Scott Sutherland

1.8K posts

Scott Sutherland banner
Scott Sutherland

Scott Sutherland

@smsutherland

Father 👨‍👩‍👧‍👧 E-com Business Owner 📦, Bass Player 🎸, Investor 📈

Auckland, New Zealand Bergabung Mayıs 2017
288 Mengikuti195 Pengikut
Kamal Razzak
Kamal Razzak@kamal_razzak·
Scripted founder ads work until they don't. Unscripted founder ads work longer and scale harder. Here's why. A scripted ad gives you control. You know exactly what the founder will say, how they'll say it, when the CTA comes in. It's predictable. It's repeatable. And it feels like an ad. An unscripted ad is messy. The founder pauses. They backtrack. They say things in the wrong order. And that mess is what makes it believable. The viewer's brain reads unscripted as unfiltered. Unfiltered reads as honest. Honest converts. The best-performing founder ads I've made weren't scripted. They were prompted. Three questions. No script. Thirty takes. Pick the best one. IcyBear's founder hated being scripted. Every scripted take felt wooden. So we stopped scripting him. We gave him the question, pressed record, and let him talk. The version where he forgot we were recording was the one that tripled revenue. Ripley Rader's $30,000-a-day ad came from an off-camera throwaway line. It wasn't scripted. It was spontaneous. That's why it worked. If you're scripting every word, you're optimising for control. But the thing that makes founder ads work is the opposite of control. It's the moment the founder stops performing and starts talking. Script the structure. Not the words. Give them the question. Let them answer it their way. That's the ad.
English
5
0
5
411
David Perlmutter
David Perlmutter@Muzzlebuster·
$AXON Enterprise is the kind of company that can catch an investor's attention because of its rapid revenue growth, super sticky suite of products/services, and it's net retention well over 100%. That's what a serious moat looks like. However, there are problems- the kind that make it easy for me to quickly dismiss the prospect. While it's true that the company sees great growth, it doesn't appear that management wants to share any of the benefits with shareholders. They are taking from the coffers of investors to transfer that wealth to the management. SBC is the mechanism, and it continues to increase. Its pace of growth dwarfs the revenue's. There is no end in sight for this dynamic as SBC's percentage of revenue is trending up and to the right. Insta-no for me.
David Perlmutter tweet mediaDavid Perlmutter tweet mediaDavid Perlmutter tweet mediaDavid Perlmutter tweet media
English
2
1
22
1.2K
Scott Sutherland
Scott Sutherland@smsutherland·
@justsomeguy1020 @QualityInvest5 A long time. Compare the cost of their fee to the actual loan value and you soon come to realise that the cost is largely irrelevant - its a rounding error to zero. Its all about reputation, trust, credibility and risk.
English
0
0
1
11
Just Some Guy
Just Some Guy@justsomeguy1020·
@QualityInvest5 How much longer can they realistically increase prices without government intervention?
English
1
0
0
503
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷@QualityInvest5·
$FICO at $1100 is a COMPLETE JOKE – 30x fwd GAAP P/E – 30%+ forward EPS Growth – Arguably the widest moat company on Earth How does this not work from here?
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷 tweet media
English
32
2
111
17.2K
Three-Legged Stool
Three-Legged Stool@valiovalentino·
Where is the Fintwit of 2020-2023 when knowledgeable people discussed individual companies? This has been replaced by Druckenmiller videos, walls of AI slop, and charts with text like: „Company X trades at this multiple, wow. „
English
14
3
88
8.3K
Thomas Chua
Thomas Chua@SteadyCompound·
Terry Smith's 2026 Fundsmith Annual Meeting: Sold: PepsiCo, Brown-Forman Halved: Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet Bought: EssilorLuxottica, Wolters Kluwer, Zoetis, Intuit, Magnum Ice Cream Full transcript: steadycompounding.com/transcript/fun…
English
6
17
97
17.7K
cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
What’s the most epic movie moment you’ve ever experienced in a theater?
English
472
37
341
9.5M
Ashton Invests
Ashton Invests@Ashton_1nvests·
What % of your portfolio is your top holding?
English
67
0
40
16.9K
Scott Sutherland
Scott Sutherland@smsutherland·
@fintegrate $META, $FICO, $MELI, $SE, $AMZN, $UBER is where my cash will continue to go.
English
1
0
1
149
Sustainable Growth
Sustainable Growth@fintegrate·
Really only want to primarily own monopolies and duopolies in this environment. Of course, that hasn’t saved them this year, but I’m most confident they’ll make it through unscathed. For me, that means relatively little change to what I’ve already been doing.
English
2
0
10
1.8K
Scott Sutherland
Scott Sutherland@smsutherland·
@kamal_razzak Hi Kamal, Do you have any resources you can share for developing a great founders ad?
English
0
0
0
10
Kamal Razzak
Kamal Razzak@kamal_razzak·
Nobody buys a product from a founder ad because the product sounds good. They buy because they trust the person selling it. This sounds obvious but it changes everything about how you write and film them. If you're trying to explain the product, you've already lost. The product explanation is the job of the landing page. The ad's job is to get them there because they trust the person who sent them. IcyBear tripled revenue in month one with ads that were almost entirely about the founder's conviction that the product worked, not about what the product was or how it was made. The mechanism mattered less than the certainty. Ripley Rader's best-performing line had nothing to do with the trousers. It was a line about the feeling a woman has before she puts them on. The product was almost incidental. When you're writing a brief for a founder ad, the question isn't: what do we want to tell people about the product? It's: what does the founder believe so deeply about this that they'd say it to a stranger at a party? Find that. Film that. That's the ad.
English
2
0
3
560
Kamal Razzak
Kamal Razzak@kamal_razzak·
This one ad did $2,083,268.42 in spend. One base ad. 257 iterations. Still scaling. At the DTC Summit (thanks @johnhickey1970 ) I showed founders how we make 600+ ads a week. But every single one of them had the same question: “…but how do I make ONE good ad?” So I put it all in a free guide. The $1M Evergreen Ad Formula. It shows you: -How to make an amazing base ad -How to iterate the juice out of it + the exact ad we ran And the BEST part is you can execute this guide TODAY with your founder, an iPhone and a mic. Comment “1mil” and I’ll DM you the guide. (Just follow so I can message you.)
Kamal Razzak tweet media
English
873
39
538
74.7K
HAWK
HAWK@HawkEmDownChris·
Agree or Disagree: Michael Jordan is the greatest athlete of all time.
English
796
189
2.2K
127.6K
Wals
Wals@walsxbt·
Thailand is the best country in the world I like it all: 🇹🇭 culture 🇹🇭 people 🇹🇭 food 🇹🇭 nature 🇹🇭 affordability & comfort 🇹🇭 freedom Name a better country, I’ll wait
English
785
342
2.7K
753.1K
Cinema Tweets
Cinema Tweets@CinemaTweets1·
The Best Film of James Cameron’s Career
Cinema Tweets tweet media
English
89
85
1.3K
28.5K
Kamal Razzak
Kamal Razzak@kamal_razzak·
Most founders don’t realize their face is worth $900,000+ per year. Here’s proof: Beyond Nine spent $584k on founder ads at 14 MER. Not influencer ads. Not creative campaigns. Just the founder talking to a camera. I spent years trying to beat the founder video. But I could not. Because people buy from people, not logos. I put my learnings into the exact playbook that generated $2.7M for our clients: ✓ The 30-second story structure + hooks that converts at 4.2% ✓ Why offices beat studios (data from 127 split tests) ✓ The iPhone setup that outperforms $50k productions In a world where everyone is afraid to get caught by shit products shipped from China, showing your face and telling your story is the biggest lever you can pull. And I'll reveal exactly how to do this. My Founder Ad Formula shows you: -7 proven founder hooks (with word-for-word scripts) -The “Beyond Nine Effect” that makes people trust you in 3 seconds -How to film 30 days of content in 2 hours Most agencies charge $50k for this. Most agencies also can’t do it. You need to make a choice: -Keep hiding behind your brand while competitors dominate your market. -Or grab your iPhone and start printing money. Next 48 hours only: Comment “FOUNDER” and I’ll send you the complete playbook + my personal equipment list. (Just follow me so I can DM you)
Kamal Razzak tweet media
English
479
26
367
59.3K
Chris Perruna
Chris Perruna@cperruna·
Can $UBER dominate the robotaxi future with their platform...?
Chris Perruna tweet media
English
22
20
163
20.3K
Scott Sutherland
Scott Sutherland@smsutherland·
@CapexAndChill This was my main learning from Drew's overview. The high interest rates ( which are not high for South America) provide a level of insulation for the credit risk.
English
1
0
1
101
CapexAndChill
CapexAndChill@CapexAndChill·
I know its hard to understand how the credit business works but $MELI making 20% margins on lending sub prime credit means they cracked the code. If you think anything otherwise then I’m sorry for you. They appropriately assess risk to the point where they maximized credit yield.
SE_super_bull@e_commerce_king

@CapexAndChill Nah, use your common sense, lend money to five person, and only 4 person payback doesn’t seem like they know what they are doing. Even though everyone is worst but it also doesn’t translate to $MELI is good, just mean that he is better.

English
4
2
31
5.1K
Fraser Cottrell | Ad Creative For Meta & TikTok
If you wanna boost your ROAS on your retargeting ads by 150%, Then you need to implement these three creative concepts in your campaigns We have implemented these for multiple DTC brands and it's been a constant success Steal this:
Fraser Cottrell | Ad Creative For Meta & TikTok tweet media
English
24
72
406
53.9K
Scott Sutherland
Scott Sutherland@smsutherland·
@QualityInvest5 With everything falling nows a great chance to reallocate to higher quality companies - $META, $FICO for starters.
English
0
0
4
409
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷@QualityInvest5·
i’m down 30% with $ADBE over something that WONT impacted their business… PS: New video out now (link in bio)
Aria Radnia 🇮🇷 tweet media
English
16
0
74
8.9K
Peter Quadrel
Peter Quadrel@Peter_Quadrel·
NanoBanana 2 just made your static ad agency obsolete. And I just open sourced the entire tool. Drop your product page URL. It pulls your logos, product images, fonts, colors, and brand voice automatically. Builds a full brand guide for you. Then generates ad creatives at scale using nearly 4,000 high-performing ad templates across 8 niches. It dynamically matches the best templates to your brand and brief. Here's what makes it different: → Instant resizing Get any ad in 1x1, 4x5, 9x16 with one click. No regeneration. No broken text. → Highlight-to-edit See an issue? Highlight the area and tell it what to fix. → Multiple brand profiles Run different brands or segments from one tool. → Auto persona building from real customer reviews → Multiple QC loops on briefs and final assets Catches AI-isms before you do. → Upload your own templates or use ours Runs locally. Just needs your Claude and Google API keys. This is the lite version of what we use internally. You get the full finished tool AND the open source code to make it your own. Creatives still design the system, this handles iteration and scale. Want a copy to download? 1. Like this post 2. Comment "AI" Will DM you the tool along with a tutorial shortly after.
English
2.5K
243
4.4K
281K
Scott Sutherland
Scott Sutherland@smsutherland·
@the_zack_zhu Many on here refuse to invest in Chinese companies (myself included) as a rule so it is not surprising that $MELI came out on top regardless of business quality.
English
1
0
2
96
Zack Zhu
Zack Zhu@the_zack_zhu·
I thought $BABA would win by a landslide, so I was surprised to see $MELI get the highest votes. That says a lot about just how bullish people are on this stock. To be clear, I also think it will perform very well on the revenue side over the next few years. There is still plenty of room to grow. But for my article, the challenge is that $MELI operates with a very "classic" eCommerce value proposition, and a lot of its operations still feel quite old-school. I don't think I have much to add on the positive side unless I just repeat the usual clichés. What I want to add probably won't be very pleasant for the $MELI investor community to hear. It is similar to my last post, where I argued that $MELI's logistics capability isn't actually that special, and also pointed out that its logistics network is still structurally quite primitive. 😭😭😭 Beyond logistics, which I already covered, I think $MELI still operates within a rather "old" structure. There is also a lot to say about the platform design. In many ways, it still follows what would have been considered best practice 15 years ago, and now it faces the dilemma of how to evolve toward better modern practices. For me, it's a very interesting journey to understand the differences between platforms, but it's probably not the kind of thing most investors want to hear. I hope I can attract the kind of investors who like getting deep into the weeds.
Zack Zhu tweet media
English
7
0
21
1.9K