I’ll be honest… I hate most AI writing tools.
They either:
• sound nothing like you
• overcomplicate everything
• or just spit out polished nonsense you’d never actually post
So I went into Scripe expecting… more of the same.
And at first, it felt a bit weird.
Instead of just generating a post, it started asking me questions.
About what I wanted to say.
Who it was for.
What angle I cared about.
And I realised…
it’s not trying to write for me, it’s trying to think with me
That’s different.
My usual workflow before this was:
open doc → stare at screen → overthink → spend hours writing
With Scripe, it felt more like:
answer a few prompts → get a structured idea → refine it
Way less friction getting to something usable.
What I actually liked:
• it pulls ideas out of you instead of forcing random ones
• it suggests what type of post to write next
• it tracks what performs and adapts
One thing I’m still not fully sold on:
I’d like a bit more depth on the visuals / asset side
Right now it’s very strong on writing + direction
but content is more than just text
What’s interesting though is the system underneath it:
→ official LinkedIn API connection, so it feels more stable than most tools
→ guided content creation that works more like a conversation than a generator
→ a knowledge base that connects to Notion, Slack, WhatsApp, YouTube, voice notes, etc
→ it learns from your LinkedIn performance over time
→ trained on millions of posts, so it already understands patterns that work
Overall, the biggest shift for me was simple:
I stopped overthinking what to post
and started actually posting again.
And honestly, that’s the hardest part of LinkedIn for most people.
So If your problem is:
“what do I even say next?”
or
“why does this feel like so much effort?”
…this is probably worth trying
👉 https://lnkd.in/dFCivDTk
I’m curious what it turns into after a few weeks of learning my style
Because that’s where it could get really interesting 👀