Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile
Andre Theus

@atheus

Get Found on Google | Marketing at @ProductPlan, @RightScale, @Sonos, and @Citrix | Writer & Speaker About #Marketing & #ProdMgmt | Love the #Outdoors

ID: 11996872

linkhttps://www.andretheus.com calendar_today08-01-2008 19:32:57

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Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Thanks for reporting this, Brodie Clark , Richard Hearne & @PedroDias . The team has been looking into this and is working to resolve it. This is a Search Console reporting issue, and not related to indexing or ranking.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What are your favorite #WordPress #affiliate plugins? Here are some of mine: 1. Pretty Links 2. ThirstyAffiliates 3. MonsterInsights 4. WP Affiliate Manager 5. AdSanity 6. OptinMonster 7. Affiliates By Itthinx 8. WP In Post Ads 9. Amazon Auto Links

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Founders who show up build trust faster. You can’t hide behind a logo anymore. People want to hear from you. Consistency beats algorithms. Show up often, share what you’re learning, and stay visible. Trust comes from frequency, not perfection.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You don’t need to go viral to be remembered. Trust builds through repetition—clear ideas, consistent presence, simple stories. 3 thoughtful posts a week for 8–12 weeks beat one big spike. Frequency compounds. Familiarity turns into opportunity.

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No one can copy your story. It’s your most defensible marketing asset. Features can be cloned, pricing undercut, channels crowded. But your lived experience can’t be reverse-engineered. Define it once. Tell it often. Let your story build the trust your brand can’t.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One viral post won’t build trust. Ten solid ones will. Spikes fade. Frequency compounds. Show up, share ideas, repeat what matters. Repetition isn’t boring—it’s branding. Trust is a cadence, not an event. Stop chasing viral. Aim for reliable.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most founders already have what they need for LinkedIn. If you can talk about your product, your lessons, and your journey, you’re set. No brand voice needed—your voice is the brand. Show up with what you know. Consistency with substance beats polish every time.

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Most founders hide the messy middle. That's what people want. Learning in public builds trust. Show your process: trade-offs, failed experiments, rough sketches. Try a weekly post: one decision, one metric, one lesson. Context. Why. Next.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Honesty > polish. Share what worked—and what didn’t. Fail posts often beat win posts. Simple format: goal, tried, happened, next change. Benefits: sharper feedback + proof you’re evidence‑driven. Learning in public is a system. Credibility compounds.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Virality distracts most founders. Frequency wins. Chasing perfect kills momentum. Each post is a feedback loop—what worked, what didn’t, what to try next. Make it a process, not a mood. Consistency compounds. Quality follows the reps.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

People back you before your startup. That’s the trust bridge. Logos don’t create conviction. People do. Daily: 1 lesson. Weekly: 1 decision + why. Monthly: a stance. Show thinking > features. Consistency compounds. Belief > product. What belief will you share this week?

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Learning in public builds trust faster. Share the process: tests, trade-offs, fixes. Weekly: Problem → Hypothesis → Result → Next step. No spin. 8 weeks > case study. Simple > perfect. Momentum > polish.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most founders measure progress by outcomes. Normal, but it kills momentum. If you ask “What did we get?” first, only wins count. Losses feel wasted. Better: “What did we learn?” Learning leads. Results lag. After every sprint: 1) Learn 2) Change 3) Expected result

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One campaign won’t change your quarter. A system can change your year. Most launches spike… then reality returns. Not because the idea is bad—because there’s no repeatable engine. Pick 1 cadence you can sustain for 90 days. Document it. Measure execution.

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Founders: if you post on X and expect leads in week 1, you’re tracking the wrong thing. Early traction isn’t in dashboards. It’s in signals: - “This resonated” DMs - replies from people you respect - intros - prospects liking posts before booking Track conversations early

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A startup week can mess with your head. A great week ≠ “made it.” A bad week ≠ you’re wrong. Most of it is variance, not signal. Track inputs you control (outreach, shipping, convos). Review weekly, judge monthly. Don’t let 1 week rewrite the story.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Learning in public is a speed cheat for founders. Share drafts, not launches. Unfinished ideas get feedback fast—comments, DMs, even silence. Speed comes from tight feedback loops. Test story/problem/value before heavy cycles.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most startup wins look boring in real time. Nothing. Nothing. Then momentum. Low engagement. Slow sales. Tiny tweaks. Then: a referral. A post hits. A feature clicks. “Overnight success.” It’s compounding. Track 2–3 inputs weekly (ship, outreach, content). Not outcomes.

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Virality is a lottery; frequency is a lever. Can’t predict hits. You control how often you show up. Pick 2–3 themes. Post 2–4x/wk. Repurpose notes, emails, calls. Ship, iterate. Track inputs, not likes. Consistency compounds. What cadence will you commit to for 8 weeks?

Andre Theus (@atheus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You don’t need hot takes to build trust. You need visibility + clear thinking. Most buyers aren’t here for drama. They want signals: Do you get the problem? Can you explain it? Can I trust you? Pick 1 customer problem. Share 1 lesson weekly.