Packs: Ronnie EstateX FollowUp Pro

Engagement Engine - Ronnie Huss

X/Twitter Pack - 11 Apr 2026 - 10 targets
#1
@saasxyzco
https://x.com/saasxyzco/status/2042365688887570820
The SaaS industry built a generation of great pitchers and terrible operators. Fundraising isn't the product. Flat growth after 4 rounds isn't a success story. It's a slow crisis with good PR.
✅ Safe Reply
This resonates. The best operators I know are almost embarrassed to talk about fundraising because they'd rather show you the numbers.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Funny how founders who can't ship anymore become 'investor relations experts'. The market eventually notices the gap between deck and demo.
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#2
@buildwithmaleeq
https://x.com/buildwithmaleeq/status/2042753639328972998
AI is not going to replace the man with skill. It is going to replace the man who never built one. GPT-5.4 operates your computer now. Amazon just cut 16,000 jobs citing automation. The question is not whether to be afraid. The question is which side of that line you are on.
✅ Safe Reply
The framing is right: AI doesn't replace skills, it replaces the absence of them. The real question is whether you're building capability or just using buzzwords.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Most people crying about AI replacing jobs were already replaceable before AI existed. The skills question is uncomfortable because it's true.
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#3
@dr_rukevwe
https://x.com/dr_rukevwe/status/2041604493012254917
2 in 3 employers that cut jobs due to AI are already REHIRING the same workers they let go after discovering automation could NOT replace the skills, oversight, and institutional knowledge those employees held.
✅ Safe Reply
This is the pattern nobody talks about. Companies that treat AI as a replacement instead of an amplifier end up paying twice: once for the cuts, again for the recruitment.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
The AI replacement crowd discovered that institutional knowledge doesn't live in prompts. Now they're back cap in hand. Classic.
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#4
@MariusBC78
https://x.com/MariusBC78/status/2042870228879581487
The long-term vision: A world where digital and physical AI agents work alongside humans with $VIRTUAL as the currency of that autonomous society. 1M+ unique wallets on Virtuals, $25M+ daily trading volume, 5M humanoids targeted globally by 2030.
✅ Safe Reply
The infrastructure play here is more interesting than the narrative. Virtuals Protocol has actual usage metrics that most crypto projects would kill for.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
The humanoid + currency angle is ambitious but the 5M by 2030 claim needs serious scrutiny. We're not even close to that manufacturing capacity.
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#5
@HederaKimchi
https://x.com/HederaKimchi/status/2042721776493564032
If Anthropic launches an on-chain token, it won't be just another crypto launch. It would shock the entire industry. And if it happens, there's a strong case it could be built on Hedera.
✅ Safe Reply
The Accenture + Anthropic connection is worth watching. If AI verification becomes regulatory, Hedera's enterprise ties become a real differentiator.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Every chain claims they'll be the 'AI chain' when a major player launches. Hedera has enterprise credibility but the crypto market doesn't exactly reward boring competence.
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#6
@Linear
https://x.com/linearapp/status/2042141547021651968
Your scalability doubts just cost you 40% of your valuation. Investors price risk. If you can't explain 10x growth, they assume worst case.
✅ Safe Reply
This is the uncomfortable truth about fundraising. Valuation isn't about what you've built, it's about what they can imagine you building.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
40% is generous. I've seen founders lose 80% of their valuation by being vague about growth. Precision matters when money is at stake.
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#7
@JasonFried
https://x.com/jasonfried/status/2042075464542744717
The best time to raise was when you didn't need it. The second best time is now if you think you might need it in 12-18 months.
✅ Safe Reply
This advice is older than startup culture but it holds because it's true. Fundraising from a position of strength beats desperation every time.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Founders who wait until they're out of runway deserve the terms they get. No sympathy for planning failures.
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#8
@naval
https://x.com/naval/status/2042549214530801842
The best founders think in terms of leverage. They don't trade time for money. They find systems that multiply their impact.
✅ Safe Reply
This is the mental model shift that separates founders who scale from those who just get busier. Leverage is the answer to 'how do I do more?'
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Most founders still trade hours for revenue. They call it 'founder mode' but it's really just expensive labour.
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#9
@svpino
https://x.com/svpino/status/2042043267945443337
The problem with most OKRs is that they're just a list of things we want to do, disguised as outcomes. An outcome has to be measurable. A list is just a list.
✅ Safe Reply
This is why most companies have 'strategy' that looks like a wishlist. If you can't measure it, you can't manage it.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Every company I've seen with OKRs that look like this is basically running on corporate theatre. The outcomes are fictional.
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#10
@levelsio
https://x.com/levelsio/status/2042047567849333141
I'm building micro-SaaS with $0 marketing budget. Started 2 months ago, now at $2,500 MRR. Here's the exact playbook.
✅ Safe Reply
This is the counter-narrative to 'you need funding to grow'. Real revenue, real traction, zero raise culture.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
The irony is that $0 marketing only works when you have something worth sharing. Most people chasing this playbook have a feature list, not a product.
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