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@LoadedLeads

shut up and scale

Katılım Mart 2022
349 Takip Edilen4.8K Takipçiler
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B@LoadedLeads·
Opportunity of a lifetime for a tiktok shop demon: - We’re hiring a creative strategist to lead our inhouse ugc department. Monthly retainer + bonuses with potential for profit share as part of a growing 9 figure ecom team. DM if you’re ready to get out the affiliate marketing trenches
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Alex Cooper
Alex Cooper@alexgoughcooper·
Introducing Parker: The world's first AI Creative Director. 100+ brands like Grüns, Lume and Legends use us already. RT + Comment "Parker" and I'll send you 100+ AI prompt engineers for hire.
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Lorenzo | Meta Ads & Performance Creatives 📈
Hooks are the 80/20 of ANY ad. But a TON of brands get it completely wrong. After generating $100M+ on Meta ads, I built a system for creating and testing hooks that actually stop the scroll. And now, for the next 48 hours I’m giving it away: ✔ Our 25+ page guide I give away internally to my team ✔ 50+ stealth-style hook examples used in 7–8 fig ad accounts ✔ A swipe file of 500+ viral hooks & headlines that stop the scroll Want it? Like + Comment: “HOOK” and I’ll sent it over. (Must be following)
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Shalev
Shalev@shalevhvs·
Everyone is copying this AI character. And 99% of them are failing. I know because I’m the one behind it. I turned this single character into a viral empire: 👁️400M+ Organic Views 💰$300k Profit (90 Days) 👥5M Followers Everyone is trying to copy the "look" but failing to copy the brain. I'm finally revealing the exact system behind the fame. Want the free guide? 1. Follow me (so I can DM you. 2. Retweet and comment ‘AI’ below I’ll send it over instantly 👇🏼
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B@LoadedLeads·
@Camicees Clone
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Camilo Castañeda | Ad Creatives for Ecom
I just copied a winning ad in French and cloned it in English with AI. This took 30 minutes and looks pristine. I made a full guide on this reply "clone" and I'll DM it.
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Demirdjian Twins
Demirdjian Twins@demirdjiantwins·
We replaced a $221K/year UGC team with this Nano Banana Ad factory. Now this brand is running 900+ super realistic AI ads on Facebook and Tiktok And posts 20 new UGC Videos per day What agencies charge $8K-15K for (20 UGC videos, 3-week turnaround) Now takes 47 seconds. Unlimited creators. Most brands are stuck in the UGC nightmare: → Paying $15K+ monthly for inconsistent creators → Waiting 2-3 weeks for basic testimonial videos → Getting 5-8 generic videos max per campaign → Creators ghosting mid-production This system obliterates that completely. Upload your product → AI generates 900+ UGC variations → ready-to-launch video ads. Not mockups. Real scroll-stopping content. Built after watching brands burn $200K+ on creator networks that deliver recycled testimonials. The efficiency gains? Ridiculous: → 20x UGC production velocity → 97% cost reduction vs agencies → Unlimited video variations → Zero creator dependencies ever again How it works: 1️⃣ AI Avatar Generation Engine - Creates 15+ authentic spokespeople in seconds 2️⃣ Script Intelligence System - Maps product benefits to testimonial angles automatically 3️⃣ UGC Production Stack - Generates lifestyle demos, unboxings, testimonials instantly 4️⃣ Platform Optimization - Auto-formats for TikTok/FB/Instagram algorithms Deployed across 200+ brands generating $50M+ tracked revenue. 47-second production time per video. Complete UGC independence. Want to deploy this inside your brand? 1️⃣ Follow me 2️⃣ Comment "FACTORY" below and REPOST this post (I'll DM you the complete system once you follow me)
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Alex Fedotoff
Alex Fedotoff@FedotOff90·
Just created a killer swipe file of 152 BLACK FRIDAY ADS that are printing on Facebook rn (7-8+ figs). This swipe has offer images, direct response image and much more. In over 12 of the best ecommerce niches! If you want the swipe for free, comment "FRIDAY" and I'll send it to you.
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B@LoadedLeads·
@dennishegstad Creative + offer issue if you can’t be profitable under 100 AOV
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dennis hegstad
dennis hegstad@dennishegstad·
Are the days of first purchase profitability via Meta ads over unless you have a $100+ AOV ?
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B@LoadedLeads·
@lucawashenko Holy skill issue these corporate marketers are a lost cause
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Luca
Luca@lucawashenko·
this is unfortunately a skill issue i can name 30+ founders that started with nowhere NEAR the amount of money and resources a16z gives and they still scaled to $1M/month marketing will always get harder the only solution is just to be better
andrew chen@andrewchen

New essay: Every marketing channel sucks right now (full thing on my newsletter, just subscribe via link in bio) These days I’m spending a lot of my time with very early stage startups (yes, as part of the program at a16z to invest up to $1M into each, called a16z speedrun -- speedrun.a16z.com) and as part of this, I spend a lot of time talking about launch and marketing strategy for new products. The options for marketing pretty grim right now. Here are my complaints: - SEO: Takes too long, you’re competing against listicles (and Reddit threads), Google might screw you over at any moment, maybe AI one boxing will kill your traffic next year anyway :( - Influencer marketing: Get a big spike of traffic but none of it converts, the spike goes away after a few days, big creators are too expensive and a slew of small creators need to be cobbled together, lots of babysitting :( - PR/comms: Doesn’t actually generate signups, doesn’t scale and not repeatable, expensive retainers for PR experts to grab coffee with journalists, your competitors will get the same article next month, and press is as likely to attack you as to cover you :( - Email marketing: hope you like spam folders, building a good list takes forever, open rate rates are <30% and CTRs are <5% so hope you weren’t expecting a lot of clicks - Viral loops: doh you need an actually great product, all the contacts spamming techniques no longer work (neither email nor SMS!), your UX will be ruined by aggressive popups and onboarding schemes, and it’s nearly impossible to get viral factor >1 - Referral/affiliate/etc: be ready for a crazy amount of fraud, it’s just as expensive as paid marketing (though people fool themselves into thinking it’s not paid), and surprisingly most people don’t care and will get fatigued quickly! :( - Big launch on social: it can only happen once, you’ll have to spam all your friends to share and over time they might come to resent you, the algo is always working against you, and it only lasts for a few hours :( I could keep going… but you get the picture! Unfortunately this is the state of growth marketing. A lot of channels are not working, or are slow, expensive, or one-time only. This is the natural end state for things, and maybe we’re in a bit of a lull due to the technology super cycle as we’re 15+ years into the mobile wave, we’ve had various kinds of paid ads for 20+ years, and so on. All of these aforementioned marketing channels are now fully mature. The Law of Shitty Clickthroughs, Redux This is the logical ecosystem-wide conclusion for the concept I wrote about many years back, The Law of Shitty Clickthoughs which inspired by the efficient market hypothesis. It said the following: "Over time, all marketing strategies result in shitty clickthrough rates." I encourage you to read the full essay if you haven’t, but the tldr; is that when marketing channels work, everyone jumps in on them, and they start to decay like crazy. Why do they decay? Because customers stop responding over time — they start ignoring things as the novelty wears off. The ROI also goes down, as all the intermediaries that charge you for access to their audiences jack up prices. The super slick self-serve, automated auction model for paid marketing offers many pros and cons, first that it lets you aggregate much larger audiences with simple tools, but by making it easier, of course you end up with a ton of competition that then drives up CAC. In other words, as a marketing channel scales and ages over time — and yes, we’ve had SEO as a concept for 25+ years now — consumer engagement goes down, costs go up, competition goes up, ROI drops like crazy. Big channels versus Little channels All the aforementioned marketing channels are what I describe as “Big Channels.” They have scale, can be moved using $ (or labor, which costs $). And if you’re a big successful company, you might be fine because you have a (hopefully) strong brand, you get a bunch of organic traffic from word of mouth, you (hopefully) have a successful product that can cross-sell into new products, etc. You can have badly performing Big Channels because it’s all blended into a longer LTV recovery period, more organic, and all the other advantages that successful companies have. But let’s talk startups, who have none of these positive dynamics? I want to lay out a few thoughts: Don’t focus on Big Channels, focus on Little Channels. first, you should just know that all the aforementioned big, mature channels will suck for you. These channels have mostly all been bid up by bigger companies, and they are mostly stale to consumers, and you don’t have the same LTV and financial strength as an established product. Instead, a new startup has to be asymmetrical — what you can do that they can’t? The natural solution points towards Little Channels, which are all the smaller marketing strategies that are tried in the early days and abandoned over time. Don’t worry about scaling. Let’s say you have a new product with only 100 active users. If your marketing campaign gets you +500 actives, you’re ecstatic. Gain a few hundred users inside an established company, and you should clean up your resume. Thus, little channels can work: Running mini events with cool speakers, organizing a Facebook group, going after a single college/company/town, emailing your ex-colleagues/friends to try a new thing — these can all help in the early days. You won’t have the competition, the response rates will be higher since you’re doing it all by hand, and you can always scale over time by moving onto the next channel. Novelty is in your favor. There are only so many ways to sell a big established product to customers. The “wow” moments have all been used, the value prop is already understood. The response rate on marketing declines as a result. But if you’re a new, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed product on the market, and you have a “wow” product that presents well in a hype video, then you can get a nice big spike when you launch. And maybe even a few more smaller ones over time. One-time is fine, repeatability is what you do later. A lot of marketing tactics that work in the early days only work once — like a social media launch — but that’s OK. If you can prove that a few unscalable tactics work, and it helps you gain momentum via funding/hiring/otherwise, then over time you’ll have more time to try additional strategies. Your product is brand new, so your marketing can be brand new as well. When you build a new product, it’s always smart to take advantage of the new tech wave, so that you can create something different than what’s existed before. You want to be building a mobile app in 2010, not a website, and you want to be building in AI now. But in the same way, you can use these new technologies on the marketing side too. What does AI allow you to do in marketing that previously couldn’t happen? Whether it’s rapidly creating personalized creative, or generating concepts faster, or creating an interactive bot — what can you do different than no one is doing, using the new tech? Take risks with your brand. You can attract people with your brand by being polarizing. Say “this product is not for you, it’s for these other cooler people.” Or hit competitors directly in the face, in your marketing. Be aggressive. These are things that long-term employees of the world’s trustworthy brands can’t do, because they are being protective, and managing the downside. You need to do everything you can to stand out, because being ignored is the worst outcome for any marketing tactic. The point is — yes, today’s marketing channels sucks, but that has everything to do with the level of competition and the rate of customer fatigue. So go innovate! Try reaching people in new ways, say novel things to people they haven’t yet heard, and if you have to trade off anything, just trade off scalability. (You can deal with that later once your product is successful even at a small scale) Product is (unfortunately) King So I have bad news: Your product actually has to be very good. I wish I lived in a world where you could have amazing marketing and growth strategies, have a shitty product, and you would win. Then marketers would run tech, and they do not. It’s the people visionaries that create the products that run tech, and that’s a good thing! The reason is that even if you do a ton of work to acquire a bunch of users, it won’t matter if they leak out of the DAU number. I’ve come to think of great marketing strategy as a multiplier effect on your inherent product quality. If you have a great product, you will multiply that into greatness. If you have a shitty product, you will multiply that into… well, you get it. I think we’re seeing this in the AI wave at the moment. You have great, highly novel products and when one startup makes a hype video, it just goes viral. They don’t know anything about funnels, A/B testing, CAC, etc. The product is just killer, and the output is highly marketable, and as a result social media really works well for them. A year from now, I think the novelty value will have faded a bit — we aren’t as impressed by the output of image generation models compared to when they first came out. If the novelty fades, as I predict, then in a few years we’ll need to really figure out how to market these products. (Sorry AI researchers, you’re going to have to learn marketing and sales!) Every marketing channel sucks, but it’s going to be OK This essay was not meant to be depressing, but rather to just call out the idea what we can all see — that most of the channels we work with are decades old, that the performance is teetering on an edge. Just as products are innovating by adopting new tech — AI, XR, web3, and so on — we in the marketing field need to innovate as well, by asking ourselves, where can I do something new with XYZ new tech? And it’s very clear that we should not copy incumbent products. They have too many features — try something smaller and more targeted. But the same is true in marketing. Don’t copy the established products and try to execute in Big Channels — instead, think asymmetrically. What can you do that they can’t, and going with small channels is always a great place to start.

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Mark
Mark@markbuildsbrand·
I honestly believe one of the best ways to find winning hooks for your ads is to look at the top performing ORGANIC posts around your niche. But I’m lazy. So I created an AI process for doing this for you. Comment “Hooks” for the link 👇 (must be following)
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Jeddi
Jeddi@antinertia·
we reached $5M ARR with a team of 5 what's arcads.ai secret? >AI agents everywhere here are the top agents we use every day to scale with such a lean team
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B@LoadedLeads·
@syn_nxs I can see private offers becoming a thing in the future
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B@LoadedLeads·
@iamsebetancur Watch holds its value/appreciates depending on what you buy. Also great conversation starter
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Sebastian Betancur
Sebastian Betancur@iamsebetancur·
I will never understand people who drop $100k on a birkin or a watch A car? Sure I get it because it’s an experience A jet? Of course it’s basically time travel But a dumb fucking watch or bag? You’re out of your mind Guarantee you wouldn’t even consider that if nobody knew the brand
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B@LoadedLeads·
@dtc_alchemist Oddly enough my best creatives were spawned from the aether 🤣
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Rizq Irfandi
Rizq Irfandi@dtc_alchemist·
You can be a “genius” and try to spawn ad creatives from the aether Or you can be a Chad and listen to what your customers say and then replicate that in your ad scripts your choice.
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B@LoadedLeads·
@dasilvashadow Elite gamers make the best entrepreneurs can confirm
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B@LoadedLeads·
@syn_nxs His pinned post is a $179 day 😭
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Paul Niklas
Paul Niklas@PaulNiklas8·
URGENT Wise just shut all our business accounts for no reason across all corps with quite a bit of mullah in there. Anyone have an idea of what we can do here?
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B@LoadedLeads·
@runtraffic Appreciate you 💪🏻
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B@LoadedLeads·
@PaulNiklas8 The questions on his funnel made me chuckle
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