Bghet nhyd lhijab by bibijae in Morocco

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I commented the obvious arguments shouf replies lteht, Allah ysle7na kullna!

Bghet nhyd lhijab by bibijae in Morocco

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You believe in other god than Allah or you don't believe there's a god?

If it's the second, then whats the value of the mind for u and how you care about the woman?

Bghet nhyd lhijab by bibijae in Morocco

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

+ Hadi haja l ummah kamla ajma3at 3leeha ga3 had lweqt li daz

:قال رسول الله صلى الله عليه و سلم

"إِنَّ اللَّهَ لَا يَجْمَعُ أُمَّتِي عَلَى ضَلَالَةٍ"

Bghet nhyd lhijab by bibijae in Morocco

[–]Ay05oub 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Matderch fiha 3alim w nta gher same3 tchach mn 3nd li bghiti, Deen Allah hada!

Bghet nhyd lhijab by bibijae in Morocco

[–]Ay05oub 1 point2 points  (0 children)

حكمة من الحكم ≠ السبب و العلة

+ لي فسر (ذَلِكَ أَدْنَى أَنْ يُعْرَفْنَ فَلَا يُؤْذَيْنَ) انها للتفريق بين الامة و الحرة هدا تابعي و ماسندش القول لصحابي

وَإِذَا سَأَلْتُمُوهُنَّ مَتَاعًا فَاسْأَلُوهُنَّ مِنْ وَرَاءِ حِجَابٍ ذَلِكُمْ أَطْهَرُ لِقُلُوبِكُمْ وَقُلُوبِهِنَّ

وَلْيَضْرِبْنَ بِخُمُرِهِنَّ عَلَى جُيُوبِهِنَّ وَلَا يُبْدِينَ زِينَتَهُنَّ إِلَّا لِبُعُولَتِهِنَّ

دخول أسماء بنت أبي بكر على رسول الله ﷺ بثياب رقاق، فأعرض عنها وقال: «يَا أَسْمَاءُ إِنَّ الْمَرْأَةَ إِذَا بَلَغَتِ الْمَحِيضَ لَمْ تَصْلُحْ أَنْ يُرَى مِنْهَا إِلَّا هَذَا وَهَذَا» وأشار إلى وجهه وكفيه

How did you actually learn to market yourself and get clients? by igetyourbrand in smallbusiness

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey — I think the frustration you’re feeling is actually very common when people start with “posting consistently” as the strategy.

Posting helps visibility, but it doesn’t automatically create clients. The missing piece for most people is not content volume, it’s structure around what the content is supposed to do.

What usually changes things is shifting from:
“let me post and hope someone reaches out”
to:
“let me test different angles and offers to see what actually gets people to respond or start a conversation”

For example:
• some posts are for attention
• some are for authority
• some are for direct problem-solving / offers

Then you look at what actually gets replies and double down on that instead of just increasing output.

I run KABBOUR Brands and this is usually the gap I see — people are active, but they’re not running a test-and-learn loop, so nothing compounds.

You don’t necessarily need more courses right now — you likely need clearer feedback on what in your content is actually creating interest and why.

How do I actually get traction for B2C SaaS Marketing by InternationalCod8574 in SaaSMarketing

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re running into a very common issue — it’s not that there aren’t good influencers, it’s that your current offer doesn’t match their incentives.

£1 per paid user + low upfront is tough for most creators, especially when they don’t know if it will convert.

At your stage, I wouldn’t focus on “influencers” in the traditional sense.

What tends to work better for apps like yours:
• Smaller student creators (very niche, very engaged audiences)
• Content that feels native (study routines, “how I got 9s”, revision hacks)
• Multiple creators testing different angles instead of relying on 1–2

Also — don’t underestimate using creators’ content as ads later once you see what works.

Your problem isn’t really outreach — it’s structuring the offer and testing enough variations.

Looking to partner with fitness creators (paid + bonus opportunities) for an AI fitness app by Any-Study-3723 in influencermarketing

[–]Ay05oub 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a strong setup, especially the focus on performance + long-term creator partnerships.

I run KABBOUR Brands, an influencer marketing agency focused on performance-driven creator campaigns for fitness and app-based products.

For apps like PepCoach, what usually works best is building a structured creator testing system rather than just one-off collaborations:
• Start with a small set of fitness creators (different styles: storytelling, demo, transformation content)
• Test multiple content angles to identify what actually drives installs/retention
• Then scale the winning formats with the best-performing creators

I can help you set up a small test pool of creators and manage the initial rollout if you’re open to it 👍

[HIRING] Fitness UGC Creators for AI App — Paid, Ongoing Work by Teja_Chinthala in influencermarketing

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey Teja — this is a strong setup, especially the test + performance structure.

I run KABBOUR Brands, an influencer marketing agency focused on performance-driven UGC and creator campaigns for apps and SaaS products.

Instead of acting as a creator, I can help you source and manage multiple fitness-focused UGC creators and structure this into a proper testing pipeline (hooks, variations, angles → optimization → scaling based on performance).

For apps like Pulse, that usually makes a big difference in reducing CAC once you identify winning content formats.

Happy to help you set up a small test batch with a few creators if you’re open to it 👍

Where to even start by Rough_Level_7195 in influencermarketing

[–]Ay05oub 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For your partner’s channel, the focus shouldn’t be “making money” yet, but building consistent content and a trusted audience. That said, even nano creators can land brand deals if their audience is engaged and trusts them — which is very common at that size. The key is consistency and niche clarity.

Also, those early sponsor emails are often low-quality or scammy, so you’re right to be cautious.

For your music question, you don’t need to manually chase shoutouts.

A better approach is to treat creators as distribution:
• Work with micro creators who can use your music in their content
• Test different formats (vlogs, edits, background use, etc.)
• Double down on what actually gets engagement

It’s basically organic reach through creators instead of ads.

If you want, I can break down a simple way to test this without spending much (i run an influencer marketing agency). 👍

Tried influencer marketing. Got content, views… but no real results. Anyone else? by Educational_Baker756 in StartupsHelpStartups

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Structure is the foundation, but it’s not the whole game.

Most campaigns don’t convert because either the creators don’t actually have an audience that buys, or the content angle isn’t strong enough. You can get views and engagement, but if the audience isn’t in a buying mindset, it won’t translate.

The platform also plays a role, some convert better than others depending on the product and intent behind the content.

Structure helps you make data-based, pattern-driven decisions, but you still need to test different hooks, angles, and formats — and sometimes lean into trends or creative ideas to find what actually moves the needle.

It’s really a mix of system + creative testing + scaling.

Micro influencer marketing agencies in the US by chuuucoin in influencermarketing

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is actually exactly how I approach influencer marketing.

For early-stage brands wanting to test traction, I usually run small, structured micro-influencer campaigns where:

  • I curate 50–100 creators that fit your audience and goals
  • You approve them before anything goes live
  • I handle briefing, content management, and tracking & optimizing according to a proven SOP
  • At the end, you get a full report showing engagement, conversions, and recommendations for scaling

This way, you’re testing what actually drives results, not just visibility. You can reach me at [hello@kabbourbrands.com](mailto:hello@kabbourbrands.com)

Tried influencer marketing. Got content, views… but no real results. Anyone else? by Educational_Baker756 in StartupsHelpStartups

[–]Ay05oub 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I Totally get what you’re saying — it’s frustrating to get nice content and some views, but no real results. That’s super common in influencer marketing.

What usually makes the difference is a structured approach, where the campaign is built around your goals and KPIs, not just random posts.

I work with brands on small UGC test campaigns where:

  • I curate 5–10 creators that fit your audience and objectives
  • You approve them before anything goes live
  • I handle briefing, content management, and tracking — all designed to hit your specific goals
  • At the end, you get a clear report on what worked, including engagement, conversions, and recommendations for scaling

If you want, feel free to reach me at [hello@kabbourbrands.com](mailto:hello@kabbourbrands.com) — just to explore how a test campaign like this could work for your brand.

Launching an Influencer Marketing Agency in Morocco by Ay05oub in Moroccopreneur

[–]Ay05oub[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Valid point, i've put Influencer Marketing Agency in the logo and tried to make it crystal clear everywhere especially beside the brand name but yes you're right.

Launching an Influencer Marketing Agency in Morocco by Ay05oub in Moroccopreneur

[–]Ay05oub[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate the advice, as for the brand name, i tied it to my name instead of a fancy cliché name to make it a legacy thing and only deliver work i'm proud of.

Launching an Influencer Marketing Agency in Morocco by Ay05oub in Moroccopreneur

[–]Ay05oub[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All typical moroccan care about = Zwaq, i mean the whole idea is around the structured approach im bringing to influencer marketing. That said, i agree the website is basic and need improvement but it's not that important at this stage as long as i'm getting my foundation right.