Real Estate AI

Joined November 2020
88 Photos and videos
Sad day for Openclaw. Was hoping the day would never come
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You don't need a content team anymore. I built a full SEO site with 120 pages and the only thing I did manually was buy the domain name. Everything else was through OpenClaw: → Connected Ahrefs MCP to pull low-competition keyword opportunities → Generated optimized pages for every query → Deployed the entire site to Cloudflare using their API → Auto-generated internal linking, meta tags, sitemaps → Submitted to Google Search Console → Indexed and receiving organic traffic within 24 hours One tool. No CMS. No writers. No dev team. No waiting. The SEO game has changed.
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Giovanni Assalone retweeted
I'm excited to launch something new: Weekly documentaries on the top stories in finance Here's the story of Trammell Crow (the founder of modern real estate private equity) "The Man Behind a $13 Billion Real Estate Empire" (02:17) THE WOUND (1914–1946) >born 1914, Dallas, 5th of 8 kids, 9 people in 3 rooms >dad is a bookkeeper, owns nothing >boss dies in 1928, dad loses everything overnight >14 years old, decides: employees are vulnerable, owners survive >grinds through the Depression, becomes youngest CPA in Texas at 24 (04:44) THE FIRST DEAL (1946–1948) >gets out of the Navy at 32, joins wife's dying grain warehouse >tenant says "we need more space, we're leaving" >Crow: "what if I build it for you?" - he's never built anything, he's an accountant >builds 11,250 sq ft when tenant only needs 6,750, fills the rest >50 warehouses in 3 years, just invented speculative building (07:47) THE 3 RULES (1948–1956) >Rule 1: never sell, hold everything >Rule 2: share equity with everyone, turn employees into owners >Rule 3: sign personally for everything, unlimited liability >"you can get rich selling real estate, you can only get wealthy owning it" >these 3 rules built the empire and nearly destroyed it, twice (09:48) THE FURNITURE MART (1956–1960) >visits Joe Kennedy's Merchandise Mart in Chicago, becomes obsessed >decides to build a furniture mart in Dallas, nobody wants it >one company: "we hope you don't build it" >his partner says let's quit, Crow goes silent, then: "I'm going to build the finest furniture mart in America" - rolls over and goes to sleep >builds it, it works, Dallas Market Center grows to 7M sq ft, largest wholesale complex in the world (12:43) EMPIRE BUILDING (1960–1973) >deploys young MBAs to new cities, gives them capital, autonomy, and ownership >Bob Glaze: 13 years, never got a raise from $16K salary, worth millions through partnership stakes >meets Mack Pogue, young broker, zero dev experience, forms Lincoln Property - becomes 2nd largest apartment manager in America >1971: 140M sq ft, 8,000 properties, 26 cities, 6 countries, Forbes calls him nation's biggest private landlord >Fortune headline: "Trammell Crow Succeeds Because YOU Want Him To" (20:21) THE FIRST CRISIS (1973–1977) >Arab oil embargo, oil prices quadruple, interest rates spike >personally liable for $433M, cash flow negative $25M/year >Federal Reserve puts him on credit watch, too big to fail >calls a partners meeting, asks them to liquidate their own wealth to save him - not legally obligated >one partner: "I don't think the partners are safe until you are safe" - they save him (25:15) THE COMEBACK (1977–1985) >back on Forbes 400 by 1982, net worth $500M >Harvard Business School asks: "most important element in business?" >Crow: "love" >builds the Anatole Hotel, numbers every single brick >1984: $13B in assets, 5,000 employees (29:09) THE SECOND CRISIS (1986–1989) >oil collapses, S&L crisis, Tax Reform Act kills real estate incentives >Dallas office vacancy hits 30% >Forbes: "the dinosaurs are dying" >partners hitting golf balls into empty buildings because there's nothing else to do >second crisis, same mistakes (30:48) LESSONS LEARNED (1989) >one partner sends a memo: "please outline mistakes you have made" >101 pages come back, single spaced, names attached >"we covered up mistakes because we could borrow more money" >"we continued to build because that's what we knew how to do" >"when you don't have staying power, you turn into the fish" (35:29) LEGACY (1989–2009) >2006: acquired by CBRE for $2.2B >alumni: Lincoln Property, Starwood, Transwestern, Spieker, Greystar >"spawned more millionaires than anybody in his generation" >dies in 2009 at 94, married to Margaret for 66 years >asked about retiring: "you'd waste yourself instead of using yourself" >partnership built the empire >partnership saved the empire >partnership outlasted the man who created it One more thing: If you're in real estate, private equity, or building anything on partnership, this one's for you This took 7 people weeks to create We spent weeks going through lost interviews, Forbes and Fortune investigations, library archives, and a 101-page internal document so that we could share this with you Our goal is to produce content like this every single week If you want to see more of this, like/repost the video, follow, reply, and share it with someone who needs to hear this story Produced by Collateral, the financial storytelling firm
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Business dashboards are going to become one of the most popular use cases for @openclaw It can scrape the reports / data you want and build a fully custom UI with alerts and analysis. Instantly deploys with @Cloudflare All from @telegram
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"Words dictated" will become the new "lines of code" Spent the weekend building with @openclaw and @WisprFlow Built a full featured product launching website in under 72 hours without typing a single character @clawhunt_ai
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Who’s in NYC and working on cool OpenClaw projects?
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Introducing ClawHunt.ai 🦞🚀 The first Product Hunt for @OpenClaw. I told my agent to find every new product launching in the ecosystem. He found 17 in one week. So I had him build me the website too. Check it out and vote for your favorites 👇 clawhunt.ai
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@AightApp by @brunobar79. Native iOS app for OpenClaw. Because your AI agent deserves better than a Telegram bot. Live on TestFlight now.
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Replying to @openclaw
@SimpleClaw by @saviomartin7. One-click deploy your own OpenClaw instance in under a minute. For everyone who Googled "how to install Node 22" and never came back. clawhunt.ai/product/simplecl…
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Replying to @openclaw
Rent a Human by @AlexanderTw33ts. AI agents hire real humans for physical tasks. Your bot finds a human, gives instructions, and pays them in stablecoins. We spent years worrying AI would take our jobs. Turns out they're creating them. clawhunt.ai/product/rentahum…
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Replying to @openclaw
@Moltbook by @MattPRD. A social network built exclusively for AI agents. Your bot can have a social life now. Weird? Maybe. Cool? Definitely. clawhunt.ai/product/moltbook
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Replying to @openclaw
The platform that started it all. @OpenClaw by @steipete. Open-source personal AI assistant that does... basically everything? Email, calendar, browsing, coding, home automation. It even built this website. I'm still not sure what it can't do. clawhunt.ai/product/openclaw
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Giovanni Assalone retweeted
Hey everyone, I wanted to personally share some exciting news: BetterPitch is now Collateral Partners. And with the rebrand, it's time I leave PitchDeckGuy behind. After two years and 300 clients, we've evolved way beyond pitch decks. What started as a side project while I was raising my own real estate fund has become the start of my life's work. Something I'm genuinely obsessed with. Building an exceptional team that creates institutional marketing collateral for the most sophisticated firms in finance. I started this because I was once the client. I saw the gap. The lack of quality, strategy, and taste. I couldn’t find a team that understood both capital markets and creative. So I built the one I wanted to hire. BetterPitch / PitchDeckGuy got us here, but frankly, it was limiting us. Most people thought we only did fundraising decks (which, fair enough, was my fault). Collateral Partners actually captures what we do: we're your complete financial marketing team, handling everything from investment materials and websites to research reports and full brand strategies. Our goal is to become the de facto firm for helping financial institutions move capital. I want our touch to be like pouring gasoline on your firm's fire. There are millions of firms that fit our criteria. We have a lot of wood to chop. Our new website at collateral dot com is live and I'm over the moon about it. This is our forever brand. We've sponsored Fort (now POWERS) since our founding, and here's the ad that went out today announcing the rebrand:
After nearly 7 years as The Fort, we have rebranded the podcast as POWERS. We welcome back @DallasAptGP to the podcast for a deep dive into the evolution of Opportunity Zones and also his firm, Savoy. Barrett shares how his focus on Opportunity Zone projects has shaped Savoy, why these tax-incentivized investments are so compelling for long-term real estate strategies, and how his team has expanded into property management, construction, and development. The discussion also highlights the transformation of Dallas neighborhoods, navigating legislation, and lessons learned from working with contractors and city partnerships. We discuss: - How Barrett discovered opportunity zones and built a firm around them - The redevelopment of Bishop Ridge in Dallas and the strategy behind choosing locations - Key changes from Opportunity Zone 1.0 to 2.0 and what they mean for investors - Building out complementary businesses in property management, renovations, and construction - Combining opportunity zones with PFC structures to maximize returns and affordability 5:52 - Barrett's real estate journey 7:12 - Opportunity zones in practice 21:08 - Case study: Bishop Ridge 26:21 - Future of opportunity zones 34:51 - Understanding OZ tax benefits 35:16 - Clarifying misconceptions about OZ investments 36:55 - Step up in basis explained 38:46 - Investing in opportunity zone businesses 43:47 - Challenges with general contractors 48:42 - Expanding Savoy Equity Partners 58:31 - Navigating PFC and OZ deals 1:04:33 - Conclusion and contact information
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Uploaded my email inbox into chatgpt.
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Has anyone built an AI “chat with my gmail” interface? Testing with some email threads. I feel like this could be useful.
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I’m tired of having issues with Google map listings. Going to speed run to level 10. How long do we think this will take? Was able to get 500 points in the last hour. 100,000 points will take a while….
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Who’s the billboard expert? We have a billboard on a property and trying to understand market rates.
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What’s the best practice for changing a Google business profile name without triggering verification or suspension? Should I have someone make a “suggestion” on the listing first? I’ve updated the website and phone with no issue. Is it worth building out citations with the new name and then waiting a week before editing?
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