Using AI-Inspired Social Content to Grow a Loyal Audience

AI Explored · Beginner ·🛠️ AI Tools & Apps ·1y ago

Key Takeaways

The video discusses using AI-inspired social content to grow a loyal audience, covering tools like Bloato, Chat GPT, and custom GPT systems, as well as concepts such as AI-driven content creation, content personalization, and human touch in AI-generated content.

Full Transcript

One of the most underrated ways to use AI is to help you document what it is you're doing every day in your business, like the meetings you're having with clients, your internal team meetings, your meetings with partners, uh that can be recorded by AI and then spit it can spit out like draft social media posts based on all of that content. Today, I'm very excited to be joined by Sabrina Ramenov. If you don't know who Sabrina is, she's an AI educator who helps people understand how to apply AI to their life and work. She's also the founder of Bloato, an AIdriven content tool, social content tool, and her podcast can be found by searching Sabrina Robin. Sabrina, welcome to the show. How you doing? Thank you so much for having me. Yeah, doing well. I'm super excited that you're here. Today, Sabrina and I are going to explore how to use AI to inspire and create your social content. Now before we get into that I would love to hear your story. How did you get into AI? Start wherever you want to start. Yeah absolutely. So it started back in college actually. I studied computer science and physics at UC Berkeley and took my first AI machine learning course when I was I think a junior or senior in college and it blew my mind even then what you could do with AI. Keep in mind this was 2012 2013 and I thought I was late to AI then um because I'm being taught by professors who have been doing it for a decade plus uh one of my investors in my first company had been doing AI since the 80s so you can imagine yeah in 2013 I already felt I was late to the game um but that's how I got into it you know and a big part of it was around language like I've always been an avid reader and so the idea of AI that could like understand what you're saying and reply with something meaningful, thoughtful, back, something engaging. Like that was mind-blowing to me. And so my first company specialized in that kind of technology. We did real time speech recognition, natural language processing for sales and customer support conversations. And that's a whole story in and of itself. Happy to dive into it, but well, share a little bit more like what did that mean back then, quote unquote, whatever that is. Yeah. Yeah. So keep in mind this was like 2013, 2014. So we had technology that could join a conference call and understand what people were saying in real time and then use what was called natural language processing to detect questions that were asked, objections that were raised in the context of a sales call. Um just different frustrations customers were having in the context of a support call and then suggest to the agent what they should say next or do next to help resolve your issue or overcome your objection. So this was like a lot in 2014. That's like what we call AI note-taking today. Really? Right. It is. Yeah. We even launched a variation specifically for note takingaking. It was like top two product on product hunt at the day. But it was just so early to market. You know, people were not accustomed to the idea of AI joining your call, listening to everything that's being said. That was not a an idea that was welcomed in that time frame. So, very cool. So, what happened with that business? Yeah. Yeah. So we actually ended up focusing on conversations where they already had a culture of recording calls of sales and customer support for example. And so in a support context, you might call into your bank or health insurance with a set of questions. Our AI helps the agent understand like what is it you're asking about? Here's the relevant documentation or procedure to help you resolve your issue. And then we ended up selling that company to a pretty big player in the BO space called Pega Systems. They do over a billion in revenue and have a really big customer service unit. Very cool. So, what what what came next after you exited? Yeah, that's a good question. I was honestly a little lost for a while. I was definitely burnt out from my first startup. So, this was uh my first startup. My husband and I, we were fresh out of college, did not know we were doing, made a ton and ton of mistakes. Like, from a burnout point of view, I was physically, mentally, psychologically just super burnt out. had spent probably at least a year just recovering from that and realizing, oh, I I should probably do something now. Um, I kind of fell into AI education because I just noticed this massive gap between uh where we currently live today, which is the Salt Lake City area, and like Silicon Valley, which is like pretty far ahead in terms of AI adoption, agents, and how companies are deploying it. there's a pretty massive gap between that and just like everyday people and their relationship with AI and how they use AI or how they think they can use AI. And so I started making AI education content about a year ago just to help teach everyday people like here's how to use chat GPT to be a little more productive or to help research things that normally you might have to pay somebody for help and expertise with. And so yeah, it's it's been a wild ride. Started creating AI education content a year ago. have grown from zero to I think 750,000 followers now in just a year. AI has been a huge part of that like helping me scale myself and to be able to educate so many folks. So where what platforms were you using to um uh educate? Was it YouTube? Was it Tik Tok? Was it all of the above? Yeah. So I I actually just started with one post a day on LinkedIn. That was my very first one for about two months. And then I threw in Tik Tok, started experimenting there. It still took a little bit of time to figure out like my voice, my format. I was very uncomfortable on video. Most people don't realize that now, but I I could not watch my early videos. It was just too cringe for me. Uh then I added on Instagram. I'm on YouTube as well. My newsletter, I just moved to Substack. Uh have a podcast as well. So I'm I'm all over the place. Twitter threads, Facebook as well. So when you were um about a year ago, so we're recording this in 2025. So it would have been 2024 that you started publishing content on LinkedIn. Were you did you have a strategy? Were you just sharing uh educational tips to just try to help people understand how to leverage things like chat GPT? Um and then all of a sudden something happened like like share that journey and then ultimately into blot. I would love to kind of understand that. Yeah, I was all over the place in terms of like content pillars. I was experimenting a lot. that um a lot of my earlier content then was I would say more technical and that was kind of the disconnect like I was publishing stuff building stuff with AI agents and agent simulations back then those YouTube videos have 200 views um when I started doing Tik Tok and started making beginner level content that's when things really took off and so what I learned in that process is like oh wow like when it comes to just like everyday people the level of education when it comes to AI and stuff I mean agents was not even a hot term back then um in tech, let alone for everyday folks. And so I realized I kind of had to start at the beginning, like what is chat GBT? Here's how to install it. Uh here's how to like write a prompt or here are some tips to help you improve your existing prompts. And like when I started matching that level of content with the platform, for example, Tik Tok and Instagram, um I realized there's really a massive need for that kind of beginner level stuff. Like a lot of people still don't know stuff that I take for granted because I use it every single day, right? But there's so much value in like the beginner level stuff and getting accustomed to using these tools that I think I overestimated when I first started and I started with like pretty technical content. And since then, what I've done is I use the social media platforms for pretty beginner level content and I transition folks through my funnel of sorts. So my newsletter and YouTube now have more of my technical content. Yeah. Yeah. And tell us about Blotto. Oh, yeah. So, it's a tool I built for myself really to help myself scale without burning out. And so, like going from zero to 750,000 in a year with no paid ads, no budget, no team. Um, basically impossible unless you're leveraging like AI and automation in a smart way. Um, for me, I just built out like custom automations for myself. But what happened is people kept asking me like, wait, how are you doing this? like how are you making content at this level without like a team of five people behind you, you know, like researching, ideulating, script writing, creating videos, editing the videos, posting, managing comments. Um, and so I started sharing these automations on YouTube. But then I found people, you know, didn't want to have to fiddle around with workflow automations and custom builds and things like that. They just wanted a simple SAS app where they can log in, connect their social accounts, use AI to assist in the research and writing process and then boom, publish their posts. And so I just kept hearing from folks like, I'm overwhelmed with creating content. How are you possibly doing this? And so Blow just came about from solving my own problem. And then other people ask me how I solved my problem. So I built it for for everyone else to use it, too. Very cool. All right, folks. Well, we're going to talk about um how anyone who's listening who has to create content on the socials, whether you be a creator, entrepreneur, or even a marketer working inside of a small or even midsize business, um could benefit from some of the things that Sabrina has discovered. So, first, let me start with the why question. Why should creators and entrepreneurs use AI to help them with their social content? I know that um at least on my other show, I've got people that have been creators that have been creating custom content on the socials, whether it be written or video, for many, many years, and maybe haven't fully embraced what AI could do for them. What's the upside if this is done well? Yeah, I think the upside is being able to scale your teaching in a way that you don't burn out. At least that's been the upside for me. Um because my goal with all of this is to teach 1 million people AI. And my question is, how do I do that at scale but without like burning out or like having to spend a lot of money because then I have to make money through the content? I don't I don't even want to do that. So I don't charge for any of my free AI education. I want to keep it that way. But it's really hard to do that if you don't have like systems in place, automations in place, AI in place to assist you with it. Doesn't have to automate your entire process. Like even if it assisted you just with research and ideation, creating drafts, like brainstorming different hooks, like that's that's plenty. Um, for for any of you who's a content creator, you know, it's it's every single day. It's like how do you create the best original content that you can? And it's very hard to do that at scale consistently for many years without burning out or investing a bunch of money in a team. Have you found in your personal experience that um you've been a like have you been able to quantify the kind of time savings you like how much would it have taken how much time do you anticipate it would have taken you to do what you're doing now if you did not have AI versus how much time it's actually taken you now that you do have AI backing you up. Yeah, absolutely. Because when I first started, I really didn't use AI for the automation pieces. And even for beginner content creators, I don't recommend jumping into automation. Like use AI, use chat GPT to have that dialogue back and forth. But I don't recommend people like fiddle around with automations until you figure out what's your voice, what's your audience, like what's your offer. Like uh like there are all these insecurities you kind of have to fight your way through when you're starting out as a content creator and you have to figure that stuff out through trial and error. has nothing to do with using AI. So, in the beginning, you know, I didn't have a lot of these automations in place. I would create content every single day. Um, and it took me a while. I didn't know what to to write. You know, I'd have to like post manually to each of these platforms. Every single one is a different app, different interface. Um, and so it take a lot of time. So, let's say like maybe 30 hours a week just to make content, distribute it across all the platforms. Uh now I make content in only one and a half days a week. So about 10 hours a week. And again that's probably the biggest chunk of that is just my YouTube video. Like all the prep work that goes into building an automation, the templates that are free for people to download and then filming the video and editing of the video. And then the rest of that time is all of my other content on like eight different platforms. What I love about this is you Sabrina are saving 20 hours a week and you're not compromising presumably on the quality of the output. That's the other side of it, right? So with that 20 hours a week, you can go out there and you can do all sorts of other things like develop potato or take on clients if you want to or anything else. And this is the thing that I think a lot of people don't do the math. When you think about how if you had 20 hours extra per week or 5 hours or whatever your number is, what could you do with that? I mean, that could be a really big unlock for a lot of people that wish they had time to pursue something they've always dreamed of doing, but they've never done before. So, I love that. Now, um, what do people need to be thinking about, um, before they start using AI to grow a content following? What are some of the things that you have learned that you might want to share with them before they actually start fully embracing this? Yeah, number one is I do see a lot of beginners kind of treat AI as a silver bullet. Like, oh, I'm going to use AI for this and then I'm going to like magically explode my following and go viral like every single day. And I would just like reset your expectations and also not overthink it. use AI as honestly like a way 10x better Google search to help you like research ideas, research customer pain points, research hooks, create like 10 different drafts and see which one like you resonate with. Um, use it for a lot of that, but like don't overthink it. Don't like over rely on it. Don't think just because you're using AI you're going to go viral or anything like that. There's a lot of you involved in the process. Again, like what is your voice? Why are you doing this? What is important to you when you communicate your message? Who are you serving and what do they care about? Are you reaching them in an authentic way? Are you being authentic in your content? Like if you're really uncomfortable on video and you don't want to continue, you know, maybe focus more on writing on Substack or your blog or whatever it is. There's all of these like personal things that I think people kind of want to avoid shortcut and thinking by using AI. I don't have to like deal with all of that messy personal philosophical stuff that I have to figure out myself. Um, tip number two would just be that you are still in control. Like chat can go down any rabbit hole that you pointed to like but you're the director in charge. You need to like have some kind of viewpoint or perspective that you are trying to share and then use chat GPT to help you like create content around that. So like it could pull up relevant research to a perspective that you have. If you had a certain experience, chat chat, GPT or Perplex, so you can research other people who've had those experiences or differing experiences and you can talk about the difference. So like at the end of the day, like you're very much in control. Don't expect AI to just like write whatever and you go along with it and go viral. It just it just doesn't work that way. I just want to make sure people have that like correct expectation when using it. I love it. uh when we were prepping, you mentioned um a good place to maybe even consider thinking about is having AI analyze some of your comments. Do you want to talk about that a little bit? Yeah, absolutely. So, I I think AI for research and prep is a really underserved area. Like a there's a lot of focus on AI for actually writing the content, but just like in data science, it's like garbage in garbage out. like if you don't have any personal experience uh you know backing up the post you're saying it it shows like it it shows because you're not talking about specific numbers or like specific challenges you went through and so I I always talk about using AI for the research and prep like what are your customers specific pain points how have you dealt with those pain points when you served your clients and then like use AI to help you maybe structure how that's written so that it's in a format easy to digest but like always you add your perspective, add your unique insights, add your experiences, your data, your stories and use AI for that for that prep work. So like that is an example of it. Like you could take your best posts, use AI to analyze the the best comments there, the controversial comments, and that can be a seed for new posts that are coming up. You can also do that with other people's videos. For example, if there's a person in your niche that you follow all their content, take one of their videos, have AI help you analyze the comments, look for things that you could talk about that you have personal experiences with. You can s you can literally ask chat GBT based on everything you know about me. Analyze these comments and identify like the three topics that I am uniquely suited to talk about. So that's an idea for being able to generate those types of content from a pract practical tactical perspective because I like to try to get the practical tactical on this. Um sometimes chat GPT isn't really good at least historically with you give it a link to some posts and it doesn't really understand what it's reading. Um at least that's what been my experience. Do you find that these comments need to be like exported into a sheet or or is it good enough now on all the platforms because I know some of these social platforms are locked down where they where the uh you know chat GBT can't actually see some of the stuff. So how would they practically go about analyzing some of their best posts? Is there any prep work they would need to do on that? Yeah, so it depends on the platform like if you can get access to your comments. Um another workaround that's honestly easier is something like Reddit or Kora where it is public. So you can have a topic, let's say AI vibe coding is hotly being debated right now and you can search Reddit for the top posts of that topic and then that Reddit link you can you can have perplexity for example, you can set the focus specifically on Reddit to search for the top posts in that topic. And so if you can't get access to all of your comments, uh, or it's too tedious to just like have a script to copy the comments from your video, then you could use public sources like Reddit, for example. Cool. All right. So, um, so far what we've talked about is a couple different things. Number one, don't overthink it. Um, and you you're the human. You get to choose how you want to direct uh AI tools like chat GPT to creatively accomplish whatever you want to accomplish. Number two, well actually I got them flipped. The other one is don't kind of don't be lazy for lack of a better word is what I'm hearing you say. Don't just use AI to create stuff that doesn't have any substance or story. I think we call that AI slop inside of uh the AI community. There's a lot of that garbage. Um so you still should be actively involved. And then of course use AI to get insights before you actually begin creating content. Those insights can come from your own posts and comments you've had on those posts or they could come from someone else's for example YouTube video and comments or uh other sources like uh Reddit u and Kora. So um moving on to um let's say that we are now ready to start coming up with ideas or researching ideas for our next post or video. um talk to me a little bit about some tips and ideas of how we could use AI to help us at this part of the ideation and research process that's maybe um not outside information but maybe stuff that actually is inside of our business, right? Yeah. I think one of the most underrated ways to use AI is to help you document what it is you're doing every day in your business. like the meetings you're having with clients, your internal team meetings, your meetings with partners, uh that can be recorded by AI and then spit it can spit out like draft social media posts based on all of that content. So, I'm a really big fan of when Gary Vee says create social media content just by documenting what you're learning or doing. And I would take that a step further with AI. Like the 20 hours per week that you save, right? use that to dive in further to learn to teach to engage with clients record those interactions and then have AI every week send you a summary of like these were the top five most interesting takeaways from the meetings that you had this past week and that can be the basis of your social media posts. Yeah. Let's let's explore this from a um uh a tool perspective like for example anybody who uses the Google ecosystem right has an AI noteaker built into it. Um, but what's your thoughts on cuz I know some of the people listening might work for slightly larger companies and might be like have red flags go up about using recordings of meetings with AI. What's your thoughts about anonymizing or getting permission to use this stuff or how can set another way, how can we do this in a way that doesn't kind of, you know, ring any privacy bell concerns? Yeah, I think staying within the ecosystem that is already allowed for you. So if you're a Microsoft shop and you have co-pilot joining the meetings, co-pilot producing the transcripts, you can also use co-pilot then to draft some social media posts and shoot you an email in Outlook, right? So that way it's all contained within your ecosystem. And same goes for Google if you're using Gemini for meeting notes, then you can use Gemini, you know, to create draft social posts from those notes. And so I would just stick to the ecosystem tool with you're using, especially if privacy is a concern. Um, and obviously like it can be touchy to use it with customers and clients, especially if they don't know that. And so just just be upfront about it, you know, like they already know that AI is joining the call, recording the meeting. Just ask them like, "Hey, if there are some key takeaways here from our conversation, I'm happy to anonymize it, but would you let me draft a few social posts? I'd love to tag you in them if you'd love to repost to your network and share some of your insights as well." Like I'm all for transparency, right? Like uh everybody now is used to AI joining their calls. There was a time when that wasn't true and people would try to hide it. They'd hide their AI bot joining. They'd change the name of it and say it's someone else, right? I I don't like that approach. I think you should just be transparent. And some you'd be surprised some people would say, "Oh, that that's a great idea. Can I use it for my social media posts, too, because I don't have any time to write content." And so, just be transparent about it when especially when it's external facing like clients or partners. I like this a lot. Um, if we are recording a meeting, let's say we have a meeting and maybe it's a brainstorming meeting where we're meeting with a couple of our team members and we're ideulating on some uh topics of hypothetically what we want to write our social content on, right? And it's just me maybe and one other person or two other people and we turn on the notetaker. Um, once we get that raw transcript or even if we get a summary of the meeting, do you have any any suggestions on how we could prompt that transcript into a tool like Gemini or Copilot or ChatGpt to kind of take it and look at it through a different spin so it could be fodder for AI? Yeah, I mean I at this point I usually recommend folks build some kind of custom GPT that's trained a little bit on your voice and business. Um that way it can like feed that context in in a very like natural organic way. Um so let's say you have that transcript or meeting notes from Gemini and then you can drop it into GE either Gemini or custom GPT for chat GPT and that's trained already on your social media post and your business and your terminology and then you can have it spit out like three drafts based on analyzing that transcript. Um so I personally do this every week for my uh Blot office hours. It's basically a time when anyone in the community can kind of join and ask questions. And I have a prompt that's like extract the three most uh the most frustrating challenges that people have had and express during the call and I'm going to make content about that. Um so instead of like a brainstorming angle, the angle is like, oh, these are the challenges that people are facing with my product. Here's either how to solve it or if I didn't solve it yet, it's on my road map. Here's what I'm thinking for the road map. So there are all kinds of like variations for how you can do this. And I encourage more people to like adopt AI in ways that uh don't add additional time and work. Like you're already having these conversations with customers and your team every single day. It's just about choosing which context makes the most sense to be the source of of your social media ideas. Okay. Hey, I'm starting to connect the dots here and I really love that example you gave about like you're doing an office hour with some of your customers and you're using a tool, whatever tool you're using and there's a transcript going on in the background and you're putting that transcript into a custom GPT or whatever system you're using and you're asking it to kind of pull out what it believes are the most um what challenging questions that were asked and And you kind of implied, but I'd love to dig in on this a little bit deeper. I think our next question is probably going to address this, but you kind of hinted at like you've probably already trained it on some of your content. So, why don't we get into that that logical next question, which is how do we take these source materials, whether they be from a a live uh experience or whether they be from uh support tickets that are coming in, I mean, it could be almost anything, right? How do we do that and actually create um original content with that? Yeah, absolutely. So, I use like the way to think of it is like those are the sources and ideas for your content. It's still up to you ultimately to, you know, finalize the draft, add your unique point of view, your takeaways. And so, like I have a flow that has all of these different sources and then just create drafts for me. And I can just, you know, completely remove a draft if I'm not resonating with like I don't think this is interesting. So there's an element of like taste here like oh this will do really well with my audience or this is really valuable for my audience. So that's already one filter. And then the next step is to personalize each post. Like again add in your unique perspective like when somebody was asking this question or complaining about this issue like here here is where I was confused right and like maybe that's not captured in the meeting notes but when you reflect back on it like that's something that you can add that's unique to your post. Like I was I was confused why the customer was asking this cuz I thought it was clear but I realized my perspective is too technical and like the button being named this way was super confusing and I had no idea. Um and it just taught me that like I need to have a more of a beginner's mindset when it comes to testing the product, designing the user experience of the product. Like I'm just giving an example of where I might talk about a customer frustration and add my own perspective to it to humanize the post a bit more. So, it's really about combining like AI's documentation of what's happening, what you're learning, what you're teaching, how you're interacting with clients and your team, and then adding your own story on top of that before you hit publish. So, let's talk about this custom GPT um that you kind of alluded to very briefly. Um, first of all, I think I heard you say you've trained it up on your style. So, talk a little bit about what how that how that would work. And then um I think you had an example of a viral video copywriter that you had created. Does that does that sound right? Maybe you could share that story as well. Oh yeah. Yeah. So um so for creating your custom GPT it's super easy in chat GPT. If you click explore GPTs on the left sidebar then you can create your own. And you can keep it private so nobody else has access to it. And what you do is you take your posts. So, let's say your your company already has a bunch of posts or if you're a personal brand, a lot of your posts, you can feed them into the C custom GPT to train it on your voice, your business, your your style of writing, speaking. Um, and so that every time you ask it to write a new post, it's going to use all of that custom information you've uploaded to write your new post. And I recommend that so it's like highly tailored to your business. You don't have to teach Chat GPT every single time. This is my company. This is what we offer. here's the CTA I want it the post to end with. Like it will just have that stored in its memory and instruction. Um, for example, I have one custom GPT that I think has over 20,000 users so far according to my GPT dashboard and it's just for brainstorming viral video hooks. So, it's been trained on a thousand hooks I've curated from Tik Tok and Instagram. That first line in your video, if you guys are Horoszi fans, like he now says he spends 95% of his effort on the hook. like that first sentence, scene, visual hook, like everything that first five seconds. And so I have a custom GPT just trained on that for Tik Tok and Instagram. Thousands of people are using it. So that one's public. Um, but that's an example where it's like a very specialized use case for content creation. Love it. Okay. So up to this point we have talked about uh gathering up information in the early parts of this discussion and um we've talked about how you could create a custom GPT train it up on some of your best examples of writing and ultimately um and in your case were you with this custom GPT that you created did you train it up on your writing or did you train it up on like a whole cacophony of really strong copywriting that transcended Sabrina? Yeah. Yeah. Initially, it was the latter because like I didn't even know what I wanted to sound like. Um, and this is where I keep alluding to that beginner phase as a creator. It's like you don't even know who you want to be. It takes time to like figure all of that out. Figure out your voice, like your true way of speaking and writing. Um, so in the beginning, my custom GPT was trained on a bunch of people I admired as copywriters. And by the way, I still believe copywriting is at the heart of amazing content, whether it's video or writing. And so I'm I that's why I talk a lot about like copywriting, you know, as the basics and the fundamentals. But yeah, I mean, initially I just sourced it from people whose writing that I loved. And then as I started to figure out my own voice, then I replaced all of it with my own writing. And I think that's the natural progression. Like in the beginning, you just you just don't even know. And content creation is so overwhelming. Like almost like the last thing you want to think about is like having to write in a specific way. And so that's okay. Just like take some of the people you admire whose communication like you love their storytelling, they resonate with you personally. Take that copywriting as an example for your custom GPT. And honestly, as you get going in a couple months or so, you're going to replace all of it with your own writing because you'll get to a point where you're like, "This doesn't sound like me." Right? Like that. And that's great. That's like amazing progress and evolution. When you get to that point, you'll swap out everyone else's writing and just use your own as your voice. So, we're going to get to um your software solution in just a second and kind of explain how it helps, but I just want to unravel a little bit here because up to this point, we've talked about the importance of getting um some research done and gathering information. It could come from outside sources like comments on your posts or it could come from transcripts from meetings that you've done or even lives that you've done uh on any frankly platform, even YouTube. And then we create a custom GPT with some of your best performing work. And um I think the part that's missing is like um before we get to your your product is that let's say we're now ready to actually create the whatever it is, the transcript, the video, do you recommend creating a custom GPT? Um in my case, it's Cloud Projects that I use pretty religiously, but do you recommend or a Google gem or whatever people use? Do you recommend really dialing in the creation of that so that it can create something that's going to ultimately connect on the social platforms because you didn't grow to 700,000 by just randomly creating content. There was some sort of strategy employed here and I just want to talk about that part a little bit. Yeah. And on that last part as I was uh listening to you the question my initial response was going to be like don't overthink it. Right. Yeah. Yeah. because your your voice will change. Like what you consider good, what you consider like, "Oh, that sounds like me." That will evolve over the months. So like I I I don't want folks to get hung up too much on like trying to create the perfect custom GBT that sounds exactly like them. Never expect it to because like you're always growing as a writer. Your bar continues to rise and AI will like always lag behind that in some way. And that's okay. That's why you're going in there and adding your perspective and massaging the post until it like hits truly right. Um, but I would say in the beginning like volume is very important. Volume and consistency. Most beginners who start out in 100 days, they quit before then. Um, I see it all the time and like the biggest reason I hear is people are overwhelmed. They don't know which platform to start with, how many times to post, when to post, do they have to follow up with all the comments, was their post any good? like how do they know? Um and so in the beginning I I just recommend uh consistency like really posting multiple times per day and it could be different platforms. So it could be one on LinkedIn, one on Twitter, one on Tik Tok, right? You have to experiment. I'll say for me, I never expected short form video to take off. Like I was experimenting just to get outside of my comfort zone, secretly hoping I wouldn't have to do this any longer because I was so uncomfortable in front of a camera. Um, I love writing. Like I love reading and writing. Um, but but like you have to experiment with it, see how it goes. The most important thing though is just sticking to it for the long term. So when I started creating content, my goal was just to stick to it for five years every day. Just make one post. Like that was the initial. Five years is a big commitment. I figured in five years like I'll probably be successful doing this. How did you know how did you know it was working? And I mean like what were the metrics you were looking for as you were running these experiments? Yeah, I mean so different platforms give you different metrics. One reason why I do recommend Tik Tok for beginners is because it gives you so much data and it doesn't punish you for posting multiple times per day. Other platforms like LinkedIn, you don't want to post more than once or twice per day because like that's just excessive on that social network. People will just unfollow you. But the way Tik Tok's algorithm works is like they show your post to 200 people first based on your hashtags and the contents of the video. If those 200 people like it, then they unlock it to 500. Then they show it to 1,000. If those 10,000 people like it, they show it to 5,000. And so you're but and they don't punish you for posting multiple times a day. So you can post five times a day on Tik Tok and get that data back really really quickly. So test five different hooks, five different topics, and you'll see very quickly within hours which of those hits and which doesn't. So in comparison, if you're doing that on LinkedIn, it would take 5 days because you would be doing one post per day. So depending on the platform, Twitter is also great. Twitter and threads, they don't punish you for posting often. And what I mean by that is like if your post is bad, like nobody's going to see it, so it's fine. and like Twitter doesn't, you know, uh like hurt the reach of your future posts just because you've posted frequently. Um so yeah, that that's just my general advice for beginners like post often as often as you can honestly. Um stick to the platforms that don't punish posting often so you can get feedback really really quickly. Where did your time savings come in? um once you know once you started doing all of this was it mostly on the research and ideation side or the creation side or where was that time savings? Um so it's in a couple different areas. So definitely the research and ideation is a really big one. Another one is repurposing existing content. So in the beginning this isn't a problem. You don't have any existing content but as you grow uh you know you have a ton of existing I now have a ton of existing content that I can just repurpose. And this is primarily what what I built Blueotato for. The core use case was just to help me repurpose my YouTube video into social posts. And now I can use it. I can repurpose a YouTube video from six months ago into a social post. I can repurpose a Tik Tok video from six months ago into a social post for LinkedIn and Twitter. Um, so repurposing is another one where I it saves me a ton of time and allows me to scale up without, you know, hiring a big team or anything like that. And then the third one I would say is just the publishing piece. Like instead of I used to go to like each platform individually, schedule things out or publish them. And now I have like a dedicated tool where I can sit down for one day, plan out everything, schedule everything for the week, 100 plus posts for the week and that's taken care of. I don't have to worry about it. Well, let's let's transition into what Blot is. You kind of hinted at it a little bit. Um and and also share how in the world you came up with this. Yeah. Yeah. So, it's essentially an AI powered social media management tool. So, think Hootswuite and Buffer with that social scheduling aspect, but it also has a really strong AI writing assistant. I talk a lot about copywriting. And I believe like storytelling, copywriting is at the heart of great content, whether it's a Tik Tok video or a LinkedIn post or tweets. And so, I I really built this tool for myself to help myself scale as a creator. And the first use case for it was just repurposing my own content. So instead of having to sit down every week and stress about, you know, writing seven original posts every single week, half of them can be repurposed from previous posts where I can add a new spin. So for example, like AI vibe coding, this wasn't a term when I started using AI coding tools. So I can take a post about AI coding I had from one year ago, repurpose it with Blot and with a spin of like this is what vibe coding is and here's been my experience with it from the past year. And so doing that, repurposing a post that's already really well written that I wrote right and that's done well. repurpose it through Blotato, add my two cents on top, and then hit publish. That saves me so much time alone, especially on weeks where it's like, uh, I like I don't know if I can come up with seven original ideas right now that I'm sitting down. So, well, let's expand on that a little bit. So, does this mean that Blot has like a database, for lack of better words, of everything you've ever created? You can search through it and find anything I've written about Vibe or coding in general, right? Mhm. And then like explain how you instruct it and kind of what it does. Yeah, exactly. So, it has all of your published posts. You can click add to remix which will add it as a source for a new post or you can literally clone the post if you just want to make any minor changes. But the heart of Blot basically uses sources. So it could be YouTube videos, articles, Tik Tok videos, podcasts, and then runs it through an AI writing assistant trained on your posts on your voice and then spits out drafts for all of the platforms. I think I integrate with nine and then it has the scheduling component so you can schedule everything out. And then recently I've added AI image generation and faceless video generation. So excited. Talk about that. Talk about that. Yeah, sure. I actually just had a video reach 30 million views which was a faceless video. It's it's like a fun POV. You wake up in video. Um but the reason why I added asset generation is because I looked at the data of like thousands and thousands of posts being published and like 98% of all social media posts now have an image or video attached. So to me it's like okay cop I still believe copyrightiting is the heart of amazing content but now it's like you need an image or video to even like stand out above the noise. And so that's hard to do when you have no background in image or video editing. Like it's video in particular I've noticed kind of scares people off. It seems like a lot of work. But in Blotato now you can take your post, click generate AI video. It'll take your post's content, generate a video scene by scene based on the content of your post and then you can post that along with your post. Um, so what about your voice? Is it is it is it an AI version of your voice or is there no voice or what's the deal on the on the voice side of it? So, yeah. Yeah, you can have a voice. So, we integrate with 11 Labs and if you have your own voice in 11 Labs, you can use that as well. Ah, okay. So, for folks that I mean, we've covered this on other podcasts. 11 Labs allows you to train your voice, but I wasn't aware that it also allows you to kind of lease other voices. So, you can get like stock voices, for lack of better words, that will read your script. Oh, yeah. Yeah, they have like hundreds of of voices that are really really high quality. Um, and then your personal voice, like if you've tried their professional voice clone, it's amazing quality. Um, so highly recommend it if if you want to use your own voice. Okay. Now, um, are you a coder? I am. Yeah. So, computer science and physics was my background. And yeah. Yeah. So, I built the first version of Flot actually 100% with AI and I filled myself. So, it's my YouTube playlist called uh, build SAS with AI. Um, and it was it was really cool. It was really fun documenting it. You know, the MVP was very basic, like even by my own standards, embarrassingly simple by my standards, but I documented it, launched it to my community, got feedback very quickly, and have just been iterating from from from then. Yeah. So, this is really intriguing. the the idea that you documented the journey of the creation of this piece of software. you had already been writing about AI right on LinkedIn and you decided to when you say document it does that mean you were creating videos or what were you creating like share a little bit about that documentation journey because I think people would find that fascinating also oh yeah absolutely so I literally started from the very beginning like I drew handdrew a prototype what I wanted my prototype to look like and then I showed here I'm going to drop it into claude and have it code the initial first version then I'm going to open it up in this tool called Cursor AI, which like is an AI coding assistant. And every single feature that was in the MVP, I coded it and filmed myself. So, it's it's literally just like a YouTube video of me coding um and then talking here and there explaining what I'm doing. And I just thought it's really cool to document that just to show people like this is what the beginning looks like, the origin. It's really nothing fancy. Um my biggest fear is that the MVP was so embarrassingly simple and like my AI reputation is fancy. It's like, oh, people are going to be like, what? This is just like a simple basic MVP. But I really wanted to show the beginning cuz I feel like so many people get um overwhelmed starting something and finishing it. But like I just wanted to show here's what it looks like to start from nothing, like a really terrible handdrawn prototype, convert it into something functioning. I showed people how to deploy it, hook it up to your database, hook it up to your payment system, and then get something live so that you can get real customer feedback and start improving the product. Uh, did that help you? Do you feel like that the act that you actually chose to go out there and show knowing you're a coder, right? Knowing you could have done this faster and better, but do but how what's your take on that? Would you do it again? Yeah, it's funny. I was just telling my husband this, like I think editing the YouTube videos took longer than the actual filming looking back on it cuz I was like pretty new to video editing, but yeah, I would definitely do it again. Um, like I think I've gotten a lot of messages from people who watch that who are just like so thankful that they could see what it looks like to build something because I think it sounds like a scary thing to like build something from nothing. It can sound overwhelming, but it it is it is very doable. Yes, it takes time and effort like anything. Don't think of it as writing a social media post. Think of it as writing like a mini book, right? And this is the MVP is just the first chapter in your book and it's going to take many many hours and that's totally normal, right? Uh that's okay. Um in in my case, I validated the idea before I started building, right? Because people were kind of already asking me for what I'm doing to scale myself. And I also made a Tik Tok video and a newsletter post asking the community for feedback on the idea. And so I had like hundreds of people just validating the idea even before I tried to code something. Love it. Uh Sabrina, if people want to check out the work that you're doing on the socials, do you have any particular platforms you want to send them to? And then also if they want to check out your company, where do you want to send them? Yeah, absolutely. So to check out Blotato, go to blowato.com. blot t- o.com. And then for socials, substack.com is where I do videos and my newsletter posts now. Um, Tik Tok or Instagram, you can find me Sabrina Romanov with the mushroom. So, uh, but you said substack.com is I mean Substack is a huge website. Do they just search for your name when they get there or? Yeah. Yeah, you'll find me. Substack.comsabrina. Yeah. Sabrina, thank you so much for sharing your insights with us today. Yeah, thanks for having me.

Original Description

Finding it hard to create enough content to stay consistent on social media? Wondering how AI can help you post with purpose—not just frequency? To discover how to use AI tools and creative inspiration to develop social content that resonates with your audience, strengthens connections, and builds loyalty over time. 🔔 Subscribe for More AI Insights – https://www.youtube.com/@AIExaminer?sub_confirmation=1 ⏬ Download the latest AI Marketing Industry Report – https://socialmediaexaminer.com/AIReportYT 🎓 About the AI Business Society – https://AIBusinessSociety.ai 🧭 About the AI Business World Conference – https://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/aiworld-yt 👁️‍🗨️ About Sabrina Ramonov – Website https://www.blotato.com/ – Substack https://sabrinaramonov.substack.com/ – Instagram https://www.instagram.com/sabrina_ramonov/ – TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@sabrina_ramonov 🔗 Show Notes From This Episode – Find other products, tools, and resources mentioned in this episode https://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/using-ai-inspired-social-content-to-grow-a-loyal-audience 🤝 Connect With Michael Stelzner – Connect with Michael Stelzner on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/stelzner – Connect with Michael Stelzner on X https://x.com/mike_stelzner ⏰ Timestamps 00:00 Intro 00:56 About Sabrina Ramonov 08:59 Why Should Creators and Entrepreneurs Use AI to Create Social Content 12:42 What Should You Think About Before You Use AI to Create Social Content 18:53 How to Use AI to Research and Ideate Social Content 30:59 How to Use AI to Generate Custom Social Content 36:19 What is Blotato #AIExplored #AIExploredPodcast #AIContentGeneration
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1 Start Your AI Journey Here...
Start Your AI Journey Here...
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2 Adopting AI for Business: Where to Begin
Adopting AI for Business: Where to Begin
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3 How to Get AI to Create Better Content
How to Get AI to Create Better Content
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4 Prompt Engineering Fundamentals: How to Get Better Results With AI
Prompt Engineering Fundamentals: How to Get Better Results With AI
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5 Using AI to Speed Content Creation
Using AI to Speed Content Creation
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6 AI Workflows: How to Get Started
AI Workflows: How to Get Started
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7 Repurposing Video Content Into Multiple Mediums with AI Tools
Repurposing Video Content Into Multiple Mediums with AI Tools
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8 Getting AI to Model Your Unique Brand Voice
Getting AI to Model Your Unique Brand Voice
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9 AI Prompting for Writing: How to Get High Quality Output
AI Prompting for Writing: How to Get High Quality Output
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10 How to Create Stunning AI Thumbnails for YouTube
How to Create Stunning AI Thumbnails for YouTube
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11 Building Custom GPTs: Personalizing an AI Assistant
Building Custom GPTs: Personalizing an AI Assistant
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12 Using AI to Be a Better Content Creator
Using AI to Be a Better Content Creator
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13 Getting Your Team Quickly to Embrace AI
Getting Your Team Quickly to Embrace AI
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14 Using AI As Your Business Consultant
Using AI As Your Business Consultant
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15 Generic to Genius: Crafting AI Prompts for Optimal Results
Generic to Genius: Crafting AI Prompts for Optimal Results
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16 AI Operations: Using AI to Scale Your Work
AI Operations: Using AI to Scale Your Work
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17 AI Automation: How to Speed Up Your Work
AI Automation: How to Speed Up Your Work
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18 Getting Started With Midjourney: Creating Advanced AI Images
Getting Started With Midjourney: Creating Advanced AI Images
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19 AI for eCommerce: Putting AI to Work to Sell Products
AI for eCommerce: Putting AI to Work to Sell Products
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20 Implementing AI Across Your Company: A Comprehensive Method
Implementing AI Across Your Company: A Comprehensive Method
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21 Advanced AI Copywriting: How to Train AI to Write Like a Pro
Advanced AI Copywriting: How to Train AI to Write Like a Pro
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22 5 Levels of AI Marketing Mastery: How to Level-Up Your Use of AI
5 Levels of AI Marketing Mastery: How to Level-Up Your Use of AI
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23 Creating AI Assistants Using Claude Projects
Creating AI Assistants Using Claude Projects
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24 AI Creativity Unlocked: Making Anything Seem Possible
AI Creativity Unlocked: Making Anything Seem Possible
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25 Using AI to Expand Your Ideas and Creativity
Using AI to Expand Your Ideas and Creativity
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26 Prompting at Scale: How to Deploy AI Across Your Company
Prompting at Scale: How to Deploy AI Across Your Company
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27 AI Insights: Uncovering Customer Value
AI Insights: Uncovering Customer Value
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28 Building Foundational AI Skills for Business
Building Foundational AI Skills for Business
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29 Using AI to Create Engaging Social Posts
Using AI to Create Engaging Social Posts
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30 Creating an AI-Driven Content Marketing Workflow
Creating an AI-Driven Content Marketing Workflow
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31 Custom AI Models vs ChatGPT: A Guide to Private Large Language Models
Custom AI Models vs ChatGPT: A Guide to Private Large Language Models
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32 MidJourney for Business: How to Quickly Create Professional AI Art
MidJourney for Business: How to Quickly Create Professional AI Art
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33 Using AI as a Content Analyst: How to Plan Your Next Steps
Using AI as a Content Analyst: How to Plan Your Next Steps
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34 Creating AI Agents: The Future of Work is Here
Creating AI Agents: The Future of Work is Here
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35 AI Priming: Getting Custom and Accurate AI Output
AI Priming: Getting Custom and Accurate AI Output
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36 Top AI Tools for Creators for 2025
Top AI Tools for Creators for 2025
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37 The Smart Marketer’s Guide to Streamlining Work with AI
The Smart Marketer’s Guide to Streamlining Work with AI
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38 AI Automation Made Easy: How to Get Your Hours Back
AI Automation Made Easy: How to Get Your Hours Back
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39 AI Assistants: How To Level Up Your Work
AI Assistants: How To Level Up Your Work
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40 AI-Driven Teams: How to Transform Your Workforce
AI-Driven Teams: How to Transform Your Workforce
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41 Content at Scale: How to Train AI to Create Great Content
Content at Scale: How to Train AI to Create Great Content
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42 How AI Helps Leaders Accelerate Business Growth
How AI Helps Leaders Accelerate Business Growth
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43 Get Accurate AI Headshots: How to Create Your Flux LoRA
Get Accurate AI Headshots: How to Create Your Flux LoRA
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44 Custom GPTs Secrets: How to Get Great Results Every Time
Custom GPTs Secrets: How to Get Great Results Every Time
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45 Building AI Agents: How to Get Started
Building AI Agents: How to Get Started
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46 Becoming an AI Expert in Your Company or Industry
Becoming an AI Expert in Your Company or Industry
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47 Building an AI Content Team: How to Rapidly Outperform Your Competitors
Building an AI Content Team: How to Rapidly Outperform Your Competitors
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48 Embracing Emotional Intelligence With AI: How to Remain Uniquely Human
Embracing Emotional Intelligence With AI: How to Remain Uniquely Human
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49 AI and Brand Voice: Your Secret to Quality Scalable Content
AI and Brand Voice: Your Secret to Quality Scalable Content
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50 NotebookLM for Business: Unlocking Valuable Insights
NotebookLM for Business: Unlocking Valuable Insights
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51 Becoming an AI First Company: From Chaos to Clarity
Becoming an AI First Company: From Chaos to Clarity
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Using AI-Inspired Social Content to Grow a Loyal Audience
Using AI-Inspired Social Content to Grow a Loyal Audience
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53 How to Use AI to Simplify Your Marketing
How to Use AI to Simplify Your Marketing
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54 Interactive AI Clones: Creating Unique Human Experiences
Interactive AI Clones: Creating Unique Human Experiences
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55 Regain Your Time With ChatGPT: Training AI to Assist You
Regain Your Time With ChatGPT: Training AI to Assist You
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56 AI Apps Made Easy: Creating Whatever You Can Imagine
AI Apps Made Easy: Creating Whatever You Can Imagine
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57 AI Marketing Strategy: Practical Applications for Any Business
AI Marketing Strategy: Practical Applications for Any Business
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58 Combining AI Tools for Better Results
Combining AI Tools for Better Results
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59 Get Pro-Level ChatGPT Results With This Simple Change
Get Pro-Level ChatGPT Results With This Simple Change
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60 Advanced NotebookLM Use Cases You Can Apply Today
Advanced NotebookLM Use Cases You Can Apply Today
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The video teaches how to use AI-inspired social content to grow a loyal audience, covering tools and concepts such as AI-driven content creation, content personalization, and human touch in AI-generated content. It provides actionable steps and tools to help viewers create effective social media content using AI.

Key Takeaways
  1. Use AI for research and ideation
  2. Create drafts and brainstorm different hooks
  3. Automate content creation
  4. Focus on developing personal voice and audience
  5. Use custom GPT systems to generate social media content
  6. Personalize AI-generated content with human touch
  7. Analyze and optimize AI-generated content for better engagement
💡 AI-inspired social content can help grow a loyal audience, but it's essential to personalize AI-generated content with human touch and analyze and optimize it for better engagement.

Related AI Lessons

Chapters (7)

Intro
0:56 About Sabrina Ramonov
8:59 Why Should Creators and Entrepreneurs Use AI to Create Social Content
12:42 What Should You Think About Before You Use AI to Create Social Content
18:53 How to Use AI to Research and Ideate Social Content
30:59 How to Use AI to Generate Custom Social Content
36:19 What is Blotato
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