AI Worker · Content

First drafts, done.
In your house voice, not AI-voice.

Blog posts, LinkedIn, proposals, case studies, newsletter. Trained on your existing writing until the drafts come back sounding like you. Editor still required. Blank page, no longer.

CD
Content & Drafting
In your house voice
RunsOn request
Output formatsBlog · LinkedIn · Email · Proposal
VoiceTrained on yours
ReviewAlways by a human
TurnaroundHours, not days
From£1,250 / month
What it does

A first draft worth editing.

AI writing usually needs a full rewrite. This worker learns your voice from your existing content, then drafts in it — so editing, not rewriting, is the job left for you.

01

Trained on you

We index your existing blog posts, emails, decks. It learns your sentence length, preferred words, what you never say.

02

Briefed like a freelancer

A short brief — audience, angle, must-include. It drafts from that, not from vibes.

03

House style guardrails

No clichés you hate. No exclamation marks if you don't use them. Words on your blocklist stay blocked.

04

Multiple lengths

Long form, short form, thread, one-liner. Same source, different edits.

05

SEO if you need it

Briefs can include target keyword, internal links, meta description. No keyword stuffing.

A day in the life

From brief to draft in an afternoon.

Step 01

Brief

One-paragraph brief + angle. A title is enough if the angle is obvious.

Step 02

Draft

First draft back within hours. In your voice. Sources linked if relevant.

Step 03

Edit

You read and edit as if it were a junior writer. Your edits train it.

Step 04

Publish

Out the door. Or back for a second pass if it needs reshaping.

Outcomes

The content backlog, unblocked.

Time to first draft
2–4 hrs

Versus 1–3 days for most teams. Editor does the craft work.

Published cadence
+2.1×

Weekly output we see across content clients after 60 days.

Voice match
By week 3

Most teams say the drafts sound like them by the third week.

Field note

"First drafts used to sit on my to-do list for two weeks. Now they're back the same afternoon."

— Marketing Director, B2B SaaS

Questions

Common questions

Will Google penalise AI-assisted content?
Google's guidance is about quality, not authorship. An edited, sourced, substantive piece ranks fine. A thin AI draft published raw does not.
Does it invent quotes or stats?
No. It is instructed to say "need quote from [person]" rather than make one up. Claims are linked to sources.
Can it write in multiple voices?
Yes — CEO, team account, product marketing. Each gets its own profile.

Meet your Content & Drafting.

Book a 30-minute consultation. We'll show you the worker running on a sandboxed copy of your tools, so you can see the fit before you commit.