Закреплённый твит
Sebastian Watzinger 📻
2.2K posts

Sebastian Watzinger 📻
@SWComposer
building the easiest beautiful way to share audio - carrd for audio
Podcast Присоединился Haziran 2013
231 Подписки314 Подписчики
Sebastian Watzinger 📻 ретвитнул
Sebastian Watzinger 📻 ретвитнул
Sebastian Watzinger 📻 ретвитнул


Adam had 2 posts and under 1k impressions on LinkedIn.
Now he's landing dream clients on repeat. (Here’s how:)
Most agencies struggle on LinkedIn because they're invisible.
Their competitors (often with worse offers) are dominating and closing deals by default.
I just documented our entire 90-day system that turned Adam from "under the radar" into a recognized SEO authority for B2B SaaS
This case study breaks down:
→ How we rebuilt his profile into an authority page
→ The ICP-first content strategy we used
→ Our infographic system that made complex posts digestible
→ Targeted engagement that got him seen by the right people
→ How we turned LinkedIn into a sales asset, not just impressions
The results in 90 days:
- 200,000+ impressions (from under 1,000)
- 3,000+ followers in his exact ICP
- Consistent inbound leads and clients
- Shortened sales cycles (prospects pre-sold by content)
This is the exact playbook we used.
Want the full breakdown?
Follow me and comment "YES"
I’ll send it when I get a chance!

English

You take the day job to fund the dream.
Then the day job takes the hours you need for the dream.
Then you miss a deadline because you had a shift.
Then you miss a relationship because you weren't available.
Weeks pass. Then months. Then you realize the thing keeping you alive is the same thing keeping you stuck.
Most composers know this feeling. I certainly do. I lived it. The survival trap. Working just enough to not starve, never enough to actually build.
The shift happens when you stop trading hours for security and start building assets that work while you sleep.
A catalog.
A reputation.
Relationships that remember your name when budgets open up.
You can't outwork the paradox. You have to outbuild it.
English

You spend years perfecting your craft.
Days turn into weeks of tweaking mixes.
Weeks turn into months of building your catalog. Months turn into years of sending pitches into the void.
And everyone around you keeps saying the same thing.
"It's all luck. Right place, right time."
But here's what they don't see from the outside.
It's not about being in the right place at the right time. It's about being ready when you finally get there.
And about showing up to enough places, for long enough, that "right time" becomes inevitable.
The composers who build sustainable careers aren't the ones who wait for lightning to strike. They're the ones who become impossible to ignore through sheer consistency.
One day a director calls. Says they heard your name from someone you worked with three years ago on a project that paid almost nothing.
And suddenly all those years of showing up start compounding at once.
English

What’s the #1 thing missing from your current audio portfolio?
English

Just recorded a walkthrough tutorial on How to Set Up a CFO Dashboard Using a Fully Automated Xero Aging Report System (step-by-step)
With n8n, automation pulls unpaid invoices daily, cleans the data, and updates dashboard in real-time
Like + Comment "CFO" to get the FULL Tutorial FREE
(Must be following)

English

The starving artist is not a badge of honor. It's a trap.
Somewhere along the way, we convinced ourselves that struggling means we're serious.
That business skills compromise artistic integrity. That caring about money makes us sellouts.
This thinking keeps you poor. And tired. And eventually, bitter.
The composers who last—decades, not years—are the ones who treat their gift like a business worth protecting.
You are not just an artist. You are a strategist, a networker, a brand, and a business owner who happens to make music.
Accept this, or keep wondering why less talented people keep getting the gigs.
English


