Carousel Studio

Repurpose X Threads into LinkedIn & Instagram Carousels

Thread Truncated (Cap Enforced)

Only the first 20 tweets are unrolled into slides to ensure reliable PDF exporting and high server performance.

Canvas & Ratio

Choose your destination platform format


Layout Template

Choose a content structure for your slides


Preset Themes


Typography & Sizing

Title Font Size36px
Body Font Size18px
Header & Footer Size12px

Brand Kit Customization

AGENCY

Configure brand assets for headers & footers

MULTI-PROFILES (AGENCY)
AGENCY
SAVE PRESETS (AGENCY)

Outro Slide CTA

Customize your closing call-to-action slide

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Background Pattern

Source Content

Build Your Carousel

Drag and drop any post card below onto a slide, or use the quick buttons to insert content/images instantly!

Drag Post #1
Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

Underrated business model: Turning a service into a product. It helps solve the issue of scaling for: • Agencies • Freelancers • Solopreneurs Here’s how a "productized service" works:

Drag Post #2
Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

First, let's talk about the trap most consultants & contractors fall into: Trading hours for dollars. Even at high hourly rates, you're still capped by time. Earn more = work more. Stop working, and the money stops too. But there's a better way...

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

Enter the "Netflix of Services" model: Instead of hourly billing, you package your expertise into a subscription. Clients pay a fixed monthly fee for access to your skills. Just like Netflix doesn't charge per movie, you don't charge per task.

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

One of my favorite examples is Brett from DesignJoy. • The service: Design work for $4,995/mo • The product: Unlimited design requests The keyword is “unlimited.” Whether a client makes 5 requests a month or 50, the price stays the same.

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

So, what's the catch? Clients can submit only 1 request at a time. Each one gets placed in a queue. This natural throttle prevents overwhelm while maintaining the "unlimited" promise.

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

Brett runs his operation solo, leveraging 3 principles: • 0 meetings (after a 15min discovery call) • Simple Trello boards for requests • 2-day average turnaround time It results in a productized service that scales without employees.

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

WP Curve used a version of this model: • The service: WordPress maintenance • The product: Live access to a developer 24 hours a day for $59 The model worked so well, they scaled to an exit to GoDaddy in 2016.

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

I'm part owner of a company called ViralCuts with the same model. • The service: Short-form video editing • The product: A trained editor to embed on your team

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

Another example: Bean Ninjas • The service: Accounting & tax help for ecomm businesses • Product: Fixed scope, flat monthly fee The founders originally prepared custom proposals & struggled with revenue. They shared these results after productizing:

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

As long as you're creating a package and setting limits, you have flexibility. Contentfly uses this structure: • The service: Content creation • Product: A set amount of words/month

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

So… How can you replicate this? 3 things you need: • A skill/service. • SPEED in performing that skill. • A niche searvice offer within that skill to set yourself apart.

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

Once you’ve picked your service: • Package it into a monthly subscription • Set clear boundaries and expectations • Use tools to automate delivery • Focus on speed of execution Just remember...

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

The real power isn't in the "unlimited" promise. It's in the constraints you build around it: • Defined scope of work • Clear turnaround times • One request at a time These boundaries make the unlimited model actually sustainable.

Drag Post #14
Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

Online services biz's are catching on this model. But I think there’s opportunity here for brick & mortar services too. It’s a way to increase recurring revenue, while decreasing time & complexity. For example (with fictional prices)…

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

1. Handyman Rather than completing dozens of one-off projects every month… Offer an “Unlimited Home Care Plan” for $150/month. Clients get one active request at a time, completed in a queue.

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

2. Landscaper Instead of doing any job for any client... You could offer an “All-Season Lawn Plan.” $99/month for unlimited lawn maintenance on 1 residential property

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

3. Mechanic You could hope customers come back every few months for an oil change… Or you could charge them flat monthly for unlimited oil changes & maintenance checks.

Drag Post #18
Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

You could apply a version to any industry: • Cleaning → Set packages w/ 1 active booking allowed at a time • Pet Grooming → $99/mo for unlimited grooming for 1 pet • Car Wash → Unlimited washes Value proposition for the customer + constraints that protect your bottom line

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Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

Best part about these is you don’t have to abandon the “everything to everyone” model if you’re not ready. Offer these “product packages" as an optional add-on to every customer. Then you can scale back regular service as you sell more packages.

Drag Post #20
Codie Sanchez
@Codie_Sanchez

When you're not trading hours for dollars, something magical happens: You think bigger. You start to ask high leverage questions: • How can I serve more clients? • Where can I add (& charge) more value? • What systems can I build?