Skip to content
← All content

Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft

X (Twitter)

Six companies in, and the one thing people still argue about is where…

X (Twitter) post

Six companies in, and the one thing people still argue about is where to begin. Not what to build. Not how to fund it. Not how to find customers. Where to begin. I keep seeing the same pattern play out across early-stage founders and SMB leaders who want to grow their personal brand or start creating content. They spend months on strategy documents, brand guidelines, content calendars, positioning frameworks. They're preparing to start. They're not starting. Here's my read on why this happens: we've collectively convinced ourselves that visible action before perfection is somehow embarrassing. That putting something out there before it's polished is a risk to reputation. That you need the whole system before you can press go. That's backwards. And I say that as someone who's been through this six times now. Every company I've built started with a version of the idea that turned out to be wrong. Or at least incomplete. The first version of AgentCraft was a voice-to-content tool for individuals doing thought leadership. Simple premise, clean pitch. But when I started showing it to people, talking to prospects, watching how real companies worked, the picture shifted. What they actually needed was something for teams, not solo executives. The value was in giving the whole leadership layer a voice, not just the founder. I would never have found that if I'd spent six months perfecting the individual product before shipping it. You find out what's actually needed by being in motion. This applies directly to content. Executives who wait until they have the perfect brand narrative, the right tone, the ideal posting schedule, they're not being strategic. They're avoiding the discomfort of being seen before they feel ready. And the market doesn't wait for that feeling to arrive. The content creators and founders who build real audiences aren't the ones who planned longest. They're the ones who started soonest, paid attention to what landed, and were prepared to pivot when the signal told them to. Let's say you take a different approach. You post something imperfect this week. Not embarrassing, just not magazine-finished. You watch what it does. You probe further rather than reflexively dropping the idea because the first version wasn't perfect. You iterate. In 30 days you know more about your audience, your voice, and your positioning than any strategy document could have told you. The thing I've seen slow companies down more than anything isn't bad strategy. It's the refusal to be imperfect in public long enough to learn what good actually looks like for them. Pick the space that interests you. Start working. Be prepared to pivot. If you're building something and want to see how fast you can go from idea to consistent content output, try AgentCraft free for 30 days at agentcraft.ai.

Mark HadfieldJun 2, 2026Published to X - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

More content from Agent Craft