telefone das meninas super poderosas;

207 posts

telefone das meninas super poderosas;

telefone das meninas super poderosas;

@excentrically

انضم Aralık 2021
20 يتبع2 المتابعون
telefone das meninas super poderosas; أُعيد تغريده
jul!a
jul!a@tchuliaa·
“ai pq as bases brasileiras são feitas pro clima brasileiro, pra pele da brasileira…” QUE PELE? QUAL CLIMA? bora defender nossas ideias, mas com argumentos convincentes! eu falo sobre tecnologia e sobre o Brasil, um país produtor de matéria prima e não de tecnologia
jul!a@tchuliaa

n vai tirar do prato de comida pra comprar make, mas se pra você maquiagem é um investimento eu sempre vou recomendar investir em uma base importada. se puder ser só um produto q seja uma base (depois um corretivo e pó) infelizmente é papo de mudança de vida

Português
1
1
34
3K
telefone das meninas super poderosas; أُعيد تغريده
mena | 📖
mena | 📖@zcahverse·
Nenhuma mulher é verdadeiramente livre, se não for livre financeiramente.
Português
43
691
4.5K
44.3K
telefone das meninas super poderosas;
Que doideira pensar que quando eu tava na faculdade consegui viajar pra fora ganhando pouco mais de um salário mínimo
Português
0
0
0
2
Dionisio 💻
Dionisio 💻@dionisiodev·
Daqui uns dias (semanas) eu vou testar minha teoria de que a barreira de entrada para empresas americanas é mais baixa do que empresas brasileiras. Vou me colocar no mercado como AI Engineer sem experiência na área.
Português
35
16
1.1K
51.8K
telefone das meninas super poderosas; أُعيد تغريده
Celio 💻
Celio 💻@devcelio·
O windows fez uma lavagem cerebral tão grande nas pessoas que elas acreditam que "next > next > next" ou "next > custom install > next" são boas formas de instalar um app, enquanto arrastar um ícone pra pasta de aplicativos é algo de outro mundo
Noah Cat@Cartidise

it’s 2026 and this is how you install apps on macOS

Português
82
48
1.3K
79.2K
telefone das meninas super poderosas;
O que me deixa um pouco chocada ainda é os caras ficarem com a mão na arma sem nem ver o bandido. Ainda morro de medo disso.
Português
0
0
0
0
telefone das meninas super poderosas;
Presenciei parte de um furto no Leblon ontem: cara com bike do ifood tentando levar o colar de uma moça. Força municipal tava indo atrás e ela depois notou que o colar estava preso ao cabelo e o ladrão não conseguiu levar.
Português
1
0
0
4
Sobrevivente do Capibaribe
A pessoa se acidenta. É resgatada por ambulância e helicóptero, chega num hospital e é atendida por uma equipe qualificada, tudo isso sem pagar um centavo. Tem país de “primeiro mundo” em que uma família inteira faliria por isso.
Português
1.6K
2.3K
27.6K
695.7K
telefone das meninas super poderosas; أُعيد تغريده
shayla
shayla@callmeMaharani·
I’m at that age where I don’t want to share a room with my friends on vacation.
English
70
295
3.8K
208.6K
telefone das meninas super poderosas; أُعيد تغريده
Libriscent
Libriscent@libriscent·
Real gold diggers go after land & assets. Not dinner dates. Yall safe.
English
90
3.9K
19.3K
237.4K
telefone das meninas super poderosas; أُعيد تغريده
Marinex ✨
Marinex ✨@marinadepp_·
E vocês achavam que arte do canva que era um problema
Marinex ✨ tweet media
Português
583
3.4K
48.4K
3.1M
Bruno Faggion
Bruno Faggion@brunofaggion·
Quem dá o nome ao problema domina o mercado: - Leaky Gut - Cortisol Belly - Ozempic Face - Tech Neck - Growth Hacking Todos esses termos, que parecem técnicos, foram criados por marqueteiros e creators e geraram dezenas a centenas de milhões em vendas. É o melhor jeito de fazer marketing.
69kov@levikov

"Cortisol belly" has millions of videos on TikTok, has been searched tens of millions of times on Google, and has generated an estimated $100M+ in supplement sales in the last 2 years It does not appear in a single medical textbook on earth… No doctor has ever formally diagnosed it. There's no clinical definition. No diagnostic criteria. No peer-reviewed research validating it as a distinct condition A handful of wellness pages invented a 2-word clinical-sounding name for something millions of women already felt but had no language for Stress-related weight gain around the midsection. That's all it was They took a real symptom, gave it a fake clinical name, and built an entire product category from nothing When a problem doesn't have a name, people can't search for it. Can't discuss it with friends. Can't type it into TikTok. They just feel vaguely like shit and scroll past 500 videos that don't quite describe their experience precisely enough to make them stop The second you give that unnamed feeling a name, three things happen simultaneously: You create search intent from nothing. Before "cortisol belly" was a phrase, zero humans were searching for it. Now millions are. Every single search is someone self-diagnosing with YOUR term, hunting for YOUR solution, in a market that did not exist until you named it into reality You become the default authority instantly. You named it. Your content was first. TikTok and Google rank you first bc you WERE first. Every creator who uses the term after you is playing in your arena, using your language, driving traffic to your keyword They are literally marketing for you without realizing it You eliminate competition structurally. Not by outspending. Not by outposting. By inventing the category. You cannot rank for a keyword someone else coined when they already have 8 months of indexed content, established authority, and a direct relationship with every person who discovered the term through them This has been done at every level of business and the examples are almost comical once you start looking: "Leaky gut" is not a formal medical diagnosis. Wellness creators gave a name to a cluster of digestive symptoms that doctors dismissed for decades. That 2-word phrase now drives billions in annual supplement revenue globally "Ozempic face" was coined by beauty creators to describe facial volume loss from GLP-1 drugs. Within months it spawned entire product categories that didn't exist the week before. Restoration skincare. Collagen supplements. Filler recommendations. Two words created all of it "Tech neck" does not appear in medical literature as a formal condition. Some mf built a multi-million dollar Shopify store selling correctors for it. He didn't enter the posture market. He named a specific version of the problem, owned the phrase, and became the only result anyone searching for it would ever find HubSpot didn't build a product first. They coined "inbound marketing." Built the product second. Sold it to an audience that already believed in the concept bc HubSpot taught it to them The term came before the $30 billion company Sean Ellis coined "growth hacking" in a single blog post in 2010. Two words. Built his entire career and an entire industry category off a phrase he made up on a Tuesday Now apply this to content commerce and the opportunity is genuinely stupid The AI character pages converting hardest right now are not recommending products for problems that already have names. They're naming problems first. Then selling the only cure "This supplement helps with stress belly fat" = you're competing against 10,000 pages making the exact same claim in a market that existed before you ever showed up "If you've been gaining weight around your midsection despite eating clean and working out, you likely have cortisol belly. here's what causes it and here's what finally fixed mine" = that's a diagnosis followed by a prescription from a trusted source First one is a product pitch in a saturated market Second one is a medical consultation. Completely different part of the brain The viewer doesn't evaluate the product. They evaluate whether the diagnosis fits THEM. And if it fits, the product sale is already closed before the product is ever mentioned The viewer goes from "I feel kinda shitty about my stomach" to "oh fuck I have cortisol belly" in 60 seconds flat. They've been given a name for their pain. Now they need treatment. And the only treatment they've ever heard of is the one the character just recommended The character didn't enter a market. The character created one. In a single 60-second video And naming costs nothing. Zero The AI character introduces a term and if it resonates, the audience starts using it themselves. Searching for it themselves. Telling friends about it using language YOUR page invented Your audience becomes the distribution engine for a market you built from a phrase Someone coins "doom scroll gut" for digestive issues from late-night phone use. Someone coins "desk disease" for the metabolic collapse of sitting 10 hours a day. Someone coins "stress skin" for cortisol-driven breakouts that appeared from nowhere If the phrase gives language to something millions of people already feel, it spreads on its own. And the person who coined it owns every search result, every TikTok keyword, every Amazon listing that follows Permanently (btw this is exactly why the biggest supplement companies don't develop products first anymore. they develop TERMS first. spend months A/B testing which 2-word phrase triggers the strongest emotional recognition in focus groups, then build the product around the winning name. the naming IS the product development. everything after that is just fulfillment) the people entering existing markets are fighting over keywords that 50,000 other pages already rank for the people inventing terms are creating keywords that nobody else can compete for bc nobody else was there when it started do with this information what you will

Português
2
5
87
13.6K
telefone das meninas super poderosas; أُعيد تغريده
carrie blackshaw
carrie blackshaw@exwebcelebrity·
acho a dinâmica do bumble tao humilhante, onde ja se viu eu ter que puxar papo com homem
Português
43
298
4.4K
155.4K
Pedro Dinis Quaderna
Pedro Dinis Quaderna@DinisQuaderna·
@excentrically Porra, se for depender dos influencers daqui, só tem restaurante guia michelin na cidade toda.
Português
1
0
4
1.2K
Pedro Dinis Quaderna
Pedro Dinis Quaderna@DinisQuaderna·
Fui lá no Instagram conferir os comentários, esse país não tem a menor condição de dar certo. O curitibano é muito sensível, pra não dizer outras coisas. Crítica totalmente dentro do tom, não houve nenhuma falta de respeito, mas pro brasileiro médio tudo é pessoal, inveja.
convenhamos@vegetacil

Recentemente abriu um restaurante novo em Curitiba, o Zefy, que curiosamente se parece com o Z Deli, tanto no nome quanto na fonte usada, no cardápio etc. Uma crítica gastronômica de Curitiba, Caroline Grimm, fez uma crítica ao lugar, comentando sobre os preços altíssimos, a taxa de serviço de 13%, pratos mal executados etc.

Português
5
12
390
25.2K
kauan
kauan@kawolvr0·
@excentrically @DinisQuaderna O que mais tem é bons críticos gastronômicos no RJ em e SP. Para todo os gostos de "tom". De danilo nakamura a julio bernardo. Todos feras e com larga bagem de copo, faca e garfo.
Português
1
0
1
26
Sibelius Seraphini
Sibelius Seraphini@sseraphini·
Porque ainda se vende carro manual no Brasil?
Português
22
1
15
2.2K
Lara
Lara@AquelaLara·
Pessoas que tem dois cachorros, preciso da sua guiança: o trabalho diminui (pois um brinca com o outro e ficam menos demandantes) ou aumenta (tem que continuar fazendo tudo que fazia antes, mas em dobro)?
Português
111
1
115
21.5K
Mariana Oliveira
Mariana Oliveira@marioliveirain·
Atenção, isso não é uma indicação, é um alerta🚨 se você é adulto, gosta de coisas boas tipo café especial, massa fresca, cortes de carne nobre, cuidado para não cair em mais uma seita: a de pão de fermentação natural. Não consigo mais comer pão industrializado, apenas o pãozinho da produtora artesanal que faz tudo com carinho, tempo adequado da massa e insumos de qualidade 🥹❤️🤡 toda sexta chega aqui em casa os pãezinhos da semana.
Mariana Oliveira tweet mediaMariana Oliveira tweet mediaMariana Oliveira tweet media
Português
27
3
405
43.8K