Jia Chen unveils Jam, a simple marketing interface for the agentic era

Jam claims 2,000+ companies, developers, and operators already using the tool, after starting as a side project that devtool founders paid thousands to access.

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Why it matters

Founders are racing to bolt AI agents onto go-to-market, but most tools are complex or DIY. Jam is a bet that a simple, opinionated interface can package agentic workflows for outreach right now, with early traction signaling demand from builders and operators.

Video thumbnail of the founders sitting on a couch and the word "JAM" huge in white behind them

Jia Chen (@jia_seed) unveiled Jam, a marketing interface pitched as a simple control panel for the agentic era, in a thread on X. Jam, which now has a public site at spreadjam.com, already counts "2000+ companies, developers, and operators" using it, Chen wrote.

https://x.com/jia_seed/status/2057501727558107288

The origin story is scrappy. "We started it as a side project, then devtool founders paid us thousands to use it," Chen wrote in the launch thread, adding in replies that the product "used to be a context management devtool" and that they "were also devtool founders back then." The reorientation appears aimed squarely at go-to-market teams who want AI-native workflows without heavy setup.

Details in the posts point to practical outreach use cases. In response to a question about channels, Chen referenced "emails + linkedin" and said Jam advises in a "genz hustle-y" way. The account also flagged a fresh release and a dedicated handle at @wespreadjam for updates.

Chen is positioning Jam as "the simplest interface for marketing in the agentic era" and leaning into opinionated defaults and tone to differentiate, while claiming early traction with thousands of users. The team says the latest build is live at spreadjam.com.

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