** If you can spot the easter egg hidden in this VSL, i'll give you a special shoutout **
I took a different approach on my VSL because my service wasn't designed to blend into a crowd. This service is valuable and stands on it's own two feet. Excited for the year to come.
🚿Anyone else think of most of their best ideas while in the shower?
I feel like at least a few times a week I have to jump out and write ideas down in my notes lmao
A big follower count can hide a broken business for a surprisingly long time. It keeps telling you things should be working, so you never go looking for the part that isn't.
Let’s turn your views into clients. Onboarding a small founding group of coaches, consultants and course creators. See if you're a fit: https://t.co/RN6LErgNFz
Great content, no clients. That's a strategy problem, not a talent one.
I watched it happen for years from the editing side, which is why I spent 3 months building the fix: one system running the whole chain, from roadmap to posting calendar, handled by my team.
Content should make their audience feel something in the first 3 seconds and do something in the last 3...
If your edits aren’t built around that, you’re decorating, not converting.
Simply, update your pinned tweet and bio.
Best real estate on your profile and most people leave it stale. I genuinely see people who could double their income via a more polished first impression.
It continually shocks me how many people I see procrastinate learning AI.
Here's a few reasons why you should jump into it:
> There's a multitude of business ventures which are only possible due to the recent advancements.
> Your competition are learning right now and they will only get more skilled by the day. Catch up or get left behind.
> You can save so much money on subscriptions; you'll realise how many tools are just AI with a wrapper. For example using @claudeai I replaced Lovable & Clickup in my workflow.
> It can be your personal assistant & consultant if you're stuck with anything in your business.
Here's a cheeky Premiere Pro tip nobody asked for: build a master project template with your adjustment layers, audio presets, and export settings baked in. Saves 30+ minutes per project. Compound that over a year. ⏲️
Every editor wants premium clients. Very few want to post the specific, uncomfortable proof that premium clients need to see before they trust you with their brand.
I've seen so many of these videos pop up, so I fed the transcripts of 5 into Opus 4.7 and asked it to condense info into 15 helpful tips:
1) Know which model you're on (free tiers are dumber)
2) New chat per topic - context is finite
3) Don't ask one model to do everything
4) Thinking models for hard problems only
5) Verify it has tools - silent hallucination is the killer
6) Always ask for a plan first
7)Give it a feedback loop and let it iterate
8) Use voice. Stop typing.
9) Paste screenshots constantly
10) Read books with the model
11) Build context as code (CLAUDE.md, Custom GPTs)
12) Few-shot examples beat descriptions every time
13) Treat output as a first draft, never truth
14) Run sessions in parallel
15) Use it where your judgment can catch errors
The man who BUILT Claude Code just sat down and showed how he actually uses it.
Not a tutorial creator.
Not a vibe coder with 3 months of experience.
The CREATOR.
30 minutes of watching him work will restructure how your brain thinks about building with AI.
Most people are using Claude Code like a smarter autocomplete.
He uses it like a second engineering team.
The gap between those two mental models is the gap between shipping toys and shipping products people pay for.
Bookmark this.
Watch it twice.
The second watch hits different once you understand what he is actually doing.
Follow @cyrilXBT for more Claude Code breakdowns the moment they drop.
Your colour grade is not your competitive advantage. Your ability to turn a client's story into content that generates inbound leads is. Know which game you're playing.
Someone told me the market is saturated. Mate, the market for generic "I edit videos" is saturated. The market for operators who understand content as a sales lever is wide open.
Hot take: "niche down" doesn't mean you can only work with one type of client. It means your content speaks directly to one. You can still take other work. Just lead narrow, convert wide.
The gap between £2k/month and £10k/month isn't more editing hours. It's positioning, proof, and a content system that does the selling before the call.