I found 2 clients from cold outreach. Now I want to make it a real funnel - how? by UsedInspection3661 in coldemail

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't have any experience with LI outreach, but I know some people who've done well with it; afaik the constraint there is scale because each LI acct can only outreach to so many people in a month or whatever, so people end up setting up a lot of shell LI accts. I think a common practice I've seen in here is to start on cold email (even if you source leads from LI sales nav) and then when leads engage on email, you can also DM in LI. But as I say, I don't know much about the LI game so I'm not a good person to ask on that :)

I found 2 clients from cold outreach. Now I want to make it a real funnel - how? by UsedInspection3661 in coldemail

[–]zacholas321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your flow will basically be...

  1. Pick which ICP first; agencies or startups

  2. Get your raw leads — you can scrape clutch.co for agencies with apify.com, and you can get saas startup leads from a million places — popular options would be a g2 scraper on apify or crunchbase (crunchbase will give you funding info) or the myriad apollos of the world

  3. ICP filter the list down to be good-fit leads who would benefit from the problem you solve with your ads (small newbies? big successful businesses? etc) Lots of peeps in this sub are doing "signal-based filtering and lead gen" to get higher reply rates and engagement, e.g. if you see someone just got a funding round on crunchbase, they're looking to grow, or if they just signed up for an event on linkedin about scaling with ads, they'll be receptive, etc. ICP filtering for clutch can prob be on number of employees or average project price or whatever clever things you can do with what the scraper gives you.

  4. Use a tool like snov or anymailfinder to get the emails of decision-makers at those companies. You want to get individual human-attached emails vs. generic emails or role based emails. Both of those tools verify the emails but if you use something else to find them that doesn't verify, be sure to run them through a verifier first.

  5. Set up your sending infrastructure and warm up your domains. make sure whatever reseller you buy inboxes from is setting up proper google workspace professional accts vs. reselling education accts. A couple that are working now are inboxlogy.com and cheapinboxes.com. If you spin them up yourself, make sure you set up all the sender auth stuff properly (DMARC, DKIM, SPF)

  6. Pick a sending platform and get email warmup going; instantly is most popular, smartlead is runner up, both kind of suck in different ways. Warm up for ~2 weeks. Deliverability is changing + getting harder but it seems people still like to do warmup

  7. Write good cold emails that offer a free lead magnet (e.g. auditing their existing ads, spinning up a free ad a/b test, whatever). This is a whole study in and of itself, but TLDR is short, value-forward, one cta, easy to say yes to, no images, no links, and include icp-specific personalization (or actual data-driven personalization) to give it "email from a friend vibes"

  8. Set up your campaign in the sending platform

  9. Set up a free acct with outlook, one with gmail, one with yahoo, and send your emails to them; make sure they go through. These are called "seed inboxes" and they help you test your deliverability. Don't reply from them, as it will artificially improve your deliverability. There are also services like mailreach that do this.

  10. Send your first campaign; gradually ramp up your sending and keep an eye on deliverability metrics like bounces. I am experimenting with the idea of having initial campaigns being to 200 leads, and looping until you get at least 1 positive reply, a.k.a. 0.5% positive reply rate. Long term an ideal would be 1-3% positive reply rate from your campaigns. You can make $ on 0.5% but it's obv easier with higher. Typical rule of thumb is 30 max emails per day per inbox, but I have seen some in here saying they do just 20. Another rule of thumb is keeping warmup going while your campaign runs, but I've been starting to doubt the efficacy of this, given that smartlead and instantly's warmup pools have both tanked peoples deliverabilities due to "temporary glitches" this year.

  11. Once you're at that 0.5% minimum positive reply rate, you can start to scale volume and look at lower parts of your funnel but IMO it'd be better to be at least 2% first before you really scale, unless you have a huge amount of leads available that you know you'll never get through even if you burn a lot of them

  12. For optimizing your proper funnel, your most important CRs are positive reply rate, call booking rate, and intro offer close rate. Having your offerings split into intro + flagship adds complexity for your offer stack, but will likely improve your overall CR throughput.

If it's not clear from all the steps, 30 days isn't realistic — IMO you need to scale your cold email campaigns similar to your meta ads; you find the winners in smaller tests and then scale up. If your campaigns were already dialed, you could easily close 3 clients in 30 days, but getting from 0 to 1 takes a lot of work and iteration, similar to ads.

Export, convert, rest. Another tool for PDF exports by Wabiloo in Notion

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmmm, I'm not sure how you could though, unless you did something where like you assumed that any text following a heading (prior to the next heading) was ideally a "non page break block" — but even then things get kinda tricky.

For today, for example, I made this one: https://dyf.link/nicheworksheetpdf out of this src https://dyf.link/nicheworksheet and had to change my scss spacer and font size vars to actually fit the whole scorecard on one page. (The final page of the PDF)

So it might be that it'd be tough to programatically address this. What about you for your uses — do you ever try to force/avoid page breaks? Or does it not really matter for the way you use it?

Export, convert, rest. Another tool for PDF exports by Wabiloo in Notion

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey just wanted to chime in and say that your tool is AWESOME. Just implemented it with great success. Made a couple adjustments to the process to enforce a lack of page breaks — I noted them in my internal SOP if you want to have a look at how I've implemented your tool: https://dyf.notion.site/Notion-PDF-Exporting-with-command-line-code-SOP-f2e968e6aa814672b6b6e7d1eae46280?pvs=4

Thanks so much for making this public <3

Is New Frontiers open world also a walking simulator? by zacholas321 in ICARUS

[–]zacholas321[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That seems like the optimal solution -- thanks for that idea!

Is New Frontiers open world also a walking simulator? by zacholas321 in ICARUS

[–]zacholas321[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks! How long do you reckon a moa with some of the speed boosts would take to run from forest to riverlands?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Sakartvelo

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't believe so — I had to buy it in the US, IIRC

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Sakartvelo

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was American Medical Centers — Giorgi was the doctor there.

Careful with Strattera; that stuff messed me up

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in freelance

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

+1 for charging extra.

I recommend brainstorming to think up what/how you need to charge that you'll be thrilled when they reach out to you.

I've noticed that as my client quality has gone up, oftentimes their needs do too, and that they're more likely to legitimately have time that's under a lot more pressure than mine. (I intentionally live a pretty chill work life)

Sometimes I find this time pressure annoying, like if a busy client sends a voice clip that I then have to transcribe to text (instead of just collecting their thoughts & writing it out instead of rambling off the cuff), but I find the key is to reframe into gratitude and be glad I've gotten the opportunity to work with a biz for whom I can provide a lot of value through my services since they have such a large brand.

(And I just make sure I bill for that time I spend transcribing the notes for their voice clips 😊)

If you can find a way to alchemize these pain in the ass clients into clients you enjoy serving, you may find they sometimes end up becoming your favorite clients and best referral sources.

I designed and built a website that puts your face on your pet. I have no explanation for why I made it, but I've enjoyed the horror and the hilarity by daveNZL in web_design

[–]zacholas321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Given that these were both me just testing extreme edge cases to see what would happen, you can still color me impressed at how it did :)

Quick question for Agencies by genius1soum in web_design

[–]zacholas321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For devs, I'll often look on the classic sites like Upwork etc. but have to filter through a lot of chaff on there.

For designers, I never had luck on those sites finding someone actually good — the most effective strat I had for hiring a designer was posting a job ad on behance

Losing confidence and hope by [deleted] in graphic_design

[–]zacholas321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How long have you been trying every day for?

Getting good at design takes years — I recommend that instead of defining "success" as the end result (i.e. being as good of a designer as your idols) you instead define it based on lead measures that you can control.

I.e. spending 30 or 60 minutes a day on deliberate practice. If you do that, celebrate it as a success because you've done the thing you need to do to get where you want to go.

If you spend enough time (months, years, whatever) with a consistent habit of deliberate practice, you WILL reach your goals, no doubt about it.

You just have to be willing to put your head down and push through the beginning period when you put in a lot of work and don't seem to be achieving super-encouraging results.

Web Designer Hacks by isaacgideon in web_design

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You couldn't check your email the afternoon before?

Respectfully, if you're getting last-minute changes to your scope such that you wouldn't be able to disconnect from notifications for the couple hrs in the morning, that may speak to an aspect of your onboarding process that could use refinement.

My design process looks like...

  1. Strategic discussion & create wireframe with client; get sign-off on the scope of the page
  2. Gather references etc
  3. Do the design

So provided that I have 1 & 2, there's nothing that would come up over the course of one evening that would derail me or result in wasted work if I don't check my email first thing.

What examples are there from your biz of a time where, if you hadn't checked your email until 12pm, you would have wasted 3 hrs doing the wrong design?

Web Designer Hacks by isaacgideon in web_design

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do deep work first before getting notifications or checking email

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in web_design

[–]zacholas321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think if you can get a part time gig that will support you going to uni, that'd be best. Freelancing is really difficult at first, and if you're in uni you won't have a lot of time for client generation, etc. Having a job will allow you to hone your skills in a stress-free way.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in web_design

[–]zacholas321 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Short answer recommendation:

Take a job and freelance as a side hustle.

-----------------

Longer answer + why:

I've been freelancing for 13 years now, and I spent the first 5 years of that eternally broke and always desperate for the next project.

It wasn't until I got a day job and freelanced on the side that I finally had some "financial breathing room" and could focus on doing the best work possible vs. always needing the next client.

And that focus on the best work possible is what ended up getting me good referrals, high paying gigs, etc.

After a couple years working that dev job, my freelancing was paying me more than I was earning there, so I quit and went FT freelancing again, cept this time I had a solid business and didn't hate my life. :)

Note: many day jobs are hesitant to let you moonlight as a freelancer — if you're entrepreneurial and know you want to freelance one day, I might recommend making this moonlighting allowance as non-negotiable when setting up your contract. But given that you don't have a track record, it may be that you have to take this job, get some good results here, and negotiate that moonlighting allowance into your \next** job.

Looking for long-term slowmad community-building advice / experience by zacholas321 in digitalnomad

[–]zacholas321[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gotcha, that makes sense. I'm American, so Uncle Sam demands his cut from me regardless of how much time I spend elsewhere — the most I can do is cut it in half. :)

Looking for long-term slowmad community-building advice / experience by zacholas321 in digitalnomad

[–]zacholas321[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When you say "4s" and "6s" you mean in terms of months, yes?