Skip to content
← All content

Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft

X (Twitter)

I was wrong about influencers. For years I dismissed them. Thought…

X (Twitter) post

I was wrong about influencers. For years I dismissed them. Thought they were a lesser category of marketer. People who got lucky with an audience but didn't really understand the craft. I had no data to support that view. It was instinct, and it was wrong. What changed my mind was a simple observation: the bottleneck in business used to be product creation. Building something took time, capital, expertise. That's gone now. Anyone can build. Anyone can code. The barrier to creating a product or service has collapsed so fast that it barely registers as a constraint anymore. The new bottleneck is distribution. Reach. The ability to put something in front of people who trust you enough to actually pay attention. And that's exactly what influencers have. That's what they've been building while the rest of us were busy looking down on them. Reid Hoffman said years ago that influence would become the most important currency of the internet age. I thought he was overstating it. He wasn't. He was ahead of schedule. Here's why this matters right now. I see a lot of SMB owners and executives treating personal brand as optional. A nice-to-have. Something you do after the real work is done. That's the same mistake I was making about influencers. The same instinct that says "I'm a serious person with a serious business and I don't need to be posting content." The problem is the market doesn't care about that instinct. Distribution still goes to the people with reach and trust. It always did. What's changed is that ignoring it used to be survivable. Now it's not. If you're not building an audience, you're dependent on paid acquisition or referrals. Both of those have ceilings. Paid gets expensive. Referrals are inconsistent. A real audience compounds. You build it once and it keeps working. I reset my clock on this a while back. Started treating content and personal brand not as marketing add-ons but as core business infrastructure. The same way I think about sales process or product quality. And the compounding effect is real. It's slow at first, then it isn't. No pride involved in business. I was wrong. I updated. That's the move. It's coming, there's no question it's coming. The executives who figure out that distribution is the game will build the audiences. Everyone else will spend more on ads.

Mark HadfieldJun 7, 2026Published to X - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

More content from Agent Craft