David Volt (@x9volt) 's Twitter Profile
David Volt

@x9volt

đź›’ E-commerce Copywriter | I write words that print money.
🚀 Future empire in the making.
📍 Building, learning, stacking, connecting.

ID: 1937202902625382401

calendar_today23-06-2025 17:35:51

180 Tweet

32 Followers

89 Following

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Most freelancers DM constantly and wonder why founders ghost them. Here's something no guide will tell you: It's not just what you say, it's who you reference. I've noticed a pattern: DMs that mention generic metrics ("I can boost your conversions 20%") get ignored. DMs that

David Volt (@x9volt) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most freelancers DM constantly and wonder why founders ghost them. Here's something no guide will tell you: It's not just what you say, it's who you reference. I've noticed: Generic "Boost 20% conversions" DMs get ignored. But ones tying to their public pain get replies

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This pitch is a trainwreck, zero effort, all hype. If you’re gonna DM someone, at least pretend you know them first. No wonder trust in online sales is tanking.

David Volt (@x9volt) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Damn, Aaron nailed it, chasing likes is like chasing smoke, it just slips away. Building an audience that actually gives a damn is where the real money hides. Slow grind beats the quick hype every time. Be here not for impressions, but to make an impression.

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Just got a DM from a SaaS tool that was newly launched. Their product is solid. But their landing page is missing the mark. Here's the thing, most SaaS heroes sell features, not fixes. Original: "Smart Replies for Twitter & LinkedIn. AI-powered responses that sound human…"

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I've seen too many SaaS founders run headfirst into marketing, then wonder why nothing sticks. They spend on ads, blast posts, even hire agencies. Traffic comes in. But conversions are flatline. The problem usually isn't the marketing. It's the foundation. Here's what I

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I didn't land my first client on X from cold emails or endless DMs. It happened in the most unexpected way. At first, I thought posting was pointless. I was throwing out random tweets, hoping someone would magically find me. It didn't work. Then I switched things up. Instead of

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Your SaaS product can be amazing. But if your copy is mid, nobody cares. People don't buy features. They buy the words that make those features matter. I've seen SaaS founders spend months polishing their product, only to lose conversions because the headline couldn't grab

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SaaS founders, your product may be gold, but crap copy kills conversions. Here's why words win, and how to fix it. People buy outcomes, not features. Bad: "AI Tool." Good: "End low MRR in 1 click." Mistake 1: Feature dumps. Fix: Use pain-first heroes. Mistake 2: No

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Lost a client today. It was a SaaS founder. We were fixing their landing page. I pulled three late nights on it. Eyes burning, music on repeat, just grinding. Tweaked the hero a dozen times. Headlines, CTAs, angles… nothing felt enough. Their replies slowed. My gut said

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When I first started freelancing, I thought landing clients was about sending the perfect DM. I'd spend hours crafting messages. Rewriting. Overthinking every word. But most went unanswered. The ones that did were mostly "not interested." Then I landed a client offline. Face to

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Most SaaS don't fail because of bad products. They fail because of bad positioning. Here's a quick checklist before you market your SaaS: 1. Clear audience: Can you describe your user in 1 sentence? 2. Pain-first messaging: Does your copy open with the problem, not features?

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Most SaaS pages flop for one reason. They talk like robots, not like people. Your users don't care about "scalable integrations" or "cross-platform ecosystems." They just wanna know: does this thing fix my problem? Here's how to check your copy in 2 minutes: Read your

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Growth feels complicated. But at its core, it's just three things: 1. Get people to notice you. Clear message beats shouting louder. 2. Give them a reason to try. Simple, fast, low-risk entry. 3. Make them want to stay. Real value beats hype. Most founders overcomplicate

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I've been building a mini copywriting portfolio. Nothing crazy, just a few landing pages and ads I rewrote as samples. Sharing it here because I'd love feedback, advice, even brutal takes. I'm treating it as practice, not promotion. 👇 bit.ly/voltcopyworks

David Volt (@x9volt) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Most landing pages flop because they try to sound smart. Big words. Long sentences. Buzzwords everywhere. But here's the truth: Clear beats Clever. If your reader has to think twice, you've already lost them. Good copy doesn't impress, it explains. It makes the offer so

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Forget fancy websites. My copywriting portfolio lives in Google Drive. Folders = webpages. Docs = landing pages. Not a launch, just practice, open to feedback. 👇 bit.ly/voltcopyworks

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why do people click your ad but never buy your ad says one thing your landing page says another that gap makes them pause and most times they just leave fix is simple keep the same message ad to page to checkout most founders ignore this but it's the fastest way to stop