For years, Nathaniel ran a done-for-you and done-with-you agency. His clients were coaches, podcasters, newsletter writers, course creators — people who had built real audiences and had something substantive to say, and who needed the infrastructure to match. He built it for them. Websites, brand positioning, email sequences, launch funnels, content systems. The full stack.
The work was good. The model had real limits. Projects that should have taken six weeks took four months. VAs who were reliable for one build weren't reliable for the next. The vision Nathaniel had for each client — the version of their business that he could see clearly — kept hitting a ceiling imposed by how many hours were in the day and how many dependable people he could coordinate at once. He could never fully deliver on what he saw was possible for them.
He also watched his clients carry the same gap on their own. He'd hand off a complete build — a website, a funnel, a six-month content system — and six months later the newsletter had gone quiet, the follow-up sequences weren't running, and the person was back to doing everything manually because there was no one to operate the infrastructure they'd paid to build. The work didn't stick without the person behind it.
"At some point I realized I couldn't in good conscience keep selling someone a $10,000 build that takes four months to deliver, when the outcome they actually need is achievable in a week with the right AI infrastructure. That's not a service you can stand behind anymore."
The moment he understood what AI agents could actually do — not generate text, but hold context, execute full workflows, know a business and operate inside it — the old model became impossible to defend. The thing his clients needed wasn't another build that would go stale. It was an operator. Something installed once that runs continuously, handles the workflows, and gets more useful over time rather than requiring constant maintenance.
He built ThoughtLeaderAI within days of that realization. Not after a quarter of planning. Days. He started with Runa — his own full AI operator, built to run his businesses — and had it running inside his own work before he packaged it for sale. The Client Concierge came from the intake system he built after watching too many good leads fall through during slow follow-up. Voice to Broadcast came from the pipeline he actually uses to publish every week. The Content Machine came from two years of refining prompts that produce output worth sending.
Every product in the vault went through the same process: built for a real problem, run inside a real business, packaged only after it proved itself. The positioning is "We built it. You install it." That's not a tagline. It's exactly what happened.
The agency is still part of what Nathaniel does. The difference is that he now only takes on the work he can see clearly and execute fully. For the rest — the operational layer that coaches and creators have always needed and never been able to sustain — there's this.