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50 Times People Asked To Rate Their Dogs And Got Hilariously Wholesome Results
In our eyes, all dogs are wonderful and deserve a perfect 10/10 for making our days brighter with their derpy smiles, fluffy hugs, and adorable antics. However, did you know that the scale for rating dogs goes beyond 10? The WeRateDogs Twitter account has taught us all about how canines can go beyond the so-called maximum. Why? Because they’re worth it! And because it entertains us.
The founder of the page, entrepreneur Matt Nelson, rates dogs in hilarious and witty comments that will get a smile (if not a chuckle) out of you. We’ve collected some of his best new tweets for you to enjoy, dear Pandas, so be sure to upvote your fave ones and to write your own ratings in the comments!
If you’d like to see some more good boys and girls that you can pet through the screen, you can scroll through Bored Panda’s earlier articles about the WeRateDogs project here, here, and here, as well as here.
More info: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | WeRateDogs.com
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Matt, the founder of WeRateDogs, isn’t just making a decent living rating dogs—he’s thriving, earning six figures. What’s more, he’s using his influence to help dogs in need by promoting fundraising campaigns. It’s less of a ‘dog eat dog’ world and more of a ‘dog pet dog’ one with Matt around.
Matt launched the WeRateDogs account on Twitter in November 2015 and soon dropped out of Campbell University as he became more and more involved in the project. Those dastardly doggos were cutting into his studying time and he decided to focus on being an entrepreneur.
Once he set up a website with an online store where he could sell merch, Matt began solidifying his status as the head of one of the biggest dog-lover communities online (and IRL). It took around two years for him to turn his start-up idea into an empire of canine goodness.
Matt made the account at an Applebee’s. A day later, he had over 3k followers and people were lining up in his inbox, asking him to rate their dogs. That’s the kind of response you get when you’ve got a great idea that’s relatable to people and you add in a dash of great timing and luck.
However, juggling dog ratings and his studies proved to be a real challenge. Soon, Matt was burned out, low on sleep, and posting 18 times a day, as he told ‘Money.’ What’s more, even though he had loads of influence on social media, he was pretty much broke in real-life. And his friends had to take away his phone when they went to parties because he’d keep checking his Twitter feed. Something had to change.
“I was spending full-time work hours or more monitoring everything about the account. Monetizing it became a necessity if I was going to continue doing it at that level,” he told ‘Money.’ That’s when Matt partnered up with social media marketer John Ricci who convinced the founder of WeRateDogs to delegate some of the work to him.
“That told me that I need to be a good delegator if I’m not going to go crazy,” Matt explained how he learned the lesson that he can’t do everything alone. He also dropped out of college so he could fully focus on WeRateDogs instead of splitting his attention two ways.
Most of what Matt does, he can run on his phone (imagine the number of GB he uses up!). And despite practically swimming in money by providing wholesome and funny content about dogs to the internet, the so-called ‘Dogfather’ is still very humble.
Can people really not spot the difference in animals these days? (this is sarcasm)
Currently, WeRateDogs has 8.9 million followers on Twitter, 1.9 million fans on Instagram, and another half-a-million+ supporting him on Facebook. That’s a huge following and no wonder—the content is wholesome, quirky, cute, and consistent.
It’s not like we’ll all just wake up one morning and decide that we don’t like dogs anymore, so Matt’s got some stability. However, it’s not just luck: he’s been growing his doggo empire steadily and it doesn’t look like it’ll stop expanding any time soon.
There’s a lot of calculation and effort going on behind the scenes. And keeping a multi-million audience entertained is no easy feat. Now, Matt aims to tweet around two times on weekdays and always does this himself.
For Matt, it takes roughly 20 minutes to create the perfect comment for each photo. And once he tweets out his newest post, he carefully monitors how people react to it. After all, he is a professional dog rater and this is what earns him his daily bread.
“My initial goal was just to make people happy. Now I’m good at writing like a dog and embodying that behavior because I’ve been surrounded by dog internet culture,” Matt explained. His main source of income is the merch sold on his website, however, and it’s ironic because it’s actually Twitter that eats up most of his time.
So, dear Pandas, which dogs were your favorite ones? Which of Matt’s captions got you giggling and going ‘aww’ out loud? Are there any ratings that you’d change? Share your thoughts in the comment section below—we’re always happy to hear what you have to say.
Okay I legit think somebody might have pulled a fast one. There's no way that's not a seal 🤦😂
I would like the backstory of the dark brown dog seemingly trying waterbending
It is good. Which is why its a shame Bored Panda thinks its OK to rip off their content from a year ago and shove it here to sell advertising off the back of it.
Load More Replies...It is good. Which is why its a shame Bored Panda thinks its OK to rip off their content from a year ago and shove it here to sell advertising off the back of it.
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