Emily McIntyre

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Emily McIntyre

Emily McIntyre

@McIntyreWrites

Serial Entrepreneur

Kansas City Katılım Temmuz 2012
481 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
Sherry Jiang
Sherry Jiang@SherryYanJiang·
that's EXACTLY why we build peek.money different than dashboard apps like monarch monarch is for SF quantified-self power users - assuming you’ve got spare executive function to parse charts and tweak knobs. but most people don’t. they’re overwhelmed, distracted, and emotional. peek.money is a behavioral engine. nudges, habits, agentic flows. not just showing you numbers -helping you act with a messy, real-life brain.
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Nikita Bier
Nikita Bier@nikitabier·
Your surroundings will shape what you think is good product design vs. what actually is usable. When you’re building software in San Francisco: Surrounded by sober Ivy League engineers who go to sleep at 8pm and have a perfectly balanced diet (i.e., human computers) What America actually is: • 23% of Americans have some form of mental illness • 20% of Americans have more than 6 drinks per day It’s actually surprising that anyone gets through any signup process at all. Try to do the email confirmation flow after 6 drinks.
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Nabeel Hyatt
Nabeel Hyatt@nabeel·
Old CTO-friend.. "Quietly, a majority of senior engineers still resist AI coding, even in AI co's, claiming it doesn't work. It's because AI coding is closer to the messyness of managing a human than writing code, and most of them were never good at managing humans either." 😜
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Emily McIntyre
Emily McIntyre@McIntyreWrites·
@clayhepler In Kansas City the public school system outcomes re unfavorable in most districts. We send our child to a very expensive private school (25k/year) and struggle to do it. If I had more kids I wouldn’t be able, different conversation. For us it is a good move—we assess every year
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Clay Hepler
Clay Hepler@clayhepler·
Been chatting with my wife (and my brother’s girlfriend, a first grade teacher in a underprivileged city school) about something I can’t quite figure out — so I figured I’d ask here and see what others think. We were talking about private school. The best local private school near us? It’s about $20,000 per year — for kindergarten. Some parents absolutely swear by it. Others say it’s a total waste of money until later in life — maybe around 4th or 5th grade, when kids actually start becoming self-aware and remember anything. But if we had three kids, and sent them from K through 8th grade? That’s $60,000 per year. Over half a million dollars total. Almost $1,000,000 of pre-tax income… just to get them to high school. It sounds crazy when I say it like that. But so many people still do it. So now I’m stuck wondering: Is private school one of those “best investments you’ll ever make” things? Does it matter the “age” they are sent? Or is it just really expensive public school… with slightly better food and a smaller class size? Curious how other people are thinking about this.
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Josh Pigford
Josh Pigford@Shpigford·
I need an ai agent that monitors my twitter bookmarks and goes and does something productive with them.
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Aadit Sheth
Aadit Sheth@aaditsh·
99% of people still don’t realize this exists. OpenAI quietly launched a full AI Academy (and it’s way better than you’d expect). I thought it’d be another boring corporate portal. But honestly? It’s the clearest, most practical AI education I’ve seen. Just spent 2 hours diving into their new Academy. It's a goldmine of free AI education - from "what's a prompt?" to building full GPT apps. The best part is that it's not just tutorials. They've got live workshops, hands-on labs, and real-world case studies. Here's what you might be interested in: - Complete beginner tracks (zero coding needed) - Advanced API integration guides - Enterprise implementation blueprints - Live expert-led sessions Who else is checking this out? PS. Want to automate ops at scale with AI? Comment “AI” and I'll DM you
Aadit Sheth tweet media
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Emily McIntyre
Emily McIntyre@McIntyreWrites·
Just signed agreements for an exciting new venture. Stay tuned!
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
JPMorgan just raised recession odds to 60%!! My quick take on what happens next: 1. Layoffs come in waves, not all at once. First round in Q2 (10-15%), then again in Q4 (15-25% more) as companies realize the first cut wasn't deep enough. 2. VCs get quieter. LPs pull back commitments when markets drop, slowing capital calls. Megafunds like a16z weather this fine, but smaller funds feel the squeeze immediately. 3. Corporate spending gets cold/freezes. Every SaaS purchase suddenly needs CFO approval. "Essential" tools become "nice-to-haves." 4. VC-backed startups with high burn rates and 12-18 months of runway begin making tough decisions on headcount. Austerity is cool again!! 5. Consumer businesses face a double whammy: recession-wary customers spending less and tariffs increasing COGS. DTC/ecommerce companies with thin margins get hit hardest of all. 6. Valuations gradually compress. Not overnight, but steadily. Companies that might have raised at 50x ARR might be looking at 10-15x, if they can raise at all. 7. Cash-flowing startups and solo founders/teams of 5 or less thrive. The solo founder renaissance begins. As tech layoffs accelerate, talented people start bootstrapped businesses focused on immediate revenue. 8. AI funding continues to be STRONG and the exception to the rule. While funding tightens across the board, strategic AI investments continue as companies view it as existential technology, not just growth opportunity. The opportunity is just too big. 9. M&A activity spikes as cash-rich companies go bargain hunting. Strategic acquisitions replace growth-stage rounds. 10. Customer acquisition costs temporarily plummet as big spenders pull back from advertising platforms, creating opportunity for counter-cyclical marketers. 11. Public SaaS companies start aggressive bundling, adding more features at the same price to justify renewals and squeeze out smaller competitors. 12. Huge demand around building profitable companies, indiehackers, vibe coding, being Pieter Levels basically. 13. The losers...high-burn DTC brands caught between tariffs and shrinking consumer spending, late-stage startups that prioritized growth over unit economics, companies that raised massive rounds at 100x+ ARR multiples, startups with 6+ month sales cycles, and any business that can't reach profitability before their next planned fundraise. 14. The winners...profitable companies, solo founders with low burn, startups with pricing power, and AI companies solving genuine business problems.
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Emily McIntyre
Emily McIntyre@McIntyreWrites·
My office was a block from this beautiful, ambitious, ill-fated development: Portland’s own Ritz-Carlton. When you take huge risks to bring something beautiful to the world and it fails, everyone thinks they saw it coming. Succeed? They predicted that too. wweek.com/news/2025/03/1…
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Emily McIntyre
Emily McIntyre@McIntyreWrites·
@X help—I can’t create a new account! Just getting an error message every time I try.
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Z Fellows
Z Fellows@zfellows·
Determination is probably the biggest piece of success — Mark Zuckerberg
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StripMallGuy
StripMallGuy@realEstateTrent·
Was just on the receiving end of the worst cold-call of all time! We use a ButterflyMX system for the entry doors of a building we own. Competitor just cold-called me. Said our tenant’s having issues with the system, and used the tenant name. I was concerned, so asked what the issue was. Turns out it’s a sales tactic. They clarified they assume the tenant is having issues because they believe it’s an inferior product to theirs. Misleading me to start the call, then trashing a competitor. This call is over.
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Emily McIntyre
Emily McIntyre@McIntyreWrites·
@x I'm trying to create a new X account and keep getting an error at the end. Can you point me in the right direction please?
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caesararum, BS, DOGS
caesararum, BS, DOGS@caesararum·
once you learn how the sausage is made in your industry, some of the glamour falls away once you've worked in three or five industries, you realize it's all sausage, humans have never produced anything that wasn't sausage, and if you think you see non-sausage— nope, sausage
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
This might be a pretty unpopular post. Story time: I learned this lesson the hard way that startup equity is worth exactly $0 until the day someone actually buys it from you. I sold a company for $4M stock. I was told by exec team I was getting a deal. People I looked up to in Silicon Valley. “Worst case you cash out for $4M”. Ended up being worth $0. I was young, foolish and knew nothing about this silicon valley world (i was from canada and the richest people I knew were doctors or lawyers). The worst part is I even got into debt selling my company. Because I had to pay taxes on the sale so i borrowed money to pay for it. That’s a story for another tweet. Many years later, I got an offer from WeWork to buy company. They told me the same story. My stock would be worth millions. I said just give me a cash deal. Learned the hard way. When WeWork was crashing, I saw so many people who thought their equity worth millions and it became almost worthless overnight. People’s dreams shattered. Private stock is never guaranteed to be worth anything. That's why I now tell every founder I meet: cash is truth. Stock is a story. The beauty about startups is that private stock COULD change your life. But think of it as a BONUS, than a sure thing. That gives you a sober way to make decisions on which companies to join or if you want to start your own. The reason I'm sharing this is I wish someone had told me this. I hope someone sees this and it helps them rethink or even challenge what they are working on. It can't hurt to at least go through this thought exercise. (note: nothing against Blake, I think he's awesome, this is just my POV on startup equity) Don't get drunk on equity. Crazy to me that this is even a remotely controversial opinion.
Blake Anderson@blakeandersonw

We are hiring a SwiftUI developer for @10x_app $5-15k / month cash, 1-2.5% equity (will be worth millions). Extremely fast paced. $5k for referral.

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Alex Hormozi
Alex Hormozi@AlexHormozi·
If it looks easy, you don’t understand all the pieces. If it looks fast, you don’t get what slows it down. If it looks guaranteed, you’re probably the one getting screwed. So much of maturing comes down to realizing that great things take time and you’re not the exception.
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Emily McIntyre
Emily McIntyre@McIntyreWrites·
“Certainty is a prison. The more we crave it the more inclined we become to stick to the narrow paths…” Margaret Heffernan’s email this morning celebrating blind singer @Victoriavivace was beautiful.
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