Let’s be brutally honest about something for a moment.

Most tech companies don’t have a content strategy problem. They have a discipline problem. Here’s what I mean.

Product gets the red carpet treatment. Roadmaps are debated for days on end. Edge cases are heavily documented. Deployments are watched like a hawk. If something breaks, there’s a postmortem.

Content is a different story altogether. It’s whatever someone can squeeze in at the last minute before the next sprint planning meeting.

That disconnect is what’s costing these companies.

Bursts don’t accrue. Authority only grows over time.

And the uncomfortable truth most don’t want to come within a ten-foot poll is that the market can feel when your presence is inconsistent. When you publish three sharp pieces of content in a month and then disappear for six weeks, it signals distraction from your end. Perhaps even doubt.

Trust doesn’t grow where there are gaps.

Heads would roll if tech founders launched a product without infrastructure. Yet they still expect thought leadership to emerge from inspiration alone. That’s not even remotely realistic.

Respectfully, treat content like an asset if you want it to behave like one. You can’t bend around it. Not with brainstorming sessions but with a solid plan and a repeatable system to put it into motion.

Now, let’s talk about content performance, shall we?

If your team is celebrating likes from founders while your sales team has never mentioned a single post, something is horribly off.

The real question is not how many people it reached but how much it resonates.

For instance:

That’s where to focus on.

And here’s another inconvenient truth: distribution is not a growth hack. It’s simply operational hygiene.

Publishing and praying for a major organic lift is like pushing code without checking it first. You might get lucky. Or you may not notice a problem until it’s too late to do anything about it.

Serious companies build distribution into their workflow. It’s what common sense dictates.

Repurposing your content breathes new life into ideas that still have value, transforming what already works into a foundation that reinforces your message across every format and audience.

Syndication is less about flooding the internet with your name and more strategically placing your work in front of people who were never going to stumble upon it otherwise, turning visibility into genuine reach.

When you reach out directly to someone, you're not scrambling for attention out of desperation but rather making a deliberate, targeted choice to connect with exactly the right person at exactly the right moment.

Founders who achieve lasting success don't win by being the loudest voice in the room but through building systems that keep them consistently visible, relevant, and impossible to ignore over time.

Month after month, they allow their thinking to mature and shift in public, giving their audience a front-row seat to an evolving mind rather than a polished, static persona.

Over time, prospects begin to trace a throughline — basically a coherent, recognizable thread of reasoning that signals this person doesn't just have opinions, but a genuine and considered point of view.

That kind of consistency quietly does something most marketing tactics never can, gradually dissolving the skepticism that stands between a prospect and their decision to trust you.

So, if your product is engineered for scale but your narrative isn’t, you’ve built asymmetry into your company. One side compounds while the other resets every quarter.

Before hiring another agency or redesigning your website, answer this honestly:

Would your content process survive a sprint review?

If not, refactor it. Seriously, though.