Greg Parker (@gregbparker) 's Twitter Profile
Greg Parker

@gregbparker

Entrepreneur & Product Engineer. Building Fuel and AgentBid. I talk about startups, building products, and AI.

ID: 17098105

linkhttps://gregbparker.com calendar_today01-11-2008 08:17:04

7,7K Tweet

1,1K Followers

135 Following

Hunter Thompson (@hunterthompson) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New work for Distributional This one took a creative powerhouse village — so many talented folks had their hands in this project Brand: Mackey Saturday Design: Benten + me Webflow dev: Zebediah Miller 3D interactive model: Greg Parker Animations: Valerio Vazquez

Greg Parker (@gregbparker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The skeletal startup is here. No team. No budget. No permission. Just: • A few people who prefer action over endless strategy • A handful of AI tools • A clear problem to solve AI killed the old playbook: Raise money → hire fast → chase scale → pray for revenue. Now

Greg Parker (@gregbparker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Every startup starts polished in your head. Then reality hits. That’s how it should be. Speed matters more than polish. Better shipped messy than perfected too late.

Brian Lovin (@brian_lovin) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Designers working in AI need to be designing with live LLMs + code. Figma files with perfectly-mocked fake conversations don’t cut it.

Greg Parker (@gregbparker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most people are told to specialize. But in startups and AI, it’s the creative generalists who are having a moment. The ones who think across design, tech, and business. They move fast. Spot patterns. Use AI like a superpower. Early-stage teams need them more than they

Cristina Cordova (@cjc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When I started in tech in 2009, joining a startup meant taking a huge pay cut. You did it for the mission, the growth, the bet on yourself (and maybe because the best-paid jobs in finance or big tech weren't hiring in the recession). Startups were for the scrappy and idealistic.

Lenny Rachitsky (@lennysan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why you should probably hire an "AI Operations Lead," whose job is to make everyone at your company more productive using AI tools and workflows. "I sit with her once a week, and every time I'm doing something repetitively, we put it in a to-do list. She then builds prompts and

Aaron Levie (@levie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One practice we’ve implemented in going AI-first at Box is every week someone demos their AI workflow to the whole company. Usually it’s something we never would’ve predicted. Good to balance central planning for tech and decentralization for use case adoption.

Greg Parker (@gregbparker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As we're developing conversational AI agents at Fuel, I've gained some eye-opening insights about the massive gap between a working demo and a truly production-ready system. Getting our beta off the ground happened faster than expected. With a solid knowledge base powered by

Aaron Levie (@levie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

There’s a window right now where AI agents will get built for every vertical and domain. The playbook is to go deep on the context engineering required for the vertical or particular space, figure out the right UX that ties into the existing workflows naturally, and connect to

Greg Parker (@gregbparker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Career progression in tech has always followed a familiar path: Start as an individual contributor → work your way up → eventually become a manager → stop “doing” the work. I think back to one of Gary Vaynerchuk old videos, Clouds and Dirt, where he talked about having big-picture

Greg Parker (@gregbparker) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Pro tip: Get in shape while vibe coding We sit too much. While you’re waiting for your Cursor or Claude Code agents to finish, do a set of pushups, pull-ups, or squats.