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A founder I worked with years ago used to spend his Sunday evenings…

A founder I worked with years ago used to spend his Sunday evenings writing LinkedIn posts. Not because he enjoyed it. Because he felt guilty if he didn't. He'd open a blank doc, stare at it for twenty minutes, write something safe and forgettable, then close his laptop feeling like he'd done something useful. He hadn't, really. But at least the box was ticked. That pattern is more common than most people admit. The problem isn't discipline. It's the system. Or rather, the total absence of one. Here's the framework I actually use now, and the one Agent Craft is built around. It starts with a question most owners never ask: what does a real marketing function do every day, and why aren't you getting any of it? Not content. That's the output. I mean the upstream work. A real marketing function researches your competitors on a rolling basis. It maps SEO keywords continuously, not just when someone remembers to do it. It builds and refines buyer personas. It defines your content voice and keeps it consistent. It spots content opportunities before they go stale. These aren't one-time tasks. They're ongoing, background work that a diligent team member would be doing every week, every month, without being asked. The hard truth is that most small businesses are getting none of this. Not because their people are lazy. Because nobody has the bandwidth. 82% of micro-firms say AI isn't applicable to their business. That number doesn't surprise me, because the reference point most owners have is ChatGPT. They tried it once, got something generic, and concluded the whole category wasn't for them. That's a reasonable response to a bad experience, not a considered strategic position. The reframe I'd offer: the value isn't in the tool. It's in what happens when a properly configured system runs in the background while you're doing something else. The Agent Craft model is pretty simple as a concept. You talk for 45 to 90 seconds. Customer story, product update, lesson from a client call, something you noticed this week. That voice note goes in. On the other end, your content goes out across 14 channels, formatted and published, in under 90 seconds. No prompts. No prompt engineering. No choosing models. No knowing what any of that even means. The agent handles the context, the formatting, the scheduling, the lot. But the bit that resets my clock every time I show someone the strategy dashboard isn't the content publishing speed. It's the overnight work. Open Agent Craft in the morning and what you find is a completed pass at your competitive landscape, keyword opportunities mapped, buyer personas drafted, content angles identified. Everything that a human colleague would be doing, if you had one working through the night. Except you don't need one, because the agent did it. Now, I want to be honest about what this is and what it isn't. This isn't autonomous content generation that you publish without thinking. That would just produce AI slop, and plugging things into ChatGPT without any real input is how you get content that sounds like everyone else. The human still needs to provide the actual insight. The knowledge of your business. The customer stories. The specific points of differentiation. Your perspective. That's the irreplaceable part, and it stays that way. What the system does is take that input and make sure it actually gets used. Consistently. Across every channel. Without requiring you to be a marketer. The comparison I keep coming back to is this: most of the marketing output Agent Craft produces from the strategy dashboard alone is better than what 95% of marketing teams are actually delivering to the businesses paying them. Not because AI is smarter than people. Because AI is more diligent, more consistent, and it doesn't get distracted or drop things when something else comes up. Around 68% of businesses still aren't using AI in any meaningful way to grow. Not as a criticism of them. It's just where we are in the adoption curve. Which means the competitive advantage available to a business owner who does get this running properly right now is real and it's narrowing. Fast. The Sunday evening blank doc problem doesn't go away by trying harder. It goes away by building something that doesn't need you to try harder. That window stays open for a while. But not forever.

Mark HadfieldJun 11, 2026Published to X - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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