Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸

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Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸

Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸

@profekyle

The official twitter of Profe Kyle, el profe favorito del pueblo latino. @profekyle aquí y en Instagram. Habla inglés como gringo.

Katılım Ekim 2016
52 Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥
Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥@IMJustinBrooke·
Just found out you can install skills in @Replit Built one skill trained on awwwards site of the day style websites. Another on high conversion direct response style websites. And a hybrid skill of them both. Comment “skills” if you want a link to all 3 skill files.
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A@jaimeraamos·
The fresas cities in Mexico are: - SPGG - Mérida - Querétaro - Parts of CDMX Which makes them hard to break in socially, dating is more cliquesque and the city is very safe.
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Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥
Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥@IMJustinBrooke·
I’m gunna unsell you on Meta ads right now… Go ahead and get your defenses ready. Put your toughest wall up. Here it comes… .. …. …… Meta targets people based on interests that you have ZERO knowledge about WHEN they had that interest. Google ads targets based on interests they are having right this second. If you’re still sold on Meta you’re either drinking some strong cult kool-aid or just don’t understand how sales actually works. The rest of you… I’ve got a free Google ads course that will give you 1 bite-sized lesson per day via email. Comment “sold” below and I’ll DM you the link to the free Google ads course.
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Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Muchos estudiantes creen que necesitan estar hablando después de 10 clases. Nada más lejos de la realidad. Después de 100-200 horas de estudio, vas a empezar a hablar como niño de 3 años. Pero antes? Olvídalo. Disfruta ser el bebé absorbiendo.
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orthodoxmason
orthodoxmason@orthodoxmason·
Here's Waller, a game I made to help teach some of the fundamentals of drystone walling. Many thanks to @JimmyRis for helping me bring this all together. It's been quite fun! orthodoxmasonry.com/waller
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Jake Lundahl
Jake Lundahl@LundahlHorses·
One of the big problems with American culture, that you see reflected in our architecture, is the lack of spaces in which unstructured presence is socially acceptable. We don't have the commons areas, markets, and cafe culture of older nations. Most American cities lack European-style town squares or plazas where people can just go for no particular reason, hang out, people-watch, or strike up conversations with strangers. In America the focal point of urban life is the street, and you are always expected to be GOING somewhere, DOING or BUYING something. What this speaks to is a civilization that's afraid to look at itself. We are all outbound. Explore, achieve, escape, build, so we don't have to attend to or look at or acknowledge the interior. We've literally encoded "atomization" that everyone complains about, into the physical experience of being in society. The discourse on the American right about fleeing to the countryside, etc., is a feature of this as well. It's the same impulse that drove people from urban interiors into the suburbs. We are fundamentally, and have been for a long time, a low-trust society. Americans hate each other and don't want to be near each other, "except on my terms". Those terms typically are, to transact business or "when I need you for something." A lot of the social ills we have now come from the fact that our society scaled too aggressively and fast, and the social sinew got ripped apart. People, literally, stopped talking to each other about anything that wasn't surface level pleasantries. We've become a culture of avoidance, lying, and putting up a front. We're very much like the Soviet Union in that way, ironically. The Soviet system was built on lying and constant, low-grade anxiety and mutual suspicion. Sounds familiar. All of these points need further development, but, no more rambling. My two theses stated precisely: (1) The faux-pastoral impulse on the dissident right thinks it's ESCAPING atomization by moving to rural land. The problem is they're actually reproducing the same atomization. The sterile country acreage that includes a bare minimum livestock presence for tax savings purposes, and serves as a hideaway from civilization instead of a way-of-life for the owner and their family, IS the atomization. The "leave me alone on my land" impulse IS the American disease the performative rural tradlarpers think they're curing. (2) Americans have lost, or perhaps never had, the capacity for UNPURPOSED proximity. We can tolerate each other when the interaction is structured by transaction (business, service, commerce). What we cannot tolerate is the UNSTRUCTURED presence of other humans with no transactional frame. The stranger on the park bench. The neighbor with no agenda. The human being who is simply THERE, in your space, for no reason. That organism triggers anxiety in the American nervous system because the American nervous system has been configured by a built environment in which every human presence is transactional and therefore every non-transactional human presence registers as threat. In places where homelessness and crime are rampant, that's understandable. But even in places with zero homelessness and very low criminal activity, Americans still act this way. We are a civilization that hates its own interior and is constantly fleeing for the frontier. There's nothing wrong with the frontier. But our problems come from a neglected interior.
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Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥
Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥@IMJustinBrooke·
This is my new highest converting page EVER... Inspired by a page my friend @dvest originaly built. If you run webinars YOU HAVE to try this new page style. Comment "show me" and I'll DM the link.
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Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥
Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥@IMJustinBrooke·
My entire sales process is AI now... Last week it brought in $35,946 in sales, with $23,958 cash collected. You need these 3 skill files if you want to do the same for your sales process... 1. VSL script writer 2. 7 day email promo 3. Long form sales letter Comment "skills" below and I'll DM you the skill files to install.
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Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸@profekyle·
I get recommended a lot by my students. But in my 8 years teaching Latinos, I can't remember a single time the referrals said who recommended me. As a Gringo, if a friend recommends me someone, the first thing I'm saying is, "Bob gave me your number and said you're great..."
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Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥
Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥@IMJustinBrooke·
I reversed engineered every skill in digital marketing and then trained my AI on all of them. Here’s how I did it... Oh, and I’m giving away all 84 marketing skill files at the end of this post. This all took place over 5 days. Step 1: The Skill Tree I started by working with @ManusAI because I knew I was going to need their almost infinite context window. My first request was for Manus to create a skill tree starting with the base skills of earned media, paid media, and owned media. Aka paid traffic, free traffic, and your own subscribers. We started cookin up branches and branches of skills from those 3 base skills. Step 2: Teams of Experts I noticed Manus was struggling to think outside of the basics so I started asking it to embody expert after expert. For example: “Embody Neil Patel and critique this skill tree for what’s missing.” “Embody Frank Kern and critique this skill tree for what’s missing.” “Embody Russell Brunson and critique this skill tree for what’s missing.” After I brought in 12-15 virtual experts to critique the skill tree we (me & my pal manus) had over 1900 individual tactics mapped out across 152 unique categories of skills. Step 3: Coworking with Claude At this time Manus hadn’t released their skills feature yet. But Claude had a skill creator skill. First I filled in Claude on the details of the project and the goal. Because context. The other reason for using Claude was because with Claude Desktop in Claude Cowork mode you can work directly with files and folders on your computer. This was key to the organization, context, and memory for this project. Once Claude was up to speed I asked it to remove overlapping skills and tactics. Stuff like SEO for Google vs SEO for Bing. We came up with 84 total skills that would need to be created that would encompass all 1900(ish) individual tactics. For example the media buying and planning skill includes writing headlines, customer personas, keyword research, copywriting etc. And then we locked in… Step 4: Best Practices Ranked For each of the 84 skills I had Claude go into deep research mode and create a report on the best practices for that skill. This means each skill was based on reading no less than 300 articles about that skill. Then I would review the skills with my own 20yrs of experience overlooking what it found. When I felt it was shallow on something I would ask Claude to embody a specific topic expert to enhance that skill. Giving us 84 best practice documents that were extremely thorough, human reviewed, and expert enhanced. Next I sent these docs back to Manus for its wide research mode. Manus can do up to 150 tasks in parallel. Essentially running 150 prompts at once. I told Manus to rank every tactic in these best practice reports from S-tier (always do) to D-tier (never do). This created huge context and rulings that would be necessary for our final skill files. Step 5: Creating Skill Files Back to Claude. One by one I asked Claude to use the skill creator skill with my best practice reports and the S-tier rankings. My wife kept the coffee flowing while I grinded these out. For some like the long form sales letters skill I even included examples as reference files. And then I loaded all 84 skills onto a directory I vibe coded into my website. All 84 of these skills + an 85th I’m working on are available for free. Just comment “skills” and I’ll DM you the link. Can’t post it because algo will throttle this post. Bookmark this so you have a recipe for creating your own skills too. Follow @IMJustinBrooke for more wallets fattening tips on using AI for marketing.
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A@jaimeraamos·
@profekyle I sleep like a baby tbh. Even with expresos
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Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸@profekyle·
@VincetOmniaDeo @Technicalspaz @orthodoxmason Yeah, that's what I'm looking for. Load-bearing to make the foundation like the Scandinavians used to do. I'm trying to avoid cold concrete slab on the bare earth. The stone foundations with the air pocket are supposedly the best for maintaining heat in the cold 3b frost zone.
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VincetVeritas
VincetVeritas@VincetOmniaDeo·
@Technicalspaz @profekyle @orthodoxmason The focus of the book is fundamentally drystone walls (eg, not load-bearing, unmortared). For loadbearing walls, I would imagine you need mortar - or maybe just exceptional skill and lots of practice.
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Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥
Justin Brooke ❤️‍🔥@IMJustinBrooke·
Money Twitter will read this and say “Not uhh… my guru says X instead.” 🤣 Meanwhile OP is quoting one of the most successful VC funds of all time. You may have heard of a couple of their investments; Stripe, Nvidia, Apple, AirBNB. Let me break it down in marketer speak for you… I tried to warn about this in my “Dawn of Agentic Commerce” talk, but I’m afraid it’s still too early. 1. You’ve already seen the massive influx of bots on here. The reply bots. Plus, Reddit is flooded with AI posts. LinkedIn is mostly AI posts now. Agentic commerce means commercing with agents aka selling to agents. It’s why over $100 BILLION DOLLARS has been invested into this space already. A2A protocol is a system that lets Agents pay Agents. 2. Common Crawl is an organization that’s been scraping the web for 18yrs. OpenAI, Anthropic, Perplexity, and just about every or major AI brand ingests this massive dataset to train their AI. The literal ENTIRE SEO INDUSTRY is scrambling to change their methods and toolings to get their content into the common crawl dataset so AI will talk about them. When someone asks ChatGPT "Where should I go when I visit Florida?" Those who infiltrated common crawl best will show up as top solutions. This is the largest example of agentic commerce. It's a bot scraping what it thinks are the relevant parts of the Internet. and your job is to make the bot believe you are relevant enough. 3. An AI agent checks my email now, so your cold emails are meaningless to me. This is the next phase of agentic commerce. Everyone will have their own private mini common crawl system. I'm building an agent that scrapes the transcripts of YT channels I like, newsletters I like, and profiles I like. If your content doesn't show up in those places, no amount of algorithm optimization or reply botting is going to make you show up in my personal daily update. You will have to learn how to attract and persuade agents or you will be a ghost. This isn't my opinion. It's not up for debate, though you are welcome to scream and shout. It's just not going to matter. Hundreds of billions are pouring into this. Sequoia sounding the alarm to its companies is a massive signal. Adapt or die. Reskill or get left behind.
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

Sequoia just called the end of an entire go-to-market era and most SaaS companies won’t realize what hit them for 18 months. Product-led growth was built on one assumption: humans would try the software. The entire playbook since 2010 optimized for human discovery. Beautiful landing pages. Frictionless free trials. Viral invite loops. Slack, Dropbox, Zoom, Calendly. $200B+ in market cap created by winning the user’s first 5 minutes. None of that matters if an agent is picking the software. Claude doesn’t care about your hero image. It can’t be impressed by your Dribbble awards. It’s reading documentation, parsing user reviews, checking API reliability, and matching features to use case. All the surface-level polish that convinced lazy humans to click “sign up” becomes irrelevant. The new PLG funnel isn’t landing page → free trial → activation → conversion. It’s agent query → documentation scan → feature match → recommendation. Which means the new moat looks completely different. You don’t need the best onboarding. You need the best documentation. You don’t need viral loops. You need structured data that agents can parse. You don’t need a beautiful UI for the first session. You need an API that an agent can actually call. The companies that won PLG hired designers and growth hackers. The companies that win agent-led growth will hire technical writers and developer relations engineers. And here’s the part nobody’s pricing in yet: agents don’t have loyalty. They don’t have switching costs. They’ll recommend Supabase today and something better tomorrow if the documentation is cleaner or the pricing is more transparent. The stickiness that made PLG so powerful, the network effects and learned behavior, doesn’t transfer. Sequoia is telling you the entire distribution layer is being rewritten. The question is whether your product is optimized for human attention or machine parsing. Most are built for the wrong audience.

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Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Profe Kyle 🇨🇦🇺🇸@profekyle·
The fresh off the plane Gringo meeting his Latina's abuela for the first time.
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BOSS
BOSS@thebeautyofsaas·
No one told you that to build the ultimate AI to produce the content you want, you need to feed it with the elite inputs >Taschen/Rizzoli (more prestige stuff) >Thames & Hudson >Steidl/Mack (behind the scenes) You want high-quality stuff? Feed your tools with PROPER inputs
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