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There's a belief sitting at the centre of most content advice right…

There's a belief sitting at the centre of most content advice right now that I think is genuinely worth pulling apart. The belief is this: the biggest reason founders and execs don't post enough is that they don't have time. And honestly, I get why it sounds right. These are people managing teams, dealing with customers, putting out fires before 9am. Of course time is the problem. But I've watched enough small business owners to think the time thing is a red herring. Or at least, it's not the whole story. Here's what I actually see. Founders sit down to post and freeze. Not because the calendar is full, but because they haven't been prompted with the right question. Nobody asked them what they think about what happened in their industry last week. Nobody pulled out the opinion they gave on a call three days ago and said, that's the post, say that. The gap isn't time. It's context. Give someone the right prompt at the right moment and they'll talk for ten minutes without stopping. Good stuff, too. Specific, warm, real. Things their audience would actually want to read. Leave them staring at a blank box and they'll reschedule the task for next week. So here's the question I can't quite resolve, and I'm curious what you think: If a founder posts once a week because they were prompted well, versus three times a week with generic, fill-the-gap content, which one actually builds an audience that buys from them? Quality of prompt, or volume of output?

James GoddardJun 13, 2026Published to X — @JamesGodda75737View original ↗

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