13
4 Comments

I'm writing about how I made IRL friends w/ the most successful people in Austin, TX last year

As makers, we know it's important to launch early and often. I'm trying this with blog posts, too.

I'm writing a post on how I made IRL friends w/ the most successful people in Austin, TX last year- I figured I'd share the outline here and ask: do you want to read this? What am I missing in this outline?

OUTLINE

Step 1: Treated friendships like a mkting funnel

  • took one month of data and made a graph of IRL friendship sources by quality & quantity
  • in my case twitter = highest quality & quantity of IRL friends

Step 2: created content to get friends in-person from twitter

  • I targeted successful, data-driven newcomers to ATX w/ a home-buying guide
  • posted about how many friends I have, which drove ppl to dm asking to meet

Step 3: Created a 'friendship loop' from twitter friends

  • we'd work together to introduce each other to the most interesting people we knew
  • this grew all of our circles, but it was slow (one person at a time)

Step 4: Put that friendship loop on steroids by tapping into 'collectors'

  • collectors curate groups of high quality like-minded people (collectors are wonderful! Sparkles)
  • if it's a good fit, it's 10x the ROI of the before-mentioned 'friendship loop' for meeting fascinating people

Bonus section: some rules of thumb for befriending super interesting/successful people (that I learned through making a ton of mistakes haha)

I'd appreciate any feedback!

Thank you!

posted to Icon for group Bloggers
Bloggers
on January 9, 2022
  1. 2

    Hm, this sounds super interesting — and I'm not just saying that because I myself considered moving to Austin last year.

    It "works" because:

    1. It solves a problem a lot of people have after they get out of college: making new IRL friends who actually share a some of their interests.
    2. You come at it in a happily nerdy, strategic way. So as long as this post is intended for techie/entrepreneurship types, you're set.

    Just try to work these hooks into your title and opening sentences!

    1. 1

      Thanks! I'll make sure to work some good hooks in there. And if you're in Austin this year, reach out!

  2. 1

    Who do you consider to be the most successful people in Austin? Perhaps if these folks knew you were interested in meeting with them, you would get on their radar.

    Also, if you want to get someone's attention - try to put yourself out there as much as possible online and in person.

Trending on Indie Hackers
The most underrated distribution channel in SaaS is hiding in your browser toolbar User Avatar 192 comments How are you handling memory and context across AI tools? User Avatar 107 comments I gave 7 AI agents $100 each to build a startup. Here's what happened on Day 1. User Avatar 101 comments Do you actually own what you build? User Avatar 62 comments Code is Cheap, but Scaling AI MVPs is Hard. Let’s Fix Yours. User Avatar 34 comments How to see your entire business on one page User Avatar 29 comments