Ankur Aggarwal
44 posts


@Math_files If you mean 50% more added each day, you $191,000
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@Math_files @grok how is this possible what was special about her
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@davidsenra you won't regret reading "Skunkworks"by Ben R. Rich this place was like Bell labs but for the aerospace industry.
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if i had zero skills and needed to make $2k/month in 2026, here's exactly what i'd do:
step 1: learn n8n at a basic level
not master it. just play around. understand what it does. enough to speak about it when someone asks. that's it.
step 2: go sell something
find a niche. doesn't need to be sexy. doesn't need to be "money twitter" approved.
i reached out to my 12 linkedin followers. twelve.
found one guy. a crypto lawyer of all people. that's where my entire journey started.
sell first. figure it out after.
step 3: use the cheat code
once you've sold the automation, you need to build it.
Synta(.)io takes you from 0 to 95% complete workflow in under an hour.
plain english → working automation.
no nodes. no debugging for days. no stack overflow rabbit holes.
step 4: deliver and show them how cracked you are
implement it. walk them through it. make the value visible.
they won't just pay you - they'll refer you.
even a simple lovable website for the user to interact with the workflow.
step 5: do NOT undervalue yourself
one client. one week and a bit.
$3k-$10k is reasonable for real business automation.
only thing i regret when starting out? charging $500 when the work was worth $5,000.
the intelligence gap is real. don't leave money on the table because of imposter syndrome.
---
want the full breakdown?
i wrote a 3-pager explaining each step in detail:
- how to find your first client
- what to say in outreach
- the tool i use to build 10x faster
- how to price without feeling weird
comment "2026" and i'll send it over.
(must be following so i can dm)
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@FoundersPodcast next book recommendation : Happiest Man on Earth by Eddie Jakku.
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@FoundersPodcast I was listening to the William Shockley episode and couldn't help but wonder why Steve Jobs, who was also terrible to people and often stubborn and set in his ways, was successful while Shockley was not. What do you think?
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I have listened to so much @FoundersPodcast that my inner voice sounds like David whenever I am reading a book now.
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@levelsio @bryan_johnson How are you getting that sleep score without cutting out coffee ?
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@youtubemusic why is there no option for YT music mobile app and web app to be in sync?
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@FoundersPodcast I think you’d enjoy making a podcast on Empire of Pain by Patrick Radden Keefe. It tells the story of a fiercely industrious patriarch whose drive leads to immense success, but whose lack of moral restraint ultimately steers him away from the noble path.
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Ankur Aggarwal retweetledi

At twenty, you don’t get the life you deserve, you are just the product of the environment you were lucky or unlucky to have.
Then, as you get older, and enter your thirties, forties, and beyond, you notice how much agency you actually had on your life.
Maybe you moved abroad, learned another language, another culture, another mindset, and became an entirely different person.
Maybe you decided you had nothing to lose, and invested all your meager savings into the bet of a lifetime, and it worked out.
Maybe you changed all your habits, and realized that you could be much healthier, smarter, stronger than you thought, if you simply maintain a better diet, a better training, a better sleep, a better routine.
Maybe you fell in love, and realized that a great marriage was about so much more than physical attraction and intellectual compatibility: if you find yourself walking alongside with a kind, thoughtful, honest person who loves you back, you actually won the lottery.
Maybe you met some great people during your journey, shared with them parts of your journey, overcame difficult challenges together, finally understood the real meaning of “friendship,” and that some people are worth trusting and making sacrifices for.
Maybe you also had health issues, lost a few precious people that you loved, understood the fragility of life and the pain that comes with truly loving someone else, but also finally gained enough wisdom to appreciate the simple things in life, that are free and in abundance.
It’s a long journey. The best and the worst things will happen to you. You can choose to act like a victim, or you can choose to respect yourself and be more resilient, mentally stronger, overall better. In the end, you will look back, you will connect the dots, and it will all make sense, that you got exactly what you deserved.
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