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Meet The Guy Who Solved App Growth on TikTok

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In the last year, the founders on Nick

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Weber's platform generated over 2.5

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billion with a B views.

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>> 2.5 billion views seems like a crazy

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number. We were super surprised by the

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number, too.

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>> But even though they were surprised,

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this had nothing to do with luck.

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They're actually one of the few teams

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I've seen truly get viral Tik Tok growth

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down to a science. And it started with

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this weird discovery he calls the eggs

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theory. We noticed that the ones that

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were doing higher views always had some

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form of eggs on them. It's relatable.

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It's healthy. It's easily understood. it

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seems achievable because it's cheap.

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>> He realized that tiny, seemingly random

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details could be the difference between

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a thousand views and 10 million. So, he

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built a system to test all these details

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at a massive scale. Instead of hiring a

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few creators, he built a platform that

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allows 50,000 people to post content all

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at the same time. A lot of the other

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folks out there are taking, you know,

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five people, 10 people, and saying,

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"Hey, post this kind of content for us

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twice a day." And what we're saying

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instead is, "Hey, 50,000 people post

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this content." and he calls it the shots

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on goal effect. And he uses it to run

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two distinct playbooks at the same time.

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First, higheffort UGC videos designed to

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go viral with a soft call to action. And

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second, thousands of simple slideshows

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with a hard call to action that act as a

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retargeting campaign for anyone who saw

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the first viral video. Maybe the million

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view video is like a little bit of a

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softer CTA that like barely mentioned

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Noise app. And then all the like small

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view videos are a little bit harder CTA,

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which is probably why they didn't get as

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many views, but it's functioning sort of

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like as a retargeting ad. He doesn't

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guess what works. He just lets the data

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tell him. They found that a video

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starting with don't get a second job

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went viral, while the same video

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starting with everybody needs a side

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hustle flopped. You would be shocked at

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what is the thing that sets it off,

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right? Originally, we weren't using the

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don't get a second job as the start to

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this whole like paragraph text here. I

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think it was like everybody needs a side

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hustle. Don't get a second job is what

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ended up making it go viral.

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>> And what he's learning is that going

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viral has a lot less to do with being

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creative and much more to do with

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thinking like a scientist. You don't

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have to be super creative. You just have

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to be creative in showing how your app

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fits [music] or product or whatever it

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is fits into an existing viral format. I

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like to say I think Pablo Picasso is the

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one that said that great artists steal.

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In this episode, Nick Weber breaks down

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the science of virality. How to find

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winning formats by copying what already

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works. How to use a two-pronged content

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strategy to drive both awareness and

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conversion. And how to build a

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distribution machine that gives you an

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unfair advantage over everyone else.

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This is a master class in growth not as

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an art, but as a science. Let's get into

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it. This is the Superall podcast and I'm

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Joseph Choy, founder of Consumer Club.

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The members in the Consumer Club Discord

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and the founders I interview on the pod

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build apps at a median of about a

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million dollars ARR. In my conversations

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with dozens of these founders every

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week, one thing I've noticed is most of

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them AB test their payw walls to

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increase their conversion rates and make

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more money. Now, most people know that

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one of the best ways to AB test payw

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walls is Superwwell. But one thing you

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might not know is Superwwell has a lot

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of data on the thousands of apps that

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use their payw walls. So recently they

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actually put together a tool that takes

3:04

422 profitable paywall experiments and

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put those into a paywall experiment

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generator where you can upload a

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screenshot of your own payw wall and

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it'll give you an experiment idea to

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increase your revenue. You can use it

3:14

for free at paywallexperiments.com.

3:17

All right, let's get into the pod. Okay,

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so 1 year into noise and the founders on

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your platform have gotten more than two

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billion views which is pretty insane.

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first of all, how this was achieved, how

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those 2.5 billion views happened, and

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then also like how you guys got started.

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>> I mean, 2.5 billion views seems like a

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crazy number. [laughter] We were

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actually not really keeping track. We

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looked at it here at the end of the year

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to kind of like milestone what we've

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done in the last year. And we were super

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surprised by the number, too. We knew it

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was high, but we didn't know it was this

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high. It's just the accumulation of a

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bunch of stuff, right? Tons of super

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viral videos. We've got another one

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going out right now that's 22 million

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views in 4 days. It's those kinds of big

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ones and then what we call just like

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this massive ground game of hundreds of

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thousands of posts going out there that

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do 500 to a,000 2,000 views a pop and it

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really just starts to add up.

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>> So there's a bunch of like videos on

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your platform that are getting a bunch

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of views. What's the secret? How are

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they getting so many views?

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>> It's a distribution problem, right? And

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so a lot of the other folks out there

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are taking, you know, five people, 10

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people and saying, "Hey, post this kind

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of content for us twice a day." And what

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we're saying instead is, hey, 50,000

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people post this content and here's

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exactly what you need to post and here's

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all the assets for it and here's what

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you say and here's your description and

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it just goes absolutely crazy from

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there. We call it sort of like a shots

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on goal effect where just by naturally

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having a 100,000 pieces of content out

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there a day at least, you're going to

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get something that hits. And if it

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doesn't hit, it's going to quickly tell

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you why through, you know, analytics or

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just general viewership. And you can use

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that information to slightly tweak stuff

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to then make it just go crazy. [music]

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And I want to underscore how crazy it is

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that just changing the text or changing

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the picture or the first couple seconds

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of your video can be the difference

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between 1,000 views and 10 million

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views. Like it really just boils down as

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stuff that's that simple.

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>> Yeah. I want to get into kind of the

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science of that and all the little

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>> I'll talk to you about uh eggs theory.

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It'll blow your mind.

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>> Oh, just tell me that right now. In the

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early days when we were doing slideshows

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for a brand that we were working with,

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we noticed that the ones that were doing

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higher views always had some form of

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eggs on them. I can actually pull up an

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example here for you too. Yeah. So, this

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is just from one account and there were

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many of them doing this and you'll

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notice on all of these that

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aesthetically they're sort of similar,

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but they all have some version of egg in

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them. And so we started calling it the

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eggs theory and it really helped us

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solidify what hooks meant because we

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thought that the eggs here were making

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it go viral because it was about clean

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eating. It was about healthy eating. And

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eggs [music] are one instantly visually

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understandable. Not only are they a

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whole food and healthy, but they're also

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super affordable, right? Everybody knows

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what an egg is. The last election was

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based on the prices of egg cost, which

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is crazy that this little piece of food

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makes that much of a difference. You see

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over and over and over again that

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putting hard-boiled eggs, putting

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scrambled eggs in these first hook

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images just absolutely was a rocket ship

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in terms of viewership.

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>> I don't really get it, but like if it

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works, it works. Tik Tok is very

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mysterious. Sometimes

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>> it's all just about relevancy and then

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how it relates to the person that's

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