RYSE

*Today’s article is a sponsored feature from our friends at RYSE.
Did You Look at RYSE’s Pitch Deck Yet?
If you didn’t, I can already tell you’re about to pretend you’ll “check it out later,” and we both know “later” is where good intentions go to die.
So before you scroll another inch, open RYSE’s pitch deck.
How does it feel knowing the smartest piece of tech in your house might actually be your toaster?
We’ve all fallen for Big Tech’s version of “smart.”
Your thermostat watches your every move like a jealous ex.
Your speaker interrupts your therapy session because it thought you said, “Hey Siri.”
Your doorbell records everyone but the package thief.
But your window shades? Still manual, still the same awkward cord dance from 2003, and still the dumbest thing in the room.
That’s exactly where RYSE walks in, and the pitch deck nails it from slide one. These guys didn’t invent something new, they fixed something obvious.
The kind of obvious that makes you angry you didn’t think of it first.
They took the most neglected, energy-wasting thing in your house and gave it a brain; a literal clip-on brain.
No tools, no drilling, and no Home Depot trauma. Just a clean, tiny device that turns your shades into obedient, sun-tracking geniuses.
RYSE is in over 120 Best Buy stores, ten patents locked, and sales doubling like your caffeine intake during tax season.
That’s why I keep saying get the deck. Because when you actually see the numbers, it hits different.
It’s not about blinds, it’s about timing.
Timing, as in: how did Amazon and Google, those two, completely miss this?
They fought over your lights, your locks, and your doorbells but somehow left your windows wide open, literally leaking 30% of your energy.
Thirty percent!
That’s like ordering three pizzas and tossing one out the window. Not “eco,” not “smart,” just stupid.
RYSE saw that blind spot (pun intended), built something simple, real, and profitable and now you’re sitting here thinking, “Okay, maybe Matt’s onto something.”
Maybe I am.
Because this isn’t some “someday” tech dream, it’s happening now.
And if history’s any clue, the companies that quietly fix the boring problems; the ones no one’s hyped about, are the ones that win big later.
So do yourself a favor, don’t just take my word for it.
Look at the pitch deck. Really look at it.
Then ask yourself: am I early, or am I about to read about this company two years from now and say, “I remember when Matt told me about that”?
Your move.
Best,
Matt Masinga
Credtrus AI
*Disclaimer: The content in this newsletter is for informational purposes only. We do not provide medical, legal, investment, or professional advice. While we do our best to ensure accuracy, some details may evolve over time or be based on third-party sources. Always do your own research and consult professionals before making decisions based on what you read here.