p/general
by
Nick
7
10
p/self-promotion
Marc Copeland
Real talk every time I published a blog post, the actual writing was the easy part. The hard part was what came next:
Rewriting it as a Twitter thread with hooks that stop the scroll.
Rewriting it again for LinkedIn in a completely different format.
Finding 20 Instagram hashtags and writing a caption with a CTA.
5
1
Nika
I've been in social media marketing for nearly five years, but with AI advancing, I suspect my role in ad setup may soon become unnecessary.
I used to set up promo campaigns manually using native platform tools (which already applied some AI, like automated texts or ad placement, viz. Facebook Business Manager).
18
Sarah Evans
34
44
Sharath Kuruganty
26
61
Aleksandar Blazhev
Creating content in 2025 is super typical. Being a content creator as a founder isn t optional anymore, it s almost a requirement if you want to grow your business and brand. But you have to be consistent. And some people prepare content in advance or post in the moment.
I see both styles all the time.
25
19
Burcu Zeynep Konuk
6
8
jurasai
23
Karim Saif
12
16
Hannah S Kim
21
40
Ninad Sail
Sven Radavics
17
47
24
Elena Oprea
Gloria G
42
Lucia Valdivia
I recently started building a tool for content creators and startup founders who want to stay consistent on Threads. I ve realized how hard it is to promote something when you re just starting and don't have an audience yet. If you don t have a big following or a budget, what worked for you?
Did you focus on one platform at a time?
Did you document your process?
Did you post daily even if no one was watching?
Curious to hear how others approached early stage promotion. Right now I m experimenting with scheduling, batching, and smart tagging to stay organized while posting on Threads consistently but I want to learn what s working for others too.
20
Anxo Armada
28
Roslyn Brooks
4
Priyanka Saini
11
Kisson Lin
Lakshya Singh