We are building this at regen therapy! Already have 2600 clinics signed up on our PUO platform
Pairing peptides but also selling our proprietary cell factor product.
Manufacturing and whatnot all owned/operated here in the US. Currently building the 503 telehealth platform in preperation.
@rorynotsorry Totally! Can show you anytime you'd like. Have a handful of RUO stores using it doing $1M+ /mo. Full commission set up for refferals, analytics suite, and all that fun stuff.
@mansizzzzle I have a company under management who only sells RUO peptides b2b. They do 7 figures a month in sales. This month, we partnered with a 503B here in the US, who is willing to do API manufacturing for RUO peptides. Will flip to the non-RUO version support once legislation changes.
@Seanfrank Agreed as I’ve seen it happen with most of my circle. That said, all the providers are racing to try and create non-injectable versions for regulation purposes/to avoid this stigma.
We replaced all our subscriptions with custom AI software.
Monthly spend dropped from $750 in SaaS to just $4570 in LLM tokens.
A big win!
As a bonus, the team now spends half their time fixing vibe-coded bugs instead of using working tools. But at least we own the stack.
Replit CEO Amjad Masad on why the most ambitious employees are no longer blocked by engineering:
"How can I upgrade my workforce for them to become generalist business people that can wield AI for the benefit of our customers and our bottom line?"
"The most ambitious people are creating billions of dollars of value of their company."
"There are people that are closest to the customer that feel that they have ideas that could make more revenue for the business, but they're often blocked by engineering."
"Now a lot of them are bringing in Replit to work. They're building that idea, and they're making the money for their company. And then they're getting promoted, and then given more power."
"I'm going to build a team of vibe coders that are going to go around the company and find all the inefficiencies and go solve them."
"So we have a new role of this generalist automator."
@amasad with @jackhneel
I'm increasingly convinced that burnout doesn't come from working long hours or weekends. Burnout comes from working on things that drain your energy with people that do the same.
One of my favorite lessons I’ve learnt from working with smart people:
Action produces information. If you’re unsure of what to do, just do anything, even if it’s the wrong thing. This will give you information about what you should actually be doing.
Sounds simple on the surface - the hard part is making it part of your every day working process.
I've worked with a lot of high level biz owners and one anecdote that keeps repeating is the guy who has an incredibly basic workflow almost always makes the most cash.
So you don't see a lot of hyper creative geniuses making a great living online, because they tend to overcomplicate every little move in service of the "vision".
But someone with a super straightforward approach can put together a business doing numbers that sound absolutely alien to a regular working individual.
Food for thought.