Andy Taylor

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Andy Taylor

Andy Taylor

@ItsAndyTaylor

Growthwriter for SaaS & AI founders | 16 years B2B enterprise sales → content that converts Rate your content free ↓ https://t.co/lyvKio3gDW

Leeds, West Yorkshire انضم Kasım 2025
270 يتبع130 المتابعون
تغريدة مثبتة
Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
Your content sounds like everyone else’s. Not because you lack something. Because whoever's writing it learned to write about SaaS, not about you. You're doing everything correctly and still disappearing - and that's the specific thing nobody warns you about. Here's what most founders don't realise: industry expertise is often the problem. When a ghostwriter knows your space deeply, they reach for the same frameworks, the same proof points, the same vocabulary as every other writer who knows your space. If you're a SaaS or AI founder, you already know this feeling intimately - you're swimming in a content ocean where everyone has the same three takes on the same AI news cycle, the same founder lessons, the same growth frameworks dressed in slightly different words. The content is accurate. It just isn't yours. It sounds like a competent approximation of you, and somewhere underneath you can feel that, even if you can't name it. Wine people have a word for what's missing. Terroir. The taste of where something's from. Same grape, different soil, completely different wine. You can't fake it and you can't template it. It either comes from somewhere real or it doesn't. Your content has terroir or it doesn't. When it doesn't, it costs more than engagement. Prospects scroll past and can't articulate why nothing stuck. The right hire reads three posts and moves on because nothing cut through. You publish consistently, do everything correctly, and still feel like you're broadcasting into a room that isn't quite yours. Another year of that isn't a content problem. It's an identity leak, and it's costing you conversations you'll never know you missed. I played drums for 15 years. Rhythm isn't decoration in a sentence, it's the engine. Fast sentences create urgency. Slow ones create weight. Strategic pauses control where a reader breathes. When this is working in your posts, your readers won't be able to explain why they finished them. The pacing held them somewhere they didn't expect to stay. I DJed for 20 years. You can't DJ without reading energy. When the floor's cold you don't play the same track louder, you shift the energy. Build tension. Break it. Surprise them. I watch how people engage with posts the same way I watched dance floors - when to provoke, when to educate, when to go quiet and let something land. Your content stops performing at people and starts moving them. I sold B2B for 16 years. Long enough to learn that people don't buy what you say, they buy how it makes them feel about themselves. Long enough to get good at decoding what someone actually means versus what they say out loud. When I write for a founder, I'm not writing what they want to say. I'm writing what they actually mean when they stop performing. The version that exists at 11pm after two drinks. Founders read it back and think "that's actually what I believe" - sometimes for the first time. I read Dostoevsky obsessively. He was one of the most psychologically complex writers who ever lived and he wrote almost entirely in plain language. What he understood is that readers don't trust ornate sentences. They trust pressure. The weight of something true pressing against simple words - the feeling that the sentence could not have been phrased any other way without losing something essential. Most writers spend their careers chasing sophistication. The ones worth reading spend it chasing that pressure. When I write for a founder, I'm not trying to make them sound sophisticated. I'm looking for the sentence with that weight in it. The one that makes a reader pause because it's too accurate to scroll past. I don't have a roster of client results to show you yet. What I have is this post. If something in it made you pause, if a sentence landed somewhere specific, if you finished it when you expected to skim it - that's the work. That's what I'd do for you. Not your brand voice. Not a messaging framework someone built for six other clients the same month. The specific combination of experience, belief, and contradiction that only you have. Content that tastes like you came from somewhere. I niched into a life. Fifteen years of rhythm. Twenty years of reading rooms. Sixteen years of decoding what people actually mean. You can't automate that. And you can't approximate it either. If your posts have been landing flat and you've assumed it's a strategy problem, it probably isn't. DM me the word "invisible" and I'll spend 20 minutes with you mapping exactly where your content is losing its taste. No pitch. Just diagnosis. If there's nothing to fix, I'll tell you that too.
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
Posting more doesn't make you a marketer. It makes you noisier.
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Federico Martelli
Federico Martelli@fel1de·
@ItsAndyTaylor the gap compounds in both directions. every day of delay is not one day behind, it is one day further from where they will be by the time you catch up to where they are now.
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
Everyone tells you to start before you're ready. Nobody tells you what waiting actually costs. Thought the cost was time. The two-hour window after the baby goes down, when I could be asleep or watching telly and I'm writing instead. Real cost, but not the big one. The big one is compounding. Someone who started two years ago isn't two years ahead. They're further than that. Every post built on the last. Their audience knows them, trusts them, sends work without being asked. It didn't add up. It multiplied. You're not catching up to where they are. You're catching up to where they were two years ago, while they keep moving. Starting late has a price. It goes up every day you wait.
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James malsawm
James malsawm@EmailCopyJames·
@ItsAndyTaylor Do whatever you can to build your dream. It is not too late to start what we want right now, as long as we keep on learning and becoming 1℅ better daily
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Tyler Todt
Tyler Todt@tyromper·
It's so funny I see a lot of these HEALTH GURUS & INFLUENCERS saying, "Omg I drank 1 glass of wine & it wrecked me for 3 days!!" Or one longevity expert said he "slipped & ate 1 cookie & had stomach issues all week." Last night was the first night I had a drop of alcohol in 5 months. (Not much interest as I age, but no kids so wifey & I decided to let it rip!) I had 8-9 shots of Jameson & ate pizza & a cinnamon roll at midnight. Woke up early today & walked 7 miles with my wife then took a tough Pilates class with her & still feel like a million bucks. People are OVER OPTIMIZING things in 2026. Tracking everything always. Stressing about all these metrics. -Lift weights 3-4x a week. -Walk & move as much as you can. -Don't drink your calories very often. -Eat whole, real foods 80% of the time. And then LIVE LIFE!!! I do notice most of these GURUS & INFLUENCERS don't have kids. We had three one year olds at one point so a few drinks & a workout seems really easy compared to that.
Tyler Todt tweet media
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Kristian Ivanov
Kristian Ivanov@k_ivanow·
With always on agents we are reaching new levels of spam in cold emails
Kristian Ivanov tweet media
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Hussain Ibarra
Hussain Ibarra@HussainIbarra·
I'm building a business for the money. There I said. Not to buy a golden Rolex or a Lambo. But to never have to look at a price tag anymore. To tell my parents that they don't need to worry about money. To tell my siblings that their brother can take care of them. To travel to the countries I want to visit. So when I'm out to dinner with my friends, I can tell them: "This one is on me". So that my kids can explore every interest and hobby they want. I see money as a tool to gain new experiences. It's nothing more than that. Stop denying that you don't want money. The more you deny it, the harder you make your life.
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Razvan Andrei Cureteu
Razvan Andrei Cureteu@cureteurazvan·
Building the product is only half the game. The other half is learning how to explain it.
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Malik Hughes
Malik Hughes@MalikHughess·
@ItsAndyTaylor Strip it back and it usually just comes down to sitting down and doing the work. Most “systems” only matter if they actually lead to action.
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Malik Hughes
Malik Hughes@MalikHughess·
You don’t need another productivity hack. You need fewer excuses. Because deep down, you already know the work that matters. The challenge isn't awareness. The challenge is doing it when it feels uncomfortable. And that's where growth has always lived. On the other side of resistance.
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
@luluneverstops Manus: you read a newsletter about autonomous agents in January and haven’t talked about anything else since
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Melvin Luu
Melvin Luu@luluneverstops·
I can judge a person’s entire character from one question: ChatGPT, Claude, Grok or Gemini? ChatGPT: Absolute NPC energy. You’re stuck in 2023. You use the same AI tool as your mom, your accountant and 97% of all LinkedIn coaches. Never seriously tested another AI tool, but still say, “AI is crazy now.” Grok: You want to be a bad boy. You think you’re rebellious but really you just became Elons marketing strategy. Gemini: You use Android. That’s basically all there is to say. Probably drinks Matcha too. Claude: You belong to the absolute elite AI super chads. You’re an ethically perfect human being and you’re on the right side of history. Which AI tool do you use the most?
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
@the_martinvale Inspiration without a next step is just entertainment with emotions, releases a bit of dopamine for feeling productive but changes nothing
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Martin Vale
Martin Vale@the_martinvale·
Most people consume motivational content and feel inspired for 90 seconds. Then fall back into habits. Consuming is not the answer.
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
@batincaylak This is a really great point - I have noticed how many begin to neglect their own profile once the clients start rolling in
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Batın Çaylak
Batın Çaylak@batincaylak·
You write a viral post for your client. 50,000 people see it. Their inbox floods with leads. You close your laptop. Open your own profile. 3 posts this month. All from 6 weeks ago. You built someone else's pipeline today. When did you last build your own? The cobbler's children have no shoes. But the cobbler's children don't pay rent. You do.
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
@anshuldhir_ Build a product for people who are already listening 💪
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Anshul Dhir
Anshul Dhir@anshuldhir_·
The best startups I know are not the ones with the best product. They are the ones with the best distribution. Product is table stakes. Distribution is the actual business. "The most expensive mistake I made as a founder wasn't a bad product. It was building before I checked if anyone wanted it." is a good case study in which half of that equation is actually being solved.
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
@kevinleonaru Yes and often it’s the ones you have to push yourself to start Weirdly the best opportunities seem to hide behind the conversations you don’t always want to have
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Kevin Leon
Kevin Leon@kevinleonaru·
@ItsAndyTaylor Talking to people every day is underrated. Curious—has one conversation ever led to a major opportunity for you?
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Kevin Leon
Kevin Leon@kevinleonaru·
Everyone wants freedom. Few people want discipline. The second one creates the first. What's one thing you're disciplining yourself to do this year?
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Kevin Szabo
Kevin Szabo@KevinSzabo14·
I just closed 2 clients this morning. Not held back by others. Not held back by an algorithm. Not held back by location. Most important, excuses. Just pure outreach in DM form. If you can’t control your income. You don’t have a business. You have a hobby based on luck.
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
@davuthdv Try writing about what you notice, not what you do Just like everyone else you are a unique individual with a unique lens on life Instead of ‘here’s what I’m doing’ try ‘here’s what I keep seeing that no one else is talking about’ Hopefully might be more enjoyable for you 💪
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Davuth
Davuth@davuthdv·
I want to be more active on social media, but I don't like writing about what I do. I know it's great to promote myself and I definitely should, but because I don't like it, the habit doesn't stick. But what else can I write about?
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Andy Taylor
Andy Taylor@ItsAndyTaylor·
@KevinSzabo14 If you can’t advocate for your work, no one else will do it for you
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Kevin Szabo
Kevin Szabo@KevinSzabo14·
Self promotion isn’t cringe. If you think this way, you lost. it’s necessary for success.
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