Alex | orbisearch.com
1.3K posts

Alex | orbisearch.com
@AutomationAlex
Validate 11.5x more catch-all emails than MillionVerifier @orbisearch. B2B lead gen service @altbound_
🌏 加入时间 Haziran 2020
659 关注345 粉丝

Most GTM teams ignore Reddit completely. That's exactly why it works.
I spent weeks building a full Reddit GTM system - from finding the right subreddits to automating lead scoring in HubSpot.
Here's the short version of what's inside:
(Step-by-step playbook + Zapier automation + AI lead scoring system)
Get access below
Comment "REDDIT" and I'll send you access
This system isn't advice - it's an execution playbook:
→ How to find and validate subreddits with 50,000+ members where your buyers actually hang out
→ How to build karma the right way so your comments rank higher and reach more people
→ The Sandwich Formula for mentioning your product without getting downvoted into oblivion
→ How to set up F5 Bot keyword alerts so you respond to buyer intent posts within minutes
→ A full Zapier + HubSpot + GPT-4 automation that classifies, enriches, scores, and routes every Reddit lead automatically
We've run this with GTM teams doing outbound, inbound, and everything in between.
Pain points: no Reddit presence, no organic pipeline, no system for capturing demand.
After running the system: demo requests coming in minutes after commenting on a post.
Reddit GTM still works - but only if it's concrete:
Subreddit validation - comment strategy - lead capture automation
Want access?
1/ Like this tweet
2/ Reply "REDDIT" and I'll send you the full system

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we've booked 1,000+ sales calls for B2B companies using cold email.
here are 8 things we learned that most teams never figure out:
1/ your ICP is killing your results before you send a single email. there's a 30-second test to find out.
2/ you're reaching 5% of your market. no intent signal fixes this. the fix is counterintuitive.
3/ there's a setup step 90% of teams skip. it's boring. but skip it and nothing else works.
4/ more follow-ups are actively hurting you. there's a hard line. most teams are way past it.
5/ the 45-day rule. not 30. not 60. the data shows exactly why.
6/ 31% of positive replies never become meetings. the reason is embarrassingly simple.
7/ when someone replies, don't email back. the worst thing you can do is send another email.
8/ your "booked meeting" count is lying to you. there's one question that filters out the garbage.
full breakdown in a 15-minute video. no fluff.
comment SYSTEM and i'll send it to you.

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@codyschneider You’d reach more leads if you validated with @orbisearch
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claude automation for you
scrape linkedin post engagers
find linkedin post where engagers are my ICP
message the post link in a slack channel
apify extracts engagers
engagers linkedin profiles enriched by apollo
million verifier api validates emails
ads them to instantly ai via api
email that get's written references the original posters name and what the post was about
parlays this into my product
runs on a server on railway
track all the leads in hubspot and instantly
analyze the data and do reporting with it using graphed .com
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I can't express to you how useful a claude code with an .env file that contains the API key for your Instantly AI with 2,000 warmed inboxes
is
it's like test any GTM or PR idea at the speed of thought
I can test outbound motions
or test back link building ideas
or test PR placements
or test creator reach out
and then once you figure out something that works, you can just literally spin up an agent on a railway server that does that task for you
agents that just run email for you are the most underrated thing in your tool kit
stack is hypertide io, apollo io, millionverifier, instantly ai
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A two-person GTM team at a Series B SaaS company closed $2.4M in pipeline in one quarter.
No SDRs. No demand gen agency. No paid ads.
Signal-based outreach. Intent scoring. AI-sequenced follow-up. Automated reporting.
Two GTM engineers running the whole motion - for one quarter.
I pulled it apart.
Compared it to every system we've built across the GTM teams we've worked with.
Then asked myself one question:
If I had to reverse engineer this from scratch - what would it actually look like?
Turns out the architecture isn't that complicated.
I mapped the whole thing into a step-by-step playbook you can upload directly to any LLM.
It walks you through building your own version from GTM strategy to fully AI-powered execution.
Comment "GTM" and I'll send it over.

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REPEAT AFTER ME
Abusing ChatGPT is STUPID easy right now
I spun up a brand new site using ONLY listicles
Google clapped it instantly
ChatGPT started citing it in 2 weeks (srs)
NO ONE IS DOING THIS IN PUBLIC LIKE ME
Comment CHATGPT + like this post and I'll DM you the full SOP (must be following)

Jacky Chou (buying online businesses up to $1m)@indexsy
STRAIGHT TO THE DOME
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I commented on LinkedIn for 10h/day for 7 days straight.
541 comments from a single account.
This changed how we approach LinkedIn forever.
The results:
- 4,591 to 290,147 search appearances in 7 days (6,222% increase)
- 315,373 total impressions (92% came from comments)
- 136% increase in profile views
- +7.5% week-over-week follower growth
And here's what nobody tells you about LinkedIn commenting:
Your first week WILL feel like shouting into the void.
But if you quit before you understand position data? You'll never see what actually works.
Here's what the numbers taught us:
- Position 1: 1,570 avg impressions per comment
- Position 2: 875 avg impressions
- Position 5+: 404 avg impressions
Most people struggle to pass 500 impressions on their posts.
A single well-placed comment beats that.
But here's where it gets interesting...
The thing that worked? Not what we expected.
We started with long, thoughtful comments (what everyone recommends).
Turns out the algorithm - and readers - HATED it.
So we switched to 11-25 word punchy comments in position 1. Results jumped immediately.
We also discovered:
- Being 10 seconds faster = 5x more distribution
- LinkedIn notifications are delayed 2-5 mins - manually check Priority 1 creators at their posting time
- Replying to replies creates engagement loops that keep your comment visible longer
- Rotating 5 comment patterns prevents your profile from looking like a bot
Most people would call it quits after a tough start and pivot to posting instead.
We said: give us 7 days of real data. Because the data doesn't lie - it just takes volume to speak.
So we recorded the entire commenting system:
- The 3-tier creator priority framework (who to comment on and when)
- The exact daily protocol (morning, throughout day, end of day)
- The 5 comment patterns that generate replies (Data Drop, Reframe, Story, Contrarian, Addition)
- The speed setup guide so you never miss a Position 1 opportunity
- The tracking spreadsheet to measure impressions, profile views, and DMs by creator
- What NOT to do (we analyzed all 541 comments so you don't repeat our early mistakes)
This is the same system generating 300k+ weekly impressions from comments alone.
And converting at rates most people don't believe are possible from a free channel.
Want the complete playbook?
1. Follow me
2. Reply "POSITION"
I'll send you the full breakdown.
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REPEAT AFTER ME
Reddit comment count is a ranking factor RIGHT NOW
There's a method where you can generate 50 Reddit comments for $0.50 a pop
THE SOP
1. Own a subreddit in your niche
2. Export top posts from related subs
3. Rewrite and post with your mod account
4. Generate 50 comments with one click
5. Approve them as mod
6. Watch your posts rank
NO ONE is doing this at scale (BESIDES THE VPN COMPANIES)
Comment "REDDIT" + like this post and I'll DM you the method (must be following)

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Ultimate Cold Email Stack
ESP: Bison or Plusvibe
Infra: ScaledMail + CheapInboxes
Leads: Discolike + Apify
Lead list: LeadFormatter
Deliverability: EmailGuard
Warm-up: WarmUpInbox
List cleaning: MillionVerifier
You get discounts on all these inside CCG
closingclientsgroup.com
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How to grow your SaaS from $0 to $1M ARR
(1+ hour FREE course)
I just released a free course breaking down everything I learned going from $0 → $1M ARR.
No theory.
Just the exact strategies that actually worked.
If you're building a SaaS, or feeling stuck trying to grow, this will help.
Inside the course I cover:
• How to turn social media attention into real revenue (not vanity metrics)
• The growth frameworks that actually generated SaaS ARR
• Why building an audience before you need it changes everything
• The distribution strategies that helped us scale fast
Want the course?
RT so more founders can see it
Comment “Course”
I’ll send it to you. 🚀
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@gat0rtheskater @hrishio Also private data and infrastructure
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@hrishio distribution, community, stability, open API, brand loyalty
Before: customer wants super specific feature. You may never ship it.
Today: customer builds it on your API in 30 mins
"Composable apps" are going to be a big hit
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Here’s how you can get a working cold email tool stack set up for $341 a month, sending out 30,000 cold emails a month, building pipeline and driving growth for your startup each month.
You need a few things: Domains to send from, inboxes for those domains, people to send emails to, a verifier to double check your email targets, and software to do the actual sending. That’s it, tool wise.
Domains - $24 a year minimum
For a minimum set up, you need two domains to send emails from (more is better, and buying extra to save for later is great, but a minimum is just two). Don’t send from your main domain, save that for transactional and newsletter emails.
Two .com domains will cost you about $22 a year, or $2 a month essentially.
If your startup is saasydb .com, buy usesaasydb .com or trysaasydb .com or something similar.
I use Dynadot to buy domains. Comment below and I’ll send you a DM with a discount code for them.
Inboxes: $194 a month
Your domains need inboxes on them, to send the emails from.
There are a lot of places to buy inboxes from, and by going through a reseller/broker, you can save a ton of money compared to buying directly from Google or Microsoft.
I’m partnered up with Slicey .ai as I’ve enjoyed working with the founder for years now, and they provide Microsoft inboxes, both Outlook and Azure.
Slicey will have your inboxes connected within 30 minutes of ordering, without having to share your login. They’ll take care of all the technical setup, too. Super easy.
I have a special discount code for them too, so drop a comment if you need it.
Targets: $49 to $97 a month minimum
Who are you going to email? There are various major and niche leads databases, and I work on one focused on the SaaS industry. If you target SaaS companies, check out @ saasyDB (Drop a comment if you want a discount code for your first month.) saasyDB starts at $97 a month, but there are annual and lifetime plans available too.
If you want a broader leads database, Apollo is very popular, and I’ve heard good things about Prospeo lately. Drop a comment if you want free credits at Prospeo.
Verifier: $59, credit based
No matter where you get your leads from, you should run the email addresses through a verification tool that double checks to make sure they’re still valid. This will help your overall deliverability and campaigns.
Sequencer: $37 to $97 a month
The sequencer is the software that actually connects all the inboxes, in which you set up the copy and the campaigns that are sent out.
Instantly and Smartlead are very popular, and Email Bison by is big for agencies and high volume senders. I’ve been using Plusvibe for years, and it’s been great for me.
What’s your favorite tool in your cold email stack, that I should have included here?
Also just drop a comment if you want any of the discount codes
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@preframefounder @WhoWorksThere @orbisearch Everyone says that 😅 I’m actually thinking about increasing it.
Let me know if you need some credits to try.
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@WhoWorksThere @Airbnb I tried VRBO but got 0 bookings :(
Hope you figure it out!
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@AutomationAlex @Airbnb maybe VRBO, but hopefully just quit altogether.
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I've been a host on @Airbnb for 7 years. It's been okay, but I'm quitting because they're so unappreciative of hosts, and the support is atrocious.
I'm going to talk more about why it's terrible soon, but I just wanted to go ahead and say something tonight.
Don't become an Airbnb host. They're a terrible company to work with.
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