Packs: Ronnie EstateX FollowUp Pro

Engagement Engine - FollowUp Pro

X/Twitter Pack - 30 Apr 2026 - 10 targets
#1
@sourav21maha
https://x.com/sourav21maha/status/2048419506679349369
This is the part most freelancers miss. Payment frequency isn't just about cash flow - it changes your entire risk profile. Weekly invoicing means you catch a ghosting client in 7 days, not 60.
✅ Safe Reply
Spot on. The gap between sending an invoice and following up is where most freelancers lose money. Weekly invoicing compresses that window dramatically. The real shift is going from reactive chasing to a system that nudges before things go cold.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
7 days vs 60 days to discover a ghosting client. That's the difference between a reminder and a write-off. Most people treat follow-up like a personality trait. It's not. It's a system you either have or you don't.
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#2
@JoshInEncinitas
https://x.com/JoshInEncinitas/status/2043351141241749979
For longer projects, I bill every two weeks, cards accepted with payment due immediately. The work is complete. The material is on site. What's there to haggle about? Based on payment history, our terms are now "net 5."
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Net 5 is a power move. Short billing cycles keep cash flow healthy and prevent the awkward 30-day chase. The key insight here is that payment terms aren't just financial - they set the relationship dynamic from day one.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Net 5 terms. Bill bi-weekly. Payment due immediately. No 'where's my money?' conversations because you never let the gap grow. Every day between delivery and payment is a day the client forgets the value you created.
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#3
@REMarketingTips
https://x.com/REMarketingTips/status/2042316883530055997
Every listing appointment runs through a predictable set of objections. The agents who win the most listings aren't necessarily the most polished presenters. They're the ones who handle these five moments without flinching.
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This is a masterclass in objection handling. The pattern is clear: the best agents prepare for the uncomfortable moments, not just the easy ones. Same principle applies to follow-up - most people avoid it because they haven't rehearsed the conversation.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
5 predictable objections. Agents who handle them without flinching win. The rest hope for easy conversations. Hope isn't a strategy. Neither is sending one email and waiting. Preparation beats polish every time.
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#4
@AdamrahmanGTM
https://x.com/AdamrahmanGTM/status/2042277375900016941
The Cold Email + LinkedIn Outreach + Cold Calling + CRM tech stack. Infrastructure for B2B outbound domination going into Q2 2026.
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Comprehensive stack breakdown. The interesting part isn't the tools though - it's how few of these systems actually handle what happens AFTER the first touch. The follow-up sequence is where pipeline lives or dies, and most stacks stop at the send.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
24 tools for outbound. Zero mention of what happens after 'sent.' The first email gets 30% of replies. The follow-up sequence gets the other 70%. Stack all the tools you want - if your follow-up game is weak, your pipeline is a sieve.
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#5
@RealKenWalls
https://x.com/RealKenWalls/status/2044579036597207476
Project management, CRM & deal pipeline, video meetings, AI-powered sales coaching, client portals & approvals, scheduling, contracts & e-signatures - one platform, one login. No more software chaos.
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Consolidation is the trend. Running separate tools for CRM, projects, and contracts creates gaps - especially around handoffs. The question isn't whether to consolidate, it's whether the follow-up workflows are robust enough to replace what you're using now.
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6 tools merged into 1. Sounds great until you realise most 'all-in-one' platforms are mediocre at everything. The dealbreaker isn't features - it's whether the follow-up automation actually prevents leads from going cold, or just adds another dashboard to ignore.
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#6
@subhammahipaul1
https://x.com/subhammahipaul1/status/2049512168551575865
Your lead response time is killing your ROI. While you're busy on-site, your Facebook leads are going cold. My AI system fixes that in 15 seconds flat: Lead submits form, data syncs to WhatsApp/CRM, AI Voice Agent calls & books the appointment.
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15-second response time is the bar now. The data is clear: leads contacted within 5 minutes are 9x more likely to convert. The real challenge isn't speed though - it's the follow-up cadence AFTER that first touch. Speed without persistence still loses deals.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Leads go cold in 5 minutes. Most businesses respond in 5 hours. Then follow up never. Speed wins the first response. Persistence wins the deal. You need both, and most people have neither.
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#7
@MichLieben
https://x.com/MichLieben/status/2046680419534524634
100 outbound tips from a guy who sent 23,000,000+ cold emails in the last 3 years. The follow-up was always the guess. Day 3 or day 5? Did they read it or didn't they?
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This is a goldmine. The standout insight: 'Respond to positive replies within an hour. Reply speed equals meeting rate.' That applies to every touchpoint, not just cold email. Follow-up speed and consistency are the compound interest of sales.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
23 million emails. The #1 lesson? Follow-up. 70% of booked calls come from follow-ups, not openers. Most people send one message and quit. The pipeline they think is dead is actually just under-nurtured.
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#8
@Dsgnrayo
https://x.com/Dsgnrayo/status/2046464516083663341
Most people have been asking me lately if its too late to build on Arc. Most folks are still stuck at the stage of trying to understand it instead of building on it. Freelancer tool where invoices get paid instantly without dealing with banks.
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The freelancer payment gap is real. Instant invoicing tools help, but they only solve the send side. What matters equally is the follow-up rhythm - knowing when to nudge, when to escalate, and when to move on. The best invoice is useless if the follow-up doesn't happen.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Instant payments for freelancers? Great. But most freelancers don't have a payment problem - they have a follow-up problem. They send the invoice and pray. The ones who get paid consistently aren't luckier. They have a system.
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#9
@Bondigthefirst
https://x.com/Bondigthefirst/status/2045301981753839679
ICP: Power users who use bookmarks as a second brain and have watched that system slowly become useless. The backup buyer is motivated by loss anxiety. The knowledge base buyer is motivated by utility.
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Fascinating positioning breakdown. Two distinct buyers, two emotional drivers. Same principle applies to follow-up tools - some buy because they're losing deals (loss anxiety), others because they want to scale what's working (utility). Know which one you're selling to.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Loss anxiety vs utility. Same product, two completely different sales conversations. Most tools market to one and wonder why the other bounces. The follow-up is: which problem are you actually solving, and does your messaging match?
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#10
@YeboahWalee
https://x.com/YeboahWalee/status/2042112546384343079
Nissan NX8 SUV - 1,450 km range kills range anxiety. 800V platform with CATL 5C ultra-fast charging. Price: $21,900 starting.
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Range anxiety is a perfect metaphor for pipeline anxiety. 1,450km of range eliminates the 'will I make it?' fear. In sales, the equivalent is having enough pipeline coverage that no single deal going cold can hurt you. Build your pipeline like it has 1,450km of range.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Range anxiety in EVs. Pipeline anxiety in sales. Same problem. Most sales teams are running on fumes - one deal away from a bad month. The fix isn't more leads. It's a follow-up system that stops deals going cold before they disappear.
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