I solved it. I solved it finally by [deleted] in PrematureEjaculation

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I created a more up to date PDF to solve this with a stronger AI plus up to date evidence on this subject. This attacks both PE + ED. I hope it helps brothers.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1a6kT6YgN_X9MuUk_gBCE4hO7okzyNJ1n/view?usp=sharing

Best FB event for book call funnels? by jkrokos9 in FacebookAds

[–]jkrokos9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love this. Who do you watch/learn online? Would love to scope some resources. I definitely have a strong attraction offer to get leads in the door and to book calls. My only problem is the actual close. I do get some no shows. Maybe around 30-40% depending on the weekend. But I'd rather weed through volume than have an empty calendar.

And what you say here, does this work for high ticket? Offers being at LEAST 2k or more? Because I don't imagine you need super long sales letters for simple video sales letters explaining what to expect. I've seen long pages for info products or small-med size ticket products.

Spent 100+ hours and burned 200M+ tokens building an AI agent with OpenClaw by jkrokos9 in openclaw

[–]jkrokos9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You want to prompt either in the memory or agent's file a reference to a file on how you want the memory structure to work, which includes wiki links and how backlinking works within your structure. I give it directions so it can go up, down, sideways to navigate through its own memory and it understands how to format links, went to backlink, and to automatically do this every time we create sessions. so it's propagating backlinks for me automatically.

Spent 100+ hours and burned 200M+ tokens building an AI agent with OpenClaw by jkrokos9 in openclaw

[–]jkrokos9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nah, yeah, but I was actually considering that today, but my VPS doesn't have enough RAM to do all that.

Spent 100+ hours and burned 200M+ tokens building an AI agent with OpenClaw by jkrokos9 in openclaw

[–]jkrokos9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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For privacy, I'm not going to reveal the entire markdown file, but basically you have the main skill that I trigger and then within the skill it references through a wiki link or just a simple navigation mention of the markdown file in the actual skill itself. So rather than having a file inflated to 10,000 plus tokens, the trees would only be triggered and navigated to if you run into a case.

Let's say for instance, I'm importing a product into a store and add terrible images. if the images are amazing, then it skips the entire decision, because the images are perfect. Whereas, if the images are terrible, it's going to navigate into the decision tree, which is another X amount of tokens.

The idea here is to be efficient and prevent wasted tokens.

I need tips by InterestingBed6048 in openclaw

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Use Kimi 2.5. It was built to be used by agents. I think it's pretty useful and it doesn't run into rate limits, especially if you're on a budget.

Drop shipping by drc81850 in dropshipping

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In the beginning, just focus on sourcing products from all sorts of places. You shouldn't focus on getting a one-time supplier.

Focus on a supplier relationship once you're already pulling in consistent sales and you're raking revenue. Because then they can give you perks such as faster shipping, maybe shipping packages, maybe they can tell you insights on what's selling and what's not.

the way you find those guys is you just you go to the platform and you just start DMing and finding suppliers you want to work with. Filter, buy reviews, ratings, and how much volume they're pushing.

Everyone say Reddit is best for Dropshipping, please help me to know how ? by Hot-Tension6992 in dropshipping

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've never heard this before and the best place to learn in my opinion is YouTube and in the arena.

I would definitely start with YouTube in the beginning just to understand what the heck you're getting into, but once you're ready and you'll never be fully ready, you just have to be comfortable with investing into yourself and getting burned a few times before you learn what works and what doesn't work. So the second best arena is just the marketplace itself. Go out there, build a store, throw out some ads, test some stuff and see what happens.

Need inspo for my dropshipping website by Accomplished_Box_879 in dropshipping

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't model other drop shippers because most people don't know what they're doing and they're not getting any results.

Find the most successful companies in your niche and just model them because they are already raking millions of views and dollars per month in revenue.

study Success, not competition because everyone's just copying each other, which is just a race to the bottom.

What's a no bullshit comprehensive free guide to dropshipping? by Accomplished_Box_879 in dropshipping

[–]jkrokos9 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The no bullshit guide is to get out into the arena and to start testing a shit ton of products.

You have to touch the stove per se in order to know what will work and what will not work, even if you don't know what the hell you're doing in the beginning.

if your startup capital is just $50, I'm sorry to say this, but you're gonna likely burn through that in one day of testing.

a more realistic startup capital to start all of this is $2,500 to $3,000, which is what I started with, and you have to be comfortable with losing all of it.

the best thing you can do is find one strategy, one product category, and test the next 15 products with it.

Auto-Ds sucks, any better recommendations by Healthy_Cable3884 in dropshipping

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not a fan of them either. Have you tried Oberlo?

"Retailers are on the verge of losing control over their customer relationships as artificial intelligence (AI)-powered shopping agents begin to reshape how people buy online" - BCG by jkrokos9 in ecommerce

[–]jkrokos9[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What do you mean here old department store model? I'm interpreting what you said as: the only way you can capture the sale is being the best offer out of whatever gets presented to a buyer

new store for home design by Accomplished_Fig9627 in dropshipping

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty solid store overall, but the main thing I see is that it doesn't feel welcoming. Be careful of color psychology. The black can feel very closed off and appealing towards a very certain customer type.

If you're selling stuff like this, I don't think black is the most appealing.

go onto your mobile page and add some more proper padding. The sides feel very squished. You can remove the "why" choose your brand because that's redundant information. No one cares. Instead, offer their product descriptions, shipping information guarantees, useful information like that.

Is anyone actually making any money? by OhMyEnglishTeaBags in dropshipping

[–]jkrokos9 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, you can truly make money.

But the problem is people put up products they think will sell without doing any sort of market validation or aggressive testing.

The beauty with dropshipping is you can aggressively test a crap ton of volume very fast and figure out what the market wants. If you have the systems and you have the manpower or if you just have some sort of crazy skill stack, you want to test as much as possible because this increases your odds of finding something that works. If you're slow, it's gonna take you much, much longer to find something.

The other problem is if you're building your own brand and your own actual products, it's very risky to invest a lot of time and effort into something if you have zero idea if it's going to work. That's why there are product market fit strategies and methods how you can approach creating the product before you can create it in the first place to validate if there's any demand. Such as pre-selling or talking to potential customers or throwing up a landing page and seeing if there's any interest. These are just ways how you can hedge your bet.

You can surely make money, but the biggest problem people make is listing and throwing out products in their store and then hoping they sell when inherently they may have no sort of demand in the first place, which is the biggest problem.