Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft
Bluesky
Most companies believe in AI for content. Few actually ship it…

Most companies believe in AI for content. Few actually ship it consistently. The gap isn't capability. It's friction. The ones winning right now removed the steps that killed momentum before anything got published.
More content from Agent Craft
- ThreadsGeneric AI tools strip your voice out. Agent Craft was built specifically because that gap exists. Voice notes in, authentic content out, across every platform you publish to.
- LinkedInTwo types of SMB executives are showing up on LinkedIn right now. The first treats it like a task. They carve out 90 minutes, open a blank document, write something passable, second-guess it, publish late, and move on. It happens maybe twice a month if they're disciplined. The second treats it like a conversation. Voice note in the car, published before they park. Three minutes, not ninety. And because they're actually consistent, the algorithm notices. Here's the real debate though: does speed make content worse, or does 90 minutes of overthinking just produce more polished mediocrity? A lot of senior people assume the careful, considered piece will always outperform the raw, fast one. The data doesn't back that up. Unscripted, unpolished posts routinely outperform carefully edited ones because authenticity creates a kind of friction that makes people stop scrolling. But some executives swear the slower process is what keeps their content credible. That the extra time isn't overthinking, it's editing out the parts that would embarrass them. So genuinely curious where people land on this: do you think speed and quality are in tension for executive content, or is the "quality takes time" belief mostly just friction dressed up as standards?
- FacebookMost executives posting on LinkedIn aren't failing because they have nothing to say. They're failing because 90 minutes to publish one post is just not a realistic ask. Agent Craft brings that down to one to three minutes. Not by automating away your voice, but by capturing it fast and getting it out while it's still relevant. So here's the real question: if time wasn't the barrier, would you be posting more yourself, or would you still outsource it to an agency? Because a manufacturing company once paid an agency good money for social, and ended up with a few dozen followers and zero engagement. Their organic posts looked like ads. Nobody cared. There's a difference between content that sounds like a brand and content that sounds like a person. Which one do you think actually converts?
- LinkedInHere's what most people building AI content tools are missing right now. Everyone assumes the models are the product. They're not. GPT-4, Claude, Gemini, Grok, they're all good enough. The model is a commodity. What actually determines whether a tool succeeds or fails isn't the intelligence behind it. It's whether anyone bothers to open it tomorrow morning. Most tools fail on distribution. Not because the tech is broken, but because busy people won't add another complicated thing to their day. If the tool asks too much of the user, the user stops using it. Simple as that. Building AgentCraft taught me there are really only two things that matter once you've chosen your model. Distribution and domain. Distribution means making the tool so frictionless that someone with a full calendar actually uses it every day. For us, that's a two-minute voice note. Your phone, record your thoughts, done. That's it. Domain means knowing what to say in the right places to build real credibility with the right buyers. Not just producing content. Producing content that converts. Without those two layers, AI is just a faster way to generate stuff nobody reads. The model is where you start. Distribution and domain are the business.
- X (Twitter)I was sitting on my couch watching Diary of a CEO. The episode was about AI and jobs. I had a thought, paused the show, picked up my phone, and recorded a 45-second voice note. Then I went to bed.
- X (Twitter)$10,000 a month in recurring revenue sounds like a goal. It's actually a ceiling you're building for yourself.
