Ryan Harmon
642 posts


@akafaceUS @grok can you find the cleaning company in this video?
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@afomera I’m really pumped to see the file explorer! That’s the missing feature in cmux and other agentic dev platforms such as this. When will you be releasing?
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I’ve made over $100,000 in just 3 months using my custom CBC strategy.
Now I turned it into a FREE TradingView indicator that tells you exactly when to buy and sell—no guesswork.
I’ve been testing it for months, and it’s been printing. 📈
Like + Comment “Trade” - I’ll DM it to you.
(Must be following to DM)
$SPY $SPX

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I have a $20 setup that has the potential to turn into $1,100 in under 1 hour.
This is the same setup I saw once in 2025 —
and it’s showing up again now in 2026.
My CBC indicator is fully backing it. Signals are aligned. 2000-5000%+ trade.
Like + reply “$20” and I’ll DM it to you
(Must be following to DM)

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@GithubProjects How does it compare to online based converters like craftmarkdown.com?
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I migrated cursor.com from a CMS to raw code and Markdown.
I had estimated it would take a few weeks, but was able to finish the migration in three days with $260 in tokens and hundreds of agents.
Here's how I did it + all my my usage stats.
leerob.com/agents
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Ryan Harmon retweetledi

I’ll share a small part of pickle.com
Back in med school, I became obsessed with augmenting memory and dreamed of a Notion or Obsidian that completes itself. Today, we’ve built something close.
My self-awareness is sharper and everything feels connected. I genuinely believe AI does not replace humans. It amplifies us.
Huge respect to our engineers and designers who made this crazy thing real.
Bubbles are the episodic units of my life that the system interprets from my raw data. Clouds are the system’s questions, its hypotheses about who I am.
When I answer a cloud, it becomes a bubble again.
There is so much personal data that I cannot fully demo it. Wish I could. This system understands me more deeply than anyone.
Want to try it? Retweet and comment “memory.”
I’ll DM you an access code to skip the waitlist.
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You’ll be sleep deprived. You’ll have to suck it up. You’ll survive. You’re the least important in the trio.
The first 3 months are not about the baby. Be happy, enjoy the moment, but there’s very little work here (change diapers, and milk).
Your priority is your wife. She is going through the most difficult part of her life, and your job is to support, encourage, and uplift her. Hormones suck, PPD is real, offloading as much as you can from her, and keeping her in high spirits needs to be your primary focus. She needs to survive the first few months with a newborn, and you need to get her through it.
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This A-Z cold email system cheatsheet covers everything you need to know to send 10,000+ cold emails/day with 98% deliverability in 2025.
It covers in-depth walkthroughs on everything from:
> AI prompts for deep market research, TAM mapping, and ICP validation
> Best-in-market cold email infrastructure and deliverability protocols
> 3-step account sourcing to contact enrichment list building process
> 3 useful data scraping & enrichment workflows to build out in Clay
> Top 46 GTM tools to leverage in your cold email technology stack
> 10 validated cold email script frameworks + 10 core messaging principles
> Campaign testing frameworks for hitting KPIs as efficiently as possible
> Optimal campaign metrics to monitor and how to action on each one
Want this A-Z cold email system cheatsheet for yourself?
👉 Like + Comment "Email" and I'll DM you the downloadable PDF.
[ Must be following to receive ]

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You are 1 cold email away from a life changing deal. All it takes is 1 response.
Most of y'all think you're fishing but you don't even have any hooks in the water.
What if you had 100,000 hooks?
My cold emails have generated millions & gotten me meetings and/or responses from Cuban, McAfee & CEOs
Below is everything I've learned about cold emailing over 17 years, for free. 0 ChatGPT to be found here.
If you find any value here, here just drop me a "thanks" in the comments and share with a friend who isn't on X.
Let's get into it:
COLD EMAILING:
We love it and we hate it. We love it because it's our free foot in the door with anyone on the planet. We hate it because we get dozens per day and 99.99% of them are a nuisance.
But I’ll help you with that. By the end of this email you’ll know:
‣ When to use cold email vs not
‣ Where to get valid emails
‣ How to stand out from the crowd
‣ Which software options to choose
‣ How to set the tech up on the backend so you don’t get sent to spam
When to use cold email
I can’t think of any situation where it wouldn’t hurt to know how to cold email. And when I say cold email, I mean all of the following situations:
‣ Reaching out to someone much more important or influential than you
‣ Reaching out for your dream job
‣ Mass emailing potential customers
Cold email is most effective when you’re selling either a high-ticket or recurring product or service.
Cold emailing is best when you’re selling something that requires someone to book a call to close a deal.
Maybe you’re a fractional CFO and you charge $5k/month. Cold emailing is perfect for you. Email > open > interested reply > book a call > close the sale.
If you only close .5% of your emails then you only need 2,000 relevant emails to build a $50k/month business.
So where do you get valid emails?
Ah, so many places. My favorite is a bit under the radar, however, and very, very cheap.
Upwork or Fiverr
Now I’m not talking about hiring a Filipino VA on Upwork to scrape emails, although that works too. It just takes too long and I’m impatient.
This is an actual post of mine on Upwork:
You’re looking for something that is already found. You just need to find the Upwork VA that already did this job for someone else so you can buy their CSV for $20.
I’ve done this about a dozen times and it almost always works. So your job post might say,
“I need names and email addresses of veterinary clinic owners in Ohio.”
And then buy the CSV for $20 instead of waiting 2 months and paying $500.
You can message relevant freelancers on Fiverr with the same request.
If this doesn’t work then just use something like Apollo, Clearbit or a Chrome extension that can scrape them from LinkedIn such as Hunter.
Once you have your emails DO NOT EMAIL THEM until you have validated them. You have no clue how old they are, and about ~5% of emails go bad every year, so please validate them.
I have been using Bulk Email Checker for years and it’s the best and cheapest I’ve found, but there are dozens of options.
If you can, get as much info on these emails as possible.
At a bare minimum get their first name, because you’ll be including that in the email and it makes a massive difference on response rates and deliverability.
How to stand out from the crowd
I almost never see a good cold email. Literally, maybe I see one per year. I’ll help you fix that.
Here’s the whole purpose of any cold email:
Start a conversation, don’t try to sell.
You won’t sell from the first cold email, you just won’t. You have to build some semblance of a relationship first, so seek to start a conversation.
And yes, this logic holds true whether your product is $100 or $100,000.
If I was selling into home services, I’d start with landscaping owner emails, and first email would look something like this
First name,
Do you still own (landscaping business name)?
Chris Koerner
That’s it. That’s the whole first email. No link! Wow. Brilliant, right? Hah, just kidding. This would be my first email, that’s it, really! Why? Because I’m starting a conversation and qualifying the lead at the same time!
If they say yes, I respond. If they say no, I don’t. If they don’t respond, I’ll send automated follow ups (more on this later.)
Let’s say they say yes, my next email would be,
Awesome. Do you offer tree trimming? The reason I ask is because we’re hosting a tree biz bootcamp in Dallas and I’d love to see if you’d like to either attend or speak at it. We're happy to pay. Would love to chat either way!
Ok, so here’s my thinking here.
I could keep up the bait and switch-ish vibe by just asking “Do you offer tree trimming?” But that’s a bridge too far in my opinion.
That’s too much, too many emails. You will lose trust. I’ll just hit them with the pitch in email #2 because I don’t want to feel slimy.
If they respond once their chance of responding twice is much, much higher.
Most cold emails lead with the pitch. STOP DOING THAT! The sunk cost fallacy is real. They’ve already spent the time responding to you once, might as well see this through.
My other strategy is that I’m offering to pay them to speak. That’s a real offer. If they already trim trees and know a ton about operations, I literally need them to speak and am willing to pay them.
Humans need to know what’s in it for them. In the case of this 2nd email, they can either be paid to speak or get more jobs by learning new marketing tactics and adding a 2nd service line.
Emails # 3+ would be to get them on the phone to close the sale, since it’s high ticket you won’t really close it online very effectively.
What about the subject line? Keep it short, stupid.
Quick question used to rule them all, but it’s played out now. For this one I would simply do, trees?
3 words or less is my rule. Seek to pique their curiosity, not to convince them to open directly.
Which software options to choose?
I love Mixmax, Instantly, GMass and Lemlist, but Instantly gets the nod.
All offer mail merge and automated follow ups, and that’s what really matters. But Instantly is cheaper and more user friendly. I've used both for many years.
What’s freaking cool is that you can spend an hour setting up a campaign and then get leads in your inbox on autopilot for months to come, without ever having to login to the software again.
Automated follow-ups turn off when the person replies.
As my British friend Zach would say, “It’s brilliant.”
How to set the tech up on the backend so you don’t get sent to spam
This one is really easy, just follow these exact instructions:
Warm up your inbox by ensuring that you’ve been sending and receiving emails successfully for a month or so.
There are tools you can pay for like Warmbox or Warmup Inbox that will do this for you so you can cut the line, if you’re impatient like me.
Don’t use a gmail account, use a custom domain. I use Namecheap to buy a $10 domain and then Google Workspace for a $7/month email.
Use the Lemlist deliverability checklist below, it’s the best guide I’ve found all in one place.
Don't ever use links in your first email. There's more downside than upside. They aren't going to book a call with you or buy your product cold, but the link may be the reason the email goes to spam.
Like I mentioned above, ALWAYS validate emails before sending. If the result is unknown or catchall, just skip.
Add at least one custom variable per email, preferable first and business name. This will show Gmail that not all of your emails are the same.
Add in automated follow-ups that are 1 sentence or less "Just checking in." This will show Gmail that you aren't a one and done kinda guy.
Whew, ok, that’s about it. I feel like there’s many thousands more words I could put in this, but there’s only so much time.
Cold emailing is awesome because it’s scalable and on autopilot. Once you figure out what the formula is for your offer, it’s just simple math.
Send 1,000 emails, get 200 replies, get 20 calls, get 2 sales, etc. Then it’s just a matter of finding enough solid emails.
Would appreciate a follow @mhp_guy if you learned something helpful.
PS: Below is the 4th or 5th response I got from the late John McAfee back in 2018 when I was pitching a product to him.
I ended up spending the day at his house and partnering with him, but that's a story for another day...
I'll add the links to all these tools below.


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