RossDCurrie

joined 1 year ago
[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

A miscalculating statement small businesses and founders are hammered is, 'Ideas are worthless! Only execution matters.'

No, this is a misinterpretation.

You had patents and other protected IP, which are expensive to get and worth exactly as much as your ability to defend them.

Our lawyer took a long time

Sounds expensive.

You clearly had cash to spend on a lawyer, and were lucky enough that the company chose to settle.

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

You must construct additional pylons!

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

From 300 odd followers on Twitter/X, I've managed to generate a couple hundred thousand in project revenue over the last few years. I'm a tech consultant targeting large orgs, so that's really only a few projects, and it's mostly come in the form of referrals from colleagues - generally, they get a job that's too small for their gigantic company, so they send it my way and it's plenty big for me.

My content strategy is generally:

  1. Posts venting about customers. Anonymised and time-shifted, so that it's less bad if customers find it. Colleagues in my field relate to these posts and so I get a small amount of quality engagement from them that keeps me front-of-mind
  2. Links with commentary
  3. Technical solutions (link to my blog)
  4. Replies on relevant hashtags, and to relevant content for the people I follow

And to be honest, I mostly just use it for #1 lately.

Feel free to ask me about that, if you have questions.

In general, I don't know of anyone that is a particular Twitter/X marketing specialist at the moment. It's not very popular atm, and it's never been super popular with marketing people anyway, because the click-through/ROAS has never been great, but I've always loved it for its organic reach, which I think most marketers suck at, and there are 100% definitely some people that are absolutely KILLING it with Twitter marketing.

They're mainly doing long-form content spread across multiple tweets. It's become a platform for story telling, in tech marketing. But obviously the more followers you have, the more reach your story will get.

Not sure what sort of content you're looking to create, but feel free to describe your niche/industry and I'm sure people can give you some ideas

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Why can't you link it here?

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

He mentions "creating things", and in one of his other posts linked a video where he creates a water-cooled pillow.

So, I believe his belief is based on acquiring parts to make things in each video.

And you're absolutely right. Lots of ways to make videos in this niche without spending a fortune.

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

i dont even like programming anyways

I have a CS degree, and am not a programmer. I do code a bit, but it's baby programming. Get into corporate tech consulting - way more fun (and money).

Anyway, yeah working full-time and working on your business on the side is hard. Really hard. It's not for everyone. But for those who it is for, it's totally worth it.

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

and almost 26 dollarydoos, but, I am assuming they did a conversion and are comparing dollars to dollars. What it doesn't take into account is the relative cost of living.

The Big Mac Index is always fun. $4.71 in France, $5.45 in the USA but only $4.63 in New Holland, so definitely getting more mac for your buck downunder.

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

this was a deliberate choice to provide exclusive features but at the same not to penalise free users by restricting existing features.

I just left another comment about episodecalendar. Being completely honest, the reason I paid for a premium sub on that site is that he had a 20 show limit and I wanted to track more shows.

If I look at your free plan, it's got "unlimited titles", "unlimited lists", "unlimited reviews" etc.

There might be some better startup advice around freemium feature pricing models, but I'd do something like workout a behaviour threshold that the top 20% of your users are in - then say okay, anyone who keeps using it like those people should be considered premium from now on, and will have to pay.

You'd have to come up with a strategy to transition those people from free to premium (restrict future behaviour or just give them premium for free as a loyalty thank you), but you could at least make sure that anybody else who crosses the threshold now has to become a paid user if they want to keep using the site.

So behaviour threshold could be something like adding X titles to their library, or something like that.

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I'm a paid member of episodecalendar.com, which seems to be a similar sort of site. I got my friend onto it, and she's a paid member too.

I did a lifetime plan, and I don't remember what I paid, but it's $39 US at the moment.

If the dude had to shut down the site and asked for a bit more cash to cover expenses, I'd probably chip in. It's probably not worth me paying $10/mo for, but it's a website I find useful.

I think the main reason I upgraded to a paid plan was because he had a limit on how many shows I could add to my list.

Having looked at your membership options, yeah, dude, $5/mo just seems. I dunno, I hate paying things like this monthly. It's useful, but I could live without it. You should at least have multiple pricing tiers.

And uh, "be our first supporter" looks sad dude, take that bit + the "backers list" out. You ever seen a begger shaking an empty tin? There's always gotta be a coin in there to make that rattle, to show that someone else has shown a generosity that you're at risk of not having.

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

This was posted 11 hours ago and I don't see you replying to comments, so suspect you won't reply to this, but here goes...

These are not bad tips. BUT, it lacks context. Can you give us some more details around the sort of side hustles you've found succses with and the sort of money one can expect to make from them?

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Happy cakeday botto

[–] RossDCurrie@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Did that speaker sell cleaning supplies? Or courses on how to start a cleaning company?

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