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4 contributions to Tech-Lite Business Builders
Stop Trying To Sell. Start Making People Feel Seen.
One of the biggest mistakes I see people make with their content is treating it like a checklist. Find a pain point. Offer a solution. Drop a link. Repeat. On paper, it makes sense. In reality, it often falls flat. Why? Because most people aren't scrolling social media looking to make a decision. They're scrolling because they're tired. They're taking a break. They're avoiding the things they need to think about for a few minutes. So when your content immediately starts telling them what's wrong with their life and what they need to do next, it can feel like just another person trying to sell them something. The content that connects does something different. It makes people feel understood. It talks about the thoughts they've been having when nobody else is around. The things they've considered trying. The frustrations they don't usually talk about. The worries that keep showing up at 2am. When people feel seen, trust starts to build. And trust is what creates action. Not pressure. Not hype. Not another "easy solution." Before you write your next post, ask yourself: Am I simply explaining a problem? Or am I showing people that I genuinely understand what they're going through? Because the best content doesn't make people feel targeted. It makes them feel understood. 👇 Have you ever read a post and thought, "Wow, it's like they were talking directly to me"?
Stop Trying To Sell. Start Making People Feel Seen.
0 likes • 4d
@Claudia Lopez Do you use AI to help you write your content?
1 like • 4d
@Claudia Lopez I need to get better at taking out the AI fluff. I have a hard time still creating a post that actually sounds like me.
Content Lesson: Why Some Posts Connect And Others Get Ignored
One of the biggest mistakes content creators make is focusing on the wrong things. They worry about: • Hashtags • Editing • Posting times • Fancy graphics • Trending sounds But none of those things can save a weak message. The foundation of great content is having something your audience actually cares about. Before you create your next post, ask yourself: "Why would someone stop scrolling for this?" The next mistake is making yourself the centre of the content. Many creators think: "What do I want to say today?" The better question is: "What does my audience need to hear today?" People don't open social media looking to learn about us. They open it looking for solutions, encouragement, answers, ideas, or simply to feel understood. That's why the best content makes the viewer the hero. Another important lesson is this: People remember feelings more than information. Facts are useful. Tips are useful. But emotion is what makes content memorable. People remember content that made them feel: • Hopeful • Inspired • Understood • Motivated • Less alone That's why stories are so powerful. A simple story often teaches a lesson better than a list of instructions ever could. And finally, remember this: Every piece of content should have one clear takeaway. Not five. Not ten. One. If someone finishes your post and can clearly explain the main lesson in one sentence, you've done your job. The goal isn't to impress people with how much you know. The goal is to help people leave your content better than they were before they found it. That's what great content does. 👇 What's one piece of content you've seen recently that made you stop scrolling and pay attention?
Content Lesson: Why Some Posts Connect And Others Get Ignored
1 like • 4d
Curiosity posts always get a stop and answer from me.
Stop Watering the Weeds. 🌱
Have you ever noticed how two people can face the exact same challenge, yet one finds a way through while the other stays stuck? The difference is often where their attention goes. There's a saying I come back to often: Energy flows where attention goes. If you spend your day focused on everything that's going wrong, every setback feels bigger. Every obstacle seems impossible. Before long, you've drained your motivation without taking a single step forward. But when you shift your attention to solutions, learning, and the next small action, something changes. You stop asking: ❌ "Why is this happening to me?" And start asking: ✅ "What's one thing I can do next?" That simple shift creates momentum. This is especially true when you're building an online business or learning AI. It's easy to get distracted by what everyone else is doing. Comparing followers. Comparing income. Comparing how fast someone else seems to be growing. None of that helps you move forward. Instead, put your attention on the things you can control. Learn one new skill. Create one piece of content. Help one person. Improve by one percent today. Your attention is one of your most valuable assets. Spend it wisely, because whatever you focus on today is what you'll build more of tomorrow. 👇 What are you choosing to focus your energy on this week?
1 like • 4d
This reminds me of the book The Lemonade Life by Zack Friedman. It’s all in the perspective! I’ll be moving forward toward that positive energy.
Stop Accepting ChatGPT's First Answer
One of the biggest mistakes I see people make is asking ChatGPT for something... then using the very first answer it gives them. Here's a simple trick that can dramatically improve your results. Instead of only asking ChatGPT to create, ask it to review, score, and improve its own work. Think of the first answer as a rough draft, not the finished product. Here's a prompt you can copy and use: Create [YOUR TASK]. Then grade your own work from 1 to 10 using this rubric: 1. Is it clear and easy to understand? 2. Does it speak directly to the right audience? 3. Does it avoid sounding generic or robotic? 4. Does it have a strong opening? 5. Does it lead to one clear next step? Show me the scores in a simple table. Then rewrite the piece and improve anything that scored under 8. Why this works Most people only tell ChatGPT what they want. Very few people tell it what a good answer looks like. That checklist becomes your standard. Instead of saying: "Write me a Facebook post." You're saying: "Write it... then check your own work against my standards before I see it." The difference is often huge. The best part? You can create your own checklist for almost anything. Want a better TikTok script? Create a TikTok checklist. Writing an email? Create an email checklist. Teaching beginners? Create a beginner-friendly checklist. The more specific your checklist, the better ChatGPT understands what success looks like. 💜 Remember: ChatGPT can help you write, but you decide what "good" looks like. That's where the real magic happens. Check the first comment for an example Have you ever asked ChatGPT to improve its own answer, or do you usually use the first draft? Let me know in the comments.
Stop Accepting ChatGPT's First Answer
2 likes • 4d
Great advice! I appreciate this!
0 likes • 4d
@Jenelle Livet Thank you!
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Janae Shepherd
2
14points to level up
@janae-shepherd-8214
My favorite people call me Grandma | Wellness products that are natural, functional, and clean | Building a business by sharing foundational health

Active 3h ago
Joined Jun 7, 2026