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Why Customers Buy the Founder (Not Just the Product)

Why human connection, personality, and trust matter more than ever in an AI-driven world

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Solo founder planning a business strategy on a laptop, with a whiteboard of goals in the background

Why Customers Buy the Founder, Not Just the Product


In today's business landscape, customers increasingly buy from founders they connect with, not just products they need. These founders understand that one of the most powerful parts of their business is their own story and how it helps people relate to the company on a personal level and buy because of that relationship. CEOs like Rene Lacerte of fintech firm BILL, Hannah Choi of fashion tech firm Spotlite, and Fiona Scott of journalistic PR firm Scott Media all show how authenticity and personal connection drive growth in each of their respective industries.

Trust is the New Differentiator


When founders make a real effort to engage their audience, trust becomes the foundation for every lasting connection. It's important for business owners to establish connections not just with customers but also with employees.

If you're thinking about building a company that's going to last for decades... it takes a lot of intentionality around the product strategy, the purpose strategy, the people strategy, the culture strategy. These are all the things you have to put intentional thought to.

That steady sense of purpose helps customers and employees see what the company stands for through the person leading it.


This philosophy permeates all facets of Lacerte's business. When speaking about his products, he builds trust with clients by presenting them with solutions that solve their immediate pain points with minimal friction. "We want to meet businesses where they are. Our goal is to make it simple for our partners to include our capabilities inside their own systems." Lacerte's values-driven approach to establishing client trust is how a founder can make the transition from holding a personal belief to executing a company mission.


Fiona Scott, who won UK Solopreneur of the Year in 2025, has seen the same dynamic play out in her own work. She says the trust between a founder and an audience isn't built through features or stats but through what feels real. "It's about what resonates," she says.

People buy from people. Any small business owner will tell you that's true, whether they're in the UK or anywhere else.

Relatability Builds Loyalty


Being able to identify with customers' shared experiences can go a long way toward building lasting customer relationships. Hannah Choi and her Spotlite co-founder Benjamin Hori sought to solve problems that existed in the modeling industry, including the lack of freelance representation, as well as image and likeness protections for models. Choi says her co-founder was a professional model for ten years and witnessed how AI was being used to replicate and alter creators' images without consent.

There are a lot of problems in this industry. I've done this for a decade, and it's about time for a change.

This drove the two to create an agency that leverages tech to protect clients' interests. Models quickly began trusting them to handle their rights and representation, leading to a sharp early spike in new users who saw Spotlite as a platform built by insiders, not outsiders.


"Spotlite is about protecting creators in the AI era. We wanted to give models and artists control over their own likeness, and that meant building trust first. We built a platform where our team, our community, and even our investors can see exactly why we're doing this. That transparency makes the brand feel human."


Meanwhile, Scott agrees that relatability can give you a kind of celebrity status, especially with younger customers. "Younger generations will look for the personalities who speak to them and they will then work out 'how to afford' to be aligned with those people/brands. Taylor Swift is just one rather extreme example. The way she, and her team, have served their audience deserves admiration in my view."

Personality Drives Visibility


Strong founder personalities - whether they be in sports, entertainment, media, or business - make an impact. Scott, the straight-shooting solopreneur award winner, is one such example. She's built her firm around directness and transparency.


Scott says her no-nonsense presence and approach to business differentiates her from competitors and gets clients in the door.

In a world where you can choose from multiple suppliers offering similar services, how do you stand out, how do you stop your brand from becoming part of an amorphous mass? It's personality, personality, personality.

Her clients find this approach refreshing because of the authenticity it demonstrates in a landscape increasingly dominated by the digital. "In the age of AI, I predict personality and authenticity will become even more important," says Scott. "As human beings we emotionally connect with any personality that resonates with us and our own experience. We don't have to know them to relate to them."


Choi agrees that a personality that displays a clear intention creates customer loyalty. "People connect with your intent before your product. If they believe you actually care, they'll give you time to figure everything else out."


Rene Lacerte believes authenticity means your personality is the same with both customers and employees.

There's no way to see me other than me. Our employees see that, and I expect them to bring the same authenticity when they talk to each other.

It's the People Behind the Product


Leadership expert Simon Sinek once remarked, "The goal is to do business with people who believe what you believe." In short, customers don't buy what you sell. They buy who you are. When CEOs demonstrate qualities like honesty, relatability, and authentic personality, they make connections with customers that advertising, a website, or a chatbot could never achieve.


Rene Lacerte, Hannah Choi, and Fiona Scott are all examples of founders who do not just lead their brands, they embody them. Their actions become synonymous with what their brands represent. In an era of AI, automation, and tech-driven marketing, these CEOs are investing in personal connections with customers, which is one thing that cannot be outsourced. It has to be owned.

Why does the UK abound with business networking groups offering 1000s of opportunities a week to network with others? It's the need for human connection and it's real whether that is on or offline.

Key Takeaways


- In an AI-driven world, customers form deeper connections with founders than with products or faceless brands

- Founders who share their personal stories create more meaningful loyalty than those who focus solely on technology

- Trust becomes the core differentiator when founders engage authentically with both customers and employees

- Intentionality across product, purpose, people, and culture fuels long-term trust

- Transparency and solving real pain points help founders turn personal values into company-wide missions

- Relatability drives loyalty: customers respond strongly to platforms built by people who understand their lived experiences

- A strong, authentic personality can cut through a crowded market and attract clients

- Younger generations prioritize aligning with personalities they admire, sometimes even before assessing the product

- Customers buy from founders whose beliefs and intentions resonate with them

- Human connection remains irreplaceable despite AI advancements

John Boitnott
John Boitnott

John is a tech writer and journalist with  more than 20 years experience who contributes to several respected online publications, including BusinessInsider, Inc., and Entrepreneur. In addition to journalism, writing about social good companies and in-depth research, he is also active in his community and enjoys metaphysical book-reading groups, as well as hiking on the amazing trails of the San Francisco Bay Area.

John graduated with a degree in Communications at UC Santa Barbara and soon afterward began his journalism career. He worked in TV news from 1994 to 2009, and served as web editor and writer at KNTV, San Francisco’s NBC affiliate. He also wrote for KGO, KRON and KPIX in San Francisco, and worked as a radio anchor, assignment desk manager, reporter, editor and producer at KEYT in Santa Barbara for ten years. After stints with agencies and startups, John has returned to working with various newsrooms across the country.

John currently writes pieces on productivity, career advice, tech trends, AI, marketing, social media, as well as companies that help underserved communities around the world. Several Fortune 500 companies utilize his writing skills for their blogs and other online content.

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