The Daily Loop #4
Fourth edition of The Daily Loop. 3 long-form reads, 3 short-term tweets, 1 quote and some daily advice! Have a read.
The Daily Loop newsletter focuses on information that can be consumed in 2 minutes every day by linking to posts across the internet, formatted in a way that is easy for anyone to navigate. In a 3-3-1-1 design.
The goal is for as many people to read this daily and inspire them to think differently about certain things. It will primarily be around topics and industries I am interested in such as: startups, ai, success, innovation, change, crypto, nfts, etc.
3 long-form reads
1/
Just a singular tweet but the video attached is 2 minutes long. Customer obsession, customer-centric, focus on the customers as opposed to competitors — Jeff continuously mentions this.
2/
Post by Brett again. This is a great thread for those interested in businesses and/or working in startups. It’s rare to see the initial goals and pitch from some of the most successful companies ever.
3/
TL;DR- Focus on one product, good relationships, distribution through social media, how to acquire new users through certain mediums, a good name to associate with a specific audience, delegating certain tasks (like ads) to platforms that do it better, community rather than consumers, good equipment, organic marketing through good product, simplify product instead of adding on if struggling with sales and look at data often.
3 short-form tweets
1/
An interesting tweet. The idea of “prompt-engineering” has gotten popular over the last year because of AI tools like ChatGPT or Midjourney. I predict this won’t be a position as AI improves and anyone can get good results from average prompts. But the idea behind speaking in a certain way using certain words to other humans is essentially prompt engineering. Those good at speaking with humans can probably learn how to prompt engineer faster than others.
2/
Crypto, NFTs, Metaverse and AI are promising industries to watch out for. 2030 is not so far off. If you believe in any of them, this is a good timeline.
3/
It sounds simple, but storytelling is indeed the greatest marketing tool. You don’t ask people to buy a product, they buy it because you tell them what value it adds to their life. And looking at the entertainment industry, they all tie back to stories.
1 good quote
“The shortcut is to stop looking for shortcuts.”— Visualize Value
@loop how many hours do You sleep a day? :) Great content, sir