The products that win on TikTok Shop are overwhelmingly worn, applied, or consumed. Among the top 1,000 U.S. products by lifetime sales, drawn from the more than two million products Marketplace Pulse now tracks, more than two-thirds of revenue comes from products applied to the body, taken into it, or worn on it. That is personal transformation a creator can demonstrate on camera. The same mechanism that produced a top-heavy seller economy is visible at the product level: TikTok Shop rewards the narrow set of things that perform in a video, not the broadest assortment.Beauty and personal care leads at about 30% of tracked revenue, with health and wellness close behind, near 20%, and apparel and accessories following at roughly 17%. Everything that a general marketplace is built to carry, from home goods and electronics to automotive, tools, pet, and books, splits the remaining third. On Amazon, the long tail is the point; selection is what sells Prime, and a query for almost anything returns a result. TikTok Shop inverts it. Demand is manufactured by video, not retrieved by search, and video favors products with a visible before-and-after or a claim a creator can dramatize in fifteen seconds. A serum, a pair of shaping leggings, and a greens powder all qualify. A replacement HDMI cable does not.The price points tell the same story. The median top product sells for about $40, and roughly two-thirds are priced under $50, high enough to matter and low enough to buy without leaving the feed. The platform’s commerce runs on the gap between seeing a product and deciding to own it, and that gap closes faster at $40 than at $400. The winning combination is consistent: a product with a demonstrable result, priced for impulse, sold by a brand that treats content as its primary channel.The brands that fit that profile tend to be the ones that built it first. Thirteen of the twenty largest TikTok Shop sellers from the platform’s first full year still place in the top 1,000 products, among them medicube, Halara, MERACH, Goli, tarte, and MaryRuth’s the early winners who figured out the affiliate model. Between them, they account for 114 of the top products and about a quarter of all branded revenue tracked. Their advantage is not the original viral moment but what they built around it: affiliate networks, content cadence, and inventory depth that keep them surfacing long after the first video. That machinery is a capability, not luck, which means it can be learned.That is the more useful read of the content-first thesis. Owned attention can still replace paid placement, but it rewards the products attention naturally collects around and the brands that operationalize it most consistently. The same maturation logic is visible across the seller base, where 1% of sellers drive 60% of GMV. Who wins and what wins resolve to the same answer. The opening is real, and it rewards the seller who pairs a demonstrable product with a content operation built to repeat: win the body, and win the feed.