What is Voice to post

This app is an AI content generator built for founders, coaches, consultants, and small business owners who have valuable ideas but not enough time to write. Record a voice note or paste raw thoughts. The AI extracts your insights and writes social media posts that sound like you, not like a generic language model.

How it works

Open the app and record a voice note directly in the browser, or paste any raw text: meeting notes, a brain dump, a rough idea. The tool transcribes your audio, identifies your core insight, and creates ready-to-publish posts formatted for the platform you choose. The whole process takes under 30 seconds. No login or credit card is required to try it.

Why it sounds like you

Most AI writing tools produce content that sounds polished but generic. Anyone could have written it. This workflow works differently: it extracts the specific insight from what you actually said, preserves your phrasing and tone where possible, and formats it for the platform rather than replacing your voice with a template. The result reads like you wrote it on a good day, not like a robot guessing what you might say.

Supported platforms

You can create content for LinkedIn posts, Twitter and X threads, Instagram captions, and video scripts. Each format is optimised for the platform's character limits, structure expectations, and audience behaviour. LinkedIn posts are written for professional insight-sharing. Twitter threads are structured for readability and engagement. Instagram captions balance personality with discoverability.

Who it is for

Coaches who teach through stories but find writing slow and draining. Consultants with deep expertise who want to build a public profile without spending hours at a keyboard. Founders building in public who want consistent content without a content team. Small business owners who know their subject matter but struggle to translate it into posts that get traction. If you have ever said something smart in a conversation and then failed to write it down before the moment passed, this tool was built for you.

Record a voice note. We'll turn it into content

Get posts for LinkedIn, X, Instagram and more in under 30 seconds. No prompting.

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Short post

X · LinkedIn

Halfway through a project, I was dragging my feet and blamed her for being stifling. Truth: I wasn't interested in the yoga studio. If a project doesn't spark passion, it drags on twice as long and you'll blame the client for your own yes.

I kept underestimating scope. "Let's move it around a bit" felt like five minutes and became ten hours. A little something for the client is still my time. I either count it or say it's extra. I need to stop avoiding money conversations.

When I went quiet for two days, anxiety spiked. One message, "working on it, I'll show you Thursday," calmed everything. Thirty seconds. Check in every couple of days.

I sent references instead of a mockup and learned she hated white minimalist design, despite asking for "clean, airy." Trust reactions to images more than words.

Lesson: be honest at the start about whether you actually want the work.

Thread

X · Threads

1/ "Let's move it around a bit" sounds like 5 minutes and becomes 10 hours. A little something is still my time. I either count it or say it's extra. I need to stop avoiding money talks.

2/ Mid-project I blamed her for being stifling. Truth: I wasn't interested in the yoga studio. No passion = double timeline, then I blame the client for my own bad yes.

3/ When I disappeared for two days, anxiety went up. One 30-second message ("working on it, I'll show you Thursday") calmed everything. Check in every couple of days.

4/ I sent references first and discovered she hated white minimalist design, even after asking for "clean, airy." Words and taste diverge. Trust reactions to images.

Carousel

Instagram · LinkedIn

Slide 1: "Quick five-minute tweak" became ten hours. That frustration is a signal.

Slide 2: A little something for the client is still your time. Count it or call it extra.

Slide 3: I blamed the client, but I wasn't interested in the project. No passion, slow execution.

Slide 4: Silence creates anxiety. One short check-in message calms people down fast.

Slide 5: She asked for "clean, airy" but hated minimalist references. Trust reactions, not words.

Slide 6: Scope creep, money avoidance, bad-fit projects, and weak communication are connected.

What you said

Okay, so, I closed this project with Alicia today, so the website is delivered, and the payment has gone through. I'll tell you what I got out of it. So first, there were like twice as many revisions as we agreed because she'd say, "oh, let's move it around a bit," and I'd think, "It's nothing really, five minutes of work," but it ended up being ten hours of work. Bottom line: a little something for the client is still my time. I either count it or immediately say, "That's extra." I'm embarrassed to mention money during the process; that's what needs fixing. What worked was that I first sent three references instead of a mockup. And I immediately realized she hates white, minimalist websites, even though she'd verbally asked for "clean, airy." So, trust not the client's words, but how they react to the images. Words and real tastes almost always diverge. Also: when I disappeared for a couple of days, she'd get increasingly anxious and start texting, "So, how are things going?" A short "working on it, I'll show you on Thursday" immediately calmed her down, even without results. People need to feel like the process is ongoing and they haven't been forgotten. Thirty seconds, but it relieves half the stress. It should become a habit to check in every couple of days. And to myself. Halfway through, I realized I was dragging my feet and blamed the client for her being stifling. But in reality, I wasn't interested in the project itself, the yoga studio, and I wasn't passionate about it. Conclusion: if a project doesn't spark passion, it drags on twice as long, and I blame the client for something that was my own fault in taking it on. I need to be more honest with myself at the start.