Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft
Who else has looked at a $3,000 to $8,000 a month ghostwriting…
Who else has looked at a $3,000 to $8,000 a month ghostwriting retainer and just... closed the tab? I have. Multiple times. And I don't think I'm the exception. I think that price point screens out a huge portion of the people who actually want to be building a serious personal brand on LinkedIn or X. Business owners, founders, individuals who know exactly what a high-authority account is worth as an asset, especially one that travels with you when you leave a company. They're not opposed to the idea. They're opposed to the invoice. And honestly, it's not just the money. It's the process. You've got to get on calls with an agency or a ghostwriter, brief them on your ideas, review drafts, send notes, go back and forth. That friction adds up fast for someone already running a business. So the $3,000 to $8,000 a month option just sits there, unconvincing. For years I was in that exact position. I knew I wanted the asset. I wasn't going to pay for it that way. And I didn't want to hand my thinking over to an agency and spend my time managing their output. So I built something else entirely. An app where I just speak into my phone for a few minutes a day and it produces platform-optimised content. Same quality of output as what a ghostwriter or agency would produce. A fraction of the cost. No calls, no brief documents, no drafts waiting for approval. That's the product I would have bought years ago if someone had offered it to me. And that's exactly why I built it. If you've been sitting on the same idea, wanting the account but not the retainer, try Agent Craft free at agentcraft.ai. No credit card required.
More content from Agent Craft
- LinkedInA personal brand is one of the most valuable assets a business owner can build. It follows you when you leave a company. It compounds over time. And unlike most things in business, nobody can take it from you. But most business owners will never build one. Not because they don't want one, because the only paths they've been shown are too expensive or too slow. I believe there is a large group of business owners who want a high-authority presence on LinkedIn or X but won't pay agency rates, and don't want the friction of managing an agency relationship. What they actually want is a technical solution. A way to capture their thinking in raw form and get platform-optimized content out the other side. Same outcome, none of the overhead. That's the whole idea behind Agent Craft. I put myself in this group for years. I knew a high-authority personal brand on LinkedIn or X was a real asset. The kind that follows you when you leave a company. Who wouldn't want that? But I wasn't willing to write a big monthly check for it, and I didn't want to spend time briefing a ghostwriter or sitting through agency calls. If someone had offered me a tool where I just captured my ideas in a few minutes a day and got a similar result at a fraction of the cost, I would have jumped at it immediately. Nobody offered me that tool. So I built it. You can check it out and get started at agentcraft dot ai. How many people are just quietly sitting out the personal brand game entirely because the only options they've ever been shown are too expensive or too slow?
- BlueskyConviction isn't the problem. Most SMB marketers believe in AI. The failure point is execution. The gap between "we should be doing this" and actual published content is where growth dies quietly.
- LinkedInAgent Craft is live. Here's what that actually means for SMB teams who've been stitching together tools. Most marketing stacks weren't designed together. They accumulated. A scheduling tool here, an analytics platform there, something for content, something else for distribution. You end up managing the tools instead of running the marketing. That's the problem Agent Craft was built to fix from the start. The architecture matters. Agent Craft isn't a legacy platform with AI features bolted on afterward. Intelligence is built into every workflow from day one, agentic-first. The difference in output quality between those two approaches isn't marginal. It's the same gap that already played out in the CRM category, and it's playing out again here. A few things stand out in how it works in practice. During onboarding, Agent Craft generates your first campaign automatically. Within 10 minutes of connecting your Slack or Teams channel, based on your role and objectives, Agent Craft produces a complete short-term campaign ready to publish. Most tools require significant manual setup before producing anything useful. This one produces something useful before you've finished setting it up. It also runs without the bottlenecks human teams carry. Priorities shift, bandwidth runs out, and context gets lost between handoffs. Agent Craft executes full marketing strategy work at consistent rigor regardless of those constraints. The strategy output alone, delivered without those gaps, outperforms what most marketing teams are actually delivering. And it consolidates your stack. Rather than maintaining separate logins, contracts, and workflows for every function, everything runs through one system with one input. The overhead of managing tools disappears. The competitors who haven't automated this yet aren't standing still. They're falling further behind every day they stay on a fragmented stack that requires them to do the work manually. That gap compounds fast. Agent Craft is open now. No technical setup required.
- X (Twitter)A guy I went to high school with, all-boys school, hadn't spoken in probably 10 years, commented on one of my posts. I reached out, got his number, we had a proper catch-up. Turns out he's deep in the marketing space now. Full overlap with what I'm building. That happened because I was putting my work out publicly. Not the company page. Me. Which brings me to something I genuinely want to know where people land on this. Brand pages feel safer to post from. No personal exposure, no opinions attached to your name, the company absorbs the feedback. But I've seen founders with a fraction of their brand page's follower count pull more reach, more replies, more real traction from their personal profile. The tension I keep running into: most people building something real are more comfortable letting the brand take the stage. Post behind the logo, keep the personal profile quiet, stay heads-down. That was me for a long time. But the engagement data doesn't support it. People follow people. They want to know what you think, what you got wrong, what you're betting on. The brand page gets the polished update. Your profile gets the actual conversation. So here's where I want to push back on the default assumption: is posting from your personal profile actually more valuable than posting from your company page, even if your personal audience is smaller right now? Or is that framing wrong entirely, and the real answer is both, just used differently? Not asking what sounds right. Asking what you've actually seen work. — James, co-founder @ Agent Craft Powered by Agent Craft 🎙️→📱
- InstagramVoice is the thing most AI tools destroy on contact. You paste in your draft, it comes back cleaner, tighter, and completely stripped of the way you actually speak. Your audience can feel it. You can feel it. And so you either fix it manually or you stop publishing. Agent Craft is built around a different idea. It takes how you speak, the specific phrasing you reach for, the rhythm of your sentences, the earisms that make your content recognizably yours, and folds all of that into whatever it generates for your personal channels. LinkedIn. Instagram. The output doesn't need editing back into your voice because it started there. This isn't AI bolted onto a content tool. Agent Craft was architected as AI-first from the beginning, which means the voice capture isn't a feature someone added later. It's structural. The result is content that's ready to ship. Campaigns, product announcements, thought leadership posts. Rich, specific, organic-feeling. Not the kind of copy that reads like it came from a prompt. If you've ever posted something and immediately thought "that doesn't sound like me," you already know what Agent Craft is solving. Follow @agentcraftai to see how it works.
- FacebookPower users of Agent Craft tend to notice something after the first few weeks: the agent doesn't stop working when they do. While the team is in meetings or off the clock, the agent is still running. Researching competitors. Testing what's resonating. Refining the content strategy based on what's actually working. That continuous attention is what separates a compounding content program from one that just stays flat. The other thing power users lean into is the team layer. Agent Craft isn't a solo tool for one person managing their personal LinkedIn. It's built to pull an entire content marketing team into the same workflow, through Slack or Microsoft Teams, so the output reflects the whole organization, not just one contributor's voice. And the content itself isn't generic. It matches both the brand voice and the individual writer's voice before anything ships. That combination, always-on strategy plus team-wide deployment plus authentic voice, is what makes the habit stick.
