Resilia is doing ~$20M/month
→ Their funnel is insanely optimized
→ Subs system feels invisible
→ Clean, conversion-focused design
→ Simple… but extremely effective
I rebuilt their entire theme
(with fully editable sections you can use)
If you want it:
Comment “THEME” + RT
Today I found a potential “GURU” brand doing over $100k/day consistently a year and had 1.000.000 orders Shopify Milestone plaque. And today I feel generous to share this with limited people. (cuz not everyone should know this kind of play)
Comment “MILLION” and RT this tweet.
I’ll DM you (need to follow me so I can dm the doc) the store and my full breakdown on:
• Traffic
• Ad count
• Best-selling products
• Top landing pages
• Their best hooks
You can draw heavy inspo from their funnels, offers, landing pages, and creative formats to print in your own store.
Might delete this tomorrow or limit it to the first 500 people —
too much sauce to keep public 🤭🤐
#ecom
This 1 split test will make me millions.
Most founders never run it
It impacts CVR, AOV, LTV, & more
Takes 10 mins to implement,
& it’s the most impactful test you can do.
Just dropped a full breakdown
Like + RT + comment “Test” (must be following) and I’ll DM it to you.
How to create AI advertorials & listicles on auto pilot that are soo good, they don't even look like AI...
Get the free training direct into your DM
RT + Comment "AI" and i'll send it to you (MUST BE FOLLOWING)
How to Spot if Somebody is Full of Shit?
I get questions like this so often that I’m writing this down once and for all—please never ask me about this again:
"How do I find a good mentor?"
"How do I find a good business partner?"
"How do I find a good accountant?"
"How do I find a good lawyer?"
The business world is full of people who pretend they know something, but in reality, they are fake and have zero deep knowledge—even accountants and lawyers.
The easiest way to figure out if someone is actually good at what they do is to talk to them for 40–60 minutes. Let them do most of the talking; just ask questions and listen carefully to their answers. It’s extremely hard to fake real knowledge in a detailed, unscripted 60-minute conversation.
The best approach is to educate yourself on the topic first and then grill them with questions to see their reaction. If their answers are vague or superficial, dig deeper. You’ll quickly notice if they try to change the topic, start sweating, or say something like, "Let me check that and get back to you."
I once needed a new tax advisor. So, I educated myself on a very specific international tax structure, went to five advisors, and hammered them with questions—while pretending I knew nothing about the topic.
Four of them fed me complete bullshit and just tried to sound smart.
It’s easy to fake knowledge when speaking to someone who knows nothing—because that person will just believe whatever the so-called "authority" figure tells them.
Moral of the Story:
Never, ever book a consultation with anyone in your life without at least some preparation on the topic. If you go in unprepared, you will lose—and worst of all, you won’t even realize that someone just fed you complete bullshit.
Even if you’re not an expert, you can still judge how someone reacts to your questions:
How quickly do they respond?
How detailed are their answers?
Do they confidently go deep into the topic, or do they stay vague and surface-level?
Preparation is everything.
Since Twitter doesn’t really favor long-form posts, I’d appreciate a retweet so more people see this—and so I don’t have to keep answering the same question.