I sell a big volume of products and need an app that can help me run my business and support my high volume of sales. Can anyone share their experience with useful dropshipping apps? Any recommendation?
Topic summary
- A high-volume dropshipper on Shopify seeks an app to help run operations and handle large sales volumes, asking for real-world experiences and recommendations.
- Focus is on third-party dropshipping apps (per tags: apps, dropshipping, third-party-apps).
- No suggestions or outcomes yet; discussion is open with no responses.
Hi @sam324dropship!
May I please know what type of products you sell and where your customers are? Someone in the community might be using the same category and can give more specific recommendations.
I’m in the same boat. Once you start moving real volume, the manual stuff gets unbearable. I switched most of my workflow to AutoDS because it handles bulk importing, automated ordering, and keeps my price/stock updated without me having to stay on top of it all day long. So far, it’s been reliable even with a lot of daily orders.
What kind of volume are you doing? Some apps work better depending on the scale.
Hi there!
When your store starts running at a high volume, the biggest challenge usually isn’t the products themselves, but keeping up with so many fronts (sourcing, importing, listing optimization, stock sync, etc.).
If you’re looking for an app to handle it all, AutoDS can definitely help. It lets you manage large product catalogs and multiple daily orders with automated order fulfillment, real-time stock and price sync, bulk product importing, support for multiple suppliers, a centralized dashboard, and more.
It’s designed for sellers looking to continue growing and expanding, and it definitely holds up under high volume. It also offers advanced analytics so you can track performance and optimize your store faster.
Hello, yes for big volume the app I can recommend is DSers because it helps you automate dropshipping orders and sync inventory easily. But sometimes it can be slow if you have too many products at once. In brief, I really recommend you to test it.
Hi there @sam324dropship would you mind giving more insight into the kind of features you are on the lookout for precisely? This would help the community offer much better and more tailored recommendations for you.
Hey @sam324dropship,
Once you’re doing high volume, most dropshipping apps start to fall apart. The problem usually isn’t selling anymore, it’s keeping suppliers, fulfillment, and tracking from turning into a mess.
At that stage, the biggest things to watch are supplier reliability and how much of the order flow you can automate. Manually placing orders, chasing suppliers, and updating customers doesn’t scale for long, and that’s usually where margins and sanity take a hit.
If you’re looking for something more operational, DropShipMan is worth a look. It’s less about “finding a random product” and more about managing sourcing, fulfillment, and tracking in one place. It helps once volume is high and you don’t want to juggle AliExpress chats, spreadsheets, and order issues all day.
It won’t fix bad products or pricing, but it can remove a lot of the day-to-day friction that shows up when orders start stacking up.
Hope this helps a bit! If it does, feel free to mark it as a solution so others can find it too!
For large stores, apps for order management and syncing automation are crucial. Oberlo alternatives such as DSers and Spocket also allow for processing bulk orders in an efficient manner. Inventory and price sync apps, Stocky or Synce, automatically update the products. Pair with a reporting tool to monitor sales trends and fulfill more effortlessly — all without punching buttons.
Hey — “high volume” can mean a lot of different things. Where’s the bottleneck for you right now?
A few common ones at scale:
-
Order intake: If you’re receiving orders via PDF or email (from retailers, wholesale buyers, etc.), manual entry gets painful fast.
-
Fulfillment: Pushing orders to suppliers, tracking, inventory sync.
-
Multi-channel: Managing orders across different sales channels.
If the issue is on the intake side — processing incoming PDF/email orders — that’s what we built LevelOps Email to Order for. It reads the PDF and creates draft orders in Shopify automatically.
If it’s more on the fulfillment/supplier side, there are other apps better suited for that depending on your supplier setup.
Happy to help point you in the right direction if you share a bit more about where things are breaking down.
I wonder how do you handle SEO product optimization with such large volume of products?