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Céline Moretz
3.3K posts


Jason Fladlien was the man behind Iman Gadzhi's 8 figure launches on Whop
He spoke at WebinarCon and boy oh boy did he drop some value on webinars (comment "slides" for his slides)
He had very detailed slides with prompts you can use to craft highly converting webinar slides with Ai
He purposely skipped through them very quickly so you would just buy his program (which I did)
but I managed to grab a photo of nearly every one of his slides.
Like + comment "slides" if you want the photos of the slides with prompts and crazy nuggets
some people have their inboxes locked and I can't send, so follow me to ensure you definitely get the DM

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The real reason your content doesn't hit:
You haven't lived it.
I was staring at my screen trying to write something worth reading.
Nothing came.
Then it clicked.
My best ideas never come from frameworks or formulas.
They come from experience.
From actually doing the work.
The problem with most content?
It's theoretical.
Written by people who study the game but haven't play it.
I've been there too.
Trying to write about success before tasting it.
It feels empty. Forced.
Your audience can smell the difference.
This doesn't mean observation can't be powerful.
Some of the best content comes from people
• who watch deeply.
• who notice patterns others miss.
• who connect dots in unique ways.
But there's still something special when you mix observation WITH experience.
Even small experiences outweigh big theories.
Write one post after trying something new.
You'll see immediately:
⋰ your words flow better
⋰ your insights cut deeper
⋰ your voice actually sounds like yours
When you build this habit, something magical happens: Content stops being a grind.
It flows naturally from what you've done and seen.
You'll no longer struggle for things to say.
So here's my challenge:
Do something worth writing about.
⋰ test a theory
⋰ try a new approach
⋰ take a small risk
Or passionately observe something nobody else is talking about.
That's when content creation stops feeling like work.
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"Expert content won't save your brand"
Everyone tells you the same thing:
"Just deliver value"
"Just post expert content"
"Just be helpful"
But I'm noticing something interesting...
When you're still small,
People need more than your knowledge.
Think about the creators you actually follow.
The ones whose content you never miss.
Do you only follow them because they can do what they do well?
Or is there something else pulling you in?
The biggest creators don't just dump information:
⋰ They invite you into their world.
⋰ They share personal stories that illustrate their points.
⋰ They reveal their unique perspective on life.
⋰ They show you how their mind works.
It's like having dinner with a fascinating person versus reading their resume.
Both might showcase expertise.
But only one makes you want to come back for more.
People remember YOU first.
Your content second.
Build a brand around your brain AND your being.
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@kyrinahlis this. they try too hard to follow the script and doesn't actually engage in the natural flow of convo (where real connection comes from)
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Everyone says "no case studies, no authority."
I discovered something different.
Here’s how I’d grow from scratch today (even with 0 case studies):
1. Talk about yourself.
Your story is strategy.
⋰ what you've been through
⋰ what lessons keep you up at night?
⋰ what you want.
2. Make actual friends.
The ones who reply. DMs. Share your stuff.
Not once a week. Every. Damn. Day.
This app runs on energy, not just content.
3. Borrow authority, but make it yours.
React to what big names say.
Reshape them with your own taste.
Make them visually yours.
4. Build a Personal Code.
List of topics you believe in.
Post from it like it’s your Bible.
5. Keep living.
Because the more you live and learn,
the more real content you’ll actually have to say.
The more you build, fail, and grow outside X,
The easier it is to win on X.
Visibility comes before authority.
Your audience is waiting.
They just don't know you exist yet.
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@VentureJourneys thats only gonna happen after years of locking in, failing, and depression until finally it works XD
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The problem with building a business:
- You wake up
- Brush your teeth and go to the gym
- You start writing or whatever you’re doing.
Then you go to sleep and do the same thing next day. For years.
You see what’s wrong with the above?
It’s pretty dang boring.
No matter what the gurus on social media tell you.
Building a business was never about sitting on yachts or drinking booze all day.
It’s gonna be boring.
But you’ll grow like nothing you’ve ever seen before.
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@VentureJourneys even better if you build both at the same time. each one will keep compounding
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There’s a phase every creator goes through:
The NPC phase.
⋰ You post what sounds “right.”
⋰ You avoid talking about yourself.
⋰ You obsess over the perfect hook.
⋰ You overconsume and underdo.
Why?
Because you haven’t actually done the work yet.
No offers tested.
No ideas lived.
No story worth telling.
That’s why content feels fake.
That’s why growth feels slow.
That’s why no one connects.
Until you stop hiding behind “strategy”…
And start showing up as an actual human who’s building something...
You’ll stay stuck in observer mode.
…………………………………………
So how do you get out?
→ Run the offer.
→ Try. Mess up. Fix it.
→ Work with real people.
→ Post from what you just learned.
→ Stop writing for claps. Start writing for clarity.
Because the only way to exit NPC mode
is to become the main character in your own process.
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@MaxSmartFinance the audit part alone lowkey exposed how much time i was just "setting up to work"
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@MaxSmartFinance read this out loud and you’ll hear exactly why most people stay stuck for years.
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Your Fixed Mindset Is Your Biggest Roadblock
You dream of success,
Envisioning a life of achievement and fulfillment.
Yet, something holds you back.
It's not a lack of skill, resources, or opportunity.
It's the silent saboteur within:
" Your fixed mindset."
Think about it.
How often have you told yourself:
- " I'm not good at this. "
- " I can't learn that. "
- " It's too late for me to change. "
These aren't just thoughts.
They're chains, binding you to a limited version of yourself.
The real issue?
Comfort in familiar thought patterns.
We cling to what we know, even if it's holding us back.
It's like wearing shoes that don't fit because they're broken in.
But consider the consequences of this mental prison:
• Missed growth opportunities
• Self-sabotage of potential success
• Increased fear of failure and change:
• Stagnation in personal and professional life
Here's the truth:
Your mindset isn't fixed. It's a muscle.
And like any muscle,
It can be trained, strengthened, and transformed.
Growth isn't comfortable.
It's necessary.
It's the difference between surviving and thriving.
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@heyizmadz this meme lowkey keeps saving people's businesses xD
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@TheAlanHsieh also, being unique really takes time. it takes time to have your own style and tell those personal experiences your own way.
but once you figure it out, it'll be soo worth it
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@TheAlanHsieh learnings, failures, all in between = content spree!
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When I first started posting, I kept asking:
“Am I doing this right?”
“Why isn’t it working yet?”
Now I ask:
“What did I learn from showing up this week?”
That question changed everything.
It took me out of my head—and into action.
That’s exactly what I help my clients do, too.
Less overthinking.
More clarity.
Real momentum.
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