Content & Speaking
From podcast prep to conference pitches, video scripts to LinkedIn content. Voice in, published content out.
What members have built
Conference Pitch Pipeline
Getting booked to speak at conferences usually means hours of crafting the perfect pitch. One member used the brain to prepare for a podcast interview, which helped clarify their expertise and talking points. From there, the brain helped turn those ideas into content themes and then into conference submission pitches. The result? A Pubcon speaking slot - booked the next day when another speaker backed out.
Voice Note to Post Pipeline
You have great ideas while walking, driving, or waiting in line - but they disappear before you can write them down. This system lets you record a quick voice note on your phone. The brain automatically transcribes it, cleans it up, and turns it into a polished post ready for LinkedIn or your blog. You go from idea to published content without ever sitting down to write.
Video Script Creator
Creating video content is hard because you're staring at a blank page. This workflow starts with any input - a meeting note, a blog post, or just a rough topic idea. The brain generates five different angles you could take, rates them for engagement potential, then creates five script variants for your chosen direction. You end up with a production-ready script instead of struggling to figure out what to say.
LinkedIn Content Pipeline
Posting consistently on LinkedIn is valuable, but finding time every day is hard. This system lets you batch-create a month of posts in one session. The brain drafts them, organizes them in order, and sets them up so a virtual assistant (or you) can post one each day. You do the creative thinking once, then the system handles the rest.
"Just got booked to present at Pubcon next year, thanks to the brain!"
What else could you build?
“'This report is absolutely amazing.'”
— Uzair Kharawala
“Unbelievable stuff that has changed the way we operate.”
— Patrick Gilbert
“Less thinking, more doing.”
— Raoul Van Heerden