Murphy ki Barfi

2.8K posts

Murphy ki Barfi

Murphy ki Barfi

@strategy_parody

@Quickads_ai & @88ventures | Engineer by training, a 'hacker' at heart, and a recovering CxO

Katılım Nisan 2020
1.1K Takip Edilen379 Takipçiler
Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
@gdb You should call it “AI VC” and make money :) But then I will have to test this idea also with codex and make it a recursive loop?
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Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
@elonmusk Great are you able to raise at Harvey’s seed round now 💁🏻😉
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Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
Great paper. As someone with 20 years of professional services (including McKinsey cough cough) and now building a software disguised as services (Quickads) the thesis is correct imho, widely misunderstood and outcomes will mean more volatility and backward integration to keep improving win ratio That’s why VCs / money raised will still dictate the winners
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Advait Raykar
Advait Raykar@AdvaitRaykar·
sequoia was almost right, but got to the wrong conclusion people are expecting ai agent service companies to have a google like outcome, but they are going to have a cravath/PJT style outcome at best. (great, but not google) you simply can't escape the Permanent Software Middle Class* *my opinion with the current data I see, and my lived experience with software trajectories
Advait Raykar tweet media
Advait Raykar@AdvaitRaykar

x.com/i/article/2046…

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Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
Worth reading for every fly in entrepreneur looking to get funded or builders wanting a reality check on what’s it actually out there in SF
Clara Gold@Clara_Gold

6 months ago, I moved to San Francisco. It’s the best place in the world to build, and one of the worst places to stay human. My unfiltered take: 1. SF is both overhyped and underrated The overhyped part: there are a lot of people with incredible resumes who are deeply unimpressive in real life. They were at the right company, at the right time, in the right market, and got carried by the wave. They made money, got comfortable, and now spend their time “exploring opportunities” over coffee, wasting your time. The underrated part: the top 1% here is insane. But almost impossible to get. Hiring in SF feels like being a guy on a dating app: everyone you want is out of your league, and everyone in your league wants someone out of theirs. The best people have unmatchable packages, endless options, and are optimizing for maximum impact: labs, frontier companies, or startups raising $100M pre-seed rounds. If you raised $10M from Tier 1 investors, you’re not hot shit here. You’re a B-player. It’s humbling. 2. There are fewer mission-driven people than I expected Especially on the application layer. A lot of people are in “secure the bag before it’s too late” mode. And honestly, it gives me the ick. The real religious builders I’ve met are often in labs, hardware, biotech, deeptech, defense — places where the work is hard enough that you can’t fake obsession. 3. The status game favors builders This is what SF does better than anywhere else. It rewards obsession. It rewards weirdness. It rewards people who make building their entire personality. Europe punishes that. SF gives it status. If you’ve felt like an outsider your whole life because you care too much, work too much, think too radically, or refuse to be chill about things that matter, this city will make you feel less insane. 4. The market liquidity is absurd Even if you don’t build a billion-dollar company, if you manage to build a strong product with a great team, someone smart might still acquire you for $ 100M. Yeah I know, it’s not your dream outcome as a founder, but on the days you feel desperate, it helps to keep going. 5. SF does not care about the meaning crisis that’s coming Anyone paying attention here can feel that something massive is happening with AI. But I’m shocked by how little people talk about the meaning crisis coming next. Everyone wants to talk about AI liberating humanity. Almost no one wants to talk about what happens when work — the thing that gives most people identity, structure, dignity, status, and purpose — starts disappearing. The vacuum will not be peaceful. People are underestimating the chaos that comes from humans suddenly having no idea why they matter. And I really feel like no one cares. 6. Personally, I’ve never been more unhappy I moved to SF and entered the matrix. I’ve always been intense. I’ve always worked crazy hours. But here, I lost the last parts of myself that were not about building. I don’t go to events. Most networking events feel like theater for people pretending to be important. The only events worth going to are small, curated dinners with people who are actually alive. I’ve made 0 real friends. I don’t do well with transactionality. I don’t do well with people constantly performing greatness. I don’t do well with rooms where everyone is optimizing and no one is being honest. So yes, SF is lonely, transactional, delusional, addictive, inspiring, boring, extraordinary, and completely insane. But it is still the only place to be right now if you’re a founder trying to build the next wave of humanity. And for now, that’s enough.

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Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
@GanKanchi I hear you and I feel the same. Don’t worry you aren’t alone.
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Dr Mouth Matters
Dr Mouth Matters@GanKanchi·
Confessions and realities 42M, 55LPA I am a 42-year-old man with a senior job in IT. I have a house in Chennai, a supportive wife, and two children. On paper, everything about my life looks perfect. I have achieved all the things society says a man should achieve. In my twenties, life felt different. I had friends to spend time with. We would hang out at Marina Beach and Besant Nagar beach, watch movies at Rohini, Udayam, and Kasi theatres, and ride around Mount Road on my RX100. In my thirties, I had colleagues to talk with over tea breaks. We would discuss apartments, onsite trips, and share random stories about life and work. But now, in my forties, life has turned into a quiet routine. My phone rarely rings for anything personal. Most calls are about office work, bank alerts, or someone from home asking me to pick up milk on the way back. The loneliness of a man in his forties is unusual. I am not physically alone, but I often feel like a machine. When I enter my home, I am simply “Appa.” I am the person who pays school fees, fixes the Wi-Fi, and handles repairs. My wife is busy with her work and the kids. My children are teenagers now, living in their own worlds and their own rooms. They love me, but they mostly see me as the person who provides comfort and stability. They no longer see me as an individual. At the office, I am the senior person. I am expected to have all the answers. I cannot tell my team that I feel tired. I cannot tell my boss that I sometimes struggle to keep up with new technologies. I must appear confident and strong, even when I quietly worry about the future. Sometimes I drive home slowly from work just to spend a few extra minutes in the car. I listen to songs from my college days. For those fifteen minutes, I am not a manager or a father. I am simply myself again. I realize that I have not had a real conversation about my feelings with anyone in years. My old friends now exist mostly as names on WhatsApp. We send “Happy Birthday” or “Congratulations” messages, but rarely talk. When we meet at weddings, our conversations revolve around our children’s grades or the cars we drive. We never talk about what we actually feel. The hardest part is that I cannot even complain. If I tell my family that I feel lonely, they look confused and say, “But we are all here with you.” They do not understand that a person can be surrounded by people and still feel like they are on a desert island. Society teaches men that if they provide money and security, they have succeeded in life. But no one teaches us how to deal with the silence that comes with it. I have built a beautiful life for everyone around me, but sometimes it feels like there is no space left for me inside it. And maybe… this is what life in your forties feels like.
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Kritika Kapoor
Kritika Kapoor@Kritikaaaa_10·
I was today yrs old when I realised that Pratham Mittal (founder of Master’s union) is the son of Ashok Mittal (founder of Lovely professional uni)😭 like bro… you literally come from that background-one of the biggest pvt education setups in India you already have the infra, the scale, the reach, the distribution, EVERYTHING you could’ve just: made it more affordable fixed the actual employability gap upgraded curriculum for real-world skills and lowkey change the game at scale Instead, we now have another premium institution charging insane fees, selling the “entrepreneurship + startup + placement” dream and don’t get me wrong, Masters’ Union is positioned well, cool vibe, industry exposure and all -but it’s also very clearly targeted at a certain bracket only like it’s not solving the mass problem it’s just creating a premium layer on top of an already broken system
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
"Mr. Wonderful" (not so much) sold a melting company to Mattel for $4.2 billion, dumped his stock before the disclosure, got fired six months later, and watched the buyer write off everything he sold them. He is now on a podcast telling that as a folksy work-ethic anecdote. This guy has been running the same grift for 26 years. The Learning Company was losing $105 million a year on $800 million in revenue when Jill Barad announced the deal in December 1998. Mattel paid $4.2 billion in stock for a company hemorrhaging cash. Kevin took over as president of the new TLC digital division on May 13, 1999. He sold his Mattel shares within weeks for roughly $6 million. The buyer was still unpacking the boxes. In October 1999, Mattel disclosed that the division Kevin ran had not produced the projected $50 million in Q3 profit. It had lost $105 million. The stock crashed, wiping out $3 billion of shareholder value in a single trading day. The next quarter the division lost another $206 million. Mattel fired Kevin in November, six months into a three-year contract. Four months later they fired Barad too. Two careers ended cleaning up the mess he sold them. Shareholders filed a class action. It named Kevin personally. The complaint alleged TLC had used accounting tricks to inflate quarterly revenue and claimed he cashed out his Mattel stock at the peak right before the truth went public. Mattel settled for $122 million in 2003. Kevin kept his $6 million. Sixteen months after closing, Mattel sold The Learning Company to Gores Technology Group for $27 million. BusinessWeek put the acquisition on its "Worst Deals of All Time" list. The Telegraph called it one of the worst takeovers in modern business history. Kevin's own explanation was "the technology meltdown" and "a culture clash." Translation: anything except the man holding the microphone. The grift never stopped. The guy who sold Mattel a $4 billion turkey, dumped his shares before disclosure, and got named personally in the resulting class action is now on television calling himself "Mr. Wonderful," lecturing founders about discipline. Same playbook, smaller targets. Sell a story, cash out, blame the room. Mattel investors lost $4 billion. Kevin kept $6 million in cash. He kept the microphone too.
Yonan@yonann

Kevin O'Leary says he sold his company for $4.2 billion and all 10 founders went back to work because they didn't know what else to do "I woke up one day and we sold The Learning Company for $4.2 billion, I had founder shares, I wasn't even thinking about that the night before when we were negotiating the deal" "The 10 of us that were founders, we didn't know anything else except to go back to work… the only difference was we were filthy rich"

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Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
**Dentsu cut 3,400. Ogilvy cut 700. 17,000+ jobs gone in 2025.** We hired 3x our headcount in 6-9 months. The difference? **We’re actually AI-first.** Not AI-adjacent. Not AI-enhanced. Everything—from strategy to execution to GTM—**built for AI first.** Age doesn’t matter. **Output does.** **Here’s who we’re NOT looking for:** One-script wonders. Your-intuition-over-data creatives. CMOs pampering their ego. Brand marketers obsessed with vibes. We need **performance creatives.** People who get that **social media performance creative** is way deeper than it looks. That creative and data are the same system. That we **move the needle on revenue, not egos.** ----- **Hiring 3 roles (yes, we merged them):** → **Account Executives** (performance marketer + creative strategist, one person) → **AI-first Video Editors** → **Creative Strategists** **How to apply. No resume.** Send one Google Doc with: 1. **One piece of creative you built with AI** (show BEFORE & AFTER) 1. **How you actually use AI in your workflow today** DM me the link. I’ll personally review. ----- **We’re building for what’s next. Not what’s past.** **Scalable creative. AI-powered. For people who get it.** ❤️ **P.S.** — That photo attached? Real or AI? 👀
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Arindam Paul
Arindam Paul@arindam___paul·
Anyone else uses Wispr Flow and faced issues? I tried the free version, liked it and then bought the pro version Ever since then, not been able to use it. Support is all AI and giving robotic replies with usual troubleshooting that doesn't work Disappointed
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
We started an AI founder twitter group... reply with "I'm in" if you're a founder and want to be added
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Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
@wesbos It’s glitzy launch videos like this that gives normal homosapiens inferiority complex. Unfair
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Comman Man
Comman Man@CommanMan777589·
Employee decimates Peyush Bansal’s fake Claims 👏👏👏👏 Aah Man this is gonna get dirty for @lenskart and @peyushbansal
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Zach Tratar
Zach Tratar@zachtratar·
Wait, didn’t the Anthropic CPO only resign from Figma’s board like last week? So they were actively building this while he had a major conflict of interest?
Claude@claudeai

Introducing Claude Design by Anthropic Labs: make prototypes, slides, and one-pagers by talking to Claude. Powered by Claude Opus 4.7, our most capable vision model. Available in research preview on the Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise plans, rolling out throughout the day.

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Murphy ki Barfi
Murphy ki Barfi@strategy_parody·
The more you get to know how the world works The more you realize, how little you know
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Chris
Chris@everestchris6·
this OpenClaw bot finds small brands running stale Facebook ads, renders 3 fresh creatives on their actual product, and mails them a postcard, all on autopilot. here's how agencies + fractional CMOs can close $2K/mo creative packages: - pulls every advertiser from the live Meta Ad Library - scores ad-bleed (ad age, creative count, static-only, page size) to rank hottest leads - scrapes the product hero + brand palette from their website - renders 3 fresh ad creatives on their real product with AI - spins up a personalized microsite + cold email: "rebuilt your facebook ad" - mails a postcard with the new FB mockup on the front every step from ad discovery to mailbox runs without a human reply "AD" + RT and i'll send you the full guide so you can build this too (must be following so i can DM)
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Alex Vacca
Alex Vacca@itsalexvacca·
Giving away the exact Custom Skills Folder we use inside Claude Code to write our cold email sequences at ColdIQ. Trained on the same emails that have generated over $10M for our clients. Plus the master prompt we engineered to clone their buyer psychology. I've tested every AI model for cold email. ChatGPT. Gemini. Grok. They all produce okay copy. But okay doesn't get replies. Claude Code is the first one that changed that. It doesn't come off as AI. It comes off as your best AE on a good day. How it works: > Drop in a target website, a LinkedIn URL, or a detailed ICP > It returns a 3-step outbound sequence > Fully optimised for Instantly > Under 45 seconds, start to finish It feels conversational. Opens strong. Ready to launch in your campaigns. Most people are still prompting ChatGPT to "write a cold email." This is what running 7-figure outbound in the background actually looks like. Want the Skills Folder, the master prompt, and the full system? → Like this post and follow me → Comment "EMAIL" and I'll send you the link.
Alex Vacca tweet media
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Harry Stebbings
Harry Stebbings@HarryStebbings·
This is the wildest story... "I introduced Dario to 22 friends up and down Sand Hill Road and we got 21 no's.... it was such a brutal time getting this company going." @AnjneyMidha This company today is trading at $860BN on secondary markets... ouch.
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Felix Rieseberg
Felix Rieseberg@felixrieseberg·
Today is a big day! We're launching a ~ new ~ version of Claude Code in the desktop app. It's been redesigned from the ground up for parallel work and is a lot faster. It's been my main way to use Claude Code for the last few weeks.
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