u/YourGirlSaraxo

▲ 3 r/startups_promotion+2 crossposts

Struggling to explain your startup to investors and customers? A Launch video can do it for you

Hey everyone,

I wanted to share something I'm offering because I genuinely think it can help a lot of founders in here who are at that early stage where getting people to truly understand what you're building is one of the hardest parts.

I'm a brand storyteller and video producer and I specialise in creating launch and explanation videos for startups.

Here's what I mean by that and why it matters:

When you're early stage, you're constantly trying to explain your product to three very different audiences at once. Potential customers who need to get what it does and why they should care. Investors who need to quickly understand the vision and the opportunity. New team members who need to be brought up to speed on what you're building and why.

A well made video does all of that for you. It tells your story in a way that's clear, compelling and consistent every single time someone encounters your brand. No more hoping your pitch lands the same way twice.

What I offer is a one-time launch or explanation video, no retainer, no ongoing commitment, no fluff. Just one focused, high quality piece of content that captures what you're building and why it matters, and does the talking for you.

I'm fairly new to working with startups specifically but I have a strong portfolio and I'm more than happy to share examples of my work before you commit to anything. My goal right now is to work with founders who are serious about how they present themselves and their product to the world.

If this sounds like something that could help your startup, drop a comment or send me a DM. Happy to have a no pressure chat and share some of my previous work.

Would that be of interest to anyone?

Aidan

reddit.com
u/YourGirlSaraxo — 14 days ago

Struggling to explain your startup to investors and customers? A Launch video can do it for you

Hey everyone,

I wanted to share something I'm offering because I genuinely think it can help a lot of founders in here who are at that early stage where getting people to truly understand what you're building is one of the hardest parts.

I'm a brand storyteller and video producer and I specialise in creating launch and explanation videos for startups.

Here's what I mean by that and why it matters:

When you're early stage, you're constantly trying to explain your product to three very different audiences at once. Potential customers who need to get what it does and why they should care. Investors who need to quickly understand the vision and the opportunity. New team members who need to be brought up to speed on what you're building and why.

A well made video does all of that for you. It tells your story in a way that's clear, compelling and consistent every single time someone encounters your brand. No more hoping your pitch lands the same way twice.

What I offer is a one-time launch or explanation video, no retainer, no ongoing commitment, no fluff. Just one focused, high quality piece of content that captures what you're building and why it matters, and does the talking for you.

I'm fairly new to working with startups specifically but I have a strong portfolio and I'm more than happy to share examples of my work before you commit to anything. My goal right now is to work with founders who are serious about how they present themselves and their product to the world.

If this sounds like something that could help your startup, drop a comment or send me a DM. Happy to have a no pressure chat and share some of my previous work.

Would that be of interest to anyone?

Best Aidan

reddit.com
u/YourGirlSaraxo — 14 days ago
▲ 4 r/LifeInsurance+1 crossposts

Hey, I’m doing some research into how insurance companies handle claims behind the scenes and wanted to hear from people who actually work in the industry (or have experience with it).

Specifically:

  • How are claims validated in practice?
  • Is it still mostly done by people (claims handlers/adjusters), or is AI/software playing a big role now?
  • What does the actual step-by-step process look like once a claim is submitted?
  • What parts of the process take the most time?
  • Where do mistakes or delays usually happen?
  • Are there any tools/systems you use that are particularly good or really frustrating?

Not selling anything, just trying to understand how it works in the real world rather than what companies say online.

Appreciate any insight 🙌

reddit.com
u/YourGirlSaraxo — 25 days ago