Jacob Saltijeral

645 posts

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Jacob Saltijeral

Jacob Saltijeral

@JacobSalti

22, Living this thing we call Life. Psychology is the root of All | Finance | #Bitcoin | $MSTR | Livin Salti one day at a time.

Illinois, USA Katılım Kasım 2018
586 Takip Edilen600 Takipçiler
Jacob Saltijeral
Jacob Saltijeral@JacobSalti·
@ryQuant Good point. Aiming for retail investors but only big amounts of capital (institution like) will actually “benefit”
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Retail Ry 🏧🟧
Retail Ry 🏧🟧@ryQuant·
Daily Frequency of dividends may prove to be annoyingly too fast. Too many line items to verify. Every couple of months I log into my brokerage accounts. It’s nice to just see “okay March/April/May $STRC all came in, cool” in just 3 line items. Not ~60 line items.
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Wealth Squad Chris
Wealth Squad Chris@Chrissssjohnson·
I know it’s some rabbit hole junkies that follow me waiting for Situational Awareness and Renaissance Tech 13F’s to drop tomorrow 👀👀
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Jacob Saltijeral retweetledi
James Lavish
James Lavish@jameslavish·
Can I say something?
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Jeff Walton
Jeff Walton@PunterJeff·
Sat down with @coffeebreak_YT today on Bitcoin and Digital Credit. His edit will drop soon. Posting the full raw hour for anyone who wants the unfiltered version. Enjoy
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Remz
Remz@Remzztrades·
$WDC calls next week can probably 5x on Monday. Good lotto
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Dylan Oliva
Dylan Oliva@DylanOlivaGrows·
The opportunity Grant's describing is real. I do this right now for home service companies. I have 2x companies using this and saved them hundreds of hours of time. But heres what he's not telling you. You don't just bring three AI platforms into a company and collect a check. The AI doesn't respond correctly at first. Its not trained right. It says the wrong things. Every industry has edge cases and weird scenarios that no platform handles out of the box. A plumbing company and a roofing company sound similar until you actually sit inside both of them. The workflows are completely different. The customer conversations are completely different. And when the AI messes up it doesn't just look bad. It actually impacts the business. You have to call the client and explain why their AI just quoted a customer the wrong price on a 12,000 dollar job. You have to fix it. You have to make sure it doesn't happen again. And if it does you have to own that too. Thats the real work. Not the software. The tweaking. The training. Sitting in the building watching how the team actually works and adjusting the system until it fits. I personally fly to every client and onboard them in person because you cannot do this over a zoom call. The opportunity is real but its messier than he makes it sound. Its operational. And thats exactly why most people wont last in this space. If you actually want to see how this works I put together a full breakdown on how I build this for companies. What I included: 1.) What roles I replaced with AI and what I kept human. 2.) The exact agents I built and what each one handles. 3.) Where I messed up and what I had to rebuild. 4.) The cost breakdown of what I was paying people vs what I pay now. And how I onboard a new client from first call to fully live system. Comment "SAAS" and I'll send it to you.
The Iced Coffee Hour@TheICHpodcast

Grant Cardone reveals how to make $80,000/month with AI consulting👀 “I’d make $1,000,000 in year 1”

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Remz
Remz@Remzztrades·
Ok serious question for options traders, curious to hear your thoughts. At what point do you consider a trade a win? For me, once it clears 20%+, I consider that a W.
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Dylan Oliva
Dylan Oliva@DylanOlivaGrows·
I'm Dylan. Here's how I generated millions for home service businesses, saved them thousands of hours, and worked with brands doing over $100 million a year. Where it all started - 2022 - One day I was sitting in the library, finished my homework, and was watching YouTube on how to make money with marketing. Everyone needs it, would be a good skill to learn. Right after taking notes and writing it all down on a single sheet of paper it was time to execute. I built a website. Started asking around telling people about it. No clue what I was doing. Talked to a friend, he wanted to partner, we did. Got a roofing client. Did not know what we were doing and he eventually stopped paying us. That was when I realized I never want to underdeliver again. Always want to show value or you don't pay. I don't want to scam people. I want to make money honestly. So I dove deep into learning it all. Websites, SEO, ads, and google business profile. 2023 - Now that I was confident in my skill I was cold calling, trying to get clients. Got some through word of mouth. Was working with a music artist @YungLordFiness, a hair salon, a real estate guy, and a media guy who was referring me roofers. I started niching down into home services. Also probably in the best shape of my life here. Going to jujitsu twice a week and really counting my calories. 2024 - Helped generate over $5 Million for local businesses. Got an offer at @UBS. Accepted it. Thought I might learn something. Started a Pickleball club I started posting content on YouTube. Just sharing the things I learned over the years, and how I was getting results. 2025 - I started posting marketing content on Twitter, YouTube, and LinkedIn. Then I started the job @UBS. The agency was on the back burner but I was growing on Twitter and the community was great so I kept posting. Started a remote cleaning company. 30 days in, consistent leads, ranking top 3 on google. Quit @UBS 3 months in absolutely sucked. Joined a startup in the home services space on the founding team. Sold my marketing agency to a friend and went all in. We were working 8am to 11pm. Sometimes even later. Waking up even earlier. Traveling every week. Learning so much. Truly a great time, great people, smart people. I was working on home services companies some doing over $100 million a year. Implementing software for them. Helping build business cases to present to private equity groups. Constantly putting out fires, training AI agents and setting them up, managing and consulting customers. Working with the highest level home service companies. Trained for a half marathon. My plan initially was work there for 6 months and then do sales for 6 months. 2026 - I started posting on Twitter again. I was 4 months in, starting to build myself up again. Thinking about the transition to sales. Month 6 I left. Got an offer to work in sales at another startup. But I was thinking, I can do this. I know exactly what to do now. So I went all in! Today: Started Bloomview Growth. Client: added 628K in new revenue. No new hires. Response time went from 4 hours to under 5 minutes. 40 Google reviews to 180. Lead capture went from 34% to 58% on the same ad spend. Another client built an automated follow-up sequence. Closed 141K in 90 days. Built a Roofing AI Agent to find discrepancies in insurance supplements (filings), as well as a permit tracking agent to always stay up to date and file permits for jobs. Now I work on businesses end to end, from when a lead comes in all the way to when you're doing the job and forever after. If you made it this far going to put my 5 step framework on how I audit businesses in this thread.
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Remz
Remz@Remzztrades·
If you had to buy calls on any of the remaining Mag 7 into earnings, who would it be? Choose one. $AAPL $MSFT $GOOGL $AMZN $NVDA $META
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Remz
Remz@Remzztrades·
If you guys enjoy my tweets drop a like so I know :) Congrats to all! 💚
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Preston Pysh
Preston Pysh@PrestonPysh·
A personal note.  After years of public discussion/work: the podcast, social media, venture capital, everything — I'm stepping back to focus on my family. My kids are growing fast.  My wife deserves the best of me.  To everyone who listened, read, grew, and built alongside me — thank you. What a blessing you all have been!
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Grant Cardone
Grant Cardone@GrantCardone·
Money doesn’t buy happiness, but…. (Finish what I’m thinking for $500….)
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Dylan Oliva
Dylan Oliva@DylanOlivaGrows·
If I created a home service business tomorrow and had $1000, here's exactly what I would do: First, open a Google Drive, use excel as your CRM. Everything lives here. Offer, SOPs, numbers, leads, notes. One place. Then get the offer tight. FREE What am I selling, who am I selling to, how am I getting it in front of them. Nail that before you do anything else. Google Business Profile next. FREE Name = service + city, matching what people actually search. Not your LLC. Not your logo name. The search term. Then get to 10 reviews by any means necessary. FREE DoorDash driver maybe $5-$10, local friends, past customers, whatever. Get off zero fast. GBP barely ranks anything under 10. Post on the profile once a day. Every day. Most owners never do this and it's free distribution. Answer the phone 24/7. Every missed call is a dead lead. Can't do it yourself, forward it or hire a service. Build citations everywhere. Yelp, Bing Places, every directory that'll take you. Same name, address, phone across all of them. I would now get an LLC $200 after I do work and have money to pay for it. Now the systems. I want every lead handled without me touching it. Go to Claude. Spec the whole thing out first. Tight, detailed, pressure-tested. Verify the spec before you build a single line of code. Then open Claude Code. Vercel for the frontend, Supabase for the backend. Build the backend first. Wire it into the frontend after. Ask Claude questions when you're stuck. Don't blindly trust the output. Push back on it. End result: an automated responder that talks to leads and books calls for me. 24/7. No drops. Only after leads are flowing organically do I turn on LSA ads. $500/mo Not before. You don't pay for traffic you can't handle. Now I've got data. Time for the 5 questions that actually matter: Are people finding me? If yes, can I get it cheaper? When a lead comes in, are we capturing it? Is the customer experience clean? Where's the friction? Old customers in the database, how are we using them? Staying in touch? Getting repeat work? Conversion, do leads actually buy? Avg ticket, can we raise prices, lose a few customers, still make more money? Retention and reviews. Do customers come back? Are we pushing the good ones and killing the bad ones at the source? Then layer in website conversion rate, landing pages for specific services or cities, qualifying leads before the call. You can use Claude design! Saving Money is making money. Most owners never make it past step 3. Because the biggest constraint is time you want to move fast but all this is work being on the job and trying to still get everything else done. Comment "book" and follow, I'll send over some freebies to fix your bottlenecks.
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Jacob Saltijeral
Jacob Saltijeral@JacobSalti·
@Codie_Sanchez It’s wild because every time I apply anywhere everyone always asks “if you chose X degree, why are you applying in Y field”
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Codie Sanchez
Codie Sanchez@Codie_Sanchez·
the biggest mistake you can make when you graduate... is think your major has anything to do with your career. it won't.
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Jordan Ross
Jordan Ross@jordan_ross_8F·
My clients have added over $500M in combined annual revenue. Every single one that's falling behind now has the same problem. Theyre waiting too long to move on AI. Most agency owners think the tools are the hard part. They're not. Here's what I see inside agencies right now: → Reporting eating 10+ hours per client per month with nothing automated → Strategists doing work that should be running on infrastructure → Competitors responding to RFPs in hours while they take days → AI-native agencies being funded right now to take their clients → Revenue per employee flatlined while margins shrink We've invested over 50,000 hours building AI systems for marketing agencies. I put everything we've learned into a 33-page field guide to give you the basics you need to start playing the AI game. Inside the PDF: → The plain-English glossary — speak the language before you get sold the wrong thing → What AI-equipped agencies are actually outputting vs. traditional ones → A role-by-role playbook — IC, founder, or exec → The hiring filter — how to stop bringing on people who will slow your adoption → The security threats nobody is warning agencies about → How to use open source the right way → How to use Claude Cowork → And more The window is open but it's closing fast. Comment "AI" & I'll send it directly. (must be following for auto DM to send)
Josh Kale@JoshKale

This is big... Anthropic just announced a model so powerful they won't release it to the public out of fear over the damage it will cause 😨 Claude Mythos Preview found thousands of zero-day exploits in every major operating system and web browser... The numbers are hard to believe: > $50 to find a 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD, one of the most security-hardened operating systems ever built > Under $1,000 to find AND build a fully working remote code execution exploit on FreeBSD that grants unauthenticated root access from anywhere on the internet > Under $2,000 to chain together multiple Linux kernel vulnerabilities into a complete privilege escalation exploit For context: these are the kinds of findings that previously required elite security researchers working for weeks. Anthropic engineers with no formal security training asked Mythos to find exploits overnight. They woke up to working code the next morning. The results were so impressive Anthropic assembled Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, NVIDIA, and seven other organizations into Project Glasswing: A $100M defensive coalition. They're not releasing this model publicly. Instead, they're racing to patch the world's infrastructure before models like this proliferate.

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Jordan Ross
Jordan Ross@jordan_ross_8F·
I found the easiest way for a marketing agency to add $1M in passive revenue. It's a $297/month product that 99.9% of agencies aren't selling yet. Here's the opportunity most agency owners are walking past every single day: 33 million businesses in the US with a physical storefront. Every single one misses calls every day. They know it. They hate it. And nobody has offered them a real solution. That's the opportunity. Agencies have been selling websites for decades and collecting hosting fees forever. They've been building CRMs on GoHighLevel and collecting the markup in perpetuity. Passive. Recurring. Zero maintenance after setup. AI voice agents are the next version of this. Here's exactly how I'd build it: Step 1 — Scrape a list of 1,000 local businesses with storefronts Surgeons, med spas, law firms. Any high(er) ticket service a phone number and hours. Step 2 — Run an automated after-hours call campaign Call every number after 6pm. No answer? That's your proof of concept. You just documented a missed call in real time. Step 3 — Trigger an automated email the same night "I called your office tonight. Nobody answered." Body: You're missing customers right now. An AI receptionist answers every call, books appointments, and handles FAQs 24/7 — for less than a part-time employee's lunch budget. Can I install it for you? Step 4 — Install it for $99 the first month. $297/month after that. Your cost to run it: $30–50/month. Margin is immediate from month two. Churn is almost zero. A business that relies on AI to answer their phones doesn't cancel. Step 5 — Upsell Once youre in and have the realtionship, expand: Paid ads → SEO/GEO → GBP The playbook isn't complicated. The product sells itself. The math is insane at scale. I mapped out the full system — tech stack, the after-hours call sequence, the email follow-up automation, onboarding flow, and pricing model so any agency can implement this before their competitors even know its a strategy. Comment "voice" and I'll send it over.
How To AI@HowToAI_

🚨 BREAKING: NVIDIA just removed the biggest friction point in Voice AI They open-sourced PersonaPlex 7B, a real-time conversational model. It listens and speaks simultaneously to handle natural interruptions and overlaps. 100% Open Source.

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Codie Sanchez
Codie Sanchez@Codie_Sanchez·
All roads lead back to... - Finding a biz that's already profitable - Buying it from an owner who's tired of running it - Using seller financing so you're not writing a giant check - Plugging in AI + a great operator - Letting the cash flow pay down the deal - Rolling the distributions into the next one - Repeating until your businesses pay for your life
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Luke Pierce
Luke Pierce@lukepierceops·
I mapped every AI automation opportunity across 25 industries. 10-15 pain points each. With the exact positioning, pricing range, and who to sell to. This took me 4 years and 80+ client engagements to figure out. A lot of AI agencies pick a niche and pray. They don't know the actual pain points. They don't know who the buyer is. They don't know what these companies are already paying for broken solutions. They don't know what the realistic project size is. So they end up competing on price for generic "AI automation" gigs. I've worked with marketing agencies, recruiting firms, e-commerce brands, law firms, real estate companies, healthcare practices, financial services, SaaS companies, manufacturing, construction, logistics, and more. Every single one has 10-15 processes that are bleeding money because they're still done manually. Here's what the guide covers for each industry: → The top 10-15 automation pain points (ranked by ROI) → Who the actual buyer is (CEO, COO, ops manager, etc.) → What they're currently paying for manual labor or broken SaaS → Realistic project pricing ($5K-$60K+ depending on scope) → The discovery questions that unlock the deal → How to position yourself as the expert even if you've never worked in that industry → Red flags to avoid (industries and company sizes that aren't worth it) 25 industries and 300+ specific automation opportunities. This is the cheat code for picking your niche and knowing exactly what to sell before you ever get on a call. Like + RT + reply "NICHE" and I'll send you the full guide (Must be following so I can DM)
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