Packs: Ronnie EstateX FollowUp Pro

Engagement Engine - FollowUp Pro

X/Twitter Pack - 21 Apr 2026 - 10 targets
#1
@nishanthr122
https://x.com/nishanthr122/status/2044825166279241762
Paid for a price guidance report from @Cars24 yesterday and still haven't received anything. Raised a complaint through customer care - no response, no refund. Very poor service. Lost a car deal while waiting for a paid service.
✅ Safe Reply
Losing a deal because the other side went silent is the worst kind of frustration. Paid for something, got nothing, and the opportunity disappeared. A proper follow-up system wouldn't fix their service, but it would've given you a structured way to escalate before the deal slipped.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
You paid money, got silence, and lost the car. The follow-up chain broke on their end and it cost you. Every business that ignores paid customers deserves to lose them.
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#2
@quoc_modoro
https://x.com/quoc_modoro/status/2038438756722872786
We lost a $4,200 deal because no human was available at 2AM. That's when I built AI into our customer service. Response time: 6h → 4min. Error rate: 14% → 2%.
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That 2AM gap is where most service businesses bleed revenue. Speed of first response is one of the strongest predictors of whether a lead converts. Automated follow-up doesn't replace your team, it covers the hours they can't.
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$4,200 gone because nobody was awake. The fix isn't hiring night shift - it's making sure the first touchpoint doesn't depend on a human being available.
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#3
@HapiiArts
https://x.com/HapiiArts/status/2036638788240462289
"i would like to reserve a slot for commission" "ok, will do!" *they ghosted me after sending a proposal, it's been months now*
✅ Safe Reply
This is painfully common in freelance work. One follow-up after the proposal is usually not enough. A gentle nudge at day 3, day 7, and day 14 catches people who genuinely forgot vs those who've moved on. The silence hurts less when the system handles it.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Months of silence after they said yes. The proposal wasn't the problem - the follow-up was. One automated nudge could have surfaced a real answer instead of leaving you guessing.
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#4
@Hashim_Amuda
https://x.com/Hashim_Amuda/status/1968717932701053062
I did a free UX audit of a small part of this guy's product just to show what needs to be improved. So, he told me to send a proposal so that I can finish up the audit and also improve it. Guess what happened after sending it? He ghosted me 😂
✅ Safe Reply
The free audit → proposal → ghost pipeline is a rite of passage. The hard part isn't the ghosting, it's not having a system to follow up without feeling pushy. Timed reminders at set intervals take the awkwardness out of chasing someone who asked you to pitch.
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You gave free value, they asked for a proposal, then vanished. Classic. The lesson isn't to stop being generous - it's to automate the follow-up so ghosts don't drain your energy.
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#5
@mycliqk
https://x.com/mycliqk/status/2045301648759943338
Every brand deal case study leads with the payout. Almost none of them show the 40-something emails that came before it. That's actually the job. The follow-ups, the negotiation, the revision cycles, the terms you had to push back on. Automate the logistics and you free up the parts that actually need you in the room.
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This is the unglamorous reality of deal-making. The follow-ups are the work. Automating the routine nudges - check-ins, status updates, deadline reminders - means you spend your energy on negotiation, not nagging.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
40 emails to close one deal. The payout gets posted, the follow-up chain stays hidden. Automate the chasing, keep the negotiating human.
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#6
@csloane
https://x.com/csloane/status/2044051588948386158
Most agencies automate in the wrong direction. They start at the top of the funnel and work down. The ones printing margin start at delivery and work up... Growth exposed the cracks instead of compounding the wins.
✅ Safe Reply
Really sharp observation. The same principle applies to follow-up - most businesses only automate lead chasing, not the ongoing client communication that prevents churn. Fixing the delivery side first means your follow-ups actually have something solid behind them.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Agencies automating top-of-funnel while delivery runs on Slack DMs and hope. More leads into a broken system just means more fires. Fix the foundation, then open the tap.
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#7
@seanb2b
https://x.com/seanb2b/status/1931336617156923695
Ghosted after sending proposal? Here's what to ask: "Was it the price, the timing, or something I missed?" Use that to close the deal or fix the next pitch
✅ Safe Reply
Great framing for a follow-up message. The key is sending it at the right interval - too soon feels pushy, too late and they've forgotten. A structured follow-up cadence means that question lands at the right moment every time, without you having to remember.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
That one question can revive a dead deal. But most people never send it because following up feels awkward. Systematise the ask and the awkwardness disappears.
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#8
@georgiporgie
https://x.com/georgiporgie/status/1902026812143669378
Someone that completely ghosted me after sending them my proposal last yr just called for another quote lol this when I charge out the ass to feel vindicated.
✅ Safe Reply
The boomerang client. It happens more than people admit - they ghost not because the proposal was bad, but because timing or priorities shifted. A follow-up sequence that stays warm over months means you're top of mind when they're ready, not just a forgotten email.
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Ghosted last year, calling this year. The proposal was fine - the timing wasn't. Raise the price and enjoy the vindication. A drip follow-up would have caught them months sooner.
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#9
@Robin_Van_Peer
https://x.com/Robin_Van_Peer/status/2044753930874142946
Here's what to automate if you haven't yet: Week 1 - Booking + calendar. Week 2 - Lead follow-up: instant reply, 3-email nurture sequence, reactivation for cold leads. Week 3 - Client experience. Week 4 - Reporting.
✅ Safe Reply
Solid breakdown. Week 2 is where most businesses stall - they capture leads but the follow-up dies after the first email. The 3-email nurture plus a cold lead reactivation is where the actual revenue recovery happens. Consistency beats intensity here.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Most businesses automate the booking and stop. The money is in Week 2 - the nurture sequence and reactivation. Everything before that is just collecting names.
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#10
@walkermckay
https://x.com/walkermckay/status/1951329104201908695
A VP of sales came to me frustrated - one of his top reps had just been ghosted after four meetings and a 12-page proposal. The prospect said they loved the solution… then disappeared. I asked, "What did you ask for in return?" He had nothing. Interest isn't intent.
✅ Safe Reply
Four meetings and a 12-page proposal with no commitment checkpoint is a classic pattern. Building micro-commitments into the process - and automating follow-ups between each stage - keeps deals from drifting into silence. If they're not committing along the way, they won't commit at the end.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
12 pages and four meetings for a ghost. Interest isn't intent. If they won't commit to a next step at each stage, you're writing proposals for someone who's just being polite.
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