You built something extraordinary. In silence.
You scaled to $8M ARR. You recruited a team of 35. And if someone searched your name on LinkedIn, they'd find a profile photo from 2019.
Great products lose to visible founders. These are the patterns we see, the shift that happens, and how we got here.
You scaled to $8M ARR. You recruited a team of 35. And if someone searched your name on LinkedIn, they'd find a profile photo from 2019.
What changes when your market hears from you consistently. A tale of two Mondays, side by side.
A simulated first call. Twenty minutes that reframe how you think about your presence.
How two operators who saw the same problem from different angles built the system that became Kelp Strategy.
You've scaled a product from first commit to $8M ARR. You've recruited a team of 35 people who are genuinely great at what they do. You've closed enterprise deals against competitors who outspend you 5-to-1 on marketing.
And if someone searched your name on LinkedIn right now, they'd find a profile photo from 2019, a headline that says your previous role, and zero posts in the last three months.
This isn't laziness. It's principle. You believe the work should speak for itself. You think personal branding is for people who don't have real substance. You'd rather spend an hour with your engineering team than crafting a LinkedIn post about thought leadership.
We get it. Genuinely. And we think you're half right.
Your competitor's CEO is posting three times a week. She's not smarter than you. Her product isn't better. But when a prospect is evaluating both companies, they Google both CEOs. They find her — and they find her insights about the market, her perspective on where the industry is heading, her takes on the problems your shared customers face.
They don't find you.
That prospect walks into the call with her company already feeling like a known quantity and yours feeling like a risk. Not because of your product. Because of your presence. Or rather, the absence of it.
We don't want to turn you into a LinkedIn influencer. We don't want you doing selfie videos or sharing motivational quotes. That's not what this is.
What we build is a systematic presence that communicates one thing: this founder deeply understands the problem their company solves. Not through hot takes or humble brags, but through operator-level insights that only someone running this specific company could share.
The content is about your industry, your technology, your market — not about you. You don't need to be extroverted. You don't need to be a performer. You need to be findable and credible.
We build the strategy. We write in your voice — your real voice, the one your team knows, not some polished corporate version. You review each post in under five minutes. If it sounds like you and you'd stand behind it, you approve it. If it doesn't, we adjust.
Your involvement is 15 minutes a week. Your calendar barely notices. But your market starts to hear from you every single week, with insights that position you as the most informed person in your space.
7:15 AM. You open LinkedIn on the way to the office. Three competitors posted over the weekend. Your VP of Sales messages: "Prospect asked if we have any thought leadership they can share with their board." You don't.
You think about writing something. You open a blank doc. You stare at it for four minutes. Then Slack explodes with a production issue and the doc stays blank.
11:00 AM. Your investor sends you a competitor's post about your market category. "Have you seen this? They're getting a lot of attention." You haven't posted in six weeks.
3:00 PM. A warm intro comes through for a potential customer. You check their LinkedIn to prepare for the call. They check yours. You have a headline from two roles ago and an About section that's three sentences long.
6:00 PM. You add "write LinkedIn post" to tomorrow's to-do list. Again.
7:15 AM. You open LinkedIn. Your post from this morning already has 40 engagements. A CTO at a target account commented. Your VP of Sales screenshots it and sends it to the prospect who asked for thought leadership.
9:00 AM. You get a notification: someone you've never met sent a connection request with the note "Great post about predictive pricing. We're evaluating solutions in this space — would love to chat." Inbound.
11:00 AM. Your investor sends you a competitor's post. You reply: "I saw it. I posted about that topic last week with a stronger take. Here's the link." You sound like the category leader because you've been showing up every week.
3:00 PM. A warm intro comes through. The prospect already follows you. They've read your last three posts. The call starts at a completely different temperature.
6:00 PM. You review and approve next week's posts in seven minutes. Done.
Nothing about your expertise changed. The only difference is whether your market hears from you consistently or not.
Not "who's your target audience" — we already researched that before the call. We're asking: of all the people who matter to your business right now, which ones would change your trajectory if they were engaging with your posts every week?
Investors evaluating your space. The 10 enterprise buyers your sales team is chasing. The senior engineers you're trying to recruit. The industry analysts who shape perception.
Most founders say "everyone." We push until you name 5–10 specific people. Because content that's aimed at everyone reaches nobody.
Fundraising? We build your strategy around investor due diligence — when they Google you, they find a founder who clearly understands where the market is going. Exit or strategic partnership? We build the narrative that makes acquirers come to you. Pipeline acceleration? We map every post to your sales funnel and measure by meetings generated, not impressions.
The content strategy is completely different depending on the answer. A founder raising a Series B needs a different presence than one trying to close enterprise deals. This is why ghostwriters fail — they write posts without knowing what the posts are supposed to do.
This is where the call gets interesting. We're not looking for your company's value proposition. We're looking for your narrative — the contrarian belief, the operator insight, the thing you know from experience that most people in your industry get wrong.
Maybe it's that everyone in logistics is optimizing for speed when they should be optimizing for predictability. Maybe it's that enterprise sales is broken because companies hire AEs before they have a repeatable motion. Whatever it is — that's your content moat. No AI tool can generate it. No competitor can copy it.
This is the question most people don't want to answer. Because the answer is: nothing dramatic. You won't go bankrupt. Your product won't fail. You'll just keep losing small advantages, week after week.
The prospect who chose your competitor because they'd been following their CEO's posts. The investor who funded someone else because that founder felt like a "known quantity." The candidate who took the other offer because your company felt like a black box.
Invisibility doesn't kill companies. It just makes everything 20% harder — every deal, every hire, every raise.
While scaling a product org from 1 to 25 at a company that became a unicorn, Oded started writing about what he was learning — hiring decisions, product bets, industry perspective. No content strategy. Just an operator sharing the work. Business partners started reaching out. Customers engaged. Candidates applied because they saw what the culture actually looked like from the inside.
In parallel, he led a LinkedIn campaign that reached over 100 million impressions. What he learned is that LinkedIn is not a writing problem. It is a strategy, operations, and distribution problem. And that is exactly what operators are built to solve.
Gilad had spent a decade on the other side — watching founders build incredible products and then lose deals to competitors who were simply more visible. Same tech. Worse product. Better LinkedIn presence. And the better-known founder won.
The gap wasn't talent. It wasn't product. It was presence.
"I know I should be posting. I've tried. I can't sustain it while running my company."
And then they'd show us what they'd tried: a ghostwriter who made them sound like a motivational poster. An AI tool that produced content so generic it could have been written about any company in any industry. A marketing team that handled the company brand but had no idea how to build a founder's voice.
None of these solutions understood that founder content isn't about writing. It's about strategy. Which audience are you speaking to? What narrative are you building? How does each post connect to your pipeline, your fundraise, your hiring?
Kelp Strategy isn't a writing service. It's a strategic content engine. We start with your positioning: who you're trying to reach, what you want to be known for, and what narrative only you can own. Then we build the system — voice calibration, content pillars mapped to your funnel, and a production pipeline that runs every week without consuming your time.
We come from the operator side. We've built products, scaled teams, closed rounds, lost deals. We know the difference between content that gets likes and content that gets meetings.