AI Content Assistant — Kmong Listing Active, Auto-Reply Setup Complete
I checked the Kmong listing status to verify the actual sales readiness of the AI Content Assistant. The goal wasn’t to confirm that registration had happened — it was to confirm that a buyer landing on the page could actually make a purchase.
What Was Checked
- Service name “AI-powered SNS copywriting for small business owners” — listing confirmed
- Service approval complete, status shows as “On Sale”
- 5 auto-reply FAQs configured
- Buyer-facing detail page and package structure reviewed
- Sample deliverables and delivery format confirmed
The Buyer’s View
Looking at the detail page from a buyer’s perspective, I judged it has reached a first-pass sellable state. But the point of this check wasn’t the registration itself — it was whether someone landing on the page could understand the offer and place an order.
Paid Ads Deferred
I decided to hold off on paid advertising. Running ads before seeing any organic response makes it impossible to separate ad performance from service appeal. The right sequence is to observe organic reach first — what inquiries come in, what questions get asked, whether inquiries convert to orders.
Next Step
The next stage is watching what happens under organic exposure. Does a first inquiry come in? If so, what kind of questions? Are there inquiries that don’t convert?
The plan: observe for 7–14 days to see if a first inquiry arrives. If it does, log the top 3 question types. If nothing comes in, audit the listing’s first impression — thumbnail and title — before anything else.
Where This Record Sits
No first inquiry or first order has happened yet. This is not a success record — it’s an entry log for the sales validation stage. The AI Content Assistant has moved from “registered” to “live and observable.” What the market does next is the actual test.