inlytics.io

inlytics.io

软件开发

West Hollywood,CA 639 位关注者

Visualize Content Performance Therefore Grow Your Influence. Start Today For Free.

关于我们

LinkedIn Analytics for your personal account | inlytics.io ?? inlytics enables you to analyze your data therefor optimize your content performance while at the same time grow your influence in your network. ? Get insights most users won’t by analyzing important key-metrics like the engagement rate or the time history progression of certain metrics. ? Find out what your audience likes. inlytics helps you to increase the quality of your content week after week, month after month. ? We provide you with a comprehensive Linkedin Dashboard that helps you analyze your data lightning fast. We focus on action able insights. We help agencies, in-house teams and content creators around the world with their different needs for data, stats and analytics on LinkedIn - in a single cloud based application. Right in your browser. Get started - it's free!

网站
https://www.inlytics.io/
所属行业
软件开发
规模
2-10 人
总部
West Hollywood,CA
类型
上市公司
领域
analytics、linkedin和personal

地点

动态

  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    You should acquire companies with relevant SEO. And merge their websites into yours. I've done this TWICE in 2024. Here's how they're each playing out: 1. ???????????????????? ???????????????? ?????????? ???????? ???????????????? (March 2024) → Avg quarterly SEO-sourced SQLs are up +62% → Avg quarterly revenue up +66% Funny how that works? You maintain a great LinkedIn presence, you keep building out your website, you partner with amazing people, and revenue rises along with leads. This was a very partnership-oriented deal, as well. We're paying the former owners of the acquired company based on realized value, not based on a hope and a dream. But I still think you can put hard numbers to the value of SEO, and acquire it. As evidenced by... 2. ?????????? ???????????????? ???????????????? (September 2024) → Avg quarterly SEO-sourced SQLs up +1000% → MRR up +40.2% in less than 3 months These are extremely correlated. I've been doing basically nothing additional on LinkedIn with my content, even slacking a bit on our influencer program if I'm being honest, and revenue has grown handily. In this deal, like I said above we took the opposite approach and actually offered 100% guaranteed cash over 60 days. But we paid a price that might surprise you, given how much value we have been able to realize. We'll need another several weeks to make back the actual cash flow given that we have costs on the revenue we acquired, but our financial ROI is in the 18X range on this already. I imagine it'll be over 60X easily before all is said and done. -- To put this another way: I spent years trying to convince y'all to invest in this stuff. Many listened. But a lot of marketers stuck their noses up at this and decided to play around with ChatGPT instead. Really, I hate convincing people to do things. But I LOVE putting my money where my mouth is. I'm going to keep doing that.

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  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    We shipped a big revamp to the Aware UI! Took Mac a few weeks of clearing out tech debt, but we needed to stay scalable ?? Highlights: ? Faster and more responsive ? Date range selectors make more sense ? Better use of white space ? Buttons etc are more standard ? Add commonly used snippets to the post scheduler ? Commonly used bullet points (like these, ha!) available in scheduler Bunch more stuff too. Oh, and: MRR is up 46.2% last 3 months. Let's go ????

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  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    Give away your best insights. Completely free. Here's why you shouldn't be worried about "your secret sauce": 1. IT'S NOT ACTUALLY SECRET Other people are going to give it away first. Maybe they're wrong, or not as smart as you. But they'll give it away, even if it's not public yet. Whatever it is that you think is so special, you're not the only one who knows it. And you'll get left behind, if you're hiding in your corner hoarding your perspective, expecting to be paid just for sharing it. 2. PEOPLE DON'T PAY FOR KNOWLEDGE The value that people pay you for is not in the insights themselves. It's in the *tailored application OF those insights* to their specific business. Or in you flying out to deliver those insights to their company, in person. Or in you putting your reputation on the line to certify something. Even if you sell information products: what you sell is the placement of all of your knowledge, into a coherent and digestible format so that people can consume it in a way that helps them drive outcomes. The point is, you should be treating your Perspectives, Insights, and Knowledge as "free marketing products". Your actual paid product, is the application of that perspective. -- I've been walking the talk on this, personally. I've been consistently posting on LinkedIn for 7+ years. I share the good stuff. I'm not violating privacy, and I'm not sharing actual trade secrets. But I'm giving away serious value in Perspective, Insight, Knowledge. Free. I even flew down to Apollo.io HQ last year to shoot a video course - again, free! - where we talked about giving away your best stuff on LinkedIn. If you haven't checked out this course yet, it's on apollo[dot]io/academy. Have a look. -- All of this sharing? It's driven tons of revenue for companies I've founded. I'm making huge time investments in educating people about LinkedIn, and Aware (a LinkedIn management tool for creators, agencies, and sales teams) is growing rapidly as a result. This stuff pays off. Believe me. Share your sauce publicly and see how far it gets you.

  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    So our customer service is pretty good. It could be better. But here's how we do: Median First Response: 1.6 hours Median Response Time: 12 minutes (Time To Close, I don't really care about because that's just when we hit "close" on the ticket, and we give it a few followups if a customer hasn't responded re: our ticket, before closing.) That's factoring in overnight inquiries from EU/APAC customers. Travel and vacation (which I'm currently on. Ha. Hello from Tulum!) This is with a skeleton crew of me and my cofounder Mac doing it all ourselves, in addition to everything else under the sun across the business. There's a reason that only 2 people have cancelled their subscription to Aware, and listed "customer service" as the reason (and they both said they hit it by mistake and apologized, when I reached out to confirm that was a real thing). Our product isn't perfect. It never will be. But the least we can do is TAKE CARE of people. Best we possibly can.

    • Aware Customer Service Response Time
  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    The debate about content formats can be fierce. → Make video! Post selfies! Carousels are dead! But comparing formats is a waste of time. Let's look at two Top Creators: Sam Browne ?? and Brianna Doe. Then let's break down the average engagement of their posts of different formats. Sam's Carousels → Average # Comments: 206 Brianna's Text Posts → Average # Comments: 189 Why is the comparison between formats a waste of time? Two reasons: 1. Their brands make an extremely healthy, similar amount of revenue. Should you be posting carousels then? If deciding based on engagement alone, it would seem so. But if the financials aren't drastically different, how do you decide? 2. It's just not about "the format". It's about the story. Sam has a wonderful, lighthearted, pleasing, and very insightful message: the torch of which he carries day in and day out with a strongly consistent brand aesthetic. Brianna's voice and message are bright, insightful, and equal parts mellow yet biting, depending on the day. The kicker? In each post, both Sam and Brianna choose the format that works the best to tell the story they want to tell, of THAT particular piece of content. Now, sure: → There are some advantages (that I've talked about) of using richer visual media. In particular, integrating high quality video and carousels into your content allows you to stand out and connect with your community on a deeper level. But this is no substitute for the core fact here: People follow Sam, and Brianna, and other creators, because they just plain: → Like them as people → Value their contributions → Enjoy their content → Get value from what they publish Day in and day out. I bet if Sam started ONLY doing video, you'd like him just as much. Or if Brianna started primarily posting carousels, you'd still appreciate her words and message quite a bit. They both invest in their brands, make great incomes that increase the value of their businesses, and what they do works for them. Find what works for you. Lean into the formats that feel good. But don't forget: It's your WHOLE PRESENCE, holistically, that draws people in and encourages them to actually spend money within your corner of the ecosystem. P.S. It doesn't matter which bullet point you use :) → This ? This ? Or this

  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    You’re treading water on LinkedIn. But Top Creators are gaining engagement. What are they doing differently? Our proprietary data shows about 2/3 of Top Creators seeing MORE reach in 2024 vs 2023. On their typical post. Top Creators include people like Brianna Doe, Sam Szuchan, Melissa Gaglione, and Ruben Taieb. And many more. But 2/3 of everyone else are LOSING reach, on average. The best? They have two main ingredients: → Substance → Style Substance is real knowledge, know-how, understanding of a particular field or industry. Style is the production quality of their profile and their material: a consistent, aesthetically-pleasing media presence, including high quality copywriting. When you combine those two TOGETHER, you have a recipe for gaining ground in a crowded market. If I had to pick one? It would be: → Substance Plenty of the people who make enormous gobs of revenue and income from LinkedIn are great writers but don't invest a dime in visual media. Those people are not: → Shooting skits → Creating carousels → Doing elaborate giveaways So if you can: do both. But if you can only pick one? Pick substance. Do the work to unpack your core message. Figure out the real underlying problem you are solving, for whom, and what perspective shift your customers need to go through to realize that shift. Talk about THAT. If you can design it all well, all the better ???? -- P.S. It's pretty much just the last several months ALONE that I've been investing in design. It's been a great investment. But I made millions without it. I'm just shooting for acceleration now :)

    • 61% of Top Creators are gaining reach in 2024 vs 2023
  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    I've seen firsthand how LinkedIn commenting can lead to a $40k sale. With a sales cycle of just 4 hours. It happened like this: ? I was commenting on a post written by X ? I tagged someone else (Y) on that post ? Someone else, who HAD NOT ENGAGED PUBLICLY, sent me a DM ? It said, "Great to connect! Do you know X and Y? Do you do the same things as them?" ? I said, "No, those guys X and Y are great. My company does Z." ? He said, "Got it. Perfect. Because I have some spare budget left over from last quarter that I need to use, or I lose it. Can you send me an invoice this afternoon ASAP, so I can squeeze this in now and work with your team this month?" That was a pretty life changing moment. Not because someone spent $40k on consulting with my company, that's just a normal day. The crazy thing was: WE HAD BARELY SPOKEN. My very first interaction with this person was earlier that morning. The purchase order arrived soon after, and I had to scramble to get an MSA together *after the invoice* which is highly unusual, to define scope. This sank home the awesome power of TRUST. As you go about your day networking on LinkedIn, keep this in mind: ? People will infer your credibility based on who seems to know you, and who you seem to know. LinkedIn comments can help you share and earn trust, fast, and across a wide surface area. This isn't weird: it's a natural human instinct. Now, you're not always going to make five figure sales that easily (that was sure was). But you can and should be demonstrating your credibility with your engagement. -- Major h/t again to my friends over at --> Apollo.io/academy, where you can find my 35-minute LinkedIn course, completely free.

  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    There’s no way to grow on LinkedIn in 2024 if you’re not engaging. Sure, you might maintain what you have. But attention is becoming increasingly competitive. It’s no surprise that, after an extensive study of millions of LinkedIn posts, we found that the median number of post engagements DECLINED 25% when evaluating 2024 vs 2023, on the whole… …while Aware users, on average, GAINED 11% more in terms of their median number of post engagements. It’s true: not every Aware user is totally maximizing the value of their account. As much as I wish each user would log in every day: they don’t (although, to our credit, about HALF of them do! Our DAU/MAU ratio is nuts.) But we DO notice that our customers come to us with two things: 1. The INTENTION to grow their LinkedIn presence 2. POWERFUL TOOLs to make good on that intention When you think about it… how could it NOT be true? When you engage meaningfully with relevant people in your network, comment on their content, increase the surface area of your digital presence… in what world could that do anything BUT have a strong positive impact on your personal brand? On the brand of your company? Sure, you can’t just half ass it and write nutty or thoughtless comments, and call it a day. But the data is starkly clear. Engagement is a make-or-break factor on LinkedIn. Fun fact: LinkedIn agencies understand this extremely well. They either collaborate with their clients to do it for them with guidance, or spoon feed them the posts to comment on, because they know that posts alone don’t cut it. Adapt, or decline. I think it’s high time more of us committed to doing what it takes. – DISCLAIMER: Several “big accounts”, in terms of followers, don’t engage much any more, you might say to me. Fine. But I know some of them. Some of them are seeing stagnation in their business, they’re raising money at bad valuations, they’re under stress, etc. Now: in no uncertain terms, I DO NOT want to simply equate Buying Aware And Doing Commenting, with, You Will Necessarily Make More Money. Not at all. It doesn't work that way. But, it’s an attitude: are you still interested in building relationships? Or have you sort of given up on that and are riding on your past successes? If it’s the latter, your presence and your profits are not long for this world.

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  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Andrej Persolja的档案,图片

    ?? Positioning strategist for tech companies | You are one message away from your best-fit client, investor. Let me help you find that message. Founder @ Narwhal Network

    After 8 years in marketing, I am not often surprised. But just the other day, something unexpected happened. Those of you who follow me for some time, know that I am vocal about how important dialogue with your clients is. Scaling a SaaS product isn't all about marketing and tactics. It's about building a group of vocal followers who advocate for your product and brand. Alex Boyd takes this to the next level. Quick story ?? A couple of months ago, I was testing Aware. I was looking for a tool that would help me improve my LinkedIn game, without resorting to AI commenting and posting. (We all hate those, don't we?) I didn't get to spend too much time in the software, as I decided to take some time off LinkedIn during the summer months. Immediately after canceling my subscription, Alex, the founder of Aware, sent me a message on LinkedIn, asking about my cancellation. I told him, I would be back. Fast forward to this Wednesday. Recharged and ready to come back to #LinkedIn, I remembered the short conversation I had with Alex. I opened the chat, looking for the name of the tool. While I was there, I sent Alex a message. We started chatting and ended up having a nice conversation, founder to founder, about the importance of talking to your customers. After spending a couple of hours talking to Alex, and a couple of days in the software, Aware got a new yearly subscriber. And more than that. A vocal advocate of the tool. If you are looking to create meaningful connections from LinkedIn, I recommend you look at Aware. Or send Alex a message directly, he will be happy to talk to you. PS. In case you are wondering... No, this is not a sponsored post. I've seen plenty of those in the last year and are part of the reason why I needed a break from LinkedIn. I am simply trying to help a founder who took the time to talk to one of his clients. Because that, I believe, can make the difference in today's world. Thank you, Alex, hopefully more founders follow your initiative.

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  • inlytics.io转发了

    查看Alex Boyd的档案,图片

    Co-founder @ Aware (useaware.co) || Founder @ RevenueZen, Exited to Onfolio

    Can you live with all of your faults? I think I can. The trick with entrepreneurship: It's not → Being perfect → Pleasing everyone → Never messing up → No software bugs No way. It's more like: → Did I apologize for that thing I said when I was annoyed? → Did I not let my day go off the rails because an important customer reported a bug? → Did I procrastinate yesterday, but got the One Big Thing done today? → Do I respect my partners and team? → Have I done my best, at doing my best? Lately I've had experiences that were testing. ? Customers who canceled, and their feedback on the way out was - I thought - off the mark. I wished they would have asked for help on how to use the product before canceling, I could have just shown them! ? People (not customers) who insisted their way of doing things was the right way, and wouldn't listen or hear me out when I tried to voice my perspective. ? Stuff I've read on LinkedIn that was infuriating in how uneducated and tactless it was. And I am very low-filter in my LinkedIn presence. I think part of my secret is this: I know that I am imperfect. Life is imperfect. Others are imperfect. Yet somehow. Paradoxically. I view it as: All Perfect. We have one life to live, and that life comes with warts and screwups. I'm just grateful to be living it.

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