Arunima

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Arunima

Arunima

@HeyArunima

💛 Marketing ✨ Helping your SaaS pass the FIVE MINUTE TEST and get customers to click every button till PAY.

if you're a SaaS founder Katılım Ekim 2016
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Arunima
Arunima@HeyArunima·
I've audited about 50 SaaS till now. they were broke bec they failed at - "AI" slop landing page - onboarding that had 32 ques - trial that was boring they lost me in the first 5 minutes these first 5 MINUTES, if they don't SLAP you've lost your customer forever your email drip campaign your free lead magnets your discounts won't bring them back they'll close your app and never come back again and that's what i'll help you fix the first 5 minutes of your SaaS so the 500 hours of your hard work in your features in your content in your ads They work. If you want to do this for your SaaS yourself Check out this FREE eBook - arunima.gumroad.com/l/five-minute-… And better yet, if you want to get it done by me - startupdifferentials.com
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George Ten
George Ten@GrammarHippy·
A new group of the hobby cohort is open. It’s a cohort where we use AI to build a cash-flowing business in niches with almost no competition. From scratch. No audience. No authority. Pure cold traffic. The cohort doesn’t end until you get sales PROFITABLY. Lemme know if you want more deets.
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LUI
LUI@iamluisolivas02·
when my 4-year-old’s daycare held a “lunch with mom” event, every single mom showed up. we all have other jobs, which is why our kids are in daycare. but we took off work or found a way to get there in the middle of the day. now, they’re doing an event for the dads … at 6:30 in the evening. it’s a small example, but the double standards are real.
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Arunima
Arunima@HeyArunima·
everyone out there wants you to write using the best chatgpt prompt you know what i wanna do? have a nice cohort where we just write what we want to, soulfully. No ai. No hooks. No templates. Ah, the dream.
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Arunima
Arunima@HeyArunima·
"The club isn't the best place to find a lover so the BAR ⚖️ is where I go" Hello Husband :P @_shrayanshsingh
Arunima tweet mediaArunima tweet media
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Abhishek Singh
Abhishek Singh@0xlelouch_·
I know couples like this too. And I get why people say “it backfires”, because in India we equate meaning with kids by default. But I have also seen the other side. A child does not automatically give you purpose. Plenty of parents are still lonely, still bored, still drifting… just with higher EMIs and more stress. And plenty of childfree couples build insanely meaningful lives, because they actually choose purpose instead of inheriting it. The real problem is not “no kids”. The real problem is “no mission”. If your life has no responsibility, you will default to consumption. Not because you are a bad person, but because society literally trained you like that. Study. Job. Marriage. Buy stuff. Take trips. Repeat. They sold us the dream that comfort = success, and then act surprised when comfort turns into numbness. You can create responsibility on purpose. Raise something other than a child: Build a company. Mentor juniors. Adopt animals. Take care of parents. Fund a school. Teach kids for free on weekends. Train for a marathon. Write a book. Create art. Build a community. Start a local club. Volunteer in a cause where you cannot quit when motivation dies. Legacy is not just DNA. Legacy is what still exists because you existed. And about old age. Kids are not a guaranteed retirement plan anymore. People move abroad. They get busy. Relationships get messy. Health happens. Life happens. If you want companionship at 60, you have to invest in humans today, not just markets. Friends. Family. Community. Students. People you helped when they needed it. The scary part is not being childfree. The scary part is thinking “easy life” will stay satisfying forever. Pick a bigger impact. Make yourself useful. Build something that demands you show up even when you do not feel like it. That is what keeps you sharp, grounded, and alive.
Sindhu Biswal@sindhubiswal

I know a 35-year-old married couple in India. No kids by choice. Household income is strong. House almost paid off. Good investments. Foreign trips every year. Comfortable life. Looks sorted from the outside. But in the long run, this choice usually backfires. In India, money without family responsibility mostly turns into consumption. Bigger cars. Better phones. Another vacation to the same three places with different hotel names. At some point, experiences stop feeling new. Kids aren’t just an expense here. They’re continuity. Legacy. A reason to stay sharp, relevant, grounded. Ask older Indians what gave their life meaning. Almost none will talk about gadgets or trips. They talk about their children, the sacrifices, the chaos, the pride. Comfort is addictive in your 30s. Loneliness is brutal in your 60s. Choosing ease over building something bigger feels smart today.

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Brian Moran
Brian Moran@realbrianmoran·
This post is completely right. At 18 years old - 22 years old - All I cared about was playing baseball - Did the bare minimum in school - Hated every job I ever had - Sold TVs out of my dorm room for beer money - Driving a beater station wagon my parents gave me - Had to borrow money from my dad for my wife's engagement ring At 22 years old: - Graduated, got a job at a paper shredding factory - $15/hour covered in dust - Miserable but it paid well for 2008 At 23 years old: - Got lucky, landed a government contractor job making $60k/year - Hated every second of it and did the bare minimum to not get fired - Got married - Living in a basement apartment - Driving a piece of crap 93 Jeep Wrangler - Wife worked nights, I worked days - We saw each other maybe an hour a day - Every waking moment I was trying to find a way out At 24 years old: - Studied online business relentlessly for a year - Made my first sale - By the end of the year I was doing $80k/month - Didn't quit my job because I was too scared it wouldn't last At 25 years old: - Work found out about my side business - Fired on the spot - Full-time entrepreneur doing $100k/month - Hired my brother right out of college At 26-28 years old: - $100-150k/month for a few years and just stashed away my money - Bought our first house - Finally got a new car - No kids yet so we took 6-8 trips a year - Hawaii, Europe, Caribbean, skiing out west - Should have saved more but I don't regret a thing At 29 years old: - Got bored with my own business - Had the idea for SamCart - Dumped $1M of my savings into it At 30-38 years old: - Built SamCart from nothing to $300M+ valuation - Raised $100M in funding - Hired over 100 employees - Got stuck at $5M for 3 years until I fired myself as CEO - Never missed one of my kids' baseball games At 39 years old: - Building toward a $1B exit in public - Still showing up like it's day one - Prioritizing God, family, and business. In that order.
blue@bluewmist

i hate how social media makes us forget that life has stages. it’s normal to be broke, to have broke friends or partners and yes it’s even normal to be unemployed at times. these are phases we all go through. some people are lucky enough to find good jobs at a young age and afford a certain lifestyle. others take longer and that’s perfectly okay. we need to stop comparing ourselves and start accepting our journey. i just want all of us to be at peace with where we are in life while still working and striving for better.

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Arunima
Arunima@HeyArunima·
Hum bahut sochte hain ki log kya kahenge Log kya kahenge agar humne ye kapde pehne Log kya kahenge agar ye cheez khareedi Log kya kahenge agar ye khana khilaya Par kya unn logo ne socha ki HUM KYA KAHENGE!! Hum kya kahenge jab hume pata lagega ki wo hamare kapdo pe tippani karre Hum kya kahenge jab hume pata lagega ki wo hamari mehnat ki kamayi se lai cheez ki burai kar rahe Hum kya kahenge, hume kaisa lagega, jab hume pata lagega ki wo ann me kami nikal rahe Toh dekhiye "Log kya kahenge" tabhi sochiye agar aap confident hain ki wo bhi soch rahe hain ki hum kya kahenge agar unhe hamare kehne pe fark nahi pad raha, toh hume kyu padna chahiye! :)
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blue
blue@bluewmist·
you must learn to enjoy life without needing an audience to see that you are enjoying life.
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Shubh
Shubh@kadaipaneeeer·
In 2006, my brother was doing his PhD. Topic: Bovine AIDS. Institute: a university in Mathura. Coursework: HSADL, Bhopal, India’s top animal disease lab. Then bird flu happened. Suddenly, HSADL became the lab. And suddenly, my brother was told to drop 1.5 years of research and switch topics. Not because science demanded it. Because the system did. The deal was simple: Change your topic, or lose your stipend. He called me and said, “I love my research. I don’t want to work on what babus want.” For once, I didn’t give gyaan. I gave him an exit. “Apply outside India. Let’s see if anyone values your work.” He applied to 8 universities. 7 in Australia, 1 in Europe. Within hours, 7 offers came back. 5 with full scholarships and stipends. The 8th replied three days later. The professor was at a conference. That’s it. That was the delay. Why? Because his CV was ridiculously good: •17 international publications •1 book •54 national publications •103 reviews He went to Europe. Finished his PhD. Got a Post-Doc in Texas. Applied for a Green Card. Got it in 2 months. Citizenship the moment he was eligible. Still, he wanted to come back. Because India is home & hope dies slowly. In 2011, he applied for a professor’s job at JNKVV, Jabalpur. Salary: ₹40,000/month. They asked for hard copies of all publications. I still remember packing a full carton of his papers and couriering it. Then, on July 8, we got a letter dated July 6. Interview: July 10. In person. Bring: •NOC from his current university •Character certificate •Hard copies again Because “what if interviewers want to see?” I called them. “How does someone fly from Europe in two days?” Answer: “Interviews are till 12th. He must come.” That was the moment we stopped trying. India wasn’t rejecting him. India was humiliating him. Later, when he sent his HSADL work to Elsevier, the journal did a routine verification. HSADL replied saying: •He left without due process •His stipend wasn’t settled •His address was false We sent: •No Dues Certificate •Formal relieving letter •Proof that the address was the same as his passport •Proof that our parents still live there Didn’t matter. Publication rejected. That’s the system. We happily talk about reservations. But we quietly harass competence. And before someone says, “Things have changed under Modi” no, they haven’t. I tried in 2023. Same hard copies. Same physical interviews. I now work as a visiting professor with an IIT. Online. My reimbursement request has been pending since August 2023. The professor in charge says, “I get 100 mails a day. I don’t check all.” Fair enough. This country doesn’t lack talent. It lacks respect for it. And the smartest people don’t leave India for money. They leave to save their dignity
Shubh@kadaipaneeeer

Last night I spoke to a friend who left India years ago. We reconnected recently. She studied at BITS, got a scholarship for her master’s in Germany, and later on the German government funded her research on animal behaviour using computer science. Today, she has a full-time job there with a good package. Cool. Happy for her. But this isn’t a flex. This is a comparison. In countries like Germany, research funding means funding actual research. You show up with a problem, data, methodology and a use case. The government backs you. Because they understand that science doesn’t need nationalism, it needs money and patience. Now cut to India. The Madhya Pradesh government recently spent ₹3.5 crore on “cancer cure research” using cow dung and cow urine. ₹3.5 crore. Tax payer public money. In India, researchers struggle to get basic grants. Fellowships are delayed for months. Professors themselves discourage students from pursuing research because they know the system will not support them. If you want to do serious work, you are often told one thing very clearly: arrange your own funding. Another friend, a classmate till 10th, went to IIT Dhanbad. Did robotics and AI. Got an internship. Finished graduation. Immediately got a job offer from Texas. Moved there. It’s been three years. Never came back. Not because India didn’t need him. Because India didn’t deserve him. This is the pattern • Indian PhDs go abroad because fellowships here get delayed like train schedules. • Top STEM graduates leave because research grants in India are buried under bureaucracy and political interference. • Professors tell students not to pursue research because “government se funding nahi aayega.” • Deep-tech startups register outside India because innovation here dies in paperwork. • Indian-origin scientists lead projects at NASA, Google DeepMind after leaving Indian institutions. And then we do this funny thing on internet. We clap. We tweet “proud Indian 🇮🇳”. After pushing them out. Countries like Germany, the US, and France are aggressively hiring Indian minds. Not out of kindness. Because they know talent + funding = progress of their nation. India, meanwhile, is busy deciding whether science needs evidence or belief. Studying animal behaviour using PyTorch and OpenCV sounds “useless” here. But finding a cancer cure in cow dung sounds “visionary”. That’s not cultural pride. That’s intellectual bankruptcy. The scary part isn’t brain drain. The scary part is that no one in power seems embarrassed by it. We’re not losing talent accidentally. We’re outsourcing our future, ₹3.5 crore at a time. The real concern is not that India is losing talent. The real concern is that there is no serious urgency to stop it & without that urgency, slogans will continue to replace solutions while the future quietly moves elsewhere 🙏🏻

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Arunima
Arunima@HeyArunima·
"All or nothing mindset" is a destroyer I'll fix everything, w a perfect recipe Or I won't touch it because it can't be fixed a certain way Result - You end up fixing nothing
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