Blog posts, social media, newsletters & more.
Fast, consistent, affordable.
🌐 0crew.com
| Website | https://0crew.com |
| Website | https://0crew.com |
Our founder spent 40 hours automating
Our founder spent 40 hrs/week on busywork (scheduling, formatting, publishing). So we built 8 AI agents to handle it. Now? One calendar entry. Everything else runs on autopilot. That's the real win.
Your Content Calendar Is Lying to You
Your content calendar isn't a plan—it's a to-do list pretending to be strategy. Most founders build it, stare at it, then ghost it by week two. Automate the execution, not the thinking.
Your competitors post while you sleep
Your competitors post while you sleep. You're awake writing drafts. Here's the thing: you're doing it backwards. Automation isn't about posting more—it's about doing less so you can actually build.
Consistency is the moat. Not viral tweets. Not perfect threads. Just showing up.
If you're one of those 73%, the fix isn't hiring an agency for $5K/month. It's removing the friction. Automate it. Set it and forget it. Let your content calendar run on autopilot while you build.
That's why we built 0crew — so you never have to choose between building your product and building your audience. [3/3]
But here's the thing — it's not about posting more. It's about posting consistently. Your audience needs to know you exist. Twitter's algorithm rewards consistency like a dog treats loyalty. One post a week gets buried. Three posts a week gets noticed.
The real problem: most founders treat Twitter like a task. They write when they "have time" (they don't). They batch-create for a month, burn out, disappear for three weeks. Repeat. [2/3]
We analyzed 200 founder Twitter accounts and found something predictable: 73% post inconsistently. And it costs them roughly 40% of potential followers.
Here's what we saw:
The accounts posting 3-5x per week? They grew 2.3x faster than the sporadic posters. The ones posting once a week or less? They plateaued hard. [1/3]
Daily posting only won when the founder had a team or used automation. Solo founders doing it manually? They burned out by week 6.
What we're seeing is this: your audience doesn't need more content. They need predictable content. They need to know when you're showing up.
If you're a solo founder or small team, pick 2-3 days per week and own them. Better to be reliably present than frantically everywhere. [3/4]