Browse LinkedIn templates created by iuliia shnai
Iuliia Shnai š©āš»
In last months I worked in probably 100 different places
Before that, last 3 years, I was working mostly from home.
I worked in:
- cafes
- car
- ship
- plane
- hotels
- airbnbs
- coworkings
So, I was trying to figure out for myself what is the best model for me.
And realised that working 100% from home is not the best for me.
Very productive for me is to work from coworking or closed spaces where you have limited amount of time to work. It is like working for a deadline in the train for example.
But you can not work from train, every day of course.
So, my best working expereince:
- working from coworking
- walking there and back by foot
- 2 days in a week down work or work from home
- work one of the weekends
The main reason, is that I feel much more active working from somewhere I need to walk to.
Combining it together with travelling, you need to stay in one place at least for month or 3 is ideal.
Yesterday, were the new location working from the park in Brisbane š
What your idea working places?
Iuliia Shnai š©āš»
The other side of building in public, nobody says about
I experienced myself for the first time. COPYCAT.
First time smn who reached personally to me and was very open to support each other projects.
Copied Postli functions.
And than said copied it from other product š¤£
And it is ok, it is not changing anything for me.
But it made me thinking.
We copy, and we being copied. That's how we live and learn.
I sometimes got the idea, which I think is mine, but actually saw sometimes ago somewhere. So, my brain copy it without telling me.
Everyone copy from everyone, so this is just like that.
And now with the development being more accessible and cheap, it is just easier to copy.
Tamara Kramer would say, build strong brand that nobody copy it.
Yes, brand is good, but also takes time especially for solo founders.
Regarding the situation, first I got a bit upset, because and only because I know this person. Next I thought, maybe I should not share all.
But I think it does not worth it.
I stay true to myself, building in public is good, no matter what. :
- building in public is better
- growing brands is better
- sharing is better
- getting more feedback
Dont cover up and be afraid that someone steal smth and be in stealth.
You risk never launch š¤£
Iuliia Shnai š©š»
In 2023 my LinkedIn posts caught eyes of 905k people
Practically 1 Million like:
- The biggest music festival
- City, size of San Francisco
- 4 times more than any stadium
As you see, it is not spread equally:
- it is graph with peaks
- with more stable activity seen in the end of December
- with average only 2k impressions per post
- with 1 highest performing post
One viral post, is kind of the reason:
- I started actively posting on Linkedin
- I built micro-tools for Linkedin
- I receive feedback
- I got inspired
And after that 100+ more posts building in public and sharing my journey.
Thanks for this awesome year š
Iuliia Shnai š©š»
My last recap of 2023 "Linkedin wins" :
1. I cried 10 times over 3 likes on my posts
2. Commented "Great" under smn posts 500 times
3. I hit 3 figure MRR for Linkedin tools I built
4. Get viral 1 time
5. Explained my family what viral is 20 times
6. Thought about becoming a ghostwriter 100 times
7. Never did, so did not reach 7 figure MRR
8. Spend 100 hours on creating pyramids for my lists
9. Spend 200 hours on creating carousels
10. Get 20 offers to be promoted by Linkedin influencers with 137k+ followers
11. Repeated "Build in public" 300 times
12. Create 100 photos of me with computer where I pretend to code
13. Start doubting I really code
14. Mentioned people 350 times
15. Did not get response from 349/350
16. Stopped saying that Linkedin cringe
17. Thought for a second maybe I am also cringe now
18. Read interesting posts and spoke with interesting people to stop doubts
19. Laughed on memes on Linkedin every day
All numbers in this post are fake or exaggerated by me.
š
Iuliia Shnai š©š»
Iuliia Shnai š©š»
Iuliia Shnai š©š»
Hi, Iām Iuliia, and I am building tools in public for 10 months
-> I studied to be industrial engineer
-> For 1 year, I worked scanning papers 8 hours a day
-> I did Phd in Education Technology
-> I worked as project manager in EU projects
-> I failed investor-backed startup
-> Learn code and start building in public
I had different transitions in my career from engineer, to phd students, to half-leg developer.
But what stay the same, in each of the roles I was a CREATOR.
Meaning:
-> creating ideas
-> creating products with code and no-code
-> creating content
If you are reading this post, so now you know a bit more about my journey.
Transition, is ok, we all change, trying new things is ok, sharing and failing in public is ok. And figuring out who you are and what you are doing, also ok and takes time. āØ
Iuliia Shnai š©š»
Iuliia Shnai š©š»