Looking for a partner yrr for my already validated idea

Looking for a partner or co founder already validated the idea and have a trial client

Just looking coz I don't do anything alone in the long term

Anyone interested??

Looking for someone who can handle the sales part and operations, I'm good in marketing and acquisition but to convert those clients I need a partner who can close the clients

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 12 days ago

I messaged 200 old leads for a fitness coach. 29 replied. Is that good or bad?

A fitness coach gave me a list of old leads that never bought.

These weren't cold leads.

They had already shown interest in the program months ago but never signed up.

Instead of running ads, I sent a simple reactivation message to 200 people.

Results:

200 messages sent

29 replies

9 said they were still interested

20 said they weren't interested

Honestly, I was expecting a much lower response rate.

Now I'm kind of curious:

For those of you who are running coaching businesses, agencies, clinics, or local businesses...

Do you ever follow up with old leads??

Or do they just sit in your CRM forever??

I'm starting to think most businesses focus on getting new leads while completely ignoring the people who already raised their hand once.

Would love to hear how others handle this.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 13 days ago

I messaged 200 old leads for a fitness coach. 29 replied. Is that good or bad?

A fitness coach gave me a list of old leads that never bought.

These weren't cold leads.

They had already shown interest in the program months ago but never signed up.

Instead of running ads, I sent a simple reactivation message to 200 people.

Results:

200 messages sent

29 replies

9 said they were still interested

20 said they weren't interested

Honestly, I was expecting a much lower response rate.

Now I'm kind of curious:

For those of you who are running coaching businesses, agencies, clinics, or local businesses...

Do you ever follow up with old leads??

Or do they just sit in your CRM forever??

I'm starting to think most businesses focus on getting new leads while completely ignoring the people who already raised their hand once.

Would love to hear how others handle this.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 13 days ago

SpaceX hit $3 Trillion market cap today, this means elon made more money than warren buffet

This means Elon Musk made more money in last 4 hours than Warren Buffet made in his entire life,
Maarket is Supreme.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 20 days ago

Do course sellers actually follow up with leads that don't convert??Honest question before I offer this

I am testing a lead reactivation service for Indian course sellers and webinar trainers

The idea: you give me 100 to 200 of your old leads - people who registered for your webinar or downloaded your lead magnet but never purchased.
I run a 5-day WhatsApp reactivation sequence on them. You pay me only if people actually buy.

Before I take this further I genuinely want to understand:

  1. After your webinar ends what do you currently do with leads who did not convert?
  2. Is this actually a painful problem or do you just move on and run more ads?
  3. If someone offered to reactivate your dead leads for free and charge only on results - what would make you say no?
  4. What would a realistic conversion look like for you to consider this worth it - 2 sales? 5 sales??

Not selling anything here, Genuinely trying to figure out if dead leads are a real problem for course businesses before I invest time building this properly.

comment below.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

Do course sellers actually follow up with leads that don't convert??Honest question before I offer this

I am testing a lead reactivation service for Indian course sellers and webinar trainers

The idea: you give me 100 to 200 of your old leads - people who registered for your webinar or downloaded your lead magnet but never purchased.
I run a 5-day WhatsApp reactivation sequence on them. You pay me only if people actually buy.

Before I take this further I genuinely want to understand:

  1. After your webinar ends what do you currently do with leads who did not convert?
  2. Is this actually a painful problem or do you just move on and run more ads?
  3. If someone offered to reactivate your dead leads for free and charge only on results - what would make you say no?
  4. What would a realistic conversion look like for you to consider this worth it - 2 sales? 5 sales??

Not selling anything here, Genuinely trying to figure out if dead leads are a real problem for course businesses before I invest time building this properly.

If you want me to run a free reactivation campaign on your old leads this week - comment below. Taking 2 course sellers as a test. Zero cost, pay only if it works.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

Do course sellers in India actually follow up with leads that don't convert??Honest question before I offer this

I am testing a lead reactivation service for Indian course sellers and webinar trainers

The idea: you give me 100 to 200 of your old leads - people who registered for your webinar or downloaded your lead magnet but never purchased.
I run a 5-day WhatsApp reactivation sequence on them. You pay me only if people actually buy.

Before I take this further I genuinely want to understand:

  1. After your webinar ends what do you currently do with leads who did not convert?

  2. Is this actually a painful problem or do you just move on and run more ads?

  3. If someone offered to reactivate your dead leads for free and charge only on results - what would make you say no?

  4. What would a realistic conversion look like for you to consider this worth it - 2 sales? 5 sales??

Not selling anything here, Genuinely trying to figure out if dead leads are a real problem for course businesses before I invest time building this properly.

comment below.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

Do businesses actually follow up with old leads? Honest question before I build this

I'm testing a service for businesses that have hundreds of old leads sitting in WhatsApp, Excel sheets, CRMs, or inquiry forms.

The idea: You give me your old lead list, I run a follow-up campaign to see who is still interested.

If some of those leads book appointments or become customers, that's extra revenue from leads you've already paid for.

Before I spend months building this properly, I want to understand:

  1. How many old leads do you currently have?
  2. Do you ever follow up with them after the first conversation? If not, why?
  3. Would recovering even 2–5% of those leads make a meaningful difference to your business?
  4. What would stop you from trying a service like this?

Not selling anything right now. Genuinely trying to understand if this is a real problem before I invest months into it

If you have 100+ old leads sitting untouched and are willing to let me test this for free, comment below.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

What happens to your webinar leads that don't buy genuinely curious

Question for anyone running courses, webinars, or coaching programs in India.

After your webinar or free training ends - what do you do with the leads who attended but did not purchase??

I have been researching lead reactivation and WhatsApp follow-up sequences and noticed this seems to be a massive gap for most course businesses.

Most people either:
— Send one or two follow-up emails and move on
— Do nothing and focus on the next launch
— Have no systematic follow-up process at all

Meanwhile the data suggests dead leads - people who already know your name and topic - are 5 to 8 times cheaper to convert than cold leads.

What is your current process?? and has anyone actually tried systematic WhatsApp reactivation on old leads??

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

What happens to your webinar leads that don't buy genuinely curious

Question for anyone running courses, webinars, or coaching programs in India.

After your webinar or free training ends - what do you do with the leads who attended but did not purchase??

I have been researching lead reactivation and WhatsApp follow-up sequences and noticed this seems to be a massive gap for most course businesses.

Most people either:
— Send one or two follow-up emails and move on
— Do nothing and focus on the next launch
— Have no systematic follow-up process at all

Meanwhile the data suggests dead leads - people who already know your name and topic - are 5 to 8 times cheaper to convert than cold leads.

What is your current process?? and has anyone actually tried systematic WhatsApp reactivation on old leads??

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

Most course sellers in are ignoring their biggest revenue source

I have been researching the course selling space in India for the past few weeks.

I noticed something, average course seller spends ₹30000 to ₹100000 per month on meta or youTube ads. Collects leads, runs the webinar, converts maybe 3 to 8 percent.

The other 92 percent go into a spreadsheet and nobody touches them again.

Here is the math that does not make sense-

500 dead leads at ₹100 per lead - that is ₹50000 already spent

If even 3 percent of those dead leads convert at ₹10000 course price
that is 15 people - ₹150000 in revenue from leads already paid for

No new ad spend, no new content, just following up with people who already raised their hand.

The tool is not complicated. A simple WhatsApp sequence, 3 messages over 5 days. Personalised to what they originally signed up for

Is there anyone running courses or webinars here, what do you currently do with leads that do not convert after the webinar??

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

Most course sellers are ignoring their biggest revenue source

I have been researching the course selling space in India for the past few weeks.

I noticed something, average course seller spends ₹30000 to ₹100000 per month on meta or youTube ads. Collects leads, runs the webinar, converts maybe 3 to 8 percent.

The other 92 percent go into a spreadsheet and nobody touches them again.

Here is the math that does not make sense-

500 dead leads at ₹100 per lead - that is ₹50000 already spent

If even 3 percent of those dead leads convert at ₹10000 course price
that is 15 people - ₹150000 in revenue from leads already paid for

No new ad spend, no new content, just following up with people who already raised their hand.

The tool is not complicated. A simple WhatsApp sequence, 3 messages over 5 days. Personalised to what they originally signed up for

Is there anyone running courses or webinars here, what do you currently do with leads that do not convert after the webinar??

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 21 days ago

I talked to a few founders this week while testing an AI-assisted content system and honestly the feedback changed how I think about “AI content”

One founder told me:

“It doesn’t matter if the content is AI or not. What matters is the value. Does the audience actually learn something from it?”

That genuinely shifted my thinking.

I was too focused on:

  • making content sound human
  • hiding the AI part

But founders care more about:

  • useful insights
  • relatable experiences
  • strong opinions
  • content that teaches something

Another founder gave me interesting feedback too.

He said:
“Your content sounds human already, but image + written posts are working much better right now. Founders chase engagement, and visuals help a lot.”

That made me realize the problem may not just be:
“AI writing content”

It may actually be:
“Turning messy founder thoughts into valuable + engaging content formats.”

Right now I’m testing a simple workflow where founders answer a few questions about their week, and the system turns it into posts.

One founder already posted content generated from the workflow, and I’m waiting for the 48-hour insights now.

Still early, but honestly learning a lot from these conversations.

Curious question for founders here:

What’s harder for you right now:

  • coming up with ideas?
  • writing consistently?
  • making posts engaging?
  • or turning your actual work into content people care about?
reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 2 months ago

I talked to a few founders this week while testing an AI-assisted content system and honestly the feedback changed how I think about “AI content”

One founder told me:

“It doesn’t matter if the content is AI or not. What matters is the value. Does the audience actually learn something from it?”

That genuinely shifted my thinking.

I was too focused on:

  • making content sound human
  • hiding the AI part

But founders care more about:

  • useful insights
  • relatable experiences
  • strong opinions
  • content that teaches something

Another founder gave me interesting feedback too.

He said:
“Your content sounds human already, but image + written posts are working much better right now. Founders chase engagement, and visuals help a lot.”

That made me realize the problem may not just be:
“AI writing content”

It may actually be:
“Turning messy founder thoughts into valuable + engaging content formats.”

Right now I’m testing a simple workflow where founders answer a few questions about their week, and the system turns it into posts.

One founder already posted content generated from the workflow, and I’m waiting for the 48-hour insights now.

Still early, but honestly learning a lot from these conversations.

Curious question for founders here:

What’s harder for you right now:

  • coming up with ideas?
  • writing consistently?
  • making posts engaging?
  • or turning your actual work into content people care about?
reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 2 months ago

I'm testing an AI ghostwriting service for founders - I learned this in week 1 (and I need 3 more guinea pigs)

Week 1 of testing an idea

The idea: Indian founders are too busy to post on LinkedIn consistently
LinkedIn matters for fundraising, enterprise sales, and senior hiring.
The gap between "should post" and "actually posts" is huge

Solution: I ask a founder 5 questions every week (takes them 10 minutes)
I turn their answers into 3 LinkedIn posts that sound like them - not like generic AI content. They approve. Done.

What I've done this week:

  1. Wrote posts for 3 founders based entirely on reading their existing content (no call, no input from them)
  2. Sent the posts and asked: "Does this sound like you, or like Ai?"
  3. Average rating so far: 7-8/10 out of 3 founders
  4. One founder said: "I'd actually post this"

What I've learned:
- The hardest part is NOT the writing. It's capturing the founder's specific opinions, not just their activities
- Indian founders write very differently from Western founders - more direct, more context-specific, more "building against odds" energy
- The "sounds like ChatGPT" problem is real, my first drafts failed my third pass usually lands

Market data is globally agencies doing this charge $1,500–5,000/month. India is untouched at an affordable price point.

I want to test this with 3 more Indian founders this week. Free. In exchange for 10 minutes of brutal honest feedback.

What you get - 2 LinkedIn posts written in your voice
What I get - feedback on whether my process actually works

If you're a founder and want to be a test subject - comment me

Also open to: "This won't work in India because ___"  - that feedback is just as valuable.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 2 months ago

I'm testing an AI ghostwriting service for founders - I learned this in week 1 (and I need 3 more guinea pigs)

Week 1 of testing an idea

The idea: Indian founders are too busy to post on LinkedIn consistently
LinkedIn matters for fundraising, enterprise sales, and senior hiring.
The gap between "should post" and "actually posts" is huge

My solution: I ask a founder 5 questions every week (takes them 10 minutes)
I turn their answers into 3 LinkedIn posts that sound like them - not like generic AI content. They approve. Done.

What I've done this week:

  1. Wrote posts for 3 founders based entirely on reading their existing content (no call, no input from them)
  2. Sent the posts and asked: "Does this sound like you, or like Ai?"
  3. Average rating so far: 7-8/10 out of 3 founders
  4. One founder said: "I'd actually post this"

What I've learned:
- The hardest part is NOT the writing. It's capturing the founder's specific opinions, not just their activities
- Indian founders write very differently from Western founders - more direct, more context-specific, more "building against odds" energy
- The "sounds like ChatGPT" problem is real, my first drafts failed my third pass usually lands

Market data is globally agencies doing this charge $1,500–5,000/month. India is untouched at an affordable price point.

I want to test this with 3 more Indian founders this week. Free. In exchange for 10 minutes of brutal honest feedback.

What you get - 2 LinkedIn posts written in your voice
What I get - feedback on whether my process actually works

If you're a founder and want to be a test subject - comment or DM me

Also open to: "This won't work in India because ___"  - that feedback is just as valuable.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 2 months ago

I'm testing an AI ghostwriting service for founders - I learned this in week 1 (and I need 3 more guinea pigs)

Week 1 of testing an idea

The idea: Indian founders are too busy to post on LinkedIn consistently
LinkedIn matters for fundraising, enterprise sales, and senior hiring.
The gap between "should post" and "actually posts" is huge

My solution: I ask a founder 5 questions every week (takes them 10 minutes)
I turn their answers into 3 LinkedIn posts that sound like them - not like generic AI content. They approve. Done.

What I've done this week:

  1. Wrote posts for 3 founders based entirely on reading their existing content (no call, no input from them)
  2. Sent the posts and asked: "Does this sound like you, or like Ai?"
  3. Average rating so far: 7-8/10 out of 3 founders
  4. One founder said: "I'd actually post this"

What I've learned:
- The hardest part is NOT the writing. It's capturing the founder's specific opinions, not just their activities
- Indian founders write very differently from Western founders - more direct, more context-specific, more "building against odds" energy
- The "sounds like ChatGPT" problem is real, my first drafts failed my third pass usually lands

Market data is globally agencies doing this charge $1,500–5,000/month. India is untouched at an affordable price point.

I want to test this with 3 more Indian founders this week. Free. In exchange for 10 minutes of brutal honest feedback.

What you get - 2 LinkedIn posts written in your voice
What I get - feedback on whether my process actually works

If you're a founder and want to be a test subject - comment or DM me

Also open to: "This won't work in India because ___"  - that feedback is just as valuable.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 2 months ago

I'm testing an AI ghostwriting service for founders - I learned this in week 1 (and I need 3 more guinea pigs)

Week 1 of testing an idea

The idea: Indian founders are too busy to post on LinkedIn consistently
LinkedIn matters for fundraising, enterprise sales, and senior hiring.
The gap between "should post" and "actually posts" is huge

My solution: I ask a founder 5 questions every week (takes them 10 minutes)
I turn their answers into 3 LinkedIn posts that sound like them - not like generic AI content. They approve. Done.

What I've done this week:

  1. Wrote posts for 3 founders based entirely on reading their existing content (no call, no input from them)
  2. Sent the posts and asked: "Does this sound like you, or like Ai?"
  3. Average rating so far: 7-8/10 out of 3 founders
  4. One founder said: "I'd actually post this"

What I've learned:
- The hardest part is NOT the writing. It's capturing the founder's specific opinions, not just their activities
- Indian founders write very differently from Western founders - more direct, more context-specific, more "building against odds" energy
- The "sounds like ChatGPT" problem is real, my first drafts failed my third pass usually lands

Market data is globally agencies doing this charge $1,500–5,000/month. India is untouched at an affordable price point.

I want to test this with 3 more Indian founders this week. Free. In exchange for 10 minutes of brutal honest feedback.

What you get - 2 LinkedIn posts written in your voice
What I get - feedback on whether my process actually works

If you're a founder and want to be a test subject - comment or DM me

Also open to: "This won't work in India because ___"  - that feedback is just as valuable.

reddit.com
u/ankit-nishad — 2 months ago