Use case · LinkedIn
Tell it what shipped this week. The worker writes a post that reads like you, not like a brand account.
Get your first task done freeWrites the way you would tell a friend, not the way an MBA intern would write a press release.
Keeps a steady weekly cadence so your LinkedIn doesn't look abandoned every time someone Googles you.
Pulls from your changelog, your other posts, and your blog so each post is grounded in something real.
You see every draft before it goes live. One tap to publish, edit, or kill.
Founders know LinkedIn matters for hiring, for fundraising, for credibility when a journalist or a customer Googles them. They also know that writing a LinkedIn post takes thirty minutes you don't have, and the post will get fifty likes regardless of how much you sweat the wording.
An AI worker for LinkedIn keeps the channel warm without demanding the founder's time. You give it the raw input — "we just shipped the new dashboard," "we hit 100 customers," "I'm hiring an engineer" — and it drafts a post in your voice. You approve. It posts. The cadence stays steady, your profile stays alive, and the version of your company that lives on LinkedIn looks like a serious operation instead of a graveyard.
The point isn't to chase virality. The point is to never have a prospect, an investor, or a candidate land on your profile and think the company is dead.