A content engine that turns one idea into a week of posts
A solo SaaS founder wanted to show up consistently without hiring a team. We built a content engine that turns a single voice note into a week of channel-ready posts.
- Content output
- 3xContent output
- Saved each week
- 5 hrsSaved each week
- In, a week out
- 1 noteIn, a week out
Overview
Fieldnote is a bootstrapped B2B SaaS run by a single founder. Distribution was the whole game, and the founder knew it, but writing consistently kept losing to shipping product.
They had no shortage of ideas. They had a shortage of time to turn ideas into published, on-brand posts across the channels that mattered.
The challenge
Every post started from scratch. A good thought would surface in the shower or on a walk, then evaporate before it ever reached a draft.
The founder had tried generic AI writing tools and hated the output. It sounded like everyone else, which for a product built on a strong point of view was worse than posting nothing.
Our approach
We focused on capture first. The hardest part was never the writing, it was getting the raw idea out of the founder's head and into the system before it was lost.
We then trained the engine on the founder's existing best-performing posts, so the voice stayed unmistakably theirs rather than collapsing into the usual flat AI tone.
What we built
The founder now records a single voice note whenever an idea lands. The system transcribes it, finds the strongest angle, and produces a week of posts shaped for each channel.
Everything arrives as drafts for review, never auto-posted. The founder edits in minutes instead of starting from a blank page, and the cadence finally became something they could sustain.
The results
Content output tripled within the first month, and roughly five hours a week of writing time disappeared. The founder kept shipping product while finally building an audience.
Because the engine starts from the founder's own ideas and voice, the posts still sound like a person with a point of view. The reach grew without the brand getting blander.