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Voice notes to LinkedIn posts

Plenty of people already try to make LinkedIn content from voice. They open a voice-memo app on a walk, talk for two minutes, and paste the transcript into ChatGPT with a prompt like "make this a LinkedIn post." The result is usually flat, because a two-minute monologue with no follow-up questions does not contain the specifics that make a post work, and a generic prompt flattens whatever voice was there. Edgar runs a different loop. The input is a structured conversation, not a one-way voice note: an AI agent asks open questions and follow-ups, pulls the details out of you that you would not have thought to record, and a long pipeline turns the whole thing into 3 to 6 full drafts written in your voice. The user-facing difference is what lands in your hands. Dictation gives you a transcript to edit. Edgar gives you scheduled drafts to approve.

Short answer

Instead of editing a raw voice-note transcript, you have a 10-15 minute guided call and Edgar returns 3-6 finished LinkedIn drafts in your voice.

People who have tried dictating LinkedIn posts into a voice-memo app and ended up with a wall of text that still needed an hour of editing.

How it works

  1. 1You book a recurring weekly slot with the AI voice agent, the way you'd book any calendar event.
  2. 2The agent runs a 10 to 15 minute guided conversation, asking about your week and following up on the parts worth a post, rather than recording a one-way monologue.
  3. 3A long pipeline turns the conversation into 3 to 6 full drafts in your voice, shaped by the LinkedIn posts you've imported.
  4. 4You review the drafts in your dashboard, edit any rough lines or refine via a chat instruction, and schedule each one.
  5. 5Edgar publishes the approved posts to LinkedIn on the dates you set.

Why voice, not text

  • +A guided conversation surfaces the specific detail a post needs. A solo voice note rarely does, because nobody asks you the follow-up question.
  • +You skip the editing step entirely. Dictation hands you a transcript to clean up; Edgar hands you finished drafts.
  • +The agent keeps the conversation on the topics that make good posts, so you don't end up with three minutes of rambling and no usable angle.
  • +The drafts inherit your phrasing from your imported posts, so they read like you wrote them rather than like a transcript ran through a generic prompt.

Example post

I used to record voice notes for LinkedIn on my morning walk. Forty of them are sitting in an app, none of them ever became a post, because every one needed an hour of editing I never did. The thing that changed it was the follow-up question. An agent asking "what did the customer actually say" got a real story out of me that a solo voice memo never would.

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