Piyushh Patel
whatsuppiyush.bsky.social
Piyushh Patel
@whatsuppiyush.bsky.social
💰Indie-Hacking, Bootstrapping
🏋️‍♂️On my way! to building
🔥 http://coolaiphoto.com
🔥 http://backlinkbot.ai
I really wish it to succeed, the team has worked really hard to train and de-baised it from American centric answers and they are pretty good

But the standards are pretty high right now, and marginally better stuff isn’t something people want

♻️ Share if you want REAL Indian innovation
May 25, 2025 at 8:56 AM
☑️ Deep Seek didn't win China by being Chinese. It won the WORLD by being EXCELLENT

☑️ ChatGPT didn’t win the world cause it's American but cause it works

☑️ Users choose what WORKS

Sarvam has now gotten over 350 downloads - mostly cause of the popularity it got on social media cause of downloads
May 25, 2025 at 8:56 AM
Those same people said India needed its own micro blogging platform against Twitter → but Koo is dead

This copy paste template worked for many startups but also cash starved lot of them to death

↳ Users don't care about nationalism in tech. They care about RESULTS
May 25, 2025 at 8:56 AM
I’ll tell you why ?

On Twitter many people argue that India needs a sovereign LLM, because ChatGPT or DeepSeek “don’t always know India” and secondly cause others have their own

↳ USA → ChatGPT
↳ France → Mistral
↳ China→ DeepSeek

↳ India → ???
May 25, 2025 at 8:56 AM
But here's the opportunity:
→ Creativity beats specialization

Those with creativity and ability to connect multiple dots to get things done, will be going ahead in this race
May 25, 2025 at 8:48 AM
And AI is picking the winner.

☑️ Specialists: Focused on narrow skills
☑️ Generalists: Adaptable problem solvers

↳ Guess who's winning in the AI age?

The truth: AI is becoming better at specialized tasks than humans.
May 25, 2025 at 8:48 AM
Claude's new Sonnet 4 can now work independently for 7 HOURS

That's a full workday. Let that sink in

The specialists vs. generalists battle is about to end.
May 25, 2025 at 8:48 AM
Like and Retweet 🔁

Follow for more. I share marketing and Growth Hacking Tips while building Apps that makes Founders get more revenue & sales
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
The lessons?

• Don't sell products, sell lifestyles
• Own the media, don't just buy ads
• Create culture, don't follow it
• Think decades, not quarters
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
Mateschitz passed away in 2022, worth $25B.

The Thai truck driver's drink had made him Austria's richest person.

Today, Red Bull is worth more than many traditional beverage companies combined.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
The secret sauce wasn't the drink. It was understanding that people don't buy products.

They buy into ideas.

Red Bull doesn't sell energy drinks.

They sell the promise of adventure, risk, and excitement.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
The model worked so well that many forgot what Red Bull actually is: a drink company.

In 2023, they sold 12.1 billion cans worldwide.

From a $1 Thai drink to a global phenomenon that defines extreme sports culture.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
Their content strategy? Pure genius.

Red Bull Media House produces movies, documentaries, and shows. They don't make ads about extreme sports.

They make extreme sports content people actually want to watch.

They're Netflix meets X Games.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
The numbers are staggering:

• They own 5 football teams
• 2 Formula 1 teams
• A media house
• A record label
• A mobile network

And they still spend 2/3 of their profits on marketing. Not advertising. Marketing.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
Dark truth: Early critics called them predatory.

They targeted students, promoting all-night study sessions.

They sponsored extreme sports where athletes died.

But controversy only made them stronger.

Their slogan "Red Bull gives you wings" became cultural shorthand.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
They created their own events. Red Bull didn't sponsor sports - they INVENTED them.

Red Bull Flugtag.
Red Bull Air Race.
Red Bull Cliff Diving.

They weren't selling caffeine. They were selling adrenaline.

And it worked brilliantly.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
First change? The formula. They carbonated it and sweetened it for Western tastes.

But the genius wasn't in the drink.

It was in the marketing.

They ignored traditional advertising. No TV commercials. No billboards. Instead, they did something revolutionary.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
He approached Yoovidhya with a proposal: Let's take this drink global.

They each invested $500K and split the company 49/49 (giving 2% to Yoovidhya's son).

But here's what made Mateschitz different:

He didn't want to sell a drink. He wanted to sell a lifestyle.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
Plot twist: Krating Daeng was a cheap syrupy drink selling for $0.50, marketed to Thai truck drivers and laborers.

Created by Chaleo Yoovidhya, it was just one of thousands of "energy drinks" in Asia.

But Mateschitz had a crazy idea.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
1982: Dietrich Mateschitz, an Austrian marketing exec, lands in Thailand.

Jetlagged, he tries a local energy drink called "Krating Daeng" (Thai for red bull).

The drink instantly cures his lag.

But what he saw wasn't just energy in a bottle. He saw potential.
December 4, 2024 at 6:28 AM
👋 @william-jin.bsky.social

Building coolaiphoto.com and backlinkbot.ai can you add me to the list
CoolAIPhoto - Your Personal AI Photographer
Transform your selfies into professional AI-generated photos
coolaiphoto.com
December 4, 2024 at 4:39 AM
👋 @mauriciorubio.com

Built these coolaiphoto.com and backlinkbot.ai using bolt can you add me to the list
CoolAIPhoto - Your Personal AI Photographer
Transform your selfies into professional AI-generated photos
coolaiphoto.com
December 4, 2024 at 4:37 AM