built Zapier/Make workflow templates for common business tasks.
- Courses/guides with a real perspective — AI helps with drafting and editing, but the value is the creator’s tested experience, not generic information.
What usually doesn’t sell anymore
| Product type | Sells well? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Generic AI art (“inspirational quote” posters) | No | Market saturated, zero differentiation |
| “100 AI prompts” generic ebooks | No | Freely available everywhere |
| Mass AI-written low-info ebooks | No | Readers (and platforms) can tell, low trust |
| Niche prompt packs with tested examples | Yes | Saves real time for a specific tool/use case |
| Templates solving a workflow problem | Yes | Clear, immediate utility |
Where to sell
- Etsy / Creative Market — design templates, planners, niche graphics. Heavily saturated for generic art; less so for specific niches.
- Gumroad / Lemon Squeezy — prompt packs, templates, mini-courses, automation files — good for direct sales via your own audience.
- Notion template marketplaces — productivity templates with clear before/after value.
Validate demand before producing a catalog
Choose a specific buyer problem before choosing a marketplace. A template for a known workflow can be tested with five users; a generic bundle of ‘AI content’ has no equally clear success criterion.
Use a manual-first test: speak with five potential buyers, show one sample, and ask what they currently do without your offer. A compliment is not validation. Better signals are a request for a quote, permission to run a paid pilot, a deposit, or a clear introduction to the person who controls the budget.
Price the result, then calculate the real cost
Digital products still have variable costs: payment and marketplace fees, refunds, support, updates, licensed assets, AI generation, taxes, and the time required to keep files compatible with changing tools.
| Cost or constraint | Include it in your estimate | Control |
|---|---|---|
| AI subscriptions and usage | Monthly plans, credits, rendering, storage | Set a maximum cost per deliverable |
| Human review | Research, editing, fact-checking, revisions | Limit revision rounds in writing |
| Sales and administration | Calls, invoices, marketplace fees, taxes | Use a simple scope and payment schedule |
| Rights and licensing | Fonts, images, voices, footage, training data | Keep source and license records |
Calculate contribution margin per order: price minus direct tool costs, marketplace fees, contractor costs, and the value of your delivery time. Revenue screenshots can hide an offer that pays less than an ordinary hourly job.
A realistic 30-day launch sequence
- Days 1–3: choose one customer and one deliverable: one functional asset that saves a measurable amount of time for a named audience.
- Days 4–7: build one strong sample using a real brief, then document the before-and-after result.
- Week 2: show the sample to ten relevant people and record objections in their own words.
- Week 3: sell a small paid pilot with a fixed scope, deadline, approval process, and revision limit.
- Week 4: measure delivery time, margin, corrections, and whether the buyer would purchase again.
Protect trust, rights, and platform eligibility
Keep records for fonts, images, audio, source material, and model terms. Follow the current disclosure policy of each marketplace and avoid claims that AI-assisted work is entirely handmade when that distinction matters.
- Do not imitate a real person’s voice, likeness, or style in a misleading way.
- Check marketplace and platform disclosure rules at publication time; they change more quickly than evergreen tutorials.
- Verify factual claims and keep evidence for quotations, statistics, product comparisons, and customer outcomes.
- Give clients a clear description of what is original, licensed, AI-assisted, or supplied by them.
- Avoid mass publishing near-identical outputs. Distinct research and editorial judgment are part of the product.
Revisit the offer after the first five deliveries. Compare what customers requested with what the original listing promised, then narrow the scope, improve examples, and remove steps that produce repeated revisions. Keep a simple change log for prompts, templates, source policies, and tool versions. That operational record becomes part of the business: it makes quality easier to repeat and gives you evidence when a marketplace, client, or collaborator asks how an asset was produced.
Official references and further reading
FAQ
Can I still make money with AI art? Standalone generic art is tough, but AI art used inside a product (book covers, packaging mockups, niche illustrations for a specific template) still adds value.
Do I need to be an expert to sell templates? You need real experience with the problem the template solves — AI helps you build and polish it faster, but the insight has to be yours.
Bottom line: AI is a production tool, not the product itself. Sell solutions to specific problems for specific audiences, and use AI to build and iterate faster.
