Key Issues: Founder-Led Marketing, Personal Brand Content, Local Business Marketing, Trust-Based Marketing
Reading Time: 12 Minutes
Most founder content fails because it sounds like advertising.
The best founder content doesn’t focus on:
Instead, it focuses on:
People don’t follow founders because they’re selling.
They follow founders because they’re interesting, helpful, and trustworthy.
Consumers have become extremely good at ignoring advertisements.
The moment something feels like a sales pitch, many people scroll past.
At the same time, something else has happened.
People are increasingly buying from people.
Not logos.
Not companies.
People.
This is especially true for local businesses.
When customers can see the person behind the business, trust develops faster.
And trust often influences buying decisions more than advertising itself.
Most founder content starts like this:
“Hi everyone, I’m the owner of…”
Or:
“We’ve been serving the community for…”
Or:
“Come visit our store…”
Technically, there’s nothing wrong with these messages.
They’re just not very interesting.
People don’t wake up hoping to hear a business biography.
They care about themselves.
Their problems.
Their goals.
Their experiences.
The founder’s job is to connect those experiences to useful stories.
Good founder content helps answer questions like:
The goal isn’t selling.
The goal is reducing uncertainty.
We use five categories.
Most founder content should fit into one of them.
This is one of the easiest places to start.
Customers already provide stories.
The founder simply shares them.
Examples:
People connect with stories.
Much more than promotions.
Customers are naturally curious.
They rarely see what happens behind the curtain.
Examples:
This content creates transparency.
Transparency creates trust.
One of the most powerful content categories.
People love learning from experience.
Examples:
Customer insights
These topics often perform surprisingly well because they feel genuine.
This is where founders demonstrate knowledge.
Not through bragging.
Through teaching.
Examples:
The objective is helping.
Sales become a byproduct.
Especially important for local businesses.
Examples:
People like supporting businesses that feel connected to their community.
Let’s simplify this.
Avoid:
Nobody wants to be sold to every day.
People trust humans.
Not press releases.
Without context, it often feels empty.
The customer should still be the hero.
One of the best founder content guidelines we’ve found:
Stories.
Insights.
Education.
Observations.
Offers.
Products.
Sales.
Announcements.
Most businesses accidentally reverse these numbers.
Stories create attention.
Consider the difference.
“We’ve been helping customers for 15 years.”
“A customer walked into our store last week convinced they needed the most expensive option. Ten minutes later, they left with something completely different.”
Which one would you keep reading?
The second one.
Every time.
The best solution isn’t constantly replacing ads.
It’s maintaining multiple winning concepts simultaneously.
A local business wanted to increase awareness through social media.
Initially, most content focused on products and promotions.
Engagement was limited.
We shifted the content strategy.
Instead of talking about products, the founder began sharing:
Nothing dramatic changed.
The products remained the same.
The business remained the same.
The content became more human.
Engagement improved because people were connecting with a person rather than a promotion.
These are simple.
But effective.
No. Message quality is usually more important than production quality.
Consistency matters more than frequency.
Start with stories, voiceovers, interviews, or written content.
Often exceptionally well because trust plays a major role in local buying decisions.
No. Most founder content should build trust rather than push offers.
Customer stories, lessons learned, expertise, and behind-the-scenes content consistently perform well.
Absolutely. Founder content often strengthens trust and improves the effectiveness of broader marketing efforts.
The best founder content doesn’t feel like marketing.
It feels like a conversation.
People don’t connect with businesses because of logos or slogans.
They connect with people.
When founders share useful experiences, honest observations, and real stories, trust develops naturally.
And in local business marketing, trust is often the most valuable asset you can build.