Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft
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First 10 minutes with Agent Craft: it learns your role, builds your…

First 10 minutes with Agent Craft: it learns your role, builds your first content campaign, and pushes it live. That's it. No weeks of setup, no agency briefs, no waiting. You're publishing before the coffee gets cold.
More content from Agent Craft
- LinkedInA customer had a problem most content creators would actually envy. His LinkedIn reach was growing. Posts landing. Audience responding. And then the replies started piling up. Not just meaningful ones. The kind you still have to respond to because ignoring them quietly kills your reach. The algorithm doesn't distinguish between a high-value conversation and a two-word comment that still expects acknowledgment. This customer did. But the time to sort through all of it, draft replies, keep the momentum going, that was time carved out of actual work. He described it well: a spiral. The content performs, which creates reply volume, which consumes the time you need to create more content, which slows the content, which hurts the reach you worked to build. Agent Craft changed that. Not by doing less, but by taking the reply drafting off his plate entirely. The spiral broke. The reach held. He got his time back. That's what a compounding problem looks like when you solve it at the right point. One fix doesn't just address the symptom, it stops the drain that was quietly limiting everything downstream. This is the pattern Agent Craft was built around. Executives and content creators already have the expertise. They don't need more ideas. They need the operational weight lifted so the expertise can actually compound over time, rather than stalling the moment it starts gaining traction. For this customer, the shift wasn't about posting more. It was about not losing ground every time a post did well. That's a different kind of result, harder to put in a headline, but far more valuable over six months than any single viral moment. Content that compounds does so because the system behind it doesn't create new bottlenecks as the audience grows.
- ThreadsHot take: LinkedIn content takes longer to write than most meetings last. 45 seconds of input per day versus 90 minutes to create one post manually. Which is actually the time problem, the tool, or the habit?
- FacebookBrand pages or founder accounts. Pick a side. There's a real argument that brand pages are losing the engagement game entirely. People scroll past polished logos and ad-looking posts. They stop for the actual human behind the company. But here's the counterpoint: most founders don't post consistently enough for it to matter. A personal account that goes quiet for three weeks does more damage than a steady brand page ever could. Agent Craft sees both sides of this every week. The manufacturing clients who ditched agency-produced brand content and switched to authentic founder takes saw the difference immediately. Not because personal always beats brand, but because authentic and consistent together is what actually moves the needle. So: if you had to bet your 2025 social strategy on one, which would you choose? Pure founder-led content, or a brand page done right?
- X (Twitter)The mood swings don't get smaller as you get better at this. Not everybody's cut out for that. Today was a great day. One customer call did it. Forty-five minutes with a prospect. It went well enough that I walked away more convinced the SMB owners I'm building for really are stuck the way I think they're stuck: brilliant at their craft, invisible in their market, no system that scales their message past the hours in their own day. That's the whole hypothesis. The most valuable asset any small business has is the time and insight of its CEO, and most CEOs pour all of it into delivery and none of it into marketing. The call told me I'm reading that right. Forty-five minutes, and it set the direction for the day. A few smaller wins since then, and I feel great. Other days I feel frustrated and down, like I'm rolling a rock uphill. Same person, same company, opposite mood, and usually it comes down to something small. Here's the part people don't want to hear. The swings don't shrink over time. You just learn to keep building on the low days anyway. Building: AgentCraft (dot) ai Grow your personal brand in minutes per day with voice notes
- LinkedInA prospect asked me to quote personal branding for 30 people. The company only had 60 employees. Half of them, they wanted posting. I said yes, but the request stuck with me. Because it's the thing the whole industry keeps getting wrong. Right now personal branding gets sold one executive at a time. Consultants and ghostwriters running high-ticket engagements, one person at a time. That's a real business, but it's a sliver of the actual market. The much bigger market is every executive who works inside a company. And they should all be doing this themselves. Think about how you actually market a company. The default move is handing it to the marketing team to post generic content on the company accounts. Pictures on Facebook and Instagram. Meanwhile the people who know the most, the ones doing the work, say nothing. Flip it. Tap into the insights and knowledge sitting inside those 30 executives. Real content about what they actually do. That's a better way to market the whole organization than any company page ever will be. And picture what the internet looks like if this happens everywhere. 30 execs out of every 60-person company posting real experience and real thinking, instead of a marketing team scheduling stock photos. More interesting to read. More useful. So the personal branding space is due for a shake-up. The consultants aren't bad at the job. The problem is the model only serves a handful of people who can afford it, while the far larger group who'd benefit most gets nothing. If you run a company, who inside your building knows the most and says the least? Building: AgentCraft dot ai Grow your personal brand in minutes per day with voice notes
- ThreadsBelieving AI will help your marketing is the easy part. Actually shipping content with it is where most SMBs stall. Conviction isn't the gap. Execution is.
