What started as a solo marketing venture has grown into a structured, scalable system helping tradespeople expand their businesses. Aycen Zambuto, a 20-year-old entrepreneur from Lancaster County, is the mind behind Vitality Media, Vista Artisans, and now Artisan’s Edge—a business development platform designed for painters and other contractors looking to grow without guesswork.
Starting Small: Vitality Media
Zambuto launched Vitality Media in 2019 as a freelance marketing firm. Focused initially on helping local businesses with lead generation and branding, the agency emphasized systems over tactics. It wasn’t about flashy campaigns—it was about creating repeatable processes that delivered consistent results.
Over time, the work shifted toward home service businesses, where demand was steady but marketing was often outdated. That shift would lay the foundation for something bigger.
A Testing Ground: Vista Artisans
In 2020, Zambuto teamed up with painter Jordan Marzec to co-found Vista Artisans, a local painting company based in Northern Lancaster County. The goal was to test his marketing strategies inside a real business.

Within two weeks, the company had booked two full months of work. Over the next few months, Vista expanded rapidly, driven by simple but effective lead systems, clear branding, and efficient scheduling.
But more important than the growth was the documentation—Zambuto tracked what worked and what didn’t. He wasn’t just building a business. He was building a model.
Scaling the System: Artisan’s Edge
By late 2024, Zambuto launched Artisan’s Edge, a full-stack business system for contractors. It wasn’t just marketing—it included tools and frameworks to help with:
- Lead generation and follow-up
- Brand development
- Sales systems
- Customer retention and upsells
Unlike lead platforms that send the same customer to multiple companies, Artisan’s Edge works exclusively with one business per service area. The structure gives contractors ownership over their market, while the platform handles the systems behind the scenes.
In its first month, Artisan’s Edge helped generate over $40,000 in qualified project leads for participating contractors. Those results helped validate the idea: contractors don’t just need more leads—they need better systems.
Built for Real-World Use
What makes Artisan’s Edge different is that it wasn’t built in a vacuum. Every step of the system was tested in Vista Artisans, then refined through real conversations with painters and service pros.
Some of the key differences include:
- Territory exclusivity
- Pay-for-performance structure
- No complicated onboarding or tech headaches
It’s not a silver bullet—but for contractors willing to work, it removes much of the friction from growth.
What’s Next for Aycen Zambuto
Zambuto isn’t chasing headlines; he’s chasing community growth. In 2025, he plans to:
- Expand Artisan’s Edge into 10–15 new markets
- Publish more educational content, including an expanded version of The Painter’s Playbook
- Build strategic partnerships with regional suppliers, real estate professionals, and trade schools
Why It Matters
For many contractors, marketing is confusing, time-consuming, or both. Zambuto’s work aims to change that—by giving business owners clear tools, focused guidance, and systems that make growth sustainable. The story isn’t about overnight success. It’s about building something that lasts.
