1. A niche Canva template pack
Pick one narrow audience — wedding planners, small food businesses, tutors — and build 5-10 templates they'd actually use (invoices, social posts, menus). Narrow beats broad; "templates for everyone" competes with giants, "templates for home bakers in the Philippines" doesn't.
2. A one-problem PDF guide
Not a 100-page ebook — a focused 10-20 page guide that solves exactly one problem, like "How to Set Up Your First GCash Business Account" or "A Beginner's Checklist for Renting Your First Condo Unit in Manila." Specific problems sell better than general advice.
3. CapCut or Lightroom presets
If you already edit photos or videos for fun, package your editing style into a preset pack. This is one of the fastest digital products to actually produce — you're productizing a skill you already have.
4. A Notion or Google Sheets system
Budget trackers, content calendars, OJT/internship logs, wedding planning boards — people pay for structure they don't want to build themselves. If you're organized by nature, this is a natural fit.
5. A short "how I did it" mini-course
If you've achieved one specific, tangible result — passed a certification, grew a small IG page, learned a skill from scratch — a 3-5 video mini-course teaching that exact path is a real digital product, not just content.
The part that actually matters more than the idea
None of these ideas make money by existing. What makes any of them work is the same sequence: validate the niche, build the product, test it with a small ad budget, read the numbers, then scale. That sequence — not the idea itself — is what the Six Zeros Blueprint teaches, step by step, including your first ₱1,000 Meta ad test.