Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Velqor
24.6K posts

Velqor
@velqor
Domain investor and broker https://t.co/XjRyd0OzgU https://t.co/vj2LHxcKe0 https://t.co/cRzqES0V6H
Stockholm, Sweden Katılım Nisan 2016
180 Takip Edilen1.3K Takipçiler

@velqor Feel free to use voucher FREE1 for free registration. Do let me know your honest feedback, thank you
English

@velqor Check dnterminal.com for a seamlessly AI experience in domaining
English

I saw a domain …ychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch.com
Honestly at that point just send me a PDF, this is not a website anymore.
English

Domain for Sale: NefPay.com
@spaceship
Short, brandable, and perfect for fintech or payments.
Strong global appeal. 💳
If you're building the next big payment solution, this domain gives you a serious edge.
📩 DM for details or offers.
#DomainForSale #Brandable #Startup #Fintech #Paymentsolutions

English

@velqor @spaceship If I get one sale in the next month, I will definitely try 100%.
English

After seeing a high % of domainers reporting sales through @spaceship SellerHub, I've decided to switch ~50% of my domain portfolio to Spaceship landers. Time to test it out and see what kind of results I can generate. The 5% commission + clean landers are hard to ignore 👀🚀
#domaining #domains
English

I'm projected to make $13k this month.
6 months ago I was making $100.
Here's what happened 👇
I quit my stable CTO job in September 2025. I had worked for this company 3 years alongside a great team and made good money.
I quit to go all in on BlitzReels, my AI short-form video SaaS. 8 months in, total revenue: $100.
I tried writing "viral posts" on X but that didn't work (in the sense that they didn't go viral)
So I hid in the code. I coded like a madman. I shipped countless features. I built a lot of stuff nobody had asked for.
The only reason I survived those 6 months was small freelance jobs that came in through Twitter and Linkedin. They barely paid my bills. But they paid them. I DM'd people in my network both here and on LinkedIn. I said yes to any job opportunity.
I'm genuinely grateful to everyone who reached out during that time.
By month 4 I'd lost focus and motivation. Was BlitzReels the problem? The positioning? Was I just bad at this? I felt so bad.
At some point I had to be honest with myself. I can't make money with BlitzReels so I need to get back to what I'm great at : agency work.
I had 3 years of CTO experience. Shipped 6 client projects. I had a YouTube channel at 2k subs. I had years of social proof I could use. I still spent most of my time working on BlitzReels.
By month 5 I was genuinely desperate. No money left. No MRR. Lots of stress.
So I pivoted.
Here's what actually moved the needle:
1/ Talk to more people. Friends, devs in your field, old coworkers, people you follow online. Go to events, meetups, conferences. Have coffee with someone every week. You have to show up.
2/ DM every past client and ex-colleague. Ask them if they know someone looking for a senior dev. People can't refer you if they don't know you are looking. This is the one that actually worked. Past clients who already knew I ship clean code recommended me to their network. I signed a $15k+ client exactly from this. A single DM can be turned into 3 months of agency work.
3/ Set up profiles on freelance platforms (Malt, LinkedIn). Add past work, good description, set yourself to available. But don't count on them. I registered on Malt in September. 6 months later, I signed zero missions from the platform itself. Every meaningful lead came from outside. Some clients reached out but I didn't end up signing with them. It takes about an hour to create a great profile and can make a difference.
4/ Apply to full-time roles too, not just freelance. There are some companies hiring on LinkedIn and X. Even if you don't actually want a full-time job, do the interviews. They help you to practice your pitch. I mentioned everything I did that could make me stand out (YouTube, my SaaS, the agency). I also wrote down the exact word I'd say if they ask me to "introduce myself".
5/ Improve your LinkedIn. Use a professional picture. Clear list of past experience with dates. Skills that match what you want to be hired for. Pin your best projects at the top. Once it looked like a real senior dev's profile, recruiters started DMing me.
6/ Build things in public that you're proud to show. Not just client work. Every conversation I had with a potential client/recruiter, something else made a difference. My SaaS BlitzReels for AI expertise. My YouTube channel with 2k subscribers. The past client projects I've worked for. When someone asks "what have you built?", show them everything.
Within weeks of doing this, I found a full time job and I work on client projects on the side.

English



















