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X (Twitter)

Got off a call last week that I hadn't planned for and didn't expect…

Got off a call last week that I hadn't planned for and didn't expect to learn anything from. A guy I went to school with, probably ten years since we'd actually spoken, found my LinkedIn. Saw I was co-founding Agent Craft and reached out. I'd just finished a training session, was tired, had a dozen things waiting. I picked up anyway. Thirty minutes later we'd both admitted something we don't often say out loud: that we'd each quietly gone off and built our own thing. Different industries, different paths. Same slightly terrified, slightly alive feeling underneath it all. Here's what stuck with me. He asked why I'd started posting content personally instead of just letting the company page do the work. Honest question from someone who knows how exposed it feels to put yourself out there publicly. I told him the truth. I wasn't posting because I had it figured out. I was posting because I felt like I had no real right to ask other founders to do something I wasn't willing to do myself. That's really and truly the only reason I started. Not a strategy. Not a growth plan. Just the uncomfortable logic of leading by example. We talk a lot about founder voice like it's a tactic. Post three times a week. Build a personal brand. Drive engagement. And sure, that's all real. Brand pages can sit at a few thousand followers while the person behind the brand has millions, because people follow people, not logos. That gap is real and it matters. But the reason I actually stepped into it wasn't the follower math. It was because I felt like a bit of a fraud encouraging founders to get visible while I kept myself comfortable behind the company name. That's the integrity part nobody puts in the content strategy doc. The call with my old school mate reminded me that you genuinely don't know what someone else is quietly building or quietly wrestling with. He's been growing his own business, dealing with his own version of the same fears, and we'd have just kept scrolling past each other on LinkedIn forever if he hadn't reached out and I hadn't picked up. The biggest pitfall I see in founders isn't that they don't know content matters. They know. The pitfall is they're waiting to feel ready. Waiting until the business is more established, until they have something profound to say, until they've sorted out what their "content strategy" is. Meanwhile the gap between their personal credibility and their brand's reach keeps widening in the wrong direction. I'm not here posting because I've got it all solved. I'm doing it because it's my duty as a co-founder to show up first. If you're a founder who's been quietly putting off the personal content thing, tell me what's actually holding you back. Not the polished answer. The real one.

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

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