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title: "Hey, this is Muzzammil 👋 One of the founders of reengage.app 🎉 Below are some of the posts..."
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Hey, this is Muzzammil 👋

One of the founders of reengage.app 🎉

Below are some of the posts generated via Re-Engage from different content sources, both mine and other creators:

- 2 long-form posts 📄
- 1 thread 🧵
- 3 short-form posts 💬

***

Example 1: Long Form Post 📄  

For: Twitter and LinkedIn

Repurposed from : Rez's Newsletter Edition

***

There is this concept called information arbitrage.

Knowing things ahead of others.

And in the age of AI, this is often the key to actually beating your competition.

Why?

You see, tools are getting better. You've got AI agents, no-code tools, and analytics services specialized for your niche.

So, doing things is easy now.

You can build a slick landing page with Card in just 2 hours. Build an app with Bubble in days.

So what matters is how you do it. What direction do you take? What do you work on? Can you spot the opportunity when you see it?

So, how to know about upcoming trends easily before others:

- Follow the best thinkers in the space (X is the best place to be for this)

- Join the private communities where you can (People discuss things first with friends before posting about it)

- Be a tinkerer, try out new things.

Great things are built by people living on the edge. And the winner is often the earliest.

"first mover advantage" is real!

![image.png](https://d3e0luujhwn38u.cloudfront.net/original/img/original/124435/6b2e9362-a8e2-4f76-8620-94c7b60796b0.png)

***

Example 2: Long Form Post 📄  

For: X ( formerly known as Twitter ) & LinkedIn

Repurposed from : YouTube Video of Liam Evans

***

This is the most important (and underrated) service-based business advice:

Focus on key messaging before client acquisition.

At every stage of building and growing your business, you'll encounter many challenges you have no idea how to handle.

Confusion and uncertainty will set in—you'll wonder can you really acquire new clients in this niche (let alone do it well!).

Yes, if you get the messaging right. 

It's way easier for someone who can develop clear and effective key messaging:
• Deeply understand your target audience
• Identify their specific pain points
• Craft a message that resonates with their needs

If you do that, you'll gain clarity in your business direction and make client acquisition easier and more effective.

I had a lightbulb moment about this when working on key messaging . 

It hit me: Clarity is King.

Remember: Your message will make or break your business success.

Questions to consider:
1. Have you taken the time to truly understand your ideal client's pain points?
2. How can you refine your messaging to better resonate with your target audience?

Reflect on these, make adjustments, and watch as a more focused and successful business unfolds.

![maxresdefault (1).jpg](https://d3e0luujhwn38u.cloudfront.net/original/img/original/124435/c2103eb5-c28e-42a1-bdb2-ee3bfe5ca7c0.jpg)

***

Example 3: Thread 🧵

For: X ( formerly known as Twitter )

Repurposed from : YouTube Video of Dan Martell

***

I've been building businesses since I was 17.

27 years later, I'm the founder of a $100M+ revenue company.

Here's everything I've learned about starting, growing, and exiting a business:

![maxresdefault.jpg](https://d3e0luujhwn38u.cloudfront.net/original/img/original/124435/3d1a7446-06c1-4dfd-bc06-dd6257be017a.jpg)

***

The first step: Just start.

My first business was a vacation rental website for my dad's cottage.

I convinced him to pay $500 for hosting, then got more customers by mailing letters to B&Bs.

Lesson: You don't need everything perfect to start. Just get your first customer.

***

The most important skill: Sales

Nothing happens until somebody sells something.

Don't get caught up in "business theater" (logos, business cards, etc.).

Focus on getting in front of customers and asking for the order.

Everything else is just procrastination.

***

Core business functions:

1. Awareness (Marketing)
2. Selling
3. Fulfillment

As the founder, spend most of your time on marketing and sales.

Delegate administrative and operational tasks as soon as you can afford to.

***

Growing your business:

Focus on selling more to existing customers before chasing new ones.

It's easier and more profitable to upsell current clients than to acquire new ones.

Ensure your delivery process is solid before expanding.

***

Underrated skill: Emotional control

Don't self-sabotage by overreacting to challenges.

The bigger the business, the more composed the CEO needs to be.

Learn to disconnect emotion from action, especially with difficult customers.

***

Learning strategy: Just-in-time vs. Just-in-case

Focus on information that solves current problems.

Find mentors who've been there before to avoid "paying the ignorance tax."

Build a peer group of like-minded entrepreneurs to learn and grow together.

***

4 ways to generate demand:

1. Partners (fastest)
2. Publish (content, SEO)
3. PR
4. Paid acquisition

Partners are the best way to go from zero to hero quickly.

Leverage others' existing audiences for rapid growth.

***

Best way to sell: Talk to people

Learn about their challenges and problems.

Present solutions based on their reality.

Every conversation improves your sales process.

Get out of the office and engage with potential customers directly.

***

Branding in the early days:

Focus on your reputation, not logos or color palettes.

Demonstrate expertise by asking insightful questions.

Describe the customer's problem better than they can.

The brand is what people say about you when you're not around.

***

Scaling your business:

0-300k: Learn to delegate
300k-2M: Build systems and processes
2M-10M: Learn to work through people
10M+: Communicate through outcomes, not tasks

Hire driven people and let them solve problems at scale.

***

That's a wrap 

Hope you enjoyed it.

Follow me @danmartell for more of these.

***

Example 4: Short Form Posts 💬

For: X (formerly known as Twitter ) & LinkedIn

***

First short post 👇:

***

I hit $75k/month with just two clients. But before that:

3 months of web design for $500
1.5 months of lead gen with no closings
3 months of mixed results with initial clients

No such thing as 'overnight' success. Everyone is just winging it.

***

Second short post 👇:

***

Struggling to start a lead gen agency without case studies?

Here are 3 tips that should help:

• Use your own campaign results as initial proof
• Offer low-risk pricing (small fee + pay per call)
• Focus on over-delivering to build strong cases

Remember, building trust and showing value is key in the early stages.

***

Third short post 👇:

***

Why I like being an entrepreneur.

'Freedom'

I know it's more work than a job.

But I get to do the grind on my terms.

That's what matters.

***

------- End of Examples------

Go back to try out Re-Engage

Link : reengage.app
