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X (Twitter)

Your competitor posted 47 times last month. You posted twice. That's…

X (Twitter) post

Your competitor posted 47 times last month. You posted twice. That's not a marketing problem. That's a visibility deficit, and the difference between those two things matters more than most SMB owners realize. A marketing problem implies you need a better strategy, a bigger budget, a cleverer agency. A visibility deficit means you're already paying a cost. You just haven't named it yet. Every time a potential customer searches for what you do and finds your competitor instead, that cost lands. Every time someone scrolls past a feed full of content from businesses in your space and doesn't see you, that cost lands. It's not theoretical. It's happening right now while you're reading this. The conventional framing for SMB marketing is that it's a discretionary activity. You do it when cash is comfortable. You cut it when it's not. That logic made a certain kind of sense before marketing became infrastructure, but that's not where we are anymore. Your competitors have already built the infrastructure. Some of them have agencies. Some have in-house teams. A growing number have AI working while they sleep, researching competitors, finding keywords, building buyer personas, surfacing content opportunities. And that genie is out of the bottle and is not going back in again. Here's what I've watched happen in real time. Someone opens a strategy dashboard after their first night using Agent Craft. The AI has gone out overnight and done the kind of competitive research that a decent marketing team would bill you six weeks of retainer to produce. Keywords. Content angles. Buyer personas. A content voice calibrated to how they actually talk. All of it, while they were asleep. Most business owners I talk to don't react with excitement. They react with a quiet kind of alarm. Because when they see that output sitting there at 7am, the first thought isn't "great, now I have a strategy." It's "my competitors have been doing this. I haven't." That gap is the real issue. I'm not interested in the argument that AI content is inherently low quality. That argument is usually made by people who haven't seen what good AI-augmented content actually looks like, or who have only ever used a generic prompt in ChatGPT and judged the entire category by that. Dismissing the tool because the tool can be used badly is like dismissing email because spam exists. The owners who are going to feel this most sharply in the next 18 months are the ones who still think of content as something they'll get to. Something they do when there's time. When the team has capacity. When the agency comes back with a proposal. That clock already ran out.

Mark HadfieldJun 1, 2026Published to X - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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