@UKRapDaily I really liked this one, but only me that think that he should you go solo on everything, maybe add tems and james but heel nah kano and jim
Grow your brand diffrently:
Collab with creators that already do content in your niche and already have a following thats are ICP. Put the product in subtle ways, in their daily routine, Just adding it to their normal videos without seeing as an AD.(Passive marketing).
When you are building your hero section, think of it as an AD, same concept. Make them go from either unaware/aware to interested. You do that by an evoke action headline that makes the reader starts thinking, then a subheadline over the CTA where you give more context and last a CTA where it feels as an reward for the customer to click.
Progress Update! We're now at 27% (up from 18% in just 5 days)!
-Tweaked the Pop-Up with A/B tested headlines, boosting sign-up rates by 3%!
-Launched a campaign tackling a hot topic + solution, and planning another this week for a common spring season problem their product solves!
-Gradually activating the browse abandonment flow to strengthen domain reputation!
Got questions? Drop 'em below
From 0% to 18% in Under 4 Days: This Is What I Did
Pop-Up
I set up a full-screen pop-up that’s hitting 21% conversion as I write this. Here’s what I implemented that helped:
- Full-screen pop-up.
- Positioned it as a reward, not a task—people hate tasks.
Email Flows
I got the most important ones in place so the domain could start sending:
- Welcome Flow
- Site Abandon
- Cart & Checkout
- Post-Purchase
Campaign
They had a list they hadn’t touched, so I created a campaign covering a trending topic paired with a trending product and a subtle nudge. It pulled a 58% open rate, 4.21% click rate, and 40 orders. (If you want more in-depth info about the campaign structure, just let me know.)
I’ll be building out this brand’s email marketing and posting the raw details to keep you all in the loop.
Thread: Exposing @leocousineau aka Soulja 🚨
One ecommerce entrepreneur sought 1-on-1 mentorship with Leo Cousineau (who calls himself "Soulja" online) for guidance. After agreeing to pay $5,000 for his advice on running ecommerce brands, he ghosted them right after the payment was made on September 13th. (Yeah, you read that right, 5 grand to be ignored.)
The Silent Treatment:
Every time they tried to ask a question, he either didn’t respond or completely ignored their messages. Imagine seeing your messages being read but never acknowledged. Sounds fun, right? (Not.)
Lies About the Money:
Throughout this mess, Leo continuously lied about the money they sent him. First, he claimed he never received it. Then, after they showed him proof that it did hit his account, he concocted more lies, even suggesting they pay him more over time. Finally, when cornered and out of excuses, he claimed the money was just released to his account.
Wise Account Drama:
Leo told them the money was taken from his Wise account. When they called Wise, they said the funds hit his account without interference. Talk about a wild goose chase.
Leo was also selling prebuilt stores with his services, a common scam for newbies who fall into the trap of thinking they can buy a site and have a ready-made business. We all know nobody sells product winners, and these setups are just shady scams.
Let's dive into an absurd situation where one individual paid Leo Cousineau, also known as "Soulja" online, $1,500 for a discounted mentorship service. Leo himself decided to offer this reduced price. It's like giving someone a discount and then turning around to blame them for accepting it! Absurdism at its finest!
After receiving the $1,500, Leo's communication slowed to a crawl. Despite repeated attempts to get the promised mentorship, Leo was mostly unresponsive. When the individual asked for a refund, Leo's response was a dismissive "No refunds, it's a weekend bro 💀."
In the messages, the victim expressed frustration over Leo’s lack of communication and failure to follow through on promises. Leo's final, shameless message was: "Ima just stop helping you. Wasted my damn time."
Here's the kicker—the individual had paid $1,500, a price Leo set, and Leo's excuse for not delivering was that the payment wasn't "full" and dismissively added, "Why should I care. Later."
This kind of behavior not only shows a lack of professionalism but also blatant disrespect for others' time and money. Leo’s actions are a stark reminder to be cautious when choosing who to trust in the ecommerce world.
A Past of Scamming:
Digging deeper, we realized Leo has a history of scamming. His Trustpilot reviews for one of his companies is linked here: (Trustpilot Reviews: trustpilot.com/review/whatthe…). 94% of people rated him one star due to him not shipping items that consumers paid for. Below are a couple of screenshots taken of individual reviews. Please know that if you look at the rest of the 79 reviews, you will find a multitude of similar comments regarding his scam operation.
Leo has a history of MRR fraud rebillings and non-shipping scams. He even admits to shady practices in videos without any shame.
Be wary of these so-called "mentors" who promise the moon but deliver nothing. Always do thorough research before trusting someone with your hard-earned money.