Your brand is your handshake before the sale even happens. If your store looks like a template, your customers will treat it like one.
Stop settling for "generic" when you could be "unforgettable."
Let’s bridge the gap between your identity and your conversion rate. 🚀
Let's talk sales, how understanding sales gives you an advantage as a freelancer or business owner to make more sales.
If you see this tweet check the quote later and bookmark it. It should be very useful to you thanks.
my feed is full of MRR screenshots.
people hitting 10K, 50K, 100K like it's easy.
i open stripe and it looks nothing like that.
so i close it and keep building. because i tried quitting once. felt worse.
maybe tomorrow the screenshot is mine.
either way i'll be here.
A 21-Year-Old Girl from Brazil Asked Claude to Find Her a $12 Domain. 17 Days Later, a Silicon Valley Founder Paid Her $11,000 for It
She gave Claude a prompt → Find me a tech term that nobody knows yet but will be huge in 30 days
Check if the .com is free. Make it simple
Claude built her a mini-scraper in 12 minutes. She ran it from her phone.
Day 1: The bot flagged synthetic memory 23 mentions on a niche podcast, zero on Twitter yet. She bought the .com for $12 during her lunch break
Day 8: The term hit Hacker News front page. Her phone started buzzing with DMs
Day 17: A founder from Menlo Park offered $11,000. She negotiated $11,000 + a thank-you tweet from his 80K followers
She filmed a 10-second video that day: just her smiling, holding her phone with the sale confirmation, text overlay: $12 → $11,000 in 17 days. I just asked Claude a question
The video got 4.7M views. 12,000 people commented "SIGNAL"
She says she just wanted to prove that being early beats being rich
I'm going to say something that might upset some people, but I believe it deeply and the evidence backs it up.
The single most powerful thing Black people anywhere in the world can do to fight racism is to become collectively wealthy.
Not just individually successful, but wealthy as a community.
I watched this happen with other groups. When Japan was poor, Japanese people in America were put in internment camps. When Japan got rich, suddenly everyone wanted a Toyota and Japanese culture became aspirational.
Korean Americans were targets of violence in the early 1990s. Today, after South Korea's economic rise, Korean culture is one of the most admired in the world.
The pattern is so consistent it's almost boring: poverty invites contempt, prosperity commands respect.
So when I hear debates about fighting racism in America, I always think the same thing. Yes, call out injustice when you see it, absolutely. But also build businesses, create wealth, and invest in your children's education like your life depends on it.
Make your community so economically powerful that discrimination becomes expensive for anyone who practices it.
That is how you win the game everyone else already figured out.