The fastest way to double your income is to triple your skills. Money follows value. If you are not earning enough you are not solving a big enough problem for enough people.
Speech. The one thing that will literally 10x your life, that you do everyday, and you never consciously improve it.
You hit a 9th grade speaking level and stay there until you pass away.
Spending time listening to yourself speak, recording yourself, improving your vocabulary, removing filler words, and practicing tone is one skill that can improve so many areas of your life.
The easier you can communicate your ideas and feelings the more you can improve your success and relationships.
Start with recording yourself and removing filler words.
once Fable becomes available again, I'm not gonna sleep
instead, I will create roadmaps and long-term plans for:
> all areas of my life
> all startup ideas I have
> all potential features for all of my softwares
> long-term forecasts for geopolitical events
> personalized SWE courses
> deep summaries of all books I wanna read
> in-depth analysis of my business data
and any other ideas I'll get.
this is the only way to escape the permanent underclass.
Google Antigravity es una locura.
Acaban de grabar un tutorial de 19 minutos sobre cómo construir este sitio web animado y galardonado con Antigravity + GPT Image 5.5
Most SaaS founders think LinkedIn doesn't work for them.
It works. They Just believe it's a corporate slop platform for old people.
I put together the $1M LinkedIn Playbook for SaaS & AI (below).
It's the exact content and funnel system we use to turn LinkedIn into predictable pipeline. I take our frameworks and use them to build lead magnet funnels, write the posts, and optimize the profile end to end.
This one document replaces an ENTIRE content team.
Our clients book 20-50 calls a month from it, and one brand-new account hit 300,000+ impressions in its first 28 days.
I compiled everything we do into one playbook:
- Why SaaS LinkedIn is completely different
- The ICP exercise that writes your content for you
- The three-layer content funnel, post by post
- The content formats that actually convert
- The hooks that stop your buyer scrolling
- The profile that turns traffic into pipeline
- The lead magnet engine (the highest-leverage move on LinkedIn)
- The email sequences that close
- The 90-day roadmap, week by week
- The one mistake that kills most SaaS LinkedIn strategies
Want the playbook?
→ Comment "Playbook"
→ Follow me and I'll DM it over!
I firmly believe I could take ANY local service business and get them to $100k/month using SEO in 90 days.
Here’s exactly how I’d do it with Claude Cowork Fable 5:
i did $1M+ ARR with a looksmax ai app
now face debloat is blowing up with girls and ecom founders are capitalizing hard
one ai slideshow account did tens of millions of views
but it's mainly ecom products, not an app, so a debloat app built for girls with killer distribution would do crazy
One of the biggest SEO lessons I've learned is that you can almost guarantee SEO success just by copying the strategy of low-authority competitors that are ranking well.
Let's say your brand sells pillow covers.
Take a look at the competitor Woven Nook:
34 domain rating.
(anything under 40 is low)
Ranks in the top-3 positions for 500+ transactional keywords.
If they can rank for major keywords like "pillow covers" and "24x24 pillow covers" with a 34 domain rating...
You can too.
Take a look at their XML sitemap to see the architecture of their website:
wovennook .com/sitemap.xml.
Build out all of the Collection pages they have to model their keyword targeting.
Optimize the Collection pages for their target keyword.
Add those Collection pages to your main navigation menu in the same way that they did.
Skip blog content, as they haven't updated their blog in over four years.
Next reverse engineer their link building.
How many do-follow, DR 30+ links are pointing to their homepage?
20.
Build more than that.
What about individual Collection pages?
Let's take a look at their main Pillow Covers page.
3.
Build that many. But slowly. One a month.
Run this strategy while concurrently dialing in paid ads, retention, CRO, etc, you will dominate the pillow case industry on Google in 6-12 months.
SEO is as simple as that.
most digital product businesses only get $27 from their customers because of 1 reason:
no ascension
the first sale comes in and the founder treats it like the finish line
it's not the finish line. it's the starting line.
a buyer who paid you $37 just did something psychologically huge
they crossed the trust line
they went from "stranger considering you" to "customer who paid you"
their brain has now filed you under "people i buy from"
that category is extraordinarily hard to enter
once you're in it, every future sale is about 10x easier
founders who treat the first sale as the end leave 90% of the revenue on the table
the ladder that actually works
entry product at $37 — prompt pack, template, mini-playbook
mid-tier at $197 — community access or deeper training
high-tier at $997 — full course or coaching cohort
top-tier at $5,000 to $30,000 — consulting, done-for-you, mastermind
most founders sell one product and call it a business
then they wonder why it makes $400 a month
the money was never in the first sale
it was in what you sell to the person who already trusts you
El CEO de Anthropic tras darse cuenta de que con su Claude Fable 5 se lanzó este tutorial gratuito que está rompiendo internet donde se puede crear sitios web animados y premiados de forma brutal en solo 12 minutos
My favorite @elonmusk quote that I often send friends:
Do not fear losing. “You will lose,” Musk says. “It will hurt the first fifty times. When you get used to losing, you will play each game with less emotion.” You will be more fearless, take more risks.
Storytelling’s Secret Structure
(Warning: this is going to get a little technical and nerdy, but it will be worth it for anyone who writes stories in their copy.)
It's no great secret storytelling is a powerful tool for sales and copywriting.
But what's not as well known is that effective storytelling has its own unique writing pattern.
So I'm going to share that with you right now:
Effective storytelling is based on cause and effect.
That is, the idea one event is the result of another event.
For example:
Cause - The temperature plummeted.
Effect - Andrew put on his hat and gloves.
Putting on the clothes was a result of the cold temperature.
And that’s the building block for writing a story.
Something happens therefore something else happens.
In writing it's known as a Motivation Reaction Unit (MRU).
The cause is the motivation, the effect is the reaction, together the pair form the unit.
Now let's look at how you write them:
You start with a motivation sentence.
This something that happens to your character that's important enough for them to respond to.
For example:
• The dog's growl turns into a bark.
Then you have a reaction sentence.
This is how your character responds to the motivation.
For example:
• Sam starts to back away.
And putting them together:
• The dog's growl turns into a bark. Sam starts to back away.
And that's it.
The benefits of this technique are it’s:
• Simple...
• Drives your story forward...
• Gives it a logical flow...
And it makes sure your reader won't lose track of what's going on.
Plus, to turn it into a story all you have to do is rinse and repeat.
You follow one MRU with another, and another, and so on.
A quick example:
The doorbell rings. Dan looks up but decides to ignore it.
It rings again, repeatedly. With a frustrated sigh he gets up and goes to see who it could be.
"I know you're in there, Daniel. I need to see you right away."
Dan recognises his mother's voice and opens the door...
Breaking it down:
Motivation – Doorbell rings.
Reaction – Dan ignores it.
Motivation – Doorbell repeatedly rings.
Reaction – Dan goes to find out who it is.
Motivation – The person speaks to him.
Reaction – Dan recognises them and opens the door.
Now that's not going to win me any awards.
But it does demonstrate it's not difficult to use MRUs to write a professional-sounding story.
And that's how you start to become a great storyteller.
To sum up:
1) Start with something that happens to your character.
2) Follow-up with the character's response.
3) Repeat as needed.
And you don't need to follow the pattern exactly.
Sometimes you might want two or three motivation or reaction sentences in a row.
Play around with it.
Credit for this goes to Jack Swain.
He was the first to break down the mechanics of storytelling in his 1965 book, "Techniques of the Selling Writer".
And if you found this useful:
Repost it to help your fellow persuasion professionals.
Make sure you’re following me @AndrewWriteCopy for more quality copywriting and marketing content.
And enjoy the rest of your day!