Monday 13 July

Content engine · three voices

Three reps, three voices. Drafts queued, calibrated to each rep's actual writing pattern. Approve to schedule, or edit inline. Last 30 days of published posts brought 9 inbound accounts into the pipeline.

Content → Pipeline attribution

What the last 30 days of content has put into the book. Computed across the team.

Last 30 days

  1. 4

    Posts published

    Across three voices

  2. 9

    Inbound enquiries

    From 7 accounts

  3. 6

    In pipeline

    Engaged / Discovery

  4. 0

    In proposal

    Decision near

  5. 1

    Won

    £10k/mo weighted

By voice

  • John

    1

    published

    2

    inbounds

    2

    accounts

    £5.7k/mo weighted

  • Jamie

    2

    published

    5

    inbounds

    4

    accounts

    £3.9k/mo weighted

  • Laurence

    1

    published

    2

    inbounds

    1

    accounts

    £420/mo weighted

Voice slots · three reps, three voices

Each rep posts in their own voice — calibrated during the engagement’s first fortnight against their actual writing pattern. The system drafts; the human approves. Nothing posts without a tap.

All voices are placeholder — calibrated to your actual voice during the engagement’s data-and-APIs phase (weeks 1–4).

Sector

Top performers · last 30 days

Sorted by inbound attribution into the pipeline.

9 total inbounds

#1
JWJamie·Subs·LinkedIn·8 May

Speciality coffee subs have a per-unit problem

Speciality coffee subs have a per-unit problem. Per-bag cost looks small. Multiplied across 800 subscribers, with a weekly refresh schedule and a roastery 4 hours from the despatch warehouse, it isn't. We work with two roasters who moved their packing to InterSend last quarter. Both saw per-unit fulfilment cost drop 23% — not from cheaper labour, but from cutting the roastery-to-warehouse leg out of the operation. If you're a coffee sub roasting in one place and despatching from another, that gap is where the margin lives.

Impressions

4,820

Reactions

71

Comments

14

Inbounds

3

→ Pipeline

#2
JBJohn·Subs·LinkedIn·2 May

The brand customer who pays the most is rarely the one with the longest contract

The brand customer who pays the most is rarely the one with the longest contract. We renewed two contracts this quarter. The largest is a craft brand we have served for nine years on a one-page agreement. The other was on a five-year deal and walked the day the term ended. Long contracts protect the side that needs protecting. The customer that wants to leave will leave. The customer that wants to stay does not need the paperwork. I have stopped chasing the long-term contract. I would rather earn the next month.

Impressions

8,240

Reactions

184

Comments

36

Inbounds

2

→ Pipeline