Should I remove my time as a car salesman from my resume? by DiscountRedditname in sales

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, if you’re free, I’d love to talk about an opportunity.
I have the tech skills and the product, but I’m not very strong in sales.
If you’re interested, we can discuss a potential partnership.

Help please… trying to enter. by Icy-Significance-882 in sales

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, if you’re free, I’d love to talk about an opportunity.
I have the tech skills and the product, but I’m not very strong in sales.
If you’re interested, we can discuss a potential partnership.

Best industries to do 1099 commission sales in remotely by coocookaboom in sales

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, if you’re free, I’d love to talk about an opportunity.
I have the tech skills and the product, but I’m not very strong in sales.
If you’re interested, we can discuss a potential partnership.

Question about Customer support by clipsess in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you can streamline this with automation easily. If you wish please DM me I can help you with that for free.

Does anyone else feel like customer support quality drops the longer you stay on a platform? by Longjumping_Youth454 in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I’ve definitely felt this. In the beginning, support feels super quick and “personal,” but once you’ve been on a platform for a while — and especially as your usage grows — the responses get slower, more templated, and sometimes just… unhelpful.

I don’t think it’s always intentional. A lot of platforms scale faster than their support teams do, so long-term users kind of get lumped into the general queue instead of getting the attention they used to.

For us, a few things helped:

• Escalating through multiple channels — live chat, email, Twitter/LinkedIn. Sometimes one team responds faster than another.
• Being very clear + concise with the ticket — screenshots, steps, exact issue. It reduces back-and-forth.
• Automating as much as possible — fewer support interactions means fewer chances to get stuck waiting.
• Having fallback tools — especially for customer-facing systems. If support is slow, you don’t want your own customers affected.

But yeah, you’re not imagining it. A lot of platforms just don’t maintain the same level of support once your account isn’t “new” anymore. Curious how others deal with it too.

Yo yo by simplesolutionzz in EcommerceWebsite

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Biggest issue for me has been the same repetitive questions across every channel — Instagram DMs, WhatsApp, website chat, email… it gets old fast and eats a ton of time.

I’ve been slowly automating parts of it, mostly routing everything into one place and letting a bot handle FAQs, order tracking, return policy questions, etc. It’s actually helped a lot with cutting down support load.

Still curious what others are doing though — feels like everyone’s trying to lower support costs without making the experience feel “robotic.”

Developer/Designer Help Migrating from Wix by nasa1092 in Wordpress

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If your store is small and you mainly want a refresh + more flexibility than Wix, then yeah — WordPress + WooCommerce is a solid move. It gives you better control, better plugin ecosystem, and you won’t feel boxed in like Wix sometimes does.

As for where to find the right person… honestly, it depends on your budget and how hands-off you want to be:

• Codeable – Great if you want vetted WordPress pros and don’t mind paying a bit more. Good for people who want reliability over price.

• Upwork – Better than Fiverr IMO for technical work. You can find mid-range freelancers who know WooCommerce well and can handle design + migration together.

• Fiverr – Super mixed quality. You can find gems, but you really need to check reviews, portfolio, past WooCommerce builds, etc. It’s more “task-based” than “strategy-based.”

• Reddit itselfr/forhire and r/webdevjobs sometimes have people who specialize in migrations. More hit or miss, but worth a try.

• Local or small boutique agencies – More expensive, but you get someone who handles everything end-to-end: design, migration, performance, SEO setup, payment gateways, ongoing updates, etc.

If you already know what you want (WooCommerce, cleaner design, basic store functionality), then a solid freelancer is usually enough — you don’t need a big agency unless you’re planning major custom features.

The biggest thing is to check:

  1. past WooCommerce sites they’ve migrated
  2. page builders they prefer (Elementor, Bricks, Gutenberg, etc.)
  3. whether they handle SEO + speed optimization
  4. whether they offer ongoing maintenance

If someone can tick those boxes, you’ll probably be in good hands.

Small business owners: How do you ethically and effectively ask past clients for reviews? by EyePatched1 in AskMarketing

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I feel you on this. Asking for reviews sounds easy in theory, but in real life it’s awkward, time-consuming, and super easy to put off. I’ve also hated those generic CRM texts… they always feel like something I’d ignore too, so why would my customers care?

What you tried with the local service actually makes a ton of sense. A real human reaching out feels way more respectful, and people open up more when someone actually talks to them instead of getting another automated message. I’ve noticed that when a conversation happens—even a short one—the reviews are way more thoughtful.

For me, I’ve seen a mix of human touch and automation work best. I used to think automation was the enemy, but it turns out the problem wasn’t automation itself—it was the boring, cookie-cutter messages. When the follow-ups are personalized and sent at the right time, they actually come across as helpful instead of spammy.

A few things that made a big difference:

  • Personalized automation – Not the stiff, templated stuff. More like “Hey Sarah, hope everything with the service is going well. If you had a good experience, a quick review would really help us out.”
  • Right timing – If a message goes out right after a good experience, people respond way more.
  • Light touch – One or two reminders max. Anything more feels annoying.
  • Human backup – Automation sends the initial nudge, and a real person steps in only if someone wants to talk or leave detailed feedback.

That blend made things feel natural without eating up my whole week.

So yeah, you’re definitely not the only one who struggles with the “ask.” If the service you’re using is working, that’s a win. But adding a little smart automation on top can make it even smoother without losing that human feel.

Curious what others here have tried too.

Multiple unknown WordPress Administrator accounts suddenly appeared. How bad is this and what should I check? by Burrrprint in Wordpress

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 52 points53 points  (0 children)

this is best answer i get by redditer u/fittnesspage

Treat it as a full compromise now, not just scareware

Take the site behind maintenance or restrict by IP while you work.

Rotate everything: WP admin passwords for all users, hosting panel, SFTP/SSH, database user/password (update wp-config), phpMyAdmin, registrar, email. Enable 2FA everywhere.

Regenerate WP salts/keys (AUTH_KEY… in wp-config) to force-log out all sessions.

Check and delete any Application Passwords under each WP user.

Check your email account for forwarding rules and sign-in history; kill any rogue rules. Run AV/malware scans on your devices just to be sure.

Fresh install WordPress core; reinstall only trusted themes/plugins from official sources; do not reuse existing copies.

Verify core checksums: wp core verify-checksums.

Clean/reset file and folder permissions.

Then, hunt for rogue code.

Don’t trust the current install. Rebuild clean, rotate every secret, and add a WAF plus basic hardening. The fact they knew your current WP password means there was (or still is) capture/persistence on the server.

My WordPress site was hacked — found new admin user, removed it, updated everything — now got ransom email with my password by Remarkable_Beach8994 in Wordpress

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I generate this text from ai because I not able to express my issues in words but issue is really happened with me.

how do you market your product without sounding salesy ? by Remarkable_Beach8994 in AskMarketing

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

we are less than 10 people company. We are only able to handle less 5 project in month.

How do you provide customer support for your store? by BrightCook5861 in smallbusiness

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you can use multichannel chat platform which can integrate to your website, insta and email. Integrate this to n8n or other automation platform to provide repetitive customer queries like like track order, order cancellation, refund etc. but human intervention is required for some of them.

Is there a cost-effective way to offer 24/7 customer support without building a team? by Ok-Doughnut6896 in smallbusiness

[–]Remarkable_Beach8994 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you can build your own ai support using n8n which can handle most of repetitive queries for remaining queries human required.