GreenCore Solutions reported 207% quarter-over-quarter growth in AI Agent Stack traffic across 50 markets, with Asia-Pacific alone crossing 1 million inbound agent requests, according to PRNewswire. The spike was not a marketing campaign. It was a content strategy: the company shipped pre-built agent templates—packaged workflows users could install and modify—instead of documentation explaining how to build from scratch.
The company distributed vertical-specific templates: procurement agents for supply chain, customer service scripts for retail, compliance checkers for regulated industries. Users copied, tweaked, and deployed. Each deployment generated requests back to the platform, creating network effects. The more templates in circulation, the more inbound traffic, which surfaced new use cases, which fed the next template release. GreenCore turned its user base into a template library, and the library into a distribution engine.
The mechanism is accidental community-as-distribution. Most SaaS platforms ship features and expect adoption. GreenCore shipped starting points. A buyer in Singapore installs a procurement template, modifies it for local suppliers, and the platform logs the pattern. GreenCore packages that pattern into a new template, publishes it, and five more markets install it. The user never intended to contribute—he was solving his own problem—but the platform captured the workflow and redistributed it. Contribution became a byproduct of use, not a deliberate act.
Physical-product brands can run the same play with merchandising templates, not software agents. Publish a retailer-ready product bundle: SKU assortment, shelf layout diagram, pricing tiers, markdown schedule, point-of-sale copy. A boutique in Austin copies it, swaps one SKU for local preference, reports the result. You package that swap into the next version and publish it as a regional variant. Each use case that closes becomes the template for the next buyer. The template library becomes your sales collateral.
Start with three verticals where your product already has traction. Interview one customer per vertical, document the exact assortment they bought, the configuration, the sales outcome. Turn each case into a one-page template: what they bought, how they arranged it, what it cost, what it sold. Publish all three on your site under "proven configurations." Email the list: pick your vertical, copy the play. Track which templates get downloaded, which get reordered verbatim, which get modified. The modifications are your next template. Budget: $0 to $500—three customer interviews, one designer to lay out the templates, domain hosting for the page.
The pattern scales because the user does the work. GreenCore did not hand-craft a million requests. Users installed templates, ran them, and the platform aggregated the demand. For physical goods, the buyer installs your merchandising plan, runs it in their channel, and reports the result. You harvest the result, package it, and the next buyer installs that. Each transaction becomes the blueprint for the next one, and your product documentation becomes a self-expanding playbook written by the market.
The takeaway
Ship packaged starting points, not blank flexibility—each customer's deployed version becomes the template for the next buyer.
Two hundred brands. Eight months on the desk. $0.003 an impression.
The branded-identity layer Chiefs of Staff and heritage CMOs route through — imprinting on real authorized stock for Nike, YETI, Patagonia, The North Face, Carhartt, Stanley, Peter Millar, TUMI, Montblanc, Moleskine, Waterford, and 190 more. Nine editorial desks publish the intelligence those operators read before they sign: The Stash Edge, Markets Edge, Sports Edge, Voyage Edge, Black's Edge, House Edge, the Article Engine, Ramen, and Fending.
$0.003per impression · vs ~$0.007 digital CPM
8 monthson the desk · vs 0.8s for a digital ad
200+authorized brands · Nike · YETI · Patagonia
9 deskspublishing daily · since 1997
70,000 SKUs · virtual proof in 60 seconds · no platform fee · blind-shipped · ASI #217876
Your next customer won't visit your website. Their AI will.
AI assistants have quietly taken over the first step of buying — they answer from catalogs they can read and shortlist whoever can actually ship. Two questions now decide whether you exist to that buyer: can a machine read your catalog, and can you fulfill the order. Most brands fail one or both and never find out why the orders went elsewhere. The winners of this shift aren't the loudest. They're the most readable. Build for the machine that's about to do the shopping.
Built by the craft floor — apparel, media, packaging, and secure print.
This trade runs on hands, not desks. Imprint manufacturing & Komori Press · Canon high-speed secure-media operations is a craft floor — genuine Six Sigma discipline applied to ink, thread, foil, and registration, where a hundredth of an inch is the difference between a brand that reads serious and one that reads cheap. POPS4 is built by exactly those operators: independent, boots-on-the-ground engineers who carry their own book, read a client in microseconds, and put their name on every run. Beyond our own Virginia Beach floor, we work with a vetted network of craft manufacturers across the US — each meeting the highest excellence in QC standards in the industry, each a specialist in its own discipline — so apparel, hard-goods imprinting, media manufacturing, packaging, and secure printing all go to the bench built for them, coordinated from one accountable hub. Short-run from twenty-five units, volume to five hundred thousand. Two hundred authorized national brands, seventy thousand SKUs with virtual proofing on every one. Art archived for instant reorders. Net-thirty corporate terms, NDA-standard white-label — your name on the work, or none at all.
Strategy, positioning, identity, creative, and messaging — wired into an AI system that publishes and distributes on its own. Nine editorial desks generate the authority, the production house ships the physical proof, and the attribution layer tells you which post sold which SKU. What you get is an operating layer — content, catalog, and order path under one roof — that keeps working whether or not you are in the room. Built for principals who would rather own the machine than rent the agency.
Named-account programs — one desk, quiet delivery, NDA-standard.
One point of contact who already knows the file, so nothing restarts from zero between engagements. The work ships blind, under NDA, with your name on it or none at all. Built for single-family offices, heritage-house CMOs, sports-ownership groups, and the agencies that white-label our production. The relationship is the product; the merch is the proof of it.
SFO · Chief of Staff desk. Principal household, properties, aircraft, yacht, calendar, philanthropy — one file.
Shop seventy thousand products. Virtual proof on every one. 24/7.
Drop your logo on any product and see the virtual proof before asking. Quote routes direct to the desk. MCP catalog for AI agents. Celeste for the fast conversation. Full self-service checkout in development.