CEO Founder of @PoppyFlowers, the future of fresh, full service flowers nationwide. Barbara, Charlie & Trip’s mom, cc: @babyak

Joined May 2009
181 Photos and videos
Cameron Hardesty retweeted
With everything we are hearing right now about ticks this seems like good information to share. “Here’s what I’ve learned after more ticks than I care to count. First, whatever your uncle told you, forget it. No matches. No nail polish. No Vaseline. No soap on a cotton ball. All of those do the same terrible thing, they stress the tick out, and a stressed tick empties its gut back into the bite before letting go. Which, if you think about what that actually means for a second, is literally how Lyme and the rest get transmitted so you’re not speeding up its exit. You’re making it throw up into you. Fine-tipped tweezers. Grip right where the mouthparts enter the skin, not the body, the head. Pull straight up, steady, no twisting, no jerking. It’ll feel like it’s resisting because it is, the mouthparts are barbed. Just keep the pressure on and it lets go in a few seconds. If a piece breaks off in the skin, leave it alone. Your body pushes splinters out. Digging around with a needle does more damage then the fragment ever would. Clean it with alcohol or soap. Wash your hands. Now here’s the part most people skip: don’t flush the tick. Tape it to an index card. Clear packing tape right over the body, write the date and where on your body it was, and stick the card in a drawer. If you come down with anything weird in the next 30 days, rash, fever, joint pain, that flu-that-isn’t-flu feeling, that tick goes with you to the doctor. Some labs will test the tick itself, which is faster and often more reliable than waiting for antibodies to show up in your own blood. A dated tick taped to a card is one of the most useful things you can hand a doctor who’s trying to figure out what’s wrong with you. The other thing worth saying out loud: if the tick was engorged when you pulled it, and you can’t swear it was off your body within 24 hours, call your doctor that same day. Don’t wait for a rash. Fewer than three out of four Lyme cases even produce the classic bullseye. A single preventive dose of doxycycline within 72 hours of a deer tick bite cuts the Lyme odds way down, and most docs in tick country will write that prescription without giving you a hard time, especially if you walk in with the tick taped to a card and a clear timeline.”
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
Every year, I share this video of French caretakers who take sand from Omaha Beach in Normandy, and scrub them into the letters to give them the gold coloring. They do this for all 9,386 US soldiers who died. France also gave us this land as American soil. #MemorialDayWeekend
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
The early founder years are one of the most stressful phases of life. Most are really not talking about it. - Some friends are climbing the corporate ladder and taking crazy vacations. - Someone just bought their first home - Someone already feels “settled” And you’re still trying to turn an idea into a company. At the same time: - Your bank account keeps shrinking - Investors keep saying “too early” - users never seem to care and retain on your product - People around you don’t fully get what you’re building - your mom ask when you will get a real job - Nights are full of overthinking - The runway clock keeps ticking - Time feels like it’s moving too fast yet progress is slow And the hardest part? - You smile to your friends and family - You say “things are going well.” - At 2 AM you wonder if this will ever work. But remember: - You’re not behind, you are on a different path - You’re doing something incredibly hard If you’re in this phase, be impatient for actions, patient with results and don’t give up. Building something from zero takes time. Anyone else feeling this lately? ✋
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I sell flowers and these are the kinds of texts I now send to my COO Flowers a SaaS nerd could never
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
RED, WHITE, BLUE AND GOLD. TEAM USA IS BRINGING HOME THE #WINTEROLYMPICS GOLD. 🇺🇸🦅
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
As I was saying...
BREAKING: SpaceX and xAI are competing in a secretive new US Pentagon contest to produce voice-controlled, autonomous drone swarming technology, per Bloomberg. The winner of the challenge will be awarded $100 million.
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These are the kinds of texts I’ve been getting from my husband for the last few days. Florence is our all-knowing company AI bot in Slack who, among other things, preps briefs for every single sales call on the books, surfaces press-worthy data, and dissects our sales funnel. Now, evidently we have Paw Patrol, a fleet a marketing agents spawned by Botster, @babyak’s first ClawdBot named after our dog.
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It’s more entertaining if you have kids, bc, Paw Patrol
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
One of the biggest red flags for me when I am pitched is when the entrepreneur talks about how he (or we) are going to make money. Or they talk about exits. Or they talk about how a competitor is worth $1 billion. None of that matters. A startup is a mission. A great entrepreneur is a missionary. Not a mercenary. A great irony of entrepreneurship: The entrepreneurs who come in and say they're going to make everybody money, don't. People who say that they're going to paint a picture of the world that's never been seen before often are the ones who make a fortune. When entrepreneurs leave their cushy Facebook or Google jobs, some of them can't stop looking back. That is a bad sign to me. If the entrepreneur ever says, I could be making $XYZ at Google, I am concerned that they've got one foot in and one foot out and won't make it as a founder. The same can be said for founders who are building a company for the resume versus the mission. There's been an influx of Ivy League MBAs who believe that starting a venture-backed company is the next logical career move. I'd much rather invest in someone who has found a problem and believes with every fiber of their being, and knows deep in their bones, that they're the one who is destined to find the solution.
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
6 Oct 2025
Most people have no idea what it actually takes to be a founder. They talk about vision, grit, or passion. Those words are props. What you really sign up for is a life where every decision feels like it costs something real. You will spend years being misunderstood. By your team, your family, even the people you hire to help you. You will fail in public and still need to keep the energy up in private. Every founder lives with the weight of knowing that you can do everything right and still get crushed by luck, timing, or somebody else’s mistake. Founders aren’t braver than anyone else. They just get used to uncertainty, then stop waiting for clarity. Most of your wins won’t feel like wins at all. The first revenue will be too small. The first team will outgrow you or leave. The first product that feels right will barely matter to the market. You will doubt yourself in private, sometimes every week. The founders who last figure out how to keep moving while the ground shifts underneath them. Most outsiders want the founder badge but none of the scars. They want the upside, not the drag. The hardest part is sticking around after every plan gets blown up and you have to rebuild with less optimism and more scar tissue. What makes it work isn’t relentless hustle or some mythical trait. It’s learning to make peace with constant discomfort, and then making decisions anyway. If you need constant reassurance, you’ll give up before the real work begins. If you want everyone to like you, you’ll never make the calls that matter. If you can’t handle months where nothing feels certain, this life will eat you alive. But if you can hold your own in chaos, get better at being wrong, and still want to show up and try again, you just might have a shot at building something that matters. That’s what it actually takes. And nobody cares until you make it work.
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
21 Jun 2025
working on mediocre things is a disrespect to life. being risk averse is a disrespect to life. waking up and doing things that are not your life’s work is a disrespect to life. not taking a swing at pursuing the biggest opportunity in front of your eyes is a disrespect to life
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This, but also, you started a venture-backed company in an industry most affected by COVID, and launched it January 2020. Sometimes, privately, (and sometimes publicly) I give us major props for still existing.
Apologies for the TLDR, but when you step back, it is kind of wild what we’ve all lived through over the last five years. No wonder so many young people are anxious about the future—the ‘disturbance in the force’ feels stronger by the day. I don’t have any grand takeaways other than this--the world could use an immediate course correction in the direction of boring--or we may really need those Mars rockets sooner than expected. One thing is for sure--Israel is making a compelling case for Golden Dome. • A once-in-a-century pandemic shuts the world down. No matter how you view it in hindsight, both allies and adversaries were nearly unified in halting the global economy and banishing society to lockdowns and high-pressure mask & vaccination campaigns. • We tried to print our way out of the system shock, triggering the most euphoric markets since the dot-com bubble—pre-revenue IPOs reappeared for some reason and people forgot that good companies generally don’t SPAC. • The digital revolution kicked into overdrive—work-from-home, virtual education traumatized parents, Zoom cocktail parties, Peloton, DoorDash and MS Teams---probably the most painful development. • Civil unrest emerged alongside deepening social and political divides. • A disheartening end to the war in Afghanistan—trillions spent, thousands of lives lost and the Taliban is still running the show. • Market euphoria gave way to historic inflation. Interest rates shot up to cool things down. The tide went out, and the “shitcos” failed. Centralized crypto exchanges gambled customer deposits. Hedge funds weren’t hedged. VC-heavy banks like SVB collapsed, triggering a temporary panic in the regional banking system. The big banks… got even bigger. • For the first time since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, a nuclear superpower launched a full-scale invasion of a neighboring country. The West isolates Russia, and we witness a new asymmetric dynamic in warfare--cheap drones, missile swarms, all playing out in real time on social media. • The metaverse and Web3 died quickly as the “Magnificent Seven” lead a market rebound on the promise of AI. • China closes gaps--and maybe pulls ahead--in some of the most strategically important technologies. They tolerate risk, aren’t afraid to steal good ideas and make them better--and operate with a culture that—for all its flaws—just goes out and does big things without dragging decades of baggage behind it. • Hamas launches a surprise attack on Israeli civilians, takes hostages and triggers a war that pulls in Iranian proxies like the Houthis--disrupting global shipping lanes and igniting a politically charged humanitarian crisis. • Political winds shift again. A former President—also the frontrunner—is shot in an assassination attempt, the first since Reagan. Thankfully, he survives and is now our 47th President. • The Pakistani and Indian Air Forces engage in the largest air-to-air exchange in decades. China’s latest fighters and missiles see combat success against contemporary French aircraft—signaling what many already knew--China’s military is approaching peer status. • Israel launches the most sophisticated and devastating air campaign since Desert Storm—targeting Iranian military and scientific leadership, degrading air defenses, missile systems and nuclear infrastructure..and the conflict may just be getting warmed up. All in just five years... Hopefully our defense and policy leaders are paying attention and making some course corrections. Congressional leadership is mostly well-intentioned, but often fights for expensive job programs--exactly the kind of thing an over-consolidated defense industry encourages--even as we stare down an unsustainable $36 trillion national debt. That’s how you end up holding a fleet of battleships during the advent of the aircraft carrier.... Only this time, the analogy breaks down--because as a nation have forgotten how to build ships. So instead, we will have $300 million fighter jets we can’t afford, arriving a decade too late, in quantities that may not even matter—disrupted by million-dollar, hypersonic, laser-equipped drones that our adversaries will likely produce at scale. Until, perhaps, the dark horse Skynet T-1000 shows up. This is the time--especially in such a politically charged environment--when we need to be finding more ways to come together instead of moving farther apart. A time to be rooting for America and our leadership, not betting on the next Polymarket catastrophe. Because if the next five years look anything like the last, military parades and trade imbalances will be the least of our problems.
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
mood
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
5 Jun 2025
Are men maybe too emotional for positions of leadership?
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Ok, this has gone too far. What Mother’s Day campaigns is Clear running anyway??
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
Deterrence spread in the latest issue of @arenamagdotcom on War:
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
Thank you on behalf of all Americans.
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Late night heart-to-heart with @BillAckman?
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Cameron Hardesty retweeted
We're whisking things up! 🌸→🍰 Introducing Poppy Cakes - same seamless wedding experience, now with tiers of joy! Our floral designers are officially rising to the occasion: bit.ly/poppy-cakes
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Couldn’t go to bed until after the revenue clock stopped on the 31st 👌. we had a few buzzer beaters. It took me about 10 years but work is so much more entertaining than entertainment. Today was one of the good days 📈
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