Get live statistics and analysis of Dimi's profile on X / Twitter

Professional oligarch. Jack of all trades, master of them all. ♛

303 following478 followers

The Entrepreneur

Dimi is a savvy jack-of-all-trades with a masterful grip on digital marketing and startup hustle. Armed with 10 years of experience, Dimi blends sharp wit and practical advice, breaking down the myths behind viral success while building solid, sustainable projects. Always the pragmatic optimist, Dimi knows it’s about focus, testing, and serious marketing muscle—not just luck.

Impressions
568.1k40.5k
$106.49
Likes
1.5k32
75%
Retweets
752
4%
Replies
3576
17%
Bookmarks
1066
5%

Top users who interacted with Dimi over the last 14 days

@dudufolio

Glorified Button Clicker Drawing Rectangles for a Living. Building @toolfolio

5 interactions
@hustle_fred

- My X Growth Agent👉 supabird.io - Visual Task Manager: justbeepit.com - Build in Public videos: instagram.com/hustlee_fred At $5k MRR. Goal is $20k 🚩

4 interactions
@jonathanbrnd

Quit my job to build @digistorms_ai. Living on savings. Sharing it all in public.

2 interactions
@bil0090

15 y/o Software Engineer, & Co-founder @Calendaty in middle school. building cool stuff & sharing the journey 🚀💻

2 interactions
@florinpop1705

I build stuff. On my way to making $1M 💰 My projects 👇

1 interactions
@ksmolka

Having funn creating @waterminder_app fitnessview.app calory.app at @funnmedia ✌️Husband. Dad. Likes technology, design.📘 apple.co/3Hh11wT

1 interactions
@doubji

👨‍💻 SW developer | 🐧 FOSS | 📡 IoT / 🏠 SmartHome | 🖨️ 3D printing | 🧠 Machine learning/LLM integrator | A🤖d/L🐧x | Mastodon: @douby@mastodonczech.cz

1 interactions
@HenryRealX

crypto, finance ♱ pol sci student (quant profile)

1 interactions
@_annakulina

Biochem major, having fun building and designing cool apps 👾

1 interactions
@JhaAbhijit1

21, Developer | Sarcasm

1 interactions
@dcapital_exe

software engineer during the day guy who can’t stop making things at night apps, stocks, startups, real estate I just think out loud here

1 interactions
@buildwithDB

building with nothing but vibes ✨launching aieve.app - biz management platform for content creators 👩‍💻

1 interactions
@JoshuaIPark

ex-circuit designer → Startup Founder 👨‍💻 Scaling my biz to $10M valuation 🎯 Love people 🌍 and food 🍽️ Documenting my whole journey ⚡️ @Mem_base @get_sabo

1 interactions
@csaintnelson

tinkerer, student @columbia, ex-engineer @drwtrading, AMC A-Lister

1 interactions
@SaaSScout_

Indie dev. Sometimes the hardest part isn’t building — it’s deciding what not to build.

1 interactions
@pmitu

🌿 3х Founder → building now @FoundbaseHQ ⚡️⚡️⚡️ @flowmapp + @aaplyHQ Bootstrap, SaaS, $600k ARR, no VC, $0 marketing, and 💵 3 exits

1 interactions
@justddev

building iOS apps until they pay more than my day job. documenting as I go

1 interactions
1 interactions
@kuba_shev

20 yo shipping 3 actually useful apps before new year’s

1 interactions
@jackfriks

curious guy creating things @ jackfriks.com - up and coming wife guy

1 interactions

Dimi’s the kind of entrepreneur who’s ready to build an empire but still can’t 'vibe code' without a little existential dread—proof that even oligarchs started as humble keyboard warriors (who occasionally ask ChatGPT about seahorse emojis).

Successfully grew a decade-long digital marketing career with hard-earned, practical strategies, and now builds apps from scratch without fully ‘loving’ coding—talk about persistence winning over passion!

To turn bold ideas into concrete, market-ready products that cut through the noise and create real impact, empowering others to understand the true costs and strategies behind digital success.

Dimi believes in honest hustle over hype, that there’s no such thing as free marketing, and that quality and branding ultimately win over quick viral hits. True growth comes from continuous learning, smart testing, and measured investment.

Exceptional ability to synthesize years of marketing wisdom with real-world testing to offer actionable, no-fluff insights that help others avoid costly mistakes.

A tendency to be brutally realistic might sometimes discourage newcomers eager for quick wins, and the honest approach may clash with viral, hype-driven social dynamics.

To grow the audience on X, Dimi should leverage storytelling mixed with candid behind-the-scenes takes of the startup grind, engage with communities in niche marketing and coding forums, and amplify unique insights via threads that contrast myth vs. reality in tech and marketing.

Fun fact: Despite being a 'jack of all trades,' Dimi admits to being 'new to coding' but embraces it as the way to bring ideas to life—proving that even pros keep evolving!

Top tweets of Dimi

What my 10 years of experience in Digital Marketing taught me I’m new to app development and the whole coding vibe. I never liked programming in the past, but I was always full of ideas. Now I can finally make things without knowing how to code… almost! But I’m definitely not new to Digital Marketing. Quite the opposite, I’ve been successful at it for years. And what I’ll share today comes from experience. These things can save you a lot of time, money, and nerves. X algorithm doesn’t like me at all and this post will probably reach maybe 200 people, but I still wanted to empty my brain and talk about things people lie about, the kind of lies that make beginners fail or give up too early. Free Marketing? There’s no such thing as free marketing besides word of mouth and recommendations, and even that usually costs something (like referral systems or incentives). When you see someone saying their app or SaaS “blew up for free”, 99% of the time it didn’t, or it didn’t blow up nearly as much as they claim. Sure, sometimes a TikTok or short goes viral and your app takes off, but let’s be real, what are the odds that your very first TikTok account or first video goes viral? Pretty low. To get to that stage where your videos consistently get millions of views, you need a ton of content (which costs, labor or credits, doesn’t matter), a lot of accounts (aged, warmed-up), and good proxies (residential USA or 4G mobile ones, and yeah, they’re expensive). After burning through multiple accounts, dozens of videos, and countless dead proxies, maybe one account hits and you go viral. But even that “viral moment” wasn’t free. This applies to TikTok, Instagram, X, Reddit, all of them. If you plan to use these platforms to promote your own product, be ready for bans, shadowbans, poor reach, and low views. You’ll have to test different angles, content styles, hashtags, account types, and all of that costs money. Those “gurus” on X who tell you all you need to do is “ship ship ship” and post daily content are half right, but they leave out the cost. You’ll try it, get 0 views, think you’re just unlucky, and quit. But it’s not about luck, it’s about testing, failing, and spending until you figure out what works. The “Just Ship” Mentality It’s trendy now to say “just ship” and think later about how to market or attract users. I completely disagree with that mindset. Yes, you shouldn’t overthink every small detail, but we’re in an era of millions of SaaS and apps. So you have to ask yourself: why would anyone choose yours over the next one? Every day on X I see posts like “I made this app in 5 hours and it’s ready to print hundreds” or “Look at these macro tracking apps, they’re making $200k a month, I built one in 3 hours, what’s stopping you?” Stop believing that nonsense. If you’ve got a truly unique idea with no competition, then sure, build it fast and ship. But that’s rare now. For most people, the smarter move is to sit down, plan properly, and think deeply. Figure out what makes your app different, what that extra 10% is that competitors don’t have. Then make a real marketing plan and decide your budget. Because yes, you’ll need one. Without a marketing budget, your project will most likely die unnoticed. In the current flood of low-quality, rushed products, quality and branding will matter the most in the long run. Trust me on that. Forums and Real Learning In the era of ChatGPT and X, people forget about the real goldmines of learning, forums. When you scroll X, 90% of the time you’ll see people bragging about getting 50 new followers or 1 Stripe sale, or showing they “vibe coded” in a coffee shop. What can you actually learn from that? Nothing. Tune out from X for a while. Skip ChatGPT prompts for a bit. Go to Reddit, BlackHatWorld, or affiliate forums. Check the journey threads. See what people are actually doing. Learn from their wins and their mistakes. That’s where the real lessons are. Test Before You Release Whether you’re building an app or a SaaS, always test it properly before launching. Send it to a few friends. Let them use it for a few days. Ask them if something bugs out, or what they wish the app had. Most people skip this step, they just publish something as fast as possible to “get it out there”. But if you look closer, most of those products are trash. So slow down. Gather feedback. Test. Fix. Improve. Then ship. Ideas, Ideas, Ideas Everyone has tons of ideas. Me, you, all of us. But can we actually build them all? No. If you try, you’ll fail. You’ll end up with 7 projects that are all 20% done and nothing finished. It’s a trap. Pick one idea. Stick with it until it’s done and working. If it performs well, hire people to manage it and move to the next one. We have time. We’re not dying tomorrow (hopefully). So relax, focus, and finish things.

3k

Most engaged tweets of Dimi

What my 10 years of experience in Digital Marketing taught me I’m new to app development and the whole coding vibe. I never liked programming in the past, but I was always full of ideas. Now I can finally make things without knowing how to code… almost! But I’m definitely not new to Digital Marketing. Quite the opposite, I’ve been successful at it for years. And what I’ll share today comes from experience. These things can save you a lot of time, money, and nerves. X algorithm doesn’t like me at all and this post will probably reach maybe 200 people, but I still wanted to empty my brain and talk about things people lie about, the kind of lies that make beginners fail or give up too early. Free Marketing? There’s no such thing as free marketing besides word of mouth and recommendations, and even that usually costs something (like referral systems or incentives). When you see someone saying their app or SaaS “blew up for free”, 99% of the time it didn’t, or it didn’t blow up nearly as much as they claim. Sure, sometimes a TikTok or short goes viral and your app takes off, but let’s be real, what are the odds that your very first TikTok account or first video goes viral? Pretty low. To get to that stage where your videos consistently get millions of views, you need a ton of content (which costs, labor or credits, doesn’t matter), a lot of accounts (aged, warmed-up), and good proxies (residential USA or 4G mobile ones, and yeah, they’re expensive). After burning through multiple accounts, dozens of videos, and countless dead proxies, maybe one account hits and you go viral. But even that “viral moment” wasn’t free. This applies to TikTok, Instagram, X, Reddit, all of them. If you plan to use these platforms to promote your own product, be ready for bans, shadowbans, poor reach, and low views. You’ll have to test different angles, content styles, hashtags, account types, and all of that costs money. Those “gurus” on X who tell you all you need to do is “ship ship ship” and post daily content are half right, but they leave out the cost. You’ll try it, get 0 views, think you’re just unlucky, and quit. But it’s not about luck, it’s about testing, failing, and spending until you figure out what works. The “Just Ship” Mentality It’s trendy now to say “just ship” and think later about how to market or attract users. I completely disagree with that mindset. Yes, you shouldn’t overthink every small detail, but we’re in an era of millions of SaaS and apps. So you have to ask yourself: why would anyone choose yours over the next one? Every day on X I see posts like “I made this app in 5 hours and it’s ready to print hundreds” or “Look at these macro tracking apps, they’re making $200k a month, I built one in 3 hours, what’s stopping you?” Stop believing that nonsense. If you’ve got a truly unique idea with no competition, then sure, build it fast and ship. But that’s rare now. For most people, the smarter move is to sit down, plan properly, and think deeply. Figure out what makes your app different, what that extra 10% is that competitors don’t have. Then make a real marketing plan and decide your budget. Because yes, you’ll need one. Without a marketing budget, your project will most likely die unnoticed. In the current flood of low-quality, rushed products, quality and branding will matter the most in the long run. Trust me on that. Forums and Real Learning In the era of ChatGPT and X, people forget about the real goldmines of learning, forums. When you scroll X, 90% of the time you’ll see people bragging about getting 50 new followers or 1 Stripe sale, or showing they “vibe coded” in a coffee shop. What can you actually learn from that? Nothing. Tune out from X for a while. Skip ChatGPT prompts for a bit. Go to Reddit, BlackHatWorld, or affiliate forums. Check the journey threads. See what people are actually doing. Learn from their wins and their mistakes. That’s where the real lessons are. Test Before You Release Whether you’re building an app or a SaaS, always test it properly before launching. Send it to a few friends. Let them use it for a few days. Ask them if something bugs out, or what they wish the app had. Most people skip this step, they just publish something as fast as possible to “get it out there”. But if you look closer, most of those products are trash. So slow down. Gather feedback. Test. Fix. Improve. Then ship. Ideas, Ideas, Ideas Everyone has tons of ideas. Me, you, all of us. But can we actually build them all? No. If you try, you’ll fail. You’ll end up with 7 projects that are all 20% done and nothing finished. It’s a trap. Pick one idea. Stick with it until it’s done and working. If it performs well, hire people to manage it and move to the next one. We have time. We’re not dying tomorrow (hopefully). So relax, focus, and finish things.

3k

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