
Something that keeps playing back to me across so many different conversations from founders and marketing teams is that they’re making more content than ever but they’re getting fewer leads.
Some blame the algorithm, some global uncertainty. One founder told me his team had put out more content in the last quarter than the previous two years combined. Pipeline hadn't moved an inch.
Every founder in your category is posting now. Same platforms, chasing the same keywords, running the same paid campaigns their competitors are running.
The volume cancels itself out. More posts in the feed doesn't mean more people paying attention. It just means more noise everyone has to filter through before anyone gets heard.
Content still works when it's genuinely good. But the gap costing founders pipeline right now is trust, and trust doesn't scale through a feed the way it scales through a person.
The founders we work with who've broken through this aren't posting more. They're being introduced more.
One warm introduction from someone your buyer already trusts does more for pipeline than a month of scheduled posts. We've watched this happen often enough to stop calling it luck.
Content earns attention. A trusted person passing your name along earns a meeting. Only one of those scales through an algorithm you don't control.
Most founders treat warm intros as a nice-to-have, something to chase once the content calendar's sorted. Flip that around: the content should be feeding the partnership strategy, not replacing it.
Start with who already has your buyer's attention. A small trusted community beats a big generic audience every time.
Then ask what's in it for them. The best introductions happen when making one makes the introducer look sharper too, not just because you asked nicely.
Before you plan next month's content, write down the five people who could open a door for you this quarter. If that list is shorter than your content calendar, you've found the real gap.
Drop me a line and tell me who's on your list. I'll tell you if I think you're missing the obvious one.