Created from a single voice note with Agent Craft
Volume is where most SMBs quietly lose. Not on quality. Not on ideas.…

Volume is where most SMBs quietly lose. Not on quality. Not on ideas. On volume. Showing up consistently, across the channels where buyers actually spend time, compounds in ways that sporadic brilliance never does. That's just how distribution works. The problem is that consistent, multi-channel content used to require a team. A writer, a scheduler, someone to adapt a LinkedIn post for an email newsletter, someone else to cut it for a short-form video caption. For a small business, that's either a significant payroll line or a backlog that never gets cleared. Agent Craft was built to close that gap. The core mechanic is simple: speak a thought, and the system handles the rest, formatting, adapting, and distributing finished content across every major channel without manual reformatting in between. No prompt engineering. No marketing background required. A voice note goes in, and coordinated distribution comes out. This matters for a specific reason. The constraint for most SMB executives isn't having things to say. It's the gap between having a thought and that thought reaching an audience. That gap is where content dies. Agent Craft removes it. The operational shift is real. When content production no longer requires a dedicated workflow, the hours that once went into drafting, adapting, and scheduling get redirected toward the work that actually moves the business. For a company without a marketing department, that reallocation is the difference between having a content presence and not having one. Tens of millions of small and medium businesses are in this position right now. Every one of them wants good marketing done. Most of them don't have the headcount to do it manually at any meaningful scale. That's the market Agent Craft exists in. And the product is live.
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- LinkedInThe biggest campaign flops I've seen weren't the ones that blew up. They were the ones that never needed to happen in the first place. And I bet you're guilty of it too... Here's the pattern: a campaign is running well. Consistent results, predictable performance, solid returns. Then the new quarterly plan rolls around and there's pressure to show something new. Not better optimisation. Something new. So the working campaign gets killed to fund the next one. That's not a good decision, you know it - but you do it anyway, perhaps it's even a habit now. The average campaign length right now is around four months. The campaigns people still remember, the ones that actually built brands, ran for decades. That gap isn't a coincidence. Marketers are too close to their own work. You're living inside a campaign almost every day. Of course you get tired of it. But your customers aren't seeing it the same way you are, and your boredom is not a business reason to pull the budget. It's not always the marketers fault - pressure can come from your founder or CEO. I don't know a single founder who like losing money. Not one. So perhaps the issue is that we are interpreting a request to look for more alpha, as a request to put all your eggs into one basket and shoot for the moon. Communication is a funny thing. The smarter move is to run tighter secondary pods. Smaller experimental campaigns running in parallel, testing the new idea while the control keeps running. You only scale the new one if it outperforms what's already working. T he problem is most teams don't have the infrastructure to run experimentation properly, so they default to replacing rather than testing. They take the budget from a campaign that's delivering and hand it to something completely unproven. You lose predictable results. What you gain is entirely uncertain. If a campaign is working, your job is to protect it while you test around it. Not replace it because the calendar flipped.
- LinkedInI didn't build a marketing intelligence system because I planned to. I built it because I kept running into the same wall with clients, great data sitting in silos, conversion numbers improving on paper, but no one could tell the investor why. So I built the infrastructure myself. Five live data pipelines. A deterministic analytics engine running 28 statistical methods. 199 tests written, 199 passing. Automated investor-grade reporting. All of it built solo, while working as a fractional CMO for the clients who needed it most. That system is what sat behind a $3.5M seed raise for one client, and a $2M raise for another. Neither of those outcomes came from a pitch deck with good slides. They came from being able to show, with clean data and traceable logic, exactly where revenue was coming from, what it cost to acquire it, and what the realistic path to margin improvement looked like. There's a version of this I see all the time that doesn't work. A client hits a 26% lift in conversions, which we did in 2025, and the instinct is to stop there. Declare a win. Move on to the next campaign. But that conversion number doesn't mean anything unless you can connect it to LTV, to payback period, to how that cohort behaves at month six versus month one. That's what investors are actually asking about. That's what boards want answered before they approve the next round. The companies I work with aren't early-stage guesses anymore. They've found product-market fit. The question isn't whether the product works. It's whether the growth system behind it is built to survive scrutiny. Building the measurement infrastructure after you've already started raising is the wrong order. Most founders learn that the hard way. At what point does a company get too far into a raise to build the foundation they should have started with?
- X (Twitter)I held off on posting for a long time because I genuinely didn't think my opinions were worth putting in front of people. Not false modesty. I actually believed that. I had ideas constantly, half-formed thoughts about where things were heading, what was working, what was janky in how teams were actually building, but I kept them in my head. Told myself I was too busy. Told myself people didn't need to hear from me. That belief, really and truly, is the single biggest thing holding most SMB leaders back from building any kind of presence online right now. Here's what I've watched happen while leaders like me were heads-down and quiet. The companies pulling ahead aren't doing it because their brand pages are sharper or their ad spend is higher. They're doing it because the actual human at the top is showing up and talking. Not polished, not corporate-scripted, just present and consistent. Look at any category where a founder has posted consistently for two or three years, their personal profile is running laps around the company page. Not because of production quality or budget. Because people follow people. They want to know what that person thinks. And the gap between a brand page and its founder's personal profile at most SMBs I've looked at is embarrassing. The brand page gets the product updates and the company announcements. Eleven likes, mostly employees, maybe a client if you're lucky. Meanwhile the person running the thing has actual opinions about the industry, sees patterns other people don't, has made mistakes worth talking about, and is saying none of it publicly. Buyers aren't stupid. They can tell the difference between a logo talking and a person talking. In B2B especially, trust runs through the human, not the brand asset. The reason most leaders give for not posting is time. I used to say it too. But the time argument doesn't hold when you actually look at it. Recording a rough voice note costs you less than a coffee break. The ideas are already in your head. Getting them out doesn't require a blocked afternoon or a blank document, it requires thirty seconds of not talking yourself out of it. The time story is what you tell yourself when the real problem is either friction in the workflow or a quieter belief that your thoughts aren't worth sharing publicly. That second one is what I had to deal with personally. And it's more common than most people admit out loud. The thing is, you are the brainchild of your business. Everything you know about your market, your customers, your product, the lessons from the things that went sideways, all of that is sitting in your head producing exactly zero reach because you haven't said it anywhere. That's not a noble choice to stay focused. That's a slow leak in your company's ability to grow, because share of voice in your category is being accumulated by someone else while you're quiet. I'm not saying post for vanity. I'm saying your silence has a real cost. There's a competitor somewhere in your space whose founder is posting a few times a week. Not brilliantly. Not with a media team behind it. Just talking. And over months, that consistent presence builds trust and familiarity in a way that no amount of ad creative replicates. Buyers remember names. They remember who made them think. They don't remember which brand had a cleaner logo. The friction is real though, I'm not dismissing it. An executive running a business can't carve out ninety minutes on a Wednesday to sit and write. That's a fantasy workflow. The only thing that works is getting the ideas out of someone's head with as little resistance as possible and then having the scaffolding around that raw thinking do the rest. Voice note to published post is the only chain that's short enough to actually survive contact with a real leader's schedule. I started taking this seriously myself because I realised I was leaving something on the table I had no good reason to leave. Not because someone told me to, but because I looked at what was actually happening in the market and the answer was obvious. If you're running something worth running, you have something worth saying. The question is whether you actually believe that yet. — James, co-founder @ Agent Craft Powered by Agent Craft 🎙️→📱
- Threads30 days. 30 real posts. No credit card. Agent Craft's free trial puts a full AI marketing agent inside your workflow before you spend a dollar. The first voice note is where it clicks.
