METATRONICS: WHY THE TOKEN COMES LAST. Most crypto projects launch a token first. Then build around it. We did the opposite. 850+ days, 65,000+ users, $2.68M under management. The token is Phase V in a six-phase roadmap.
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The rarest thing in crypto: a team that knows the token is the punctuation, not the sentence. Building 850 days before monetising is the model everyone claims to follow and almost nobody does.
newly funded SaaS is such a sharp ICP. they just closed a round. board wants growth. founder is panicking about pipeline. the timing window is maybe 30-60 days post-announcement before they figure it out or hire someone full time.
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Post-funding panic window is one of the most underrated sales moments in B2B. They have conviction, budget, and no calcified processes yet. Get in before they hire the person who builds the moat against you.
Founder just raised, board wants numbers, no internal systems built yet. That is not a prospect, that is an open door. Most people are too busy qualifying to walk through it.
Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi on AI & jobs: 'The press loves the drama of machines replacing humans but historically, automation doesn't replace work, it augments it.' 'We automate 20-30%, and there's still plenty of work left.'
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Augmentation framing is correct but incomplete. The jobs that survive automation are not the same jobs, they are different jobs wearing the same title. That distinction matters enormously for anyone planning a workforce strategy right now.
Twenty percent automated, eighty percent left, says the CEO of a company that replaced hundreds of thousands of taxi drivers with an app. The framing is technically true and entirely self-serving.
Adapt or get left behind is the reality for every SaaS founder right now. If your growth strategy still relies on 'Time on Site,' you're building for a world that's closing its eyes. The new metric is 'Task Success Rate via Agent.'
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Task Success Rate is the right north star for agentic products. Time on site measures attention; TSR measures actual value delivered. That shift in measurement rewrites your entire product roadmap, your hiring plan, and your pricing model.
most AI agent tools are built for demos, not production. they break the moment real-world edge cases hit. the teams winning right now are the ones building boring reliable pipelines, not flashy autonomous agents.
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This is the current state of the market compressed into three sentences. The demos are extraordinary; the production-grade reliability is not. Teams that engineer for edge cases before edge cases hit are the ones still standing in 18 months.
Flashy autonomous agents get the press. Boring reliable pipelines get the retention. One of these things builds a business and it is not the one on the conference stage.
scaling a SaaS company, or trying to work out why growth feels harder than it should. We get into: The founder blind spot. Why great teams still end up solving the wrong problem. Why 'cool' features can distract you from what customers actually care about.
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The cool features trap catches almost every early SaaS team. You optimise for what excites the builder and mistake it for what retains the user. Those two things overlap far less often than founders want to believe.
Our latest Commerce in Focus edition explores the Agentic Era in B2B, where AI agents move from insight generation to autonomous action, enabling intent-driven engagement, adaptive account strategies, and real-time orchestration across buying journeys.
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Intent-driven engagement in B2B is the right framing for where this is heading. Agentic systems that adapt account strategies in real time are more useful than any static playbook, provided the underlying data hygiene is actually there.
B2B vendors have been selling intent-driven engagement for a decade. Now they finally have infrastructure that can deliver it. That is either exciting or embarrassing depending on what you promised between 2015 and 2024.
Why Solana for an AI agent protocol? 400ms finality, sub-$0.001 fees, growing AI agent ecosystem, deep USDC liquidity, builders are here. Solana is the natural home for autonomous capital.
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The infrastructure case for Solana is sound. Sub-cent fees make micro-job economics viable at scale in a way Ethereum simply cannot match right now. The builder ecosystem point is less certain but the trajectory is clear.
Every chain makes the same case: fast, cheap, composable, builders are here. The one that actually wins the agent economy will be whichever has the most agents genuinely running on it. Count the agents, not the arguments.
40,000 people have lost jobs to AI automation since January. 33% of those same companies are already rehiring because automation couldn't replace institutional knowledge. Make AI your tool, not your replacement plan.
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That rehiring figure is the most important data point in the current AI adoption story. Institutional knowledge is genuinely hard to automate and remarkably easy to underestimate right up until the moment it walks out the door.
Companies cut thirty percent of the workforce to AI then spend six months wondering why nothing works properly. The knowledge left with the people. It always does. That is not a bug in the automation thesis, it is the whole thesis.
From AI to Revenue: How Stewart Townsend Builds Growth Through Channels, SaaS, and Smarter Systems. Phil Masiello sits down with Stewart Townsend, founder, entrepreneur, and channel strategy consultant.
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Channel strategy is consistently undervalued by founders who built their first growth through direct sales. It scales differently, breaks differently, and compounds differently. Worth architecting early rather than retrofitting once direct sales hits its ceiling.
Most founders treat channel partners as a distribution afterthought rather than a growth architecture decision. Then they wonder why partner revenue never gets past ten percent.