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Don Laur
220 posts

Don Laur
@H1tman_CS
Cs2 player 🇷🇴 Grinding CS Playing for NEMEAN
Katılım Mart 2022
339 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler

@FACEIT_Darwin youtube.com/watch?v=aQrWSX…
youtube.com/watch?v=EGO6Jz…
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@FACEIT_Darwin

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Tag the friend you’d share the win with.
Both of you must be following us.
We’ll pick the winner from the comments.
Ends Saturday, May 23.
Winner announced once entries are verified.
One entry per person. Only the first valid comment counts.
Powered by @LORGAR_Gaming.

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Don Laur retweetledi

EloShapes is doing a giveaway together with ATK for their brand-new A9 Mini+ mouse, featuring the new PAW3955 Master sensor.
How to join:
1️⃣ Follow @AtkGear and @EloShapes
2️⃣ Like and repost
3️⃣ Tag 2 friends
The winner is chosen in 2 weeks. Good luck ✨

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Don Laur retweetledi

🚨 GIVEAWAY ALERT 🚨
Fancy a signed NIP jersey? Now it's your time 😎
To enter you must:
🔹 Like this tweet
🔹 Follow @rainbetcom
🔹 Reply tagging a friend
Last day to enter is the 11/05/26. All T&C's apply, link on replies.
Good luck 🍀 #GONINJAS

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your product has 10k users and zero word of mouth.
i know because i've seen it before.
and the reason no one's talking about it? nothing to do with whether it works.
it works. it solves the problem.
but it doesn't feel like something worth sharing.
people don't recommend products that work.
they recommend products that make them look good.
if it feels generic or forgettable, they use it quietly and never bring it up.
but if it feels sharp and well-made?
they want to be associated with it.
word of mouth isn't about function.
it's about pride.
and pride is a design problem.
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@imRazvanBadea Hey @grok , can you generate ishowspeed next to Răzvan Badea ?
English

80+ projects in and I can tell you the pattern:
The founders who raised $10M+ didn't have better tech.
They just answered one question everyone else skipped.
Most founders focus on two things:
Can we build it? (tech)
Can we sell it? (business)
But they skip the most important one:
Does anyone actually want it?
That's design.
Not making things pretty. Figuring out what people need.
You don't have unlimited time or money. Every decision matters.
If you build the wrong thing, perfect tech won't save you.
The best founders right now aren't shipping more features.
They're shipping better experiences.
Design gets you there faster.

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MP3 players existed before the iPod.
Creative, Rio, iRiver - some had more storage, better battery life, more features.
But they all marketed like this:
"5GB storage, USB 2.0, 12-hour battery, supports MP3/WMA/WAV"
Apple said:
"1,000 songs in your pocket."
No specs. No feature list.
Just a clear picture of what your life would look like.
People didn't want "5GB of storage."
They wanted their entire music collection everywhere.
Everyone else was speaking engineer.
Apple spoke human.
The product reflected this too.
Competitors: tons of buttons, confusing menus, cheap plastic.
Apple: one wheel, clean white design, premium feel.
The iPod wasn't better because of tech.
It was better because of design thinking.
They asked:
"What does the customer actually want?"
"How do we make them feel something?"
"What's the simplest way to communicate value?"
The result?
450M units sold.
Saved Apple from bankruptcy.
Paved the way for the iPhone.
Meanwhile, competitors with "better specs" disappeared.
Here's what founders miss:
Your customers don't care about your features.
They care about what those features do for them.
You can have the best tech in the world.
But if you can't make people feel why it matters, you've already lost.
Design isn't about making things pretty.
It's about making things clear.
It's about understanding what people actually want and giving them a reason to choose you.
Apple designed the entire experience:
- The product
- The message
- The feeling
Everyone else just built a device.

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your website looks pre-seed but you just raised Series A.
you're spending $10k/month on ads.
hiring SDRs.
building out content.
pushing traffic.
and then that traffic lands on a site that:
• has "Book a Call" as the main CTA but doesn't explain wtf you actually do
• no clear problem being solved
• no product screenshots showing features
• no case studies
• no social proof
• looks like the same template 50 other startups are using
• zero brand personality
so people bounce.
and you wonder why your conversion rate is terrible.
the issue isn't that you need MORE traffic.
it's that your current traffic can't figure out why they should care.
they land on your site and within 10 seconds they're confused.
what does this do?
why do i need it?
who else uses it?
why should i trust you?
none of that is answered.
so they leave.
and when you bring this up internally?
"the website isn't a priority right now"
"we don't have budget for that"
"we're focused on other growth efforts"
other growth efforts.
like what? driving more traffic to a broken funnel?
you're optimizing the wrong thing.
you're trying to fill a leaky bucket instead of fixing the leak.
because here's what actually happens when you fix the site:
• the same traffic now books calls
• higher quality leads come through
• people actually understand your value
• your brand looks like it matches the stage you're at
your site isn't just a page.
it's a filter.
if it looks cheap and confusing, you attract cheap confused leads.
if it looks sharp and clear, you attract people ready to buy.
stop treating your website like an afterthought when it's the first thing everyone sees.
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Don Laur retweetledi

Hello Everyone! Lamzu and I are working together to give back to the community, I'll be doing my first giveaway today for a Lamzu Maya Champion Edition.
Requirements:
Follow @lilycarries + @Lamzugear
RT + Tag a friend below
Winner chosen in 10 days!

English

owning a startup is fun you just have to be:
• ceo
• developer
• designer
• copywriter
• seo expert
• paid ads manager
• email marketer
• social media manager
• content strategist
• customer support
• sales rep
• accountant
• HR department
• legal advisor
• product manager
• UX researcher
• QA tester
• data analyst
• community manager
• influencer outreach
• copyeditor
• brand strategist
• growth hacker
• newsletter writer
• video editor
• photographer
• project manager
• recruiter
• onboarding specialist
• retention specialist
• crisis manager
• PR person
• partnership manager
• event coordinator
• competitor analyst
• conversion optimizer
• technical support
• documentation writer
• slide deck designer
• pitch deck writer
• investor relations
• board meeting presenter
• office manager (your bedroom)
• IT department
• procurement specialist
• supply chain coordinator
• operations manager
• janitor
easy.
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You've got product-market fit.
You understand the space.
You know how to execute.
But the round isn't closing.
VCs keep saying "it's too early" or "apply again in the next round"
Here's what they're not telling you:
Your deck didn't sell the vision.
Your product looks like an MVP that's 3 months from being real.
They're not betting on potential anymore. They're betting on things that look ready to dominate.
Design isn't the reason startups win.
But it's often the reason investors actually believe you can.
A polished deck, a product that looks finished, mockups that show you're serious about this - that's what moves you from "interesting idea" to "let's draft the term sheet."
You don't need perfect design.
You need design that makes them feel like you're already winning.
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