GREG ISENBERG Profile picture
Apr 6, 2024 19 tweets 7 min read Read on X
20 years of juicy startup & life knowledge in 1159 words

1. Everything is a drug. Coffee is a drug. Food is a drug. Business is a drug. Use accordingly.

2. Google is a $2T biz walking around with their pants on fire because of AI. There's no guarantees in life

(keep reading)Image
3. Jargon almost never helps your case. The simplest sentences make things happen

4. Avoid “trust me” people. Constantly the most untrustworthy people

5. Why most products fail: not opinionated enough, wrong opinions, wrong community, distribution never figured out, giving up Image
6. Bad copy kills businesses, good copy makes them. Elite copywriters are worth their weight in gold.

7. There are three types of goals to hold sacred. Your someday goals. Your 1 year goals. Your daily goals. Everything else doesn’t matter. Image
8. I used to think a low follower to followee ratio was cool. Now I think the opposite. Avoid people who play status games.

9. More direct reports you have, the more stress you'll have. That's okay. Just acknowledge it. Image
10. Nothing is out of reach. I remember that feeling, on the come up. Top people felts unreachable. They’re just like you.

11. When someone uses your product, they are having a dialogue with you. It’s kinda spiritual. Will they understand your vision like you do? Image
12. Find all your business partners from either people you grew up with or people you find fascinating on the internet, and nothing in between.

13. How to hire: based on integrity, grit and how quickly (and willing) they are to learn. Image
14. Cash-flow is king. Being dependent on anyone is always less than ideal. Zuck or VCs.

15. If you want to write an angry email, wait 24h and see if you’d word it differently tomorrow. Hard to write good emails when you're angry

16. Bad copy kills businesses, good copy makes them.Image
17. The wrong customers will drive you crazy. Sometimes I’ll see a wonderful team and product, but they just focused on the wrong customers. So the business ends up sucking.

18. Find invigoration trips. Trips that give you a dose of inspiration. Image
19. If you sell on the internet, you’re a dopamine dealer whether you want to admit it or not.

20. Be busy creating, not consuming. Consuming is overvalued and creating is undervalued.

21. Follow what competitors are doing, but don’t obsess over it. Image
22. “10 people who yell make more noise than 10,000 people who are silent”

23. No amount of marketing can save a lousy product.

24. No-one should work at a company for 12+ years. It’s too comfortable. Image
25. Your quality of life increases when you screen time goes down. You’re more productive and happy.

26. People underestimate a good name for a product. Own a good name. Bonus points if its a dotcom. The internet rewards catchy names.

27. No rejections, no progress Image
28. The real minimum viable product is just a social post. You’ll validate more than 99% of MVPs through a tweet or an IG post.

29. When you’re thirsty, it’s too late to be thinking about digging a well

30. We often undervalue what we have and overvalue what we don’t have Image
31. T-shirt test. Your brand should be so good people want to wear it on t-shirts.

32. Give customers a little more than they expect. “Bonuses” go a long way.

33. Start even if you’re bad. Get going then get good Image
34. Everyone is in the acquisition and retention business. You're either attracting customers or keeping customers. Usually both

35. You’ll be a lot less happy (and wealthy) if you do what other people expect of you

36. Ignore status games. It’s “cool” to zig, it pays to zag Image
37. The trends that change the world are the ones that are part-inspiring, part-scary

38. Whatever you’re building, have an aesthetic. And own it. People will notice

39. How to come up with startup ideas: "Virtual travel". Go on comment sections to understand peoples needs Image
40. “Home” is where you feel accepted. “Family” is where you feel loved. “Purpose” is where you feel at peace. Image
41. Startup killers: too much capital, too little capital, perfectionism, too obsessed over competition, team burnout, too many pivots, no distribution, no fun anymore. Image
42. The moment you start caring about what other people think, is the moment you start building your company like them

43. Life is full of hidden taxes that slow you down. attention tax, social tax, boss tax, commute taxes etc. What life taxes are slowing you down? Image
44. Life is messy. That's how it's supposed to be. Make typos and don't feel bad about it. Speak from the heart. I know I have typos but that's not why you follow me @gregisenberg (follow me?)

45. Real feedback from colleagues, customers, bosses, investors is sobering. Seek it. Image

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More from @gregisenberg

Mar 26
Beautiful design is now a commodity.

I've spent the last 24 hours with ChatGPT 4o images, and it's clear we've entered a new reality: "Execution is cheap, ideas are everything."

For decades, we were told the opposite. Everyone had ideas. Few could execute them well. The ability to turn a concept into reality separated the winners from the dreamers.

But in an AI world, it's completely flipped.

When anyone can execute at 90% perfection with the right prompts, the limiting factor becomes the quality of your ideas. The creative direction. The strategic insight. The unique perspective.

The most successful companies I'm seeing are shifting resources from production to ideation. Less time pushing pixels, more time exploring concepts.

They're running 20-30 creative directions where they used to do 2-3, because the cost of trying ideas has collapsed.

In a world where anyone can create a beautiful website, logo, or packaging, the winners are focusing on the things AI can't (yet) simulate:

I think it's authentic relationships, innovative products, and unique perspectives.

The real advantage is in knowing when to break the rules of good design in ways that resonate emotionally.

The human touch is becoming less about execution and more about strategic deviation from the optimized norm.

This is creating strange new dynamics in hiring too. When I started our design agency @meetLCA, we hired for world class technical skills - mastery of tools, execution ability.

But now we care more about hiring for conceptual ability and creative direction. People who consistently generate novel ideas rather than perfect executions. Obviously, top tech skills still matter, but way less.

As AI makes "good enough" design accessible to everyone, the market is splitting. At the low end, good enough is actually good enough.

But at the high end, there's a premium on the truly unexpected - the ideas an AI wouldn't generate because they break conventional patterns.

I think we're heading toward a bifurcated creative world: automated beauty for most purposes, with human creativity focused on creating the unexpected, the ideas and approaches an AI wouldn't think to try because they don't follow established patterns of "good design."
The challenge for most of us now isn't "how do we execute this idea?" but "which ideas are actually worth executing?"

Execution is cheap, ideas are everything.

Tremendous alpha in it.

You're an idea person now. We all are?
Read 5 tweets
Mar 14
AI is making every product look the same. Same features. Same UI. Same smart assistant.

So if everyone has the same AI tools, what actually makes a product a $100M winning product?

Insights from a 50 page ebook "how to design products in the AI age" we wrote at @meetLCA:
How AI is raising the baseline for product excellence Image
first wave: social era
second wave: mobile era
third wave: ai era

"Design isn’t about making products work better. It’s about making them matter more." Image
Image
Read 9 tweets
Nov 26, 2024
$375k/mo business idea for you

software that helps mexican/canadian manufacturers avoid tariffs legally. how product can work:

1. optimize shipping routes
2. automate customs
3. ensure compliance
4. find friendly paths

not a logistics entrepreneur but hear me out might be something here

19k manufacturers export $875B to US but focus on top 500 ($10M+ exports)

simple pricing: $5k/mo + 0.1% of tariff saved avg

customer saves $2.5M/yr = $7.5k/mo revenue per client

math for year 1: 50 customers x $7.5k = $375k MRR

market is massive:

2023 numbers:

7,000+ canadian manufacturers export to US ($400B) 12,000+ mexican manufacturers export to US ($475B) 19,000 potential customers

go build this tomorrow
how to build this $375k MRR business:

month 1-2:

- partner with 2-3 customs brokers (they have relationships)
- build basic route optimization engine
- create compliance doc automation
- launch simple dashboard MVP

month 3-4:

- target top 100 mexican manufacturers
- cold email CEOs + ops leaders
- focus message: "save $2.5M/year on tariffs"
- host webinar with customs broker
- aim for 5 pilot customers at 50% discount

month 5-6:

- use pilot testimonials
- speak at 2-3 manufacturing events
- run linkedin ads to ops leaders
- build case studies
- aim for 15 customers

month 7-12:

- hire 2 sales reps ($150k OTE)
- expand to canada
- add shipping integrations
- automate more compliance
- target: 50 customers

key start super manual
prove value
then automate
sell on fear + savings
here's my framework for finding business opportunities from the news

1. spot regulatory changes/policy threats

- immediate pain point created
- companies forced to adapt
- willing to pay anything
- clear deadline

2. ask these questions:

- who's panicking right now
- what do they desperately need
- how much would they pay
- can you build it fast

3. check if it fits:

- clear customer (mexican manufacturers)
- clear pain (25% tariff = bankruptcy)
- clear solution (routing software)
- clear pricing ($7.5k/mo)
- clear urgency (jan 1 deadline)

4. validate quick:

- call 5 potential customers
- partner with industry players
- paid ads to get sense of CAC and get feedback
- confirm pricing makes sense
- ensure technical feasibility
- create content/audience/community

5. bonus points if:

- regulatory/compliance need
- affects big money companies
- simple to build MVP
- customers desperate

real examples:

- GDPR tools ($1B+ market)
- PPP loan software (massive)
- now: tariff tools

perfect founder opportunities have:
urgency + regulation + desperate customers
Read 4 tweets
Oct 29, 2024
yesterday, i stumbled onto the most underrated market research tool.

tiktok creator insights.

it's a goldmine of consumer behavior data, hiding in plain sight. and it's free to use.

here's why it's powerful:

1. shows you what people are desperately searching for
2. highlights topics with high demand but low supply
3. reveals trending questions in every industry
4. tracks search growth over 14-day periods

the "content gap" tab shows you problems people are actively trying to solve, but can't find good solutions for.

so that's cool for a couple reasons

1. help you create content that has low supply/high demand (better chances of going viral)
2. you can build startups to some of these trends

Example:

i searched "email management" and found:

• "how to clear 10k emails"
• "best way to organize work inbox"
• "email templates for busy people"

thousands searching.
hardly any solutions.

the beauty of this

• it's real-time market research
• it's actual user intent
• it's completely free
• and most founders aren't using it

a bunch of smart founders are mining tiktok insights right now

it isn't perfect, but you never know what you might find

your next startup idea might be hiding in those search trends.

So, ill share how to access it because it’s kinda hidden:

1. Go to TT search
2.Type in “creator search insight”
3. Tap view

im one of those people that think using data like this is your unfair advantage.

if tiktok is the new search engine, then tiktok creator insights is the new google trends.

might as well use it.
this is how i use it

i scroll through suggested/trending tap

i see if anything catches my eye

i look to see search data

sometimes ill look for demographic data

i write notes on what i learn

and i see what are related videos

that sparks ideas for me

free ideas galore.
why do i share this stuff even when i probably shouldn't

because i want you to win

i want you to come up with an ad idea that gets you a 5x roas

i want you to turn those shower thoughts into revenue streams

makes me happy
Read 9 tweets
Oct 16, 2024
Startup ideas thread:

#1 AI-driven email signature A/B tester

1. Create plugin for Gmail, Outlook
2. Use GPT to generate variant signatures, track performance
3. Charge $29/month for "Signature Optimizer Pro"
4. Scale to full email copywriting assistant
#2 Micro-SaaS for Airbnb hosts

1. Create AI tool to optimize listing titles and descriptions
2. Add feature to auto-respond to common guest inquiries
3. Charge $99/month for "SuperHost Autopilot"
4. Expand to pricing optimization, review management
#3 Micro-influencer content arbitrage

1. Build tool to identify trending TikToks in foreign languages
2. Use AI to translate and localize for English-speaking market
3. Charge creators $199/month for "Global Trend Surfing"
4. Expand to cross-platform content arbitrage
Read 14 tweets
Sep 15, 2024
my notes on mr beast's LEAKED 36 page leaked "how to succeed in mr. beast production" document

unfiltered analysis/reactions/full document below:Image
page 2

i find it fascinating that this "rulebook" for a billion dollar empire is written so casually.

he even calls out there will be grammar issues.

you feel like he is writing to you. Pretty powerful way to begin.

more companies should do this. founder mode?

here we go. Image
3

one book for everyone is brilliant. But Id love to see what his book for creatives, production, editing etc is

insanely clear goal for everyone. "Make the best videos possible". All companies need this.

he makes a document so simple a child could read it. Image
Read 38 tweets

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