damiNocode's profile picture. Voice Agent Builder | Nocode Developer | Building MVPs | Let's have a conversation

Damola

@damiNocode

Voice Agent Builder | Nocode Developer | Building MVPs | Let's have a conversation

If you’re a sales leader who’s: - Dissatisfied with low-performing reps, - Tired of inconsistent call performance, - Or frustrated by a lack of visibility into how your team actually sells... You’ll want to check this out: sales.practiceinteractions.com

sales.practiceinteractions.com

Practice Interactions - AI-Powered Sales Practice Platform

Turn your sales reps into top performers with AI-powered practice sessions.


I just built something WILD called practice interactions, if you need to practice sales call scenarios interviews, leadership calls etc. You'll be able to do it there, you'll practice with our AI avatars, and improve. - youtu.be/7D8fCrRTI4Q?si…

damiNocode's tweet card. Practice real conversations using AI — like sales calls, coaching...

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Practice real conversations using AI — like sales calls, coaching...


Looking to generate better and more qualified leads? Try out our service on Leadscoreai, here's how we help business formation companies in the UAE setup a scorecard assessment that qualified prospects.


Damola reposted

"broken zippers fix themselves when they hear me coming" 😂😂😂

paragraph_9's tweet image. "broken zippers fix themselves when they hear me coming" 😂😂😂

If you don't like what's been said, change the conversation


Scaffolding is the hardest part of teaching, in fact just as debugging is to programming, so is scaffolding to teaching.


A desirable skill as a builder is the patience to finish what you started


We pay for things because the value we get exceeds the cost we pay


One of my core objectives with every prospect is to add value before payment, whether through the proposals I send or the conversations we have. I believe in creating an intentional imbalance where the client receives value upfront, long before they pay


Seth Godin said you don’t get better clients by doing a good job for bad clients—you get better clients by becoming the kind of person good clients want to hire. As a Bubble developer, what’s your definition of a good client? Better pay, more freedom, fewer hours?


When i teach bubble development there's always that moment of friction where my students want me to solve the problems they encounter. Absolutely not! That's the fun part, development is like a puzzle, it's a game. My job is to explain the rules, your job is to figure it out.


School tells you to solve problems they already know the answer to, real life tells you to solve problems that they don't know how to, that when a bubble client approaches me they don't know how to solve their problem, but there is trust that i can figure it out, that's real life


I built leadscoreai to be a simpler style of marketing, it's different on purpose, it's not just about more leads but better leads, better insights that leads to better clients. Every quiz creates a conversation


Damola reposted

Finished my passport renewal application from the portal on Monday, did biometric via the app and my passport was delivered today. I believe with time, we will get everything right in Nigeria. Thank you Dr Tunji Ojo


There’s a sweet spot where what we create fuses perfectly with what people want. That fusion is the real goal, beyond ad budgets, beyond fancy Bubble apps. For every founder, the mission is to find that fusion and strengthen it with every iteration


If you were to increase your bubble rates by 10X what does that look like? So if you're charging $200/hour, what does $2000/hour look like, who are you building for at this rate? And what kind of work do you see yourself doing? What does a $2000/hour client look like?


Beyond being good at Bubble development, what soft skills truly transform a career? Things like clear communication, showing value early, making clients better buyers, and doing what you said you’d do. What else?, is is it just about delivering an app?


You can't steer a parked car


Before you build an app, think about the ecosystems that will champion it. What's the current buying process? Who are the decision-makers? How can you make their lives easier? Too many founders overlook these ecosystems to chase the mass market—and fail because of it.


Is being a Bubble developer focused on marketplaces & Stripe integrations niche enough? Or does it have to be more specific, like only building vehicle rental marketplaces or education-based job marketplaces? How niche is niche?


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