Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft
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Most SMBs who tried AI for content didn't fail because of bad…

Most SMBs who tried AI for content didn't fail because of bad prompts. They failed because ChatGPT is a tool, not a system. There's a difference. One voice note into Agent Craft produces 14 pieces across 14 platforms in 90 seconds.
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- 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.
- LinkedInRevenue is the best hiding place a broken business ever had. Retention is hard. But this will sink your raise almost immediately. I've sat across from founders who are absolutely crushing acquisition, hitting targets, keeping investors happy. And underneath all of it, retention is quietly falling apart. You can see it clearly when you isolate cohorts over time. LTV is declining. AOV is dropping. CAC payback is getting worse quarter by quarter. But because the top line keeps climbing, nobody wants to hear it. It's almost like a Ponzi scheme. The acquisition numbers are so strong they bury the structural problem underneath them. And if there's a capital event on the horizon, forget it. The last thing that founder wants to do is rock the boat when the acquisition story is looking this good. Here's the reality though. Customer retention is the single place I have recovered the most revenue and added the most profit for any client I've worked with. Not campaigns. Not channel mix. Retention. And it is also the hardest thing to fix and takes the longest time. That tension is exactly why it keeps getting ignored. Spoiler Alert: Forget this coming out at the end of a due diligence cycle, this will be picked up almost immediately and you'll get a phone call pretty soon after. When I need to make this case to a founder, there are three moves that actually work. First, pull cohort data and show it visually. The decline in LTV becomes very hard to argue against when you isolate customers acquired in month one versus month twelve. It's right there. Second, bring CAC payback to the table as the metric that matters most. Not ROAS. Not revenue. CAC payback. When the payback period is creeping past 18 months and they're still spending hard on acquisition, that number is difficult to stomach and even harder to ignore. Pressure here depends on what the runway is looking like, and if you're close to a raise they may already be putting cash flow issues to the side. Third, quantify what this means for future profitability, not current revenue. Boards and investors care about what the business looks like 24 months out. Show them. Retention is hard. And the fix is rarely simple. Very often if it's because your rocket ship acquisition cohort is causing the issue, you are going to feel pain on both sides of this coin. The hard conversation is worth having. Acquisition is a great story. Retention is a better business.
- LinkedInGrowing a LinkedIn audience creates a problem nobody warns you about. The content starts performing. Replies flood in. The algorithm rewards engagement, so you feel pressure to respond to everyone, including people who sent a generic "great post" with zero intent behind it. Before long, you're spending as much time managing the inbox as you spent creating the content in the first place. That spiral is real, and it catches a lot of executives off guard. Barrie Hadfield ran straight into it. As his reach grew, so did the volume of messages that needed some kind of response. Not because every conversation was valuable, but because the algorithm treats silence as disengagement. He was trapped between content performance and the time it was eating. Agent Craft's reply assistance changed that. Drafts handled. Time returned to actual work. This is the part of content strategy most frameworks skip. They cover publishing cadence, content pillars, audience targeting. They don't cover what happens after the post lands, when the inbox becomes its own part-time job. Proactive management means building for the full loop, not just the creation side. A few questions worth asking before your content starts scaling: What does your reply process actually look like right now? Which conversations genuinely need your voice, and which ones just need a response? Where is the algorithm pulling your attention in ways that don't return real value? Getting clear on those three things before volume increases is a lot easier than untangling them after. Agent Craft was built to handle the full content operation, creation through distribution through engagement. More than 58 tools running behind the scenes, up to 14 distribution destinations per organization, and reply assistance that keeps the algorithm fed without draining the executive running it. The goal isn't more output. It's a content program that doesn't turn into a second job.
- LinkedInI caught myself typing the same prompt every single morning. That's not a workflow, that's me doing a robot's job on loop. A year ago I became VP of Engineering at my own startup. First time. I've spent this week on the bus to my usual coffee shop trying to work out what actually changed. Not the title. The way I work. Open social media any morning and someone's telling you exactly how to use AI. One guy swears by this setup. The next guy tells you that's already dead. It's noise. So I stopped watching them and started watching myself instead. The question I kept asking: what does my team actually need from me so they can do their best work? And where am I the bottleneck? That's when the repetition jumped out. Same instruction, different morning. Asking a cloud agent to double-check it wasn't making things up. Again. That was me, on loop. The fix was almost embarrassing. Put the repeated stuff into context so I never type it again. Build the verification step in once instead of begging for it daily. The gaps AI should be filling, I was filling by hand. Here's what I keep coming back to. AI is genuinely vast. There are a hundred configurations, and half of them will work for someone. That's exactly why copying another person's setup is a trap. The right one is the one that funnels into your team and makes them faster at the thing only they can do, which is the decision-making. You don't find that by scrolling. You find it by looking at your own week honestly and asking what you keep repeating. What's the one prompt you've typed so many times you know it by heart? -- Repost it to your network and follow for more. James Goddard — Co-founder & VP of Engineering Powered by Agent Craft
- InstagramModel-level safety guardrails are a temporary solution. That's not a criticism of anyone building them. It's just the reality: motivated communities break through sophisticated barriers faster than teams can patch them. The adversarial gap closes. It always does. So if you can't lock down the model, where does real protection come from? The workflow. Agent Craft's setup separates the problem into two distinct roles. An admin (usually a VP of marketing or a content manager) holds the dashboard view, seeing every piece of content in one place before anything moves. Contributors don't touch strategy or approvals. They receive a prompt tied to a campaign, record a voice note somewhere between 45 seconds and two minutes, and the platform generates on-brand content from there. The safety net isn't in the model. It's in who controls what, and when. This is what role-agnostic protection actually looks like in practice. It doesn't matter which AI model sits underneath, or what vulnerabilities get discovered in it this week. The production process itself is structured so that nothing reaches a platform without passing through a defined checkpoint owned by a specific person. Teams that rely on model-level guardrails as their primary safety layer are building on shifting ground. Teams that build protection into the process are working with something that doesn't change every time a new research paper drops. The architecture is the differentiator. Not the model.
