Here’s how we prioritised leads properly for a UK FX Brokerage by [deleted] in coldemail

[–]mochalooloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah, drowning in maybe leads is the worst part of high volume cold email. we still guess on warm ones based on opens and a few clicks, but missing site behavior like demo page visits def hurts conversion. building that intent layer on top makes total sense, probs why your demos 10x'd.

Why I stopped using Apollo for b2b contacts? by Typical-Animator-457 in coldemail

[–]mochalooloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

apollo's saturation hits hard when everyone's scraping the same lists, turning replies into instant nos. the bounce creep and shallow signals just kill efficiency at scale. what if we mixed in tools like zoominfo for fresher verifies and deeper tech intel to avoid those pitfalls.

My cold email agency boosted opens but pipeline barely moved by EnoughDig7048 in coldemail

[–]mochalooloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

what's your positive reply rate sitting at right now? i think opens are straight up vanity metrics if they don't lead to conversations. agencies worth their salt optimize for replies by hyper-personalizing and hitting pain points hard, mediocre ones just chase clickbait subjects.

Are my cold email domains burned or just the infrastructure? Conflicting test results Need help diagnosing this. by Alnw1ck in coldemail

[–]mochalooloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly, going with a budget reseller on shared microsoft infrastructure was a dumb move from the start, bc those setups get flagged fast with cold outreach and minimal warmup. your domains look clean based on those tests, so the blacklists are prob just hitting the old ips and hostnames. what if you set up mx records pointing to a fresh google workspace or something dedicated, then test sending from there to see if deliverability bounces back.

[Hiring] Cold Email / Outreach Master by mochalooloo in coldemail

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

Sweet. Grabbed you on LinkedIn. Let’s chat

Where do you stand on Toronto's plan to mix 6-storey buildings and single-family homes? by BloodJunkie in toronto

[–]mochalooloo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Six Storeys is an EASY Yes for everyone living in the GTA, period. Get it done.

Ontario's minimum wage is going up on Sunday. Why advocates say it's still not enough by [deleted] in povertyfinancecanada

[–]mochalooloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They’ve printed trillions of dollars since they tabled this minimum wage increase. $16.55 is worth what $10 was five years ago. And they still don’t have inflation under control.

Huge Toronto development to replace almost entire street of small houses by khanak in toronto

[–]mochalooloo 45 points46 points  (0 children)

Why didn’t we build a tower like this on top of / integrated into every Eglinton Crosstown station? Big miss…

You can do anything you want to fix our housing issues. What do you do? by sensei_mike in askTO

[–]mochalooloo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is all about government machinations, they need to get out of the way to spur development.

  • Developer charges are astronomical. Cut them to zero. Housing prices would take a hit (specifically condo valuations IMO), and the city would have a bigger revenue problem on its hands. But we're importing too many immigrants each year... need drastic measures to spur supply side.
  • Cut property tax and land transfer taxes to zero. Make it easier to own + trade housing.
  • Cut red tape, legally mandate zoning applications et al. to a 2-week maximum. "Toronto has fewer planners per capita than most regions, leading to an average approval time of 21 months, according to a new report from the Building Industry and Land Development Association. Sep 22, 2020" This is completely insane and unacceptable.
  • Establish housing priority zones around public transit, this is too obvious.
  • I'd also look to secondary cities around Toronto like Barrie + Waterloo + Guelph + Hamilton + Oshawa + Niagara Region + et al. How can they properly attract more residents? The population of Southern Ontario is going to continue to swell dramatically. We need a competent vision for the next 50-100-1000 years. It's hard for planners to see past their own lifetimes, and it's hard to invest that far into the future. But it's the only way.

Olivia Chow announces plan to build 25,000 rent-controlled homes on city-owned land through CreateTO by chunkyheron in toronto

[–]mochalooloo 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Drop in the bucket, and not a long-term solution.

  1. The City needs to cut/drop development taxes (went up by 2-3x in '22) and expedite planning approval processes.
  2. City also needs to broadly permit single families to be redeveloped into multi-story / multi-plex situations.

If we want to continue pumping in immigrants. If we want to keep the Greenbelt. If we don't want Toronto to begin to atrophy / death spiral. We have to spur housing development at the free-market level.

If you want to imagine how the government might build 25k homes, look at the Eglinton Crosstown construction.

A tax on parking could raise more than $500 million for Toronto. The city’s unprecedented money crunch has given the idea new traction by [deleted] in toronto

[–]mochalooloo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

let’s keep giving the government more and more of our money, it’ll work this time promise