Robin Rump
525 posts

Robin Rump
@RobinRump
Founder and CTO @AlphaSophiaHQ • 🏥 Building a data intelligence startup in the healthcare space👨🏼💻
शामिल हुए Mayıs 2009
412 फ़ॉलोइंग1.1K फ़ॉलोवर्स

real humans + AI editor = 200 UGC videos. $3/video. 2 minutes. DansUGC Content Factory waitlist is open.
here's how it works:
> upload 10 product demos
> plugged into 3k b-rolls from dansugc
> auto-generates 200 reaction + demo combos
> real human hooks. ready to deploy.
no briefing. no editing. no waiting.
just 10 uploads and 200 videos.
comment "content factory" and I'll send you more details.
must be following so i can DM.
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@shareb_io Early distribution is so key! We experience the same with @AlphaSophiaHQ and LinkedIn! The algorithms are very adaptable today, and decide very quickly what to scale and what to ignore.
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Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया

I just built a Claude Code SEO agent that replaces your $200/mo. Ahrefs subscription 🤯
One prompt → keyword gaps found, competitors analyzed, content written in your brand voice, rankings tracked weekly.
All inside Claude Code.
Perfect for DTC brands and agencies who know SEO matters but never have the bandwidth to actually do it consistently.
This agent runs the entire loop for you:
→ Connects to Google Search Console and pulls your real ranking data
→ Finds your "gap zone" — keywords sitting at positions 5–20
→ Scrapes who's outranking you and breaks down exactly why they're winning
→ Interviews you once about your brand, customers, and positioning
→ Writes content in your voice — not generic AI slop that tanks after 90 days
→ Tracks rankings weekly and feeds results back into the next cycle
No expensive tools you barely open.
No freelancers writing content that sounds like everyone else.
No manually checking rankings and forgetting to act on it.
What you get:
- Keyword cards with a specific action for each gap zone opportunity
- A competitive breakdown showing who's beating you and the exact fix
- A weekly content plan generated from your real GSC data
- A brand voice profile Claude uses for every article it writes
Built 100% in Claude Code with Google Search Console.
I put together a full playbook with the skill files, brand interview, and the exact weekly workflow.
Want it for free?
> Like this post
> Comment "SEO"
And I'll send it over (must be following so I can DM)
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@shareb_io Was so hard for me to learn as an engineer, but social media is all about attention!
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Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया

@JamesIvings But e-invoicing goes further. In Belgium the Peppol network is mandatory since January 1st. So every invoice should be delivered over the same network. No searching for missing invoices anymore, its already added to your accounting tool.
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@JamesIvings @rishi_raj_jain_ @polar_sh B2C digital services must charge VAT to EU customers no matter where your company is
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@oleksiistrichyk @sergeynazarovx Why would there be? The whole business model is to drive everyone’s profit to zero at the expense of extracting maximum bidding volume
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Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया
Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया
Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया

Overraising and its Hidden Costs 🧵
Let's be honest — startup culture today has a massive obsession with fundraising. Founders are celebrated for closing huge investment rounds as if raising money alone guaranteed success. Let's be fucking clear: Most startups raise way more money than they actually need, only to pay a heavy price down the line. Excessive capital can trap founders, employees, and even friends-and-family investors in a vicious cycle of unrealistic expectations, brutal liquidation preferences, and diluted control. Overraising isn't the achievement many believe it is — it's often just kicking the can down the road, setting everyone involved up for painful realities later.
Alright, before you think I'm totally anti-VC, let's set something straight: some businesses simply can't survive or scale without substantial funding upfront. If you're trying to launch the next big hardware product, something seriously groundbreaking in biotech, or a business with powerful network effects — think Facebook, Uber, or Airbnb — you genuinely need a pile of cash early on. These types of startups are capital-intensive beasts: they require massive upfront investments for things like manufacturing, infrastructure, rapid scaling, or research. Without significant early capital, they risk being swallowed by competitors or never getting off the ground at all. In these scenarios, raising a ton of money isn't just strategic, it's a necessity. But let's be real — your startup most likely doesn't fall into this category.
Most startups fall into the trap of raising way more money than they genuinely need, believing more cash equals guaranteed success. But here's the harsh truth: excess funding often leads to reckless spending, bloated teams, and unsustainable growth expectations. Founders get pressured to hit unrealistic milestones to satisfy impatient investors, sacrificing their initial vision in the process. Worse yet, aggressive liquidation preferences mean founders and early employees often get screwed over if things don't go perfectly. Friends and family, who jumped in early, hoping to support a dream, are left holding the bag, their investments diluted into irrelevance. In short, the glamour of raising huge rounds quickly fades when reality hits — and everyone involved pays dearly. A decade of your life, 10 millions in value created, only for a founder to walk away with the downpayment to a condo. Fucking kills me man.
On the flip side, bootstrapping — or small seed rounds — might seem slow and unglamorous, but they offer a hell of a lot more freedom and sustainability. These companies are forced to be smarter and scrappier, carefully allocating their limited resources to what genuinely matters. Founders retain control, aren't beholden to impatient investors, and can keep their business aligned with their original vision. Sure, growth might be slower, but it's steady, profitable, and sustainable. Employees, founders, and early supporters all benefit from the increased stability and genuine alignment of incentives. Ultimately, this type of entrepreneurship is about building real fucking value — without a lot of the bullshit.
Most startups would be better off with a balanced, strategic mixed funding approach. Rather than rushing into massive rounds, founders should bootstrap initially, validate their ideas, build genuine value, and only later consider selectively raising capital — small, targeted rounds that accelerate proven growth without sacrificing control or integrity. This strategy combines the best of both worlds, offering founders flexibility, sustainability, and strategic growth. It protects employees, early investors, and founders alike from aggressive terms and unsustainable expectations, keeping everyone aligned for long-term success.
The bottom line? Overraising is an epidemic, fueled by vanity metrics and the misguided belief that bigger rounds equal bigger success. In reality, raising more money than needed usually leads to disaster—loss of founder freedom, employee disillusionment, and burned early investors. Fuck this shit. True entrepreneurial success isn't measured by how much you've raised but by how well you've created genuine, sustainable value for everyone involved.
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Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया
Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया

Robin Rump रीट्वीट किया

“The only judge who has complete context on our lives, dies with us.
A reminder of the heavy weight we place on things that matter little.” — @AlexHormozi
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@vtchakarova Let’s see :) I think the App Store is velocity driven (as opposed to total downloads), so the real test will be how it performs 3-4 weeks from now, when the initial news cycle has worn off
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@Molson_Hart There is a massive political aspect to it as well. Basically any large scale project anywhere in Europe or the US immediately gathers large local opposition, delaying even the planning stage for decades.
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