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Hey {{ck:_first_name|friend}},

I don't have a marketing team.

No agency.

No budget for ads.

Just me, my laptop, and a few AI tools I use every week.

When I started building The Juicer, I panicked.

How do I market this thing?

I was working a 9–5.

I had no time to create content, send emails, and manage social.

But here's what I discovered—

AI doesn't just help you create.

It helps you think.

Most people miss this.

But with the right 3 methods? You can run a full marketing system on the side.

The AI your stack deployed is losing customers.

You shipped it. It works. Tickets are resolving. So why are customers leaving?

Gladly's 2026 Customer Expectations Report uncovered a gap that most CIOs don't see until it's too late: 88% of customers get their issues resolved through AI — but only 22% prefer that company afterward. Resolution without loyalty is just churn on a delay.

The difference isn't the model. It's the architecture. How AI is integrated into the customer journey, what it hands off and when, and whether the system is designed to build relationships or just close tickets.

Download the report to see what consumers actually expect from AI-powered service — and what the data says about the platforms getting it right.

If you're responsible for the infrastructure, you're responsible for the outcome.

Method 1: Brainstorm everything with ChatGPT first.

Before I write a post, email, or offer, I brain-dump into ChatGPT.

The messy ideas.

The half-formed thoughts.

The "I don't even know how to explain this" things.

(I don’t even correct all the typos and bad grammar.)

I give it context: who I'm talking to, what's going on in my business.

Then I ask: "Help me turn this into something useful."

→ Posts get sharper
→ Ideas get clearer
→ I stop staring at blank pages

Method 2: Use a framework for every piece of content.

I use one simple structure for everything I write.

Problem → What's the reader struggling with?
Conventional Solution → What do most people try?
My Solution → What actually works (from experience)?

This keeps me from writing generic content.

It forces me to lead with their pain and not my solution.

The same applies to every newsletter, every LinkedIn post, every lead magnet.

Method 3: Repurpose everything once.

One idea shouldn't live in just one format.

Here's what I do after every piece of content:

Newsletter → LinkedIn post
LinkedIn post → carousel
Carousel → lead magnet

One idea. Multiple formats.

I'm not creating more.

I'm distributing smarter.

These 3 methods didn't come from a marketing course.

They came from months of testing. While juggling a full-time job.

And honestly? They're why I keep showing up. Without burning out.

You don't need to do more.

You just need to do the same things—smarter.

If you're only doing one of these right now, pick one more and try it this week.

Small upgrades compound.

Reply and tell me — which of these 3 methods are you already using?

I read every reply.

— Justin

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