
John
382 posts

John
@Indiveri_
Founder, @joincreo // 16 years of recruitment experience // Former Director Talent @qolopayments , @mediamath , @meetwagmo // sharing recruiting insights, etc
Florida Katılım Temmuz 2025
309 Takip Edilen68 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet

Hi! Just a quick intro! Recently came back to using X, I’m founder of @getrookhq (launching soon) and a former head of talent & people for various startups. 17 years in recruitment now building a platform for fractional & solo recruiters. I also run a photography business!
English


Another day, another tech layoff. This has been fairly consistent for the past 6 years.
Official Layoff@LayoffAI
LAYOFF ALERT: PAYPAL 🚨 20% of workforce cut. 4,760 jobs. New CEO Enrique Lores: "becoming a technology company again." This is not Elon's PayPal anymore.
English

For every 800 connection requests I send:
45% accept, 35% reply to my DM, and 10 book in for a sales call.
95% of others on linkedIn;
- 800 requests
- 15% accept
- 10% reply
- 0-1 calls
And that’s being GENEROUS.
But if that’s you, I’m not making fun of it.
You're not alone…
And it’s because most people STILL treat LinkedIn DMs like cold email blasts.
What I’ve learned after booking 5-10+ calls per week consistently:
What you miss out in volume on Linkedin…
You make up in SPECIFICITY.
That means making every single message count using:
- Their bio
- Their posts
- Their about section
- Their location
Linkedin profiles have SO much detail that you can point out, get specfiic with, and then leverage for genuine connection.
The problem is...
Everyone downloads automation tools, imports lead lists, and sends generic scripts. But you only get 800 connection requests per month on LinkedIn. If you waste them on copy-paste messages, you're throwing away guaranteed conversations.
I've used this hyper specificity to book calls with 7-figure agency owners and SaaS founders who normally ignore their DMs.
The difference is 100% in the humanity.
Stop competing on volume.
Start competing on specificity.
PS
Want my FULL LinkedIn outbound appointment setting framework?
Inside:
1. The 5-message framework we use for openers
2. Our full sales navigator system for clean lead lists
3. How to find prospects WITHOUT sales navigator
4. Our FULL DM psychology spreadsheet (important)
5. 30 REAL conversations that booked calls in the DMs (study what worked)
6. The exact google sheet we use to track metrics / KPIs
Comment "SOP" and I'll DM it to you.
Btw...
It's the EXACT SOP I train my setters on to book 3-5 sales calls/week in the LinkedIn DMs.
(my setter literally booked 3 calls on my account yesterday alone w/ this. One with the HOG @ a multi-8 figure SaaS)

English



I’m not a swifty by any means, but I do admire her from a thought and business perspective. What she did to get the rights to her music back is admirable. And her thoughts energy and where it’s spent is spot on here.
Unless it makes sense for me, I’m not jumping on a quick call with someone that randomly reaches out.
I’m not going to argue back and forth with someone on social media that disagrees with my post. If you’re rude I’m just blocking.
As business owners, parents, caretakers etc - time is currency. Only invest in what gives you the better returns. x.com/mhp_guy/status…
English

When people ask me why I
- Relentlessly block people instead of engaging in “thoughtful discourse”
- Almost always refuse to just “hop on a call” with almost everyone
- Will never go “grab lunch” with someone I’m not STOKED about hanging with
I think of this TS quote.
You owe no energy or mind space to anyone that you aren’t actively trying to raise, love or serve.
Your time, energy and mind space is very finite.
English

Stripe is recruiting for a forward deployed ai accelerator. This person will work with around 20 marketers to help develop and adopt ai workflows. While I don’t think this is aimed at replacing all of them- more so making them adopt ai workflows to be more efficient- I’m sure it’ll eliminate some of the roles. I’m not sure why you need 20 marketers.


English
John retweetledi
John retweetledi

@heynavtoor DaVinci is amazing, there is zero reason people should continue paying for premier pro.
English

10 things I stopped paying for in 2026 because AI made them free.
Every single one used to cost real money. Bookmark this list — it will save you at least $2,000 this year.
1. ChatGPT Plus ($20/month)
Replaced with: Claude free + ChatGPT free + Perplexity. Stack all three. You get a stronger AI workflow than any single $20 plan.
Site → claude.ai
2. Adobe Photoshop ($23/month)
Replaced with: Photopea. A full Photoshop in your browser. Opens PSD files. Has ads, but $5/month removes them or just ignore them.
Site → photopea.com
3. Adobe Premiere Pro ($23/month)
Replaced with: DaVinci Resolve. The free version edited Dune and Oppenheimer. Hollywood-grade for $0.
Site → blackmagicdesign.com/products/davin…
4. Notion paid plan ($10/month)
Replaced with: AppFlowy. A Notion alternative where your data lives on your machine. Local-first. Open source.
Site → appflowy.io
5. Notion AI / Roam Research ($16/month)
Replaced with: Obsidian. Unlimited notes. Free for personal AND business use as of 2026. Local files you own forever.
Site → obsidian.md
6. Calendly ($15/month)
Replaced with: Cal. com. More features than Calendly. White-label. Free for individuals.
Site → cal.com
7. Zapier ($30/month)
Replaced with: n8n. 400+ integrations, native AI nodes, unlimited workflows when self-hosted on a $5 server.
Site → n8n.io
8. Midjourney ($30/month)
Replaced with: Fooocus. Three clicks from download to Midjourney-quality images on your own laptop.
Site → github.com/lllyasviel/Foo…
9. ElevenLabs ($22/month)
Replaced with: ElevenLabs free tier. 10,000 characters per month is enough for a podcast intro, narration, and short voiceovers. Most people never need to upgrade.
Site → elevenlabs.io
10. Cursor Pro ($20/month)
Replaced with: Cline + Claude free. An AI coding agent that lives in VS Code, with your own API key or free models.
Site → github.com/cline/cline
Here's the wildest part:
Add it up. $209 a month. $2,500 a year.
Gone. Replaced by free tools that took me one weekend to set up.
The richest skill in 2026 isn't using AI. It's knowing what to stop paying for.
Save this before you forget.
100% free. Forever.




English

@Indiveri_ It’s annoying when you can’t just use a product without having a “quick 15 min chat”. These days at least. As a founder, you should try out pageform.io - we are a data room platform where AI helps you build fundraising and sales narratives. No boor demo call needed 😁
English

@TylerJnstn many current jobs will go away
i think we will find a lot of new ones, though they may look very different
English

I honestly miss the Sam Altman that used to call out his peers for downplaying this risk.

Sam Altman@sama
i think a lot of people are going to be busier (and hopefully more fulfilled) than ever, and jobs doomerism is likely long-term wrong. though of course there will be disruption/significant transition as we switch to new jobs, the jobs of the future may look v different, etc.
English

User feedback is so important when building a product, and I’m truly thankful for the team of users testing @joincreohq
With their feedback, I shipped:
• Cleaner candidate + client profiles (better layout + jump nav)
• Delete candidates / archive companies
• “AI candidate sourcing” (clearer + actual search added)
• Notes fixed → Scratch Pad + expanded Call Notes
All of these updates made total sense, and sometimes when you’re just to close to the project you don’t see everything.
English










