Aman 🧙♂️
744 posts

Aman 🧙♂️
@amanwon
Founder and developer https://t.co/zh4AXX0loA, https://t.co/pPYgFFPxKh college dropout turned entrepreneur.

Rick Rubin has low heart rate variability. So he looked up everything that raises it, picked one technique, and started doing it every day. It worked. The technique: coherence breathing. 10 to 20 minutes a day, at least once, sometimes twice. Now he and @hubermanlab do it together on camera so you can follow along:


As of this morning, providers on our platform can now send prescriptions for Zepbound® vials and KwikPen®, as well as Foundayo™, to the LillyDirect® pharmacy and access self-pay pricing for our customers because of an expansion in our platform’s functionality. In many ways, today reminds me of Netflix’s early days, when everyone talked about whether they would have the latest blockbuster in their catalog. As if Netflix’s success depended on its ability to become the distribution channel for a single film. They were missing the forest for the trees: Netflix wasn’t just renting DVDs. It was changing consumer behavior by ruthlessly prioritizing choice and inventing new pathways to the things people wanted the most. By offering a full range of FDA-approved GLP-1s on our platform, we’re similarly giving our customers more choices through all the tools we have available – and we’ll continue to push here on behalf of everyone who depends on us for their care. Read more on how we’re making this possible, including important info, here: news.hims.com/newsroom/full-…

I get so many pitch decks now for peptide companies now and basically all of them 1) exclusively focus on their customer acquisition costs, their UGC/video content including AI generated marketing pipelines, and affiliate marketing strategy 2) talk about how fast their turnaround time is to patients and how broad their catalog of peptides are 3) do not talk at all about monitoring patients post prescription 4) they all say they work with the top suppliers to provide legitimacy but don't really have a clear methodology for how they're doing this (esp with so many steps between securing the in ingredient, to shipping, to compounding) I understand why peptides are popular - but I don't think having more companies who effectively are marketing/dropshipping companies while offloading liability and adverse events to the doctors is the right direction for healthcare























