Nick Boyce

6.3K posts

Nick Boyce banner
Nick Boyce

Nick Boyce

@nickboyce

Founder and builder. Mostly tweeting about creative, tech, data and business.

London Katılım Nisan 2007
946 Takip Edilen553 Takipçiler
Nick Boyce
Nick Boyce@nickboyce·
Useful framework!
English
0
0
1
82
Nick Boyce
Nick Boyce@nickboyce·
@CedricGrowth Aye, I have retries with exponential backoff in place but I’m finding it’s failing at a much higher rate recently.
English
0
0
1
8
Cedric
Cedric@CedricGrowth·
@nickboyce All the time but it's only 20% of calls. So you need to get better handling the relaunch
English
1
0
0
13
Cedric
Cedric@CedricGrowth·
Meta's API is partially down! Our business runs completely on Meta... But with smart retries we still manage to succeed for our customers No better place to launch ads than admanage ai
Cedric tweet media
English
1
0
2
368
Mike Taylor
Mike Taylor@hammer_mt·
Why Superheroes Save Everyone But Their Parents This is a fun little creative project I worked on while doing a course by @remixeverything (we got to see exactly how he made Everything is a Remix).
English
4
2
6
580
Nick Boyce
Nick Boyce@nickboyce·
@leoubbiali What a game too! Eye-watering ticket prices but it may be your last chance to see some of these guys play internationally.
English
1
0
1
20
Leo Ubbiali
Leo Ubbiali@leoubbiali·
Got the chance to watch The King and other superheroes of mine hooping in London tonight. 🇺🇸
Leo Ubbiali tweet media
Leo Ubbiali tweet media
Camberwell, London 🇬🇧 English
1
0
8
647
dan barker
dan barker@danbarker·
For some reason, Instagram has started showing me Turkish before/after plastic surgery photos. Some of these are like witness protection level impressive.
dan barker tweet mediadan barker tweet mediadan barker tweet mediadan barker tweet media
English
11
2
29
5.8K
Nick Boyce retweetledi
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Now you know why
English
237
8.5K
73.9K
9.5M
Nick Boyce
Nick Boyce@nickboyce·
@elcoian I think the source of creativity is connecting disparate dots. The broader your range of inputs (knowledge, experience, inspiration), the more disparate dots you can experiment with.
English
1
0
1
20
Elco Ian
Elco Ian@elcoian·
I love this one The source of creativity is experimentation
English
2
0
2
102
Nick Boyce retweetledi
Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
Rothmus 🏴 tweet media
ZXX
115
3.5K
52.7K
2.9M
Nick Boyce
Nick Boyce@nickboyce·
@AaronOrendorff +1 for Funnel. We have 400+ data sources running through it. They have a great free tier these days.
English
0
0
1
55
Aaron Orendorff
Aaron Orendorff@AaronOrendorff·
It’s been a hot second since I used Supermetrics. Is it better than it used to be pulling Shopify data into Sheets? Also want to pull HubSpot + the usual ad platforms. Any recommendations?
English
17
0
20
5.5K
Nick Boyce
Nick Boyce@nickboyce·
@elliscrosby I’m going to take the best ideas from this post and apply them right away: starting with Rodman-style 48 hour Vegas benders, working from bed until 11am Churchill style and generally closing my eyes a lot more often.
English
1
0
1
39
Ellis
Ellis@elliscrosby·
This is an interesting opinion. I’ve mostly seen people burning out (including me) when they have a higher stress response to a workload than they should. I haven’t thought much about “energy output” before though…
George Mack@george__mack

Semi-controversial opinion: There’s no such thing as working too hard. There’s just being under rested. 1. Winston Churchill used to work 16 hours per day in his old age during the war — but he also worked in bed every day until 11am. He had a nap after lunch, and a 2 hour nap before dinner at 8pm before working late into the night. 2. John. D Rockefeller took a 30 minute nap everyday at 12pm. No meeting was important enough to move this out of his calendar. 3. Advice I’d give my younger self: Don’t focus on energy output (working too hard). Focus on energy production (recharging activities). If you produce more energy than you burn, it’s impossible to burn out. 4. The person that is well rested might be able to work 16 hour days 6 days per week. The person who never works but scrolls TikTok all day can struggle to do 30 minutes without burning out. 5. Josh Waitzkin has this concept called the "Simmering Six": “Most people in high-stress, decision-making industries are always operating at this kind of simmering six, as opposed to the undulation between just deep relaxation and being at a 10. Being at a 10 is millions of times better than being at a 6. It’s just in a different universe.” 6. Eleanor Roosevelt credited one thing to surviving her White House schedule for 12 years: Before meeting crowds or giving a speech, she would sit still, close her eyes and relax for 20 minutes. 7. When Dale Carnegie asked Henry Ford how he had so much energy before his 80th birthday: “I never stand up when I can sit down; and I never sit down when I can lie down” 8. Marcelo Garcia, the best BJJ practitioner of all time, was found asleep minutes before his semi final world championship bout and stumbled into the ring out of a slumber — before destroying his opponent. 9. When Triple H went to see Floyd Mayweather before his fight with Marquez backstage, he expected Floyd to be psyching himself up for the big occasion. Instead, he was lay on the sofa watching a baseball game. 10. Christopher Nolan doesn’t have a smartphone. His assistant manages his emails and he writes everything on a laptop without an internet connection. “I do a lot of my best thinking in those kind of in-between moments that people now fill with online activity” 11. What does the rest and recharge industry get wrong? It tries to sell a magic pill for everyone. Instead, it should always be personalised to the individual. Some people get energy from a massage — others like to do 48 hours in Vegas Denis Rodman style. 12. There’s a simple algorithm for identifying the highest leverage relaxation for yourself: (Energy produced ÷ time it takes) 13. Ironically, if Type-A personalities rest better, they’ll also be happier and live longer. But it’s always better to sell it as the ability to increase their work — and sneak happiness and health in the back door.

English
2
0
4
713
Nick Boyce
Nick Boyce@nickboyce·
@DougieSilkstone Aside from what Joe identified, I found the structure unfriendly. Starting with a TOC, followed by bullet points and tables is quite intimidating for a casual read. I think this would be fixed by adding a couple of opening paragraphs that hook me in.
English
0
0
0
20
Ellis
Ellis@elliscrosby·
Nobody: French people 15 minutes before presenting a massive workshop on LinkedIn Ads: @VivienBresson
Ellis tweet media
English
3
1
6
642