Kerry Morrison

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Kerry Morrison

Kerry Morrison

@kmore

Trying to build useful things with good people. Focused on AI, product, and what actually helps. https://t.co/6nkyzCGgmw, https://t.co/uzbduxU8pa and many more.

Houston, TX Katılım Ekim 2007
8K Takip Edilen7.2K Takipçiler
Ryan Carson
Ryan Carson@ryancarson·
omg @openclaw is sooooo good at being a Chief of Staff. What huge unlock for founders (and everyone)! It’s taken me 2 weeks to refine my setup and now it’s working like a dream. Biz dev, calendar management, research, task management, brainstorming and more
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@WisprFlow guys. Any way to lose the persistent wisprflow notifications on Android?
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Taylor Haren
Taylor Haren@THArrowOfApollo·
We were Clay's largest user at one point in time, hitting their platform 17.3 million times per week. Last month we replaced them entirely with a $200/mo Claude Code subscription. I can't write code. Neither can James, my VP of Growth who built the replacement. Here's the full story. Clay is a GREAT product and I TRULY think most people should use it. But we hit their ceiling. 50,000 row limit per table. 12.5 million row cap per workspace. Tables that take days to actually delete. Clicking "run all" thousands of times and waiting days for things to clear out. So When you're processing millions of leads, all the above become the bottleneck of your entire business. James had never touched Claude Code before. Three weeks after learning it, he built our entire core system. With Clay, processing 1 million leads took 27 hours. And it would error out often enough that we would always have to plan on hitting the “run all rows” button again on 20+ clay tables. IYKYK but Our new system waterfall enriches 1 million leads in 5 seconds. 272,000 leads PER SECOND. AND On top of the core engine, we vibe coded a Google Maps scraper that pulls leads zip code by zip code across all 32,000 US zip codes. AND An AI lead finder that hits 95% contact match rates where Apollo gives you about 30%. AND Ad library scrapers for Google and LinkedIn. AND An AI campaign analysis system. AND An auto-refill system so clients never run out of leads mid-campaign. One we started building with Claude, we just couldn’t stop Now we have the data ready for clients sending 5 million emails a month within 1 week of signing the contract. I put together the full system blueprint -- every tool, the tech stack, a Clay vs custom comparison, and a 6-step playbook for building your own. Plus a video walkthrough where I show you the live system and how each tool actually works. Retweet or Reply CODE below and I'll DM it to you.
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Alton Syn
Alton Syn@WorkflowWhisper·
mark cuban just laid out the exact playbook for making money with AI agents. pick one vertical. learn the flows. become the AI team they never hired. he's right. but he left out the how. i've been doing this for 3 months. here's what it actually looks like: week 1: i called 12 local businesses and asked one question. "what's the most annoying part of your day?" the pool company: "we lose 11 jobs a week because nobody follows up cancellations." the PT clinic: "insurance verification takes 3 hours every morning." the cleaning company: "we quote in 2 days. our competitor quotes in 2 hours." week 2: i built every single one of those workflows. → pool company cancellation recovery - 6 min → PT clinic insurance verification - 11 min → cleaning company instant quote generator - 7 min → dog groomer appointment + waitlist manager - 9 min → pest control follow-up sequence - 4 min average build time: 7.4 minutes. average close rate when you build it live in front of them: 70%. week 3: $10,750 upfront + $1,200/mo recurring. zero proposals. zero decks. zero "let me get back to you." they watched it work. they paid on the spot. cuban said "you don't need a CS degree or VC money." he's right. you need one question, one tool, and the willingness to build it in front of them. i documented the entire framework in a free PDF: → the 1-question discovery script (word for word) → 6 copy-paste workflow prompts by industry → pricing guide (what to charge per workflow type) → the live demo script that closes 7 out of 10 → full MCP setup walkthrough (5 min install) comment "CUBAN" and i'll send it. consultants charge $15K for a discovery workshop. i just gave you the playbook for free. synta(.)io - describe the workflow in plain english. it builds, deploys, and fixes itself. (must be following for DM)
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@bcherny Can't wait for it to turn on for me. Though to be fair, wisprflow already fills this need.
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@carlvellotti Beauty. Thanks. Loved the video. I'm running something of my own that is similar, but storing everything locally in a sqlite DB. No server. loving the connections it makes. If you were interested in a different take, still with Google connects. github.com/kmorebetter/be…
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Carl Vellotti 🥞
Carl Vellotti 🥞@carlvellotti·
@kmore i think as long as you have the terminal on the device running
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Carl Vellotti 🥞
Carl Vellotti 🥞@carlvellotti·
If you haven't tried /remote-control in Claude Code, it's really cool. It instantly makes a link you can open and continue the session from the app. A cool application of this is having dedicated links to specific chats. I now have a links for every one of my websites, so if I ever need to make an update, I can just go directly to that thread. You could easily make one for journalling, etc. I personally like this more than OpenClaw already because I'm working directly with Claude Code with all that visibility. And when you return to your computer, everything is also in the terminal.
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@boringmarketer Really eh? I found things working well going the other way. Plan in Codex, build in Claude. At this point, there is no way to lose. :)
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The Boring Marketer
The Boring Marketer@boringmarketer·
my coding workflow has been changing quite a bit as I'm advancing in the depth and technicality of things I am building claude opus 4.6: brainstorming, front end codex 5.3: everything else
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@pbakaus My guy. No one showed you love for these? They are...impeccable. Instantly helpful, truly valuable. So impressed.
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Paul Bakaus
Paul Bakaus@pbakaus·
Always a 'fun' experience to get your ass handed to you by the comments section on the orange website, but in all seriousness feedback is a gift, hence a couple of updates to the landing page of impeccable.style: - removed lazy and rushed before/after examples. They honestly weren't very good and caused too much stir, and didn't quite showcase the power of the commands/skills enough. Will replace with real examples soon. - Removed dark mode from the landing page, last minute addition, didn't craft it as carefully as the light one - Fixed issues with uneven vertical rhythm, typography, negative space. Tried to hard to implement a tongue-in-check" editorial vibe to match the cheeky domain name, but went overboard. - Fixed bad scroll bug in the commands section I introduced yesterday when trying to fix something else - toned down any copy that sounded like a promise that this will for sure make you (or the LLM) a great designer. That's not the case, but in my experience, these commands help. The really disheartening part was that zero feedback in the Hacker News comments were about the commands/skill itself. The landing page should not be a distraction for folks to even give the project a try, so I'll continue improving it.
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@ryancarson Where do you think the biggest opportunity for those types of people exists at this moment, and how do you think they might best take advantage of that opportunity? Asking for a friend. ;)
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Ryan Carson
Ryan Carson@ryancarson·
I can’t imagine myself, or anyone else I know on the frontier, hiring people for these job titles in the future: Marketer, Developer, Customer Support, Designer, HR, Account Executive. I think it’ll end up where we only try to recruit people with 5+ years experience in a particular focus area (Sales, Engineering, etc) who can run teams of agents (10+ agents who run 24x7x365). They’ll probably expect $350k + stock options - even then - it’ll probably be hard to find. Everyone else is going to need to either build their own thing or find a job buried in enterprise where agents haven’t infiltrated yet.
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@SahilBloom Kind sir, I dm’d you about this the other day, would love to have a chat, and who knows, maybes it’s worth bringing to more people. ;)
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
The opportunity to onboard "normal people" to the latest AI is much bigger than I originally thought. Honestly, $100k+ per month feels low. In a high income city, it could be a $10m+ business. To validate it, I tried to stand up an AI Assistant by myself (as a tech novice). It was painful. Here's what I did: 0. Phoned a tech friend to get basic steps 1. Bought a Mac Mini 2. Created a Claude Developer Account 3a. Factory reset old iPhone 3b. Created a new phone line for iPhone 4. Created a new email address 5. Created a new iCloud account 6. Used EasyClaw for setup That took me about six hours, but I had a functional AI assistant by the end of it. It was fun feeling like an idiot. I like being an embarrassing beginner. A bunch of pain points to solve (for anyone who wants to build in this space): - I had no idea what I needed. I called a friend and annoyed him for an hour to figure that out in the first place. People don't know what they don't know. - I don't know what "Terminal" is and had never used it. Running commands there was totally foreign to me and I made dumb mistakes (like thinking it wasn't working because I was typing my password and it wasn't showing). - I really wanted to understand security and how to keep this new unit completely walled off from my other systems. It took me a while to make sure I was doing all of that properly and how to maintain that integrity going forward. - I had no understanding of tokens, usage limits, and how to think about that usage going forward. - Connections and integrations of tools (like iMessage) were not intuitive at all. - No understanding of best practices for prompting, training, etc. The ongoing improvements would be great as a recurring stream after the initial deployment. Those are just my initial reactions off the top of my head. I'm sure I'll have more as I continue to play with it. P.S. We're definitely living in the future. I got my AI Assistant to text my wife that I was coming down for dinner. She rolled her eyes at me when I got downstairs. THE FUTURE PEOPLE!
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Pierre-Eliott Lallemant
Pierre-Eliott Lallemant@pierreeliottlal·
Claude Opus 4.6 just KILLED manual outreach. 💀 And I’m not going back. I used to waste hours writing “personalised” LinkedIn messages. Now? My AI stack does it better than I ever did 🧠 ❌ No copy-paste templates ❌ No “hey {{first_name}}” spam ❌ No burnout by message #26 After testing every major model this year, one thing is clear: Claude Opus 4.6 = outreach that actually gets replies. 500+ conversations this week 🧠 Human-level reply rates 🧠 12+ hours saved 🧠 I packaged the full system into a doc. Want it? Connect with me Comment “OPUS” Repost ♻️ for priority access 🚀
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Kerry Morrison
Kerry Morrison@kmore·
@SahilBloom Did not a single person offer to fly to you and do this? Consider that rectified. DM’ing if I can.
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
There's an opportunity right now to build a $100k per month side hustle as an AI Concierge. And you don't even have to be *that* technical to do it. Just high agency. There are probably millions of people out there who see all of the latest AI innovations like Claude Cowork, want to take advantage of them, but have no idea how to actually do that. I know, because I'm one of those people... I had dinner last night with the CEO of a multi-billion dollar tech startup. He was telling me about the full digital assistant/employee he just hacked together over the weekend. All of the things it's doing, how it's been an unlock for his workflows and life. I told him I'd gladly pay him $5000 to come to my house and spend the day building me one using the same approach. He laughed that he'd happily do that (though obviously won't given his day job). There's a real, high cash flow opportunity for a hustler to launch a services business as an AI Concierge for the tech curious. Ideally they would physically show up and build out a tool (or suite) to help an individual leverage the latest for their business and life. I bet you could charge $5-10k for the initial upfront work and then some low ongoing service fee to keep the thing up to date (if the person wants that and needs help with it). 5-10 clients per month and you have a meaningful cash flow engine. All comes down to the quality of what you deliver long term, but my guess is people would see a Month 1 positive ROI on the investment and referrals to their friends would drive the entire business. Just a thought...
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Drew Fallon
Drew Fallon@drewfallon12·
@kmore Making its way to you soon Kerry!
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Kerry Morrison retweetledi
Drew Fallon
Drew Fallon@drewfallon12·
Introducing Fin: The world’s first AI Chief Financial Officer. Fin outperforms humans 100% of the time. RT + Comment “FIN” and I’ll send you an AI agent that saves 6-7 figures/year.
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Mike Futia
Mike Futia@mikefutia·
This Google Maps Lead Gen Agent is absolutely insane 🤯 Enter a keyword, city, & state → get back names, phone numbers, emails, websites, & reviews. All inside Google Antigravity + Claude Code. Perfect for agencies and lead gen operators who need prospecting data without paying insane SaaS fees. Here's the problem: You're manually searching Google Maps. Clicking through listings one by one, copy-pasting phone numbers into a spreadsheet. It takes hours to build a decent lead list. This scraper solves it: → Enter your keyword (plumber, dentist, realtor, etc.) → Pick your city and state → Set the number of results you want → Hit search and let Apify do the scraping → Save leads you like to a bookmark list No manual searching, no copy-pasting, no paying $200/month for a lead gen tool. What you get: - Full search results with business info - Bookmark feature to save your best leads - Search history to track past scrapes - Option to host it on Replit so your team can use it Built 100% with Claude Code & Antigravity. I recorded a full walkthrough showing exactly how I built this from scratch, plus all the prompts I used. Want all the prompts I used for Claude Code so you can build it yourself? > Like this post > Comment "LEADS" And I'll send it over (must be following so I can DM)
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