Packs: Ronnie EstateX FollowUp Pro

Engagement Engine - FollowUp Pro

X/Twitter Pack - 1 May 2026 - 10 targets
#1
@MilesCraftDev
https://x.com/MilesCraftDev/status/2048750314010861962
Jordan walked in with a stat. Average freelancer spends 102 hours a year chasing late invoices. That's not a billing problem. That's an unpaid second job. Everyone keeps building features to send invoices faster. The pain isn't the send. It's what happens after.
✅ Safe Reply
Spot on. The invoice is easy. It's the follow-up that eats your week. Most people either chase too aggressively or give up too soon. A structured follow-up cadence with the right tone at the right time solves both problems without burning the client relationship.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
102 hours chasing invoices. That's 2.5 full work weeks spent being your own debt collector. The work was good enough to bill for. The follow-up system just wasn't there.
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#2
@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. AI system fixes that in 15 seconds: Lead submits form, Data syncs to WhatsApp/CRM, AI Voice Agent calls and books the appointment.
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Lead response time is one of the biggest silent killers in service businesses. The first 5 minutes decide whether you get the call or your competitor does. Automating that first touch while you're on-site is smart operational design.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Every minute after a lead submits a form, their interest drops and the chance they book with someone else rises. If you're not responding in under 5 minutes, you're not losing leads. You're handing them away.
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#3
@RealKenWalls
https://x.com/RealKenWalls/status/2044579036597207476
THIS is how business software should feel. Project management, CRM, deal pipeline, video meetings, AI-powered sales coaching, client portals, scheduling, contracts and e-signatures. One platform. One login. No more software chaos. No more paying for 6+ tools you barely use.
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The 6-tool stack is a real problem for small teams. Context switching between CRM, project management, and follow-up systems means things fall through cracks. Consolidation makes sense when the tools actually talk to each other.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Paying for 6 tools that don't talk to each other isn't a tech stack. It's a subscription problem disguised as productivity. One platform that handles the full client journey from lead to close? That's how you stop losing deals to disorganization.
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#4
@JoshInEncinitas
https://x.com/JoshInEncinitas/status/2043351141241749979
Many contractors ask for half upfront. I bill every two weeks, payment due immediately. The work is complete, the material is on site. If the client doesn't pay quickly, we just stop work. Our terms are now net 5. Slow terms can kill a growing business.
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Net-5 terms with milestone billing is a solid framework for service businesses. The key insight is that payment terms aren't just about cash flow. They shape the entire client relationship dynamic from day one.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
If your client expects the work on time but you don't expect the same from their payment, the relationship is already lopsided. Net-5 isn't aggressive. It's professional.
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#5
@Bondigthefirst
https://x.com/Bondigthefirst/status/2044923893098688672
Small to mid-size homebuilders running business across spreadsheets, BuilderTrend, CoConstruct, and a CRM that doesn't talk to any of it. Operations director spending real time every week reconciling data between systems that were never built to work together.
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This is the reality for so many service businesses. The data lives in 4 places, none of them sync, and the follow-up falls through the gap between systems. The fix isn't another tool. It's one system that handles the full client lifecycle from lead to close.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Running your business across 4 disconnected tools means your follow-up is only as good as your memory. Which means it's not good enough. The leads that slip through are the ones that would have been your best clients.
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#6
@infobodie
https://x.com/infobodie/status/2042969166349766913
More views does not equal more money. 6,500 potential coaching customers making $1M+ per year. Your Instagram might reach 1-5M per month but only 500 of those people are your actual target customer. The people making real revenue are speaking directly to 500 perfect customers and converting 20% of them.
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This is the pipeline math most coaches ignore. 500 qualified conversations beats 50,000 impressions every time. The follow-up on those 500 is where the revenue lives. Most people never build the system to nurture those relationships properly.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
1M views and 0 conversions means you went viral for the wrong audience. 500 targeted conversations with systematic follow-up will outperform your vanity metrics every single month.
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#7
@narrr_id
https://x.com/narrr_id/status/2047686088698040440
Been in the commission world for almost 10 years and I'm frustrated by people who ghost clients after receiving payment. A friend complained about being ghosted for payment, then that same friend ghosted me on payment for a completed project. Ghostingception.
✅ Safe Reply
Ghosting after payment is one of the fastest ways to destroy a professional reputation. The commission world runs on trust and referrals. One broken commitment can cost you years of future work from everyone in that network.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
The irony of complaining about being ghosted and then ghosting someone else is peak freelancer energy. Communication is free. Ghosting costs you your reputation and every referral you would have ever gotten.
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#8
@chris_wirkus25
https://x.com/chris_wirkus25/status/2044396749700112563
Most freelancers run business out of Google Sheets, Word docs, email threads, and Venmo. Client ghosts your invoice. Another disputes a deliverable. Wirkflow gives freelancers a live branded client portal. By the time you send the invoice, they've already watched the whole project unfold. No surprises. No disputes. No ghosting.
✅ Safe Reply
Transparency throughout the project is the best follow-up strategy there is. When clients can see progress in real time, invoice disputes drop dramatically. The follow-up starts at project kickoff, not at payment due date.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
If your client is surprised by your invoice, you didn't communicate during the project. The follow-up problem starts way before payment. It starts when you stop keeping the client in the loop.
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#9
@AdamrahmanGTM
https://x.com/AdamrahmanGTM/status/2042277375900016941
The Cold Email + LinkedIn Outreach + Cold Calling + CRM tech stack for B2B outbound domination. Infrastructure covering email sequencer, LinkedIn outreach, dialer, lead management, company data, intent signals, AI agents, CRM. Impossible to lose with this infrastructure in place.
✅ Safe Reply
Solid stack breakdown. The infrastructure matters, but the real lever most teams miss is the follow-up cadence within that CRM. The best tech stack in the world won't save you if leads go cold between touchpoints because nobody's nurturing them.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
All this infrastructure and most teams still let 70% of their pipeline go cold after the first touch. The stack isn't the bottleneck. The follow-up discipline is.
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#10
@Salesdotech
https://x.com/Salesdotech/status/2044745261151576086
The freelance economy is booming but payment systems are stuck in 2010. Ghosting clients, 30-day wait times, and heavy fees are killing independent careers. Most freelancers don't lose money because they do bad work. They lose it because clients vanish mid-project, invoices get lost in accounts payable, they never get paid at all.
✅ Safe Reply
The payment gap is a system problem, not a talent problem. Freelancers deliver great work and then have no structured way to ensure timely follow-up on invoices. The solution isn't just faster invoicing. It's a follow-up system that works while you focus on the next project.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Doing great work and not getting paid for it isn't a freelancing risk. It's a systems failure. If your follow-up process relies on you remembering to send another email, you don't have a process.
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