Meeting Title: Brainforge x Lilo Social: Weekly Demo! Date: 2026-02-13 Meeting participants: Casie Aviles, Pranav Narahari, Samuel Roberts, zacfromson, Bobby Palmieri
WEBVTT
1 00:00:15.500 ⇒ 00:00:16.470 Pranav Narahari: Hey guys.
2 00:00:17.790 ⇒ 00:00:21.420 Samuel Roberts: Hey, I was just messaging you, because I didn’t know what was going on. Zoom was just sitting there.
3 00:00:25.830 ⇒ 00:00:26.590 Samuel Roberts: How’s it going?
4 00:00:27.160 ⇒ 00:00:28.380 Pranav Narahari: Any second?
5 00:00:29.060 ⇒ 00:00:30.219 Samuel Roberts: Oh, I can’t hear you.
6 00:00:30.760 ⇒ 00:00:31.360 Samuel Roberts: Say that again?
7 00:00:31.360 ⇒ 00:00:31.920 Pranav Narahari: route.
8 00:00:32.369 ⇒ 00:00:34.559 Pranav Narahari: They should be joining any second. We were just on a…
9 00:00:34.560 ⇒ 00:00:35.389 Samuel Roberts: There you go, okay.
10 00:00:37.600 ⇒ 00:00:38.300 Pranav Narahari: Yep.
11 00:00:39.010 ⇒ 00:00:40.150 Pranav Narahari: Yup, yup, yep.
12 00:00:40.540 ⇒ 00:00:44.800 Pranav Narahari: Any update on that build error? Is that still.
13 00:00:44.800 ⇒ 00:00:47.090 Samuel Roberts: It’s good now, it’s in… it’s in dev.
14 00:00:47.540 ⇒ 00:00:48.250 Pranav Narahari: Cool.
15 00:00:48.550 ⇒ 00:00:49.440 Pranav Narahari: Cool, cool, cool.
16 00:00:49.440 ⇒ 00:00:50.140 zacfromson: Yes.
17 00:00:51.160 ⇒ 00:00:53.070 Samuel Roberts: And I have Cursor adding,
18 00:00:53.340 ⇒ 00:00:55.730 Samuel Roberts: CI do is, so hopefully that one.
19 00:00:56.320 ⇒ 00:00:58.110 Samuel Roberts: Okay. Take care of it in the future.
20 00:00:58.910 ⇒ 00:00:59.930 Pranav Narahari: Awesome, awesome.
21 00:01:05.650 ⇒ 00:01:08.570 Pranav Narahari: Cool, and then that was for the meta dashboard, right? Okay.
22 00:01:09.610 ⇒ 00:01:19.530 Pranav Narahari: Awesome. Alright, everyone’s here. I know we just were in that other meeting, and right before that, I sent over an agenda in our external chat, so…
23 00:01:20.870 ⇒ 00:01:35.129 Pranav Narahari: there’s a few things that I wanted to go over. That meta dashboard, Bobby, that, like, you created a PR for, Casey was able to make some changes to that to make sure that it builds properly, and then we just deployed it into our dev environment, so…
24 00:01:35.130 ⇒ 00:01:41.340 Pranav Narahari: that’s one thing you guys can take a look at, give us more feedback on, like, do some QA testing to make sure it’s good to go, but…
25 00:01:41.350 ⇒ 00:01:45.750 Pranav Narahari: It should be… Sam, you just said that that’s deployed, right?
26 00:01:45.750 ⇒ 00:01:46.709 Samuel Roberts: Built, yeah.
27 00:01:46.710 ⇒ 00:01:50.319 Pranav Narahari: Just built, okay, so it’s in the process of being deployed, so… by the end of this call, it’s…
28 00:01:50.320 ⇒ 00:01:52.170 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, it’s… I think it’s good, yeah.
29 00:01:53.030 ⇒ 00:01:56.210 Bobby Palmieri: I just looked, like, 2 minutes ago and didn’t.
30 00:01:56.450 ⇒ 00:01:58.989 Bobby Palmieri: see it, but maybe I need to…
31 00:02:01.440 ⇒ 00:02:01.770 Pranav Narahari: God.
32 00:02:01.770 ⇒ 00:02:02.610 Samuel Roberts: Gotcha.
33 00:02:03.790 ⇒ 00:02:08.090 Bobby Palmieri: I did see, like, some… I can show you what I’m seeing.
34 00:02:09.560 ⇒ 00:02:13.280 Pranav Narahari: We were talking about right before our 15-minute call that there were some build errors, and so…
35 00:02:13.600 ⇒ 00:02:14.990 Pranav Narahari: really, like.
36 00:02:14.990 ⇒ 00:02:19.050 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah, I think I was just checking while… yeah, we’re good.
37 00:02:19.440 ⇒ 00:02:20.190 Bobby Palmieri: Cool.
38 00:02:21.510 ⇒ 00:02:26.240 Samuel Roberts: I was also thinking we probably want to move that URL to dev. at some point, so it’s not…
39 00:02:26.240 ⇒ 00:02:29.049 Bobby Palmieri: I don’t like the front-end sand test. Yeah.
40 00:02:29.050 ⇒ 00:02:33.510 Samuel Roberts: If you like it, it’s cool, I’m happy to leave it, because it’s less work to make the domains match, but…
41 00:02:33.510 ⇒ 00:02:34.440 Bobby Palmieri: We can move it works.
42 00:02:35.300 ⇒ 00:02:39.870 Bobby Palmieri: I think it’s just Zach and I that are gonna be using this. Okay.
43 00:02:40.160 ⇒ 00:02:49.269 Bobby Palmieri: And then we already have staging set up, so I don’t… we don’t… in the spirit of the conversation Pranav and I just had, let’s… let’s leave the URL as is.
44 00:02:49.760 ⇒ 00:02:50.419 Samuel Roberts: Perfect, okay.
45 00:02:51.170 ⇒ 00:03:02.020 Pranav Narahari: Cool. Casey, anything you want to talk about with the email calendar generator? I know you sent over, like, some comments, yesterday and the day before. Anything else?
46 00:03:02.020 ⇒ 00:03:02.410 Casie Aviles: Yeah.
47 00:03:02.410 ⇒ 00:03:04.670 Pranav Narahari: Bobby, Zach, case you guys want to talk about there?
48 00:03:06.640 ⇒ 00:03:12.259 Casie Aviles: Yeah, I could just quickly go through, like, what we have on Dev right now.
49 00:03:12.850 ⇒ 00:03:15.420 Casie Aviles: I can even just share what…
50 00:03:15.590 ⇒ 00:03:21.120 Casie Aviles: what I implemented earlier, just from what Bobby has
51 00:03:21.600 ⇒ 00:03:27.360 Casie Aviles: Given, like, for example, the audience, it should be… yeah, earlier this was, like.
52 00:03:27.740 ⇒ 00:03:30.339 Casie Aviles: We were inferring this from campaign names.
53 00:03:30.590 ⇒ 00:03:34.150 Casie Aviles: So, we found, like, a different… .
54 00:03:34.250 ⇒ 00:03:35.800 Bobby Palmieri: Of course not.
55 00:03:36.150 ⇒ 00:03:41.740 Casie Aviles: Which should be giving us the, yeah, the ones that you sent should be new, returning, engaged, and then…
56 00:03:41.880 ⇒ 00:03:46.490 Casie Aviles: There are two other audience types here that are unknown and uncategorized, so…
57 00:03:46.690 ⇒ 00:03:48.989 Casie Aviles: I think that was the only change.
58 00:03:49.190 ⇒ 00:03:54.750 Casie Aviles: That we… That I, yeah, implemented. And then for the email calendar.
59 00:03:55.180 ⇒ 00:04:00.819 Casie Aviles: Yeah, pretty much, we should be able to, like, select, you know, which…
60 00:04:01.460 ⇒ 00:04:07.349 Casie Aviles: skill we want to use, so we have the email calendar gen over here.
61 00:04:08.470 ⇒ 00:04:12.100 Casie Aviles: And also, yeah, in terms of, like, the…
62 00:04:13.270 ⇒ 00:04:19.170 Casie Aviles: like, a campaign overview. We should be able to… there’s, like, this tooltip now that will show the full one.
63 00:04:19.550 ⇒ 00:04:26.140 Casie Aviles: The full text, or you could also just go here, and you could also take a look at the campaigning overview here.
64 00:04:27.010 ⇒ 00:04:31.500 Casie Aviles: So that’s one of, like, a quick change that we implemented as well.
65 00:04:32.610 ⇒ 00:04:35.919 Casie Aviles: But other than that, I guess, you know, I’ll just feedback on, like.
66 00:04:36.930 ⇒ 00:04:41.929 Casie Aviles: the actual output would be great. And yeah, there’s also, like, this new…
67 00:04:42.390 ⇒ 00:04:48.160 Casie Aviles: drop down here, so we should be able to, like, select, for example, Newton Golf.
68 00:04:48.660 ⇒ 00:04:52.290 Casie Aviles: Email copywriter skill when we’re generating our briefs.
69 00:04:52.880 ⇒ 00:04:53.730 Pranav Narahari: Nice.
70 00:04:53.900 ⇒ 00:04:54.500 Pranav Narahari: X.
71 00:04:55.300 ⇒ 00:04:59.380 Casie Aviles: I think that’s… that’s, like… All of the changes so far.
72 00:04:59.890 ⇒ 00:05:08.849 Bobby Palmieri: This is, like, I would say, visually 90% of the way there. Like, I think probably just cleaning up a couple things that Zach and I can get you some feedback on.
73 00:05:09.230 ⇒ 00:05:26.930 Bobby Palmieri: I played around with the outputs, and I think those are probably 70% of the way there, which I think is more on us than you. So I need to play around with them a bit more, and probably do it across multiple brands.
74 00:05:26.930 ⇒ 00:05:36.420 Bobby Palmieri: just to get a sense of, like, what that is and how it’s pulling in. Like, one of the emails that it wrote was, like, really good, and then I was like, oh, this might be…
75 00:05:36.420 ⇒ 00:05:40.879 Bobby Palmieri: a campaign that we already sent. I need to see…
76 00:05:40.920 ⇒ 00:05:51.819 Bobby Palmieri: because it was, like, pulling information. I was like, damn, how did it know that? And then I was like, oh, this might be something we already sent. So, I just need a… probably the weekend to play around with,
77 00:05:53.760 ⇒ 00:06:03.790 Bobby Palmieri: with the outputs, my question for you is, like, What is the…
78 00:06:05.250 ⇒ 00:06:08.720 Bobby Palmieri: How do we get better outputs? Is that…
79 00:06:09.350 ⇒ 00:06:17.149 Bobby Palmieri: playing around with the Claude skill, like, is there a system prompt that’s generating this that we need to refine, like…
80 00:06:17.750 ⇒ 00:06:26.430 Bobby Palmieri: I think this… transparently, this is, like, agency changing once we can get this to work properly.
81 00:06:27.040 ⇒ 00:06:34.359 Bobby Palmieri: So we’re pretty bullish on this feature. For reference, like, half of our business is email, so if we can
82 00:06:34.530 ⇒ 00:06:41.409 Bobby Palmieri: Generate the calendars and generate the briefs to get sent to designers, like, puts us in a really good spot.
83 00:06:42.810 ⇒ 00:06:43.940 Casie Aviles: Yeah, beautiful.
84 00:06:44.030 ⇒ 00:06:57.890 Pranav Narahari: Are you also adding an additional system prompt on top of that Claude skill, or… my inkling is that, like, that Claude skill, you know, it has the resources, it also has a prompt attached to it, like, that’s probably where the biggest…
85 00:06:57.890 ⇒ 00:07:05.729 Pranav Narahari: driver, like, for change is happening, or could happen. Casey, is there, like, when you’re implementing this, like, additional areas you thought?
86 00:07:05.860 ⇒ 00:07:06.679 Pranav Narahari: That could be improved?
87 00:07:07.450 ⇒ 00:07:10.759 Casie Aviles: Yeah, there’s, there’s also, like, additional prompts.
88 00:07:11.270 ⇒ 00:07:14.159 Casie Aviles: That we have that just basically tells
89 00:07:14.750 ⇒ 00:07:20.179 Casie Aviles: Claude to format, like, the output in a specific way, and also, like, I…
90 00:07:20.650 ⇒ 00:07:28.460 Casie Aviles: I made it, like, aware of, like, what kind of campaign we’re working on, whether it’s email or SMS, so…
91 00:07:28.980 ⇒ 00:07:37.699 Casie Aviles: there are some… yeah, but the prompt in the back end is just fairly… it’s relatively shorter, so I think the…
92 00:07:38.380 ⇒ 00:07:41.110 Casie Aviles: The bulk of it is still the Clod scale.
93 00:07:41.610 ⇒ 00:07:50.480 Pranav Narahari: Okay, that’s good to know, because what we should do is compile those, just to make sure that there might be some additional context we can put there to really, like, improve.
94 00:07:50.540 ⇒ 00:08:02.109 Pranav Narahari: this output. So, yeah, maybe after this call, what we can do is, like, each of those individual prompts, let’s just, like, expose to, like, Zach and Bobby, like, what is the purpose of these? What is it actually exec… like…
95 00:08:02.230 ⇒ 00:08:07.360 Pranav Narahari: what… what does this do? Like, what does this change? And then Bobby and Zach can, like.
96 00:08:07.550 ⇒ 00:08:10.740 Casie Aviles: Refine those prompts, basically, with your help.
97 00:08:11.480 ⇒ 00:08:17.590 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah, Zach and I have a Valentine’s Day date tomorrow, so if you could get us those prompts before…
98 00:08:18.340 ⇒ 00:08:36.639 Bobby Palmieri: the end of day, so that we can get you guys some feedback on… on all of this, that would be, super helpful. I… to be honest, like, it’s very close. I think the other thing that we need to change is, like, if you… I don’t know, who’s sharing, Casey, or…
99 00:08:36.990 ⇒ 00:08:37.520 Pranav Narahari: Casey.
100 00:08:37.870 ⇒ 00:08:39.529 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah, if you go to Edit.
101 00:08:41.820 ⇒ 00:08:47.240 Bobby Palmieri: like, the big thing that… I want to just change how the, like, the… instead of the tooltip.
102 00:08:47.540 ⇒ 00:08:53.800 Bobby Palmieri: the description should just, like, should just be, like, Excel, just, like, make the box…
103 00:08:53.900 ⇒ 00:08:58.340 Bobby Palmieri: Longer, so you can see it all… at once.
104 00:08:59.140 ⇒ 00:09:01.839 Bobby Palmieri: It’s like, the way I’m thinking about this is, like.
105 00:09:01.950 ⇒ 00:09:08.089 Bobby Palmieri: You generate this calendar, even if it gets you 75% of the way there, the strategist can go.
106 00:09:08.380 ⇒ 00:09:12.470 Bobby Palmieri: Change the… either the subject line or the description.
107 00:09:12.630 ⇒ 00:09:16.550 Bobby Palmieri: And then once that’s done, that is what pulls into the brief, right?
108 00:09:16.960 ⇒ 00:09:17.670 Bobby Palmieri: So once you make.
109 00:09:17.670 ⇒ 00:09:18.360 Casie Aviles: I can edit.
110 00:09:18.360 ⇒ 00:09:22.720 Bobby Palmieri: That description, then you can… You know, prompt the brief.
111 00:09:23.640 ⇒ 00:09:32.189 Bobby Palmieri: But it’s a little tough to see right now, and then I just need to figure out how we get better… better outputs and things like that as well.
112 00:09:33.270 ⇒ 00:09:35.930 Bobby Palmieri: But this is, like, really, really good.
113 00:09:37.250 ⇒ 00:09:45.130 Samuel Roberts: But they do that on the edit page, it’ll expand down so you can see them all, but on the lock page, it’ll just show you them? Or do you want to see it all on the lock page, too?
114 00:09:45.130 ⇒ 00:09:56.919 Bobby Palmieri: I think you should just be able to see it all on the lock page, so that you just have, like, a good understanding of, like, you know, what it… what it looks like. I know it’ll make it, like, a little bit longer, but there are only a couple sentences, right.
115 00:09:56.920 ⇒ 00:09:58.479 Samuel Roberts: My next question. Cool.
116 00:09:58.480 ⇒ 00:10:03.100 Bobby Palmieri: And then… If you go to, like, view a brief.
117 00:10:06.650 ⇒ 00:10:14.490 Bobby Palmieri: And then, like, send to Designer, that actually pulls in, like, a… a really nice link.
118 00:10:15.430 ⇒ 00:10:19.440 Bobby Palmieri: Just for my, like, own personal reference…
119 00:10:19.910 ⇒ 00:10:28.329 Bobby Palmieri: If we wanted to share the calendar as a link, Like, the timeline view?
120 00:10:28.970 ⇒ 00:10:40.639 Bobby Palmieri: Is that possible, and is there a world where someone not logged in could A see it and B, leave comments, just thinking about how clients could give us
121 00:10:41.260 ⇒ 00:10:49.859 Bobby Palmieri: feedback. That’s a super future state, unless it’s relatively easy, but, like, Zach, what’s the current process?
122 00:10:50.450 ⇒ 00:10:51.430 Bobby Palmieri: resend.
123 00:10:51.590 ⇒ 00:10:55.290 Bobby Palmieri: We send the Google Sheet, And clients review that and approve it?
124 00:10:55.290 ⇒ 00:10:58.420 zacfromson: Over… yeah, they review the client sheet. Most…
125 00:10:58.790 ⇒ 00:11:04.060 zacfromson: don’t see the briefs, though. They see the copy of Spinal Output with design.
126 00:11:04.500 ⇒ 00:11:05.460 Bobby Palmieri: Correct.
127 00:11:05.460 ⇒ 00:11:10.720 zacfromson: And so we needed… we typically… so I can show you what our calendar looks like.
128 00:11:11.160 ⇒ 00:11:13.210 zacfromson: Quickly, if that would be helpful, maybe?
129 00:11:13.210 ⇒ 00:11:13.780 Pranav Narahari: Yeah.
130 00:11:31.530 ⇒ 00:11:41.059 zacfromson: typically, like, we have, like, we visualize it here in, like, a calendar, but, like, not super necessary. It’s just kind of helpful for some clients, just because they can, like, see.
131 00:11:41.340 ⇒ 00:11:42.450 Samuel Roberts: Are you sharing?
132 00:11:42.450 ⇒ 00:11:49.069 zacfromson: Nope. Okay. I’m still not sharing the right screen here, Jesus. Okay, hold on, I got it. Alright.
133 00:11:51.150 ⇒ 00:12:02.459 zacfromson: So essentially, we have… which is basically just a simple Excel sheet, and we have a couple other reports and stuff that we do within here. Like, we have this table. It’s more just to help visualize for clients, and then they can leave in, like.
134 00:12:02.480 ⇒ 00:12:11.560 zacfromson: You know, a couple comments in a calendar, but, like, this is kind of the chart that we’re, like, more or less recreating, where it’s just, like, date, campaign name.
135 00:12:11.970 ⇒ 00:12:21.949 zacfromson: you know, basically all the inputs that you guys already have, inclusions, exclusions, strategic insights. Like, this is what they see, and then they can come in, and they’ll just, like, leave a comment.
136 00:12:22.180 ⇒ 00:12:35.549 zacfromson: in the sheet, and, like, tag us, and be like, hey, like, can we slot something else in here? Or, like, hey, this idea sucks, can we do something different? Or, like, hey, I love this, can we do more content like this? Whatever it’s gonna be, they can just leave their comments in, and it visualizes as a table.
137 00:12:36.200 ⇒ 00:12:46.189 zacfromson: you know, everything else in here, like, this isn’t much. We have, like, a growth report and stuff like that that I’m not super worried about. It’s really just, like, this… this calendar, and then we do these monthly, so, like.
138 00:12:46.890 ⇒ 00:12:53.110 zacfromson: this was, you know, February, this was January, February, so on and so forth, just lives in the sheet, so…
139 00:12:53.110 ⇒ 00:12:53.490 Bobby Palmieri: It’s like…
140 00:12:54.230 ⇒ 00:13:01.640 Bobby Palmieri: You know, if we could generate, like, if we could generate a link to just that table that we have without the briefs.
141 00:13:02.250 ⇒ 00:13:09.580 Bobby Palmieri: And they could just leave a comment on each one, or general comments, and I don’t even think that they need to, like.
142 00:13:10.810 ⇒ 00:13:17.140 Bobby Palmieri: sign in, like, you know, it’s nothing… nothing crazy. Awesome.
143 00:13:17.410 ⇒ 00:13:23.029 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, Sam, we’d probably have to, like… we’re kind of in the process of, with this admin settings page, like.
144 00:13:23.100 ⇒ 00:13:40.620 Pranav Narahari: creating different user roles. So this would just be, like, another user role where, like, you can have visibility for this calendar by not being logged in. Another aspect to this that we can look into that is definitely doable, you know, a lot of apps do this. The comments thing…
145 00:13:40.790 ⇒ 00:13:41.989 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, go ahead.
146 00:13:41.990 ⇒ 00:13:47.079 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah, it’s almost like the designer link, right? Like, how that generates the brief.
147 00:13:47.600 ⇒ 00:13:48.420 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
148 00:13:48.760 ⇒ 00:13:57.080 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, we could definitely give, like, a shareable, viewable thing pretty easily, like, very… probably very quickly. The commenting…
149 00:13:57.410 ⇒ 00:14:08.640 Samuel Roberts: is where it’s a little bit more what he’s… what Pranav’s talking about with the… the access to, like… because that’s, like, putting changes to the database from an unauthenticated… so there’s some… there’s a little bit to jump through there, just to make sure it’s not…
150 00:14:09.240 ⇒ 00:14:10.269 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I guess my…
151 00:14:10.270 ⇒ 00:14:10.980 Pranav Narahari: Is there…
152 00:14:10.980 ⇒ 00:14:11.580 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
153 00:14:11.580 ⇒ 00:14:15.799 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, like, how do you guys want to see those comments? Like, with Excel, it’s, like, very easy.
154 00:14:16.340 ⇒ 00:14:26.420 Pranav Narahari: Do you want, like, a similar type of, process where, like, they could, like, just add, like, a comment bubble and, like, put in certain comments that…
155 00:14:26.560 ⇒ 00:14:29.230 Pranav Narahari: would be visible to everybody. In that case, I would…
156 00:14:29.230 ⇒ 00:14:44.829 zacfromson: It could be its own little… it could even be its own tile. Like, right now, we don’t really give them notes, so they have to, like, left-click and hit comment, and the comments are kind of hidden. They’re just, like, yellow corner tabs, and sometimes stuff gets missed here and there. So, like, yeah, just this client feedback tab here, like, this is, you know, basically…
157 00:14:44.830 ⇒ 00:14:51.930 zacfromson: all that’s, you know, needed there. Like, we just lack that in the sheet, so they leave it as comments, and then things get lost and hidden at times, so there’s no reason to, like.
158 00:14:51.930 ⇒ 00:14:52.460 Samuel Roberts: Makes sense.
159 00:14:52.460 ⇒ 00:15:12.109 zacfromson: the middle tab on the sexy people get acne, Bobby, like, see the yellow comment against that? Like, it’s just, like, that little corner gets yellow. It’s the only way we know that a comment’s left there, so they’re kind of hidden, so there’s no reason why they wouldn’t… we couldn’t just, like, bring them to the forefront. They don’t have to be hidden, it’s the way we have it set up, and it’s probably, like, poor on our end, and not just have, like, a cell for that.
160 00:15:13.950 ⇒ 00:15:20.830 zacfromson: So yeah, I’d be fine with something like that, and I do have one other feature request, but I’ll let us get through all this.
161 00:15:20.830 ⇒ 00:15:28.649 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah, because I think the… like, this column could just be where the briefs are, because we’re not going to share the briefs with the client.
162 00:15:29.050 ⇒ 00:15:29.680 zacfromson: Yep.
163 00:15:30.000 ⇒ 00:15:36.430 Bobby Palmieri: And then, probably would also need a section to,
164 00:15:37.300 ⇒ 00:15:42.979 Bobby Palmieri: like, over… overarching feedback. Like, hey, we also forgot, like.
165 00:15:43.540 ⇒ 00:15:48.279 Bobby Palmieri: you know, X, Y, and Z product launch, or something along those lines.
166 00:15:48.600 ⇒ 00:15:54.140 Bobby Palmieri: So yeah, I’m curious, like, what the… roadmap would be.
167 00:15:55.170 ⇒ 00:16:05.520 Bobby Palmieri: But yeah, we pronounce, I guess, in the spirit of us not giving you a wild goose chase. Let Zach and I come back with, like, where we think that lands on the priority. Yeah, let’s just…
168 00:16:05.520 ⇒ 00:16:10.459 zacfromson: Yeah, we can just document all this. And there’s, like, one other feature Rallyon had, like, once the copy was done.
169 00:16:10.680 ⇒ 00:16:11.260 Bobby Palmieri: That’s.
170 00:16:11.260 ⇒ 00:16:11.800 zacfromson: 8.
171 00:16:12.280 ⇒ 00:16:13.870 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah.
172 00:16:13.870 ⇒ 00:16:15.769 zacfromson: Jason, do you want to share your screen?
173 00:16:16.150 ⇒ 00:16:20.119 zacfromson: Love that. That was, like, one of my favorite features of… of that whole piece, so…
174 00:16:20.120 ⇒ 00:16:24.200 Bobby Palmieri: I played with it today. It works well. Casey, I don’t know if you can share your screen.
175 00:16:24.200 ⇒ 00:16:26.700 zacfromson: I was thinking it just will save time on, like, regeneration.
176 00:16:27.750 ⇒ 00:16:30.810 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, Casey, if you still have that up, if you could, yeah, perfect.
177 00:16:31.600 ⇒ 00:16:32.909 Casie Aviles: This… this one.
178 00:16:34.160 ⇒ 00:16:39.739 Bobby Palmieri: Actually, if you close out, yeah, if you go back to the brief, And then view.
179 00:16:40.500 ⇒ 00:16:42.889 Bobby Palmieri: And then, like, just scroll down…
180 00:16:43.840 ⇒ 00:16:47.279 Bobby Palmieri: And anywhere, like, highlight, take quiz.
181 00:16:48.310 ⇒ 00:16:49.230 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah.
182 00:16:50.190 ⇒ 00:16:52.169 zacfromson: Yeah, then reprompt, fuck yeah.
183 00:16:52.750 ⇒ 00:16:54.800 zacfromson: Yeah. That’s so sick.
184 00:16:55.300 ⇒ 00:16:59.770 Bobby Palmieri: And it works well. I tried it today. Like, honestly, this is, like… I know.
185 00:16:59.770 ⇒ 00:17:04.760 zacfromson: Tell them to kind of make this full screen yet, I don’t know if that was missed in… I haven’t yet. Okay.
186 00:17:04.910 ⇒ 00:17:05.849 zacfromson: Okay. We can get…
187 00:17:05.869 ⇒ 00:17:12.549 Bobby Palmieri: We can give that more. More context. I think we want to make this not a slide-out, and make it more like a…
188 00:17:12.650 ⇒ 00:17:20.420 Bobby Palmieri: Or just give it more room. I actually think as a slide-out, it works, so you can kind of go from brief to brief, but we need to make this a little bigger.
189 00:17:20.420 ⇒ 00:17:36.120 zacfromson: Yeah. Or just if it does go to a new screen, like, you guys have the clothes out there that it just brings you right back after. It’s just, like, hard to, like, see everything here. It’s just a lot, like, easier if it’s, like, a full window. I can reshare what Rallyon did, as well, just as, like, another reference point.
190 00:17:36.120 ⇒ 00:17:37.910 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, sure, that’d actually be great.
191 00:17:38.680 ⇒ 00:17:45.599 zacfromson: Cool. It’s in my backlog, so we’ll, again, we’ll just get you better organization and what we owe you from our prior convo to get you in good shape.
192 00:17:46.140 ⇒ 00:17:47.720 Pranav Narahari: Perfect. Cool.
193 00:17:48.330 ⇒ 00:17:50.570 Pranav Narahari: Thanks, Casey.
194 00:17:51.760 ⇒ 00:17:59.880 Pranav Narahari: One other thing that I feel like was kind of at a standstill this week was just, like, the forecasting MVP, you know? And so…
195 00:18:00.040 ⇒ 00:18:18.650 Pranav Narahari: we’ve… like, internally, like, we’ve kind of just, like, moved some things around, like, we had a lot of ad hoc stuff this week to work on, and just, like, some patches and stuff, and, like, some of the comments that you guys have given, so… But, yeah, going forward for, like, forecasting, it’s still, like, the same stuff, just, like, just establishing that connection for meta ads and polyatomic.
196 00:18:18.680 ⇒ 00:18:25.619 Pranav Narahari: And then what will be next is, like, the Google Ads as well, since, like, that got approved this week as well, so…
197 00:18:25.710 ⇒ 00:18:39.669 Pranav Narahari: Those we can hopefully get going next week, and I think, Sam, you and I have discussed a little bit of just, like, once we see that data come in, how are we gonna structure that on a, you know, not just on a single brand basis, but, like.
198 00:18:39.950 ⇒ 00:18:42.859 Pranav Narahari: Spanning across all 70 of these brands, right? Like…
199 00:18:42.890 ⇒ 00:19:00.619 Pranav Narahari: how are we going to properly organize that data, and then, expose that in the Stitch platform. So, yeah, we have some work to do on that end, and then, like, we can do these two things in parallel. I can sync up with Bobby, you, and, Zach, you, like, for just, like, setting that up, those connections, and then…
200 00:19:00.980 ⇒ 00:19:04.619 zacfromson: Yeah, we’re looking pretty good there. The idea is, like.
201 00:19:04.620 ⇒ 00:19:17.030 Pranav Narahari: with, like, our Gantt chart, we want to now get that done by two Fridays from now. So, like, the MVP for forecasting should be good to go. That’s basically, like, just…
202 00:19:17.490 ⇒ 00:19:34.330 Pranav Narahari: only thing MVP-wise is just gonna be in staging, and so you guys can do a bunch of QA testing, maybe if there’s, like, small, like, things that you guys needed added, I think in our Gantt, we had, like, a few other things we wanted to get completed at last week, but we’re basically wrapped up for, like, the forecasting tool at that point. So, yeah, that’s kind of our, like…
203 00:19:34.650 ⇒ 00:19:39.960 Pranav Narahari: basically finish line for the forecasting MVP two Fridays from now. So…
204 00:19:39.960 ⇒ 00:19:45.219 zacfromson: Bobby, we need to figure out, just on our end, authentication for Shopify, because they’re going to need that for forecasting.
205 00:19:45.220 ⇒ 00:19:54.839 Bobby Palmieri: They have it for sh… whoa… are you using the API key that I gave you, or how are you doing the connection with Polytomic right now?
206 00:19:55.510 ⇒ 00:19:59.210 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, Casey, I think you set that up, right, in Polytomic? .
207 00:19:59.670 ⇒ 00:20:04.480 Pranav Narahari: API key. I think that’s what we have shared in our, like, one pass.
208 00:20:05.780 ⇒ 00:20:12.359 Bobby Palmieri: Can you… check with Polytomic how… actually, could you go into…
209 00:20:14.890 ⇒ 00:20:16.539 Bobby Palmieri: I guess I could do it as well.
210 00:20:18.970 ⇒ 00:20:20.910 Bobby Palmieri: Like, in polyatomic.
211 00:20:21.260 ⇒ 00:20:26.370 Bobby Palmieri: what the options are. So, for reference, we used to be able to…
212 00:20:31.160 ⇒ 00:20:41.279 Bobby Palmieri: Yeah, it’s on my list for this weekend, Zach. What a graph got back to me last night. I’ll circle back with that. So, for reference, like, we used to,
213 00:20:43.520 ⇒ 00:20:45.530 Bobby Palmieri: We used to create a custom app.
214 00:20:45.580 ⇒ 00:21:04.889 Bobby Palmieri: for each client, and we could do that through our agency access. They’ve since changed the model as of January 21st, where you need to be added as an admin directly to clients, which we don’t have admin access to any clients, to create an app. So the API keys that I have
215 00:21:05.120 ⇒ 00:21:09.839 Bobby Palmieri: for all of our stores that I’ve passed along are, like, legacy. They… the API key’s still
216 00:21:10.190 ⇒ 00:21:12.579 Bobby Palmieri: They’re not a go-forward.
217 00:21:12.580 ⇒ 00:21:14.569 zacfromson: Is that to install an app as well?
218 00:21:16.440 ⇒ 00:21:19.630 Bobby Palmieri: No, it’s to create, like, a…
219 00:21:19.630 ⇒ 00:21:28.399 zacfromson: Some other… so, like, Raylion and this other brand called Flaunt, like, they have a Shopify app that you install on Shopify that, like, connects it to their software product.
220 00:21:28.600 ⇒ 00:21:41.419 zacfromson: It’s a lot of little settings and a pain in the butt. I don’t know how quick, again, like, I think more like another, like, time check thing for Nav, like, is it worth us spinning up a quick app to just authenticate all of these in quicker? We can just install a Stitch app on everyone’s site.
221 00:21:41.560 ⇒ 00:21:53.009 zacfromson: to get this connected faster, or is that, like, a whole massive pain-in-the-ass undertaking? Because it’s really just trying… so it, you know, again, I don’t know what the best plan of action is there, but…
222 00:21:53.380 ⇒ 00:22:02.119 zacfromson: I guess, what is the alternative to that? Getting you guys, like, some sort of API key that we haven’t fully figured out. I just know
223 00:22:02.830 ⇒ 00:22:17.190 zacfromson: Like, even for a one-ograph, it’s been a pain to, like, get all the right settings. You have to click, like, 50 different things. Maybe I’m wrong, Bobby, but, like, from last time I remember, you have to, like, select a bunch of, like, random odd-off settings, and there’s been, like, issues, like, with clients figuring out what to get us.
224 00:22:17.830 ⇒ 00:22:21.679 zacfromson: Right, the app is just, like, a one-click install, and then it’s, like, connected to product.
225 00:22:22.200 ⇒ 00:22:22.830 Bobby Palmieri: Yo.
226 00:22:22.830 ⇒ 00:22:23.790 Pranav Narahari: Okay. Correct.
227 00:22:23.840 ⇒ 00:22:26.649 Bobby Palmieri: That’s how Orca’s doing it as well, if that matters.
228 00:22:27.050 ⇒ 00:22:36.220 zacfromson: They’re doing app? Yeah, everyone’s doing app. Flaunt, Rayon, Orca, everyone’s doing app, so it seems like that’s probably, like, our… our best path to, like, an action.
229 00:22:36.220 ⇒ 00:22:36.920 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
230 00:22:37.850 ⇒ 00:22:48.130 Pranav Narahari: I mean, yeah, Sam, we’ll talk about that too, because, you know, that’s part of this whole process of just, like, scaling up to these 70 different brands, right? Like, how are we going to authenticate? And so…
231 00:22:48.130 ⇒ 00:22:51.760 Samuel Roberts: Especially if they’re changing right now, it’s gonna be… yeah.
232 00:22:51.760 ⇒ 00:22:53.120 zacfromson: Selling an app.
233 00:22:53.120 ⇒ 00:22:55.890 Samuel Roberts: will take 2 seconds, like, you just install it. Yeah.
234 00:22:55.890 ⇒ 00:23:05.970 zacfromson: authenticate it, and then you’re in. There’s no, like, API key creation, like, we could just, like, run through all of our stores and just quick-connect them all, and it’ll take, like, 5 minutes for us to do them all. Okay.
235 00:23:06.120 ⇒ 00:23:07.109 Pranav Narahari: Yeah. Salad.
236 00:23:07.110 ⇒ 00:23:13.919 Samuel Roberts: We’ll have to see, because I was just looking at Polytomic, it looks like they only take an API key right now, but that might just be because they haven’t updated to the new…
237 00:23:14.130 ⇒ 00:23:23.399 Samuel Roberts: authentication style, Shopify, but we can message them, see, because they’re pretty good about adding features pretty quickly when we need them, usually.
238 00:23:23.990 ⇒ 00:23:31.159 zacfromson: And I think that’s just, like, more or less what Bobby’s saying, is, like, the API keys still work, legacy, it’s just, like, we no longer have access to create them ourselves.
239 00:23:31.160 ⇒ 00:23:35.160 Samuel Roberts: Right, right, so yeah, but I’d rather have a system that can handle.
240 00:23:35.160 ⇒ 00:23:38.089 zacfromson: Yeah, I think a Shopify app is our best bet, quite frankly.
241 00:23:38.090 ⇒ 00:23:38.820 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
242 00:23:38.820 ⇒ 00:23:39.400 Pranav Narahari: Yeah.
243 00:23:40.440 ⇒ 00:23:41.070 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
244 00:23:41.270 ⇒ 00:23:46.650 Pranav Narahari: Okay. Yeah, we’ll get with, Polytomic and make sure that they can add that as a way to authenticate.
245 00:23:46.860 ⇒ 00:23:47.730 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
246 00:23:48.520 ⇒ 00:23:51.870 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, we have a channel internally where we just talk to them, like, every day.
247 00:23:51.870 ⇒ 00:24:00.589 Samuel Roberts: So it’ll be kind of similar to the Meta Ads Google Ads, where it’ll be, like, one… hopefully one OAuth that then has access to that app, that has access to all the brands.
248 00:24:00.730 ⇒ 00:24:01.370 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
249 00:24:01.370 ⇒ 00:24:05.590 zacfromson: It might be one app per store, so, like, every store is gonna have to install.
250 00:24:05.730 ⇒ 00:24:07.550 zacfromson: our Shopify app from within the shop.
251 00:24:07.550 ⇒ 00:24:10.249 Samuel Roberts: Right, but once we have access to your Shopify app.
252 00:24:11.250 ⇒ 00:24:13.720 Samuel Roberts: I think we’d have access to the stores through that.
253 00:24:14.480 ⇒ 00:24:15.930 Samuel Roberts: Is that how it would work?
254 00:24:16.240 ⇒ 00:24:18.020 zacfromson: Ye…
255 00:24:18.560 ⇒ 00:24:19.609 Bobby Palmieri: What’s the question?
256 00:24:20.550 ⇒ 00:24:20.900 zacfromson: So…
257 00:24:21.970 ⇒ 00:24:28.999 Samuel Roberts: So you’ll have a Shopify app for Lilo, for Stitch, whatever it is, that then they install into their stores.
258 00:24:29.000 ⇒ 00:24:33.129 zacfromson: Yes. Like, here’s Flaunt, for example, like, they have an app in the Shopify store.
259 00:24:33.130 ⇒ 00:24:33.890 Samuel Roberts: Right.
260 00:24:33.890 ⇒ 00:24:40.430 zacfromson: you install this into the client’s Shopify store, and then it connects to their digital product.
261 00:24:42.430 ⇒ 00:24:43.160 Bobby Palmieri: Like, this is…
262 00:24:43.160 ⇒ 00:24:44.480 Samuel Roberts: Okay, okay.
263 00:24:46.580 ⇒ 00:24:48.330 zacfromson: It’s like their dashboard. Okay, I may have to do a little later.
264 00:24:48.500 ⇒ 00:25:07.869 zacfromson: Yeah, like, what’s in the link? It’s like, you just go to the store, you install the app on site, you, like, authenticate it in through Stitch or through Flaunt, and then, like, I had to, like, authenticate this. It was, like, get started, I just had to, like, log in, and then, like, it paired… it, like, took the store, paired it to the profile, meaning, like, in Flaunt’s
265 00:25:07.920 ⇒ 00:25:12.930 zacfromson: And then, like, paired it. So once it installed, I authenticated, like, this dashboard to the app, and then all the data from.
266 00:25:13.040 ⇒ 00:25:14.719 Samuel Roberts: Oh, okay, okay.
267 00:25:14.720 ⇒ 00:25:15.690 zacfromson: the product.
268 00:25:16.700 ⇒ 00:25:24.579 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that makes sense then for getting access to the Stitch app. I’m wondering then how we make sure that Polytomic can then sync that as well. Yeah.
269 00:25:24.580 ⇒ 00:25:24.949 zacfromson: That’s how…
270 00:25:24.950 ⇒ 00:25:25.420 Samuel Roberts: Everyone else.
271 00:25:25.420 ⇒ 00:25:26.489 zacfromson: Everyone else is doing it, and the ego.
272 00:25:26.490 ⇒ 00:25:26.850 Samuel Roberts: Yeah. That’s.
273 00:25:26.850 ⇒ 00:25:30.009 zacfromson: So I’m gonna have that, like, what I just sent you from Flan, or work,
274 00:25:30.010 ⇒ 00:25:30.730 Samuel Roberts: Oh, yeah.
275 00:25:30.730 ⇒ 00:25:37.010 zacfromson: All have the same method, so it seems like that seems to be, like, the… common…
276 00:25:37.010 ⇒ 00:25:37.540 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
277 00:25:37.620 ⇒ 00:25:38.840 zacfromson: That makes sense.
278 00:25:39.800 ⇒ 00:25:46.580 Samuel Roberts: Okay, yeah, we’ll do some research on how that works, get Polyatomic, probably, to look at it, too, make sure that that will work with them.
279 00:25:47.250 ⇒ 00:25:48.060 Samuel Roberts: Okay.
280 00:25:50.610 ⇒ 00:25:51.860 Samuel Roberts: Okay, that makes sense.
281 00:25:54.570 ⇒ 00:25:55.080 Samuel Roberts: cash.
282 00:25:55.330 ⇒ 00:26:06.180 Pranav Narahari: What else did I want? Yeah, so… another thing that we can talk about, Bobby, that we kind of talked about in the previous call is just, like, the development environment. I know you’re up and running again in that,
283 00:26:07.480 ⇒ 00:26:16.030 Pranav Narahari: we don’t have, like, a process exactly for, like, you know, when you create a PR, when we want to, like, push that.
284 00:26:16.190 ⇒ 00:26:21.800 Pranav Narahari: And… I wonder if it’s, like, worth, like, having, like, so we can get more on a…
285 00:26:22.070 ⇒ 00:26:28.259 Pranav Narahari: like, regular basis of, like, yeah, say you push something on, like, a Wednesday that you started, like, on Monday, like.
286 00:26:28.320 ⇒ 00:26:43.160 Pranav Narahari: thinking about giving us, like, a couple days to then refine it, maybe let you, like, make some edits as well, and then have that ready by Friday. That’s one way that we can, like, handle, like, some of this ad hoc stuff, just make it more consistent.
287 00:26:43.340 ⇒ 00:26:50.419 Pranav Narahari: But, yeah, that’s one thing, just on the process. I’m wondering for the environment itself, like, how is that working? Is there…
288 00:26:50.570 ⇒ 00:26:56.079 Pranav Narahari: There’s certain… because, like, there were a few bugs this… earlier this week, which I don’t know if they were…
289 00:26:56.240 ⇒ 00:27:02.760 Pranav Narahari: Easily resolved by kind of just, like, we just had to remember, like, the login stuff, or if there was anything else that was kind of concerning.
290 00:27:03.350 ⇒ 00:27:16.390 Bobby Palmieri: No, honestly, it was really just, like, the… the login stuff, and then it was, like, pretty much good to go, and then I just needed to remember how to push to GitHub. Like, honestly, that process worked, like, super, super well.
291 00:27:16.390 ⇒ 00:27:16.920 Pranav Narahari: renewable.
292 00:27:17.220 ⇒ 00:27:33.210 Bobby Palmieri: I think, yeah, the only issue was, is I kept trying to log in through my Gmail, and I needed to use the test account. Yep. That was the only issue. So, yeah, I think just, like, being realistic with, like, my time, what I would probably… so…
293 00:27:34.120 ⇒ 00:27:37.640 Bobby Palmieri: I guess, how does it work on your end, Zach, do you have to hop to…
294 00:27:37.640 ⇒ 00:27:41.910 zacfromson: I do have to hop right now, yeah. I’ll let you guys… we’ll catch up later. Thanks, guys.
295 00:27:42.410 ⇒ 00:27:47.430 Bobby Palmieri: How does this work with… So, like, let’s just say…
296 00:27:47.670 ⇒ 00:27:53.460 Bobby Palmieri: it won’t happen this week, and I got other stuff to do, but let’s just say, like, I wanted to work on the email.
297 00:27:53.600 ⇒ 00:27:55.089 Bobby Palmieri: Copy generator.
298 00:27:55.810 ⇒ 00:28:00.359 Bobby Palmieri: Do you need to sync something in GitHub first to my environment?
299 00:28:01.570 ⇒ 00:28:03.390 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, so basically…
300 00:28:04.770 ⇒ 00:28:19.609 Pranav Narahari: the best way to do it is actually to create a fresh branch with what is currently in develop. And so what we’ve been doing, so, like, you don’t have to keep on doing, like, switching your branch, is that we sync your branch to what is in Develop.
301 00:28:21.260 ⇒ 00:28:27.820 Pranav Narahari: that’s not an issue, it’s not like it’s a ton of extra work, and I think it just reduces the amount of error that could come up.
302 00:28:27.890 ⇒ 00:28:43.979 Pranav Narahari: But what that also prevents you from being able to do, which is… could become an issue, is that you can’t easily, like, context switch from, like, one feature to another. So let’s say, like, you wanted to develop two things, like, independently, like, two different dashboards, let’s say.
303 00:28:44.020 ⇒ 00:28:49.309 Pranav Narahari: you would need two branches to do that, and right now, you just have one Bobby environment branch. So…
304 00:28:49.790 ⇒ 00:28:55.639 Bobby Palmieri: I think I’m probably only gonna work on one thing at a time. My, like, my ideal…
305 00:28:56.460 ⇒ 00:29:02.140 Bobby Palmieri: Situation would be… Like, starting next week, you know…
306 00:29:02.600 ⇒ 00:29:11.530 Bobby Palmieri: on Friday, you spin up a new environment for me, and for, like, whatever feature I want to work on, or new feature I want to create.
307 00:29:11.780 ⇒ 00:29:12.380 Pranav Narahari: Yep.
308 00:29:12.380 ⇒ 00:29:18.019 Bobby Palmieri: I do it over the weekend, wrap it up on Monday, push it to you guys, and then by Friday, we can see it in…
309 00:29:18.270 ⇒ 00:29:20.619 Bobby Palmieri: In dev, is kind of like the…
310 00:29:20.870 ⇒ 00:29:29.999 Pranav Narahari: I think that’s, like, very doable. I like that process. Like, yeah, every Friday we basically just make sure that you’re synced up, like, there’s not gonna be a ton of, like, issues there.
311 00:29:30.680 ⇒ 00:29:40.269 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, and Sam, I think that’s all it should take, right? Just we make sure that Bobby’s environment is synced with, develop, and then we shouldn’t have any, like, weird conflicts or, like, a bunch of, like.
312 00:29:40.630 ⇒ 00:29:51.329 Pranav Narahari: you know, unresolved errors that require us to do even more work throughout the week. We’ll just have to worry about, like, okay, how do we configure the backend for this thing, and we have Monday to Friday to do that.
313 00:29:52.910 ⇒ 00:29:57.419 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I think… so we’re just gonna keep that one branch in sync with dev, then? Is that what you’re thinking?
314 00:29:57.700 ⇒ 00:30:00.060 Pranav Narahari: So basically, like, you just have, like,
315 00:30:00.200 ⇒ 00:30:05.499 Pranav Narahari: a repeating task every Friday to just, like, get Bobby re-synced with, development.
316 00:30:05.500 ⇒ 00:30:06.600 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, that shouldn’t be…
317 00:30:07.250 ⇒ 00:30:08.060 Pranav Narahari: Probably takes, like, 5 minutes.
318 00:30:08.060 ⇒ 00:30:08.620 Samuel Roberts: Thank you.
319 00:30:08.650 ⇒ 00:30:09.380 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, yeah.
320 00:30:09.730 ⇒ 00:30:10.940 Pranav Narahari: Shouldn’t take too long.
321 00:30:11.090 ⇒ 00:30:12.960 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, I like that. So, yeah, Casey’s…
322 00:30:12.960 ⇒ 00:30:13.630 Samuel Roberts: Mr. Huh.
323 00:30:13.650 ⇒ 00:30:30.969 Pranav Narahari: a repeating task for, like, you know, me or somebody to just, like, set that up, and Bobby will just, like, give you, like, a alert in the channel to just be like, okay, do a fresh, like, Git pull, or just, you know, you can literally just tell, like, GitHub, like, get me the latest code from.
324 00:30:30.970 ⇒ 00:30:36.680 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, just right to Claude to be able to just check out the right branch for you, and as long as we have it synced up, it should pull it down.
325 00:30:36.980 ⇒ 00:30:40.799 Pranav Narahari: Exactly, yeah. So that seems like the simplest way to do things. Yeah.
326 00:30:41.230 ⇒ 00:30:41.910 Samuel Roberts: Thanks, Cohen.
327 00:30:42.310 ⇒ 00:30:47.640 Pranav Narahari: Perfect, okay. So we can get that… we can get that going. I’ll do the same thing today.
328 00:30:48.210 ⇒ 00:31:00.979 Pranav Narahari: And then, yeah, I already kind of gave, like, a status update. One other thing that we’ll be pushing later today is, like, the theme change that you mentioned, Bobby. If you have any… I’m guessing, too, there’ll be, like, some comments on that, since, you know, we’re just kind of…
329 00:31:01.850 ⇒ 00:31:14.700 Pranav Narahari: there’s not a lot to go off of for how that should look, and I’m sure there’ll be, like, some things that you’d want to look differently, so… but I’ll get something in dev, and then something for you to comment on, basically, so then next week we can refine it, and it should be good to go.
330 00:31:14.700 ⇒ 00:31:23.869 Pranav Narahari: And then one other thing as well is the Google Ads MCP. You had some comments on that earlier this week. I’ll have that also pushed and ready to go.
331 00:31:24.280 ⇒ 00:31:26.160 Bobby Palmieri: Cool. Did you have any questions on that?
332 00:31:27.200 ⇒ 00:31:34.870 Pranav Narahari: No, I think, Sam looked into it a little bit, he kind of explained it to me, and, I think we’re… we’re good there.
333 00:31:34.870 ⇒ 00:31:35.600 Bobby Palmieri: If I do…
334 00:31:36.260 ⇒ 00:31:37.190 Pranav Narahari: Yeah.
335 00:31:37.190 ⇒ 00:31:43.109 Bobby Palmieri: It’s essentially… We’re, like, we connected to a global account.
336 00:31:43.640 ⇒ 00:31:46.939 Pranav Narahari: Yeah. That’s the account ID that shows up in the selector.
337 00:31:46.940 ⇒ 00:31:47.590 Samuel Roberts: Yeah.
338 00:31:47.590 ⇒ 00:31:48.260 Pranav Narahari: Yep.
339 00:31:48.260 ⇒ 00:31:54.550 Bobby Palmieri: Which is all of our agency accounts. And then we need to be able to connect to… like…
340 00:31:54.650 ⇒ 00:31:57.730 Bobby Palmieri: Individual accounts.
341 00:31:58.460 ⇒ 00:32:01.640 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, it’s just, like, one level deeper, basically, on that drop-down, right?
342 00:32:01.640 ⇒ 00:32:02.580 Bobby Palmieri: Yes, exactly.
343 00:32:02.580 ⇒ 00:32:17.039 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, I think it was a little bit different than the way Meta… when we did Meta, it was just… it was all the accounts that were connected. This one, it seemed to default to the account value instead of the subaccount values, or the connected account values. I don’t think it’ll be crazy to fix,
344 00:32:18.450 ⇒ 00:32:25.809 Samuel Roberts: It was just hard to fix before we had other accounts connected, because that was the only thing that would show up on an account with no other ad accounts, like I was testing with.
345 00:32:26.420 ⇒ 00:32:30.980 Samuel Roberts: That should be… Cool.
346 00:32:30.980 ⇒ 00:32:32.480 Pranav Narahari: Okay. Okay.
347 00:32:33.070 ⇒ 00:32:51.460 Pranav Narahari: basically all I have, like, I think, yeah, this weekend, yeah, just getting feedback on just, like, the Google Ads thing, just making sure, like, all of that’s, like, good to go, and I’ll update in the channel, like, once that’s live. The theme as well, Bobby, like, if you have time this weekend, or whatever, like, early next week, to give us some feedback on that.
348 00:32:51.760 ⇒ 00:33:11.580 Pranav Narahari: And then, yeah, anything else that’s in dev, really, like, that’s kind of our sandbox environment, and then our goal is to just have everything that’s in dev, like, all these features we’ve been working on, like, last week, this week, and then in the next couple weeks, like, pushed into staging. So, yeah, your guys’, like, comments on that, like, just keep them coming, and then we’ll get those sorted.
349 00:33:12.320 ⇒ 00:33:12.980 Bobby Palmieri: Awesome.
350 00:33:13.670 ⇒ 00:33:14.410 Bobby Palmieri: Cool.
351 00:33:15.080 ⇒ 00:33:15.910 Pranav Narahari: Cool.
352 00:33:16.540 ⇒ 00:33:17.510 Pranav Narahari: Alrighty.
353 00:33:17.750 ⇒ 00:33:27.640 Bobby Palmieri: lots to review. Casey, I don’t know what time you’re logging off. The one thing that I noticed on the Facebook dashboard,
354 00:33:28.430 ⇒ 00:33:35.570 Bobby Palmieri: is… The months and quarters…
355 00:33:36.230 ⇒ 00:33:43.150 Bobby Palmieri: the data on those seems to be pulling in wrong. I think the days and weeks are correct, but on the performance heat map.
356 00:33:43.350 ⇒ 00:33:44.320 Casie Aviles: I think…
357 00:33:44.380 ⇒ 00:34:00.160 Bobby Palmieri: however that’s pulling in seems to be potentially wrong, but I can do a deeper dive and I’ll get you some feedback, but I don’t know if there’s just a quick spot check of what you want to look at, to see if anything sticks out on that performance heat map, but,
358 00:34:00.640 ⇒ 00:34:04.030 Bobby Palmieri: Just one thing that the team noticed as they were playing around with it.
359 00:34:04.690 ⇒ 00:34:05.070 Bobby Palmieri: Okay.
360 00:34:05.070 ⇒ 00:34:20.720 Pranav Narahari: Yeah, Casey, let’s, sync on that, because, like, a lot of this data stuff I’ve looked into for the MCP servers, so, yeah, especially the meta ones, too, when I was creating the… the Slack reports, so… we can sync on that, make sure everything looks good, and then, make changes if necessary.
361 00:34:21.980 ⇒ 00:34:22.520 Casie Aviles: Sure.
362 00:34:23.719 ⇒ 00:34:26.619 Pranav Narahari: Perfect. Alright guys, we all set?
363 00:34:27.500 ⇒ 00:34:28.559 Bobby Palmieri: Good on my end.
364 00:34:29.100 ⇒ 00:34:29.750 Pranav Narahari: Cool.
365 00:34:29.989 ⇒ 00:34:30.670 Pranav Narahari: Thank you, guys.
366 00:34:31.630 ⇒ 00:34:32.920 Samuel Roberts: Yeah, see you guys.
367 00:34:33.120 ⇒ 00:34:34.060 Pranav Narahari: Have a good weekend.
368 00:34:34.060 ⇒ 00:34:35.190 Samuel Roberts: Happy Friday the 13th!
369 00:34:35.440 ⇒ 00:34:39.190 Samuel Roberts: Happy Valentine’s Day, too. But yeah, alright, see y’all then.
370 00:34:39.889 ⇒ 00:34:40.209 Pranav Narahari: See ya.