You have the content. A market report, a deal note, a client memo, maybe a link you meant to share. What slows you down is turning that into a post that reads clean, hits the right angle, and sounds like you. Most people fall back on the same structure each time. Hook, spacing, numbers, hashtags, then a pass to cut fluff. It is repetitive work that pulls time from higher value tasks. Communications ~5 min to run Draft a LinkedIn Post from Source Content Vic prompt Use Vic to draft a LinkedIn post from the attached market report on industrial vacancy trends in the Southeast. Purpose Cuts drafting time from roughly 30 minutes to about 5 minutes while keeping posts consistent with your established voice and tied to the original source. Inputs Topic Or Angle Required Website Content Url Optional File Content Optional Text Content Optional Youtube Url Optional Outputs A complete LinkedIn feed post returned as plain text, formatted for direct copy and paste. Time saved Cuts drafting time from roughly 30 minutes to about 5 minutes. How it works Give Vic your source and a clear angle. The source can be a URL, a file, pasted text, or even a YouTube link. Add a short note on what you want the post to emphasize. Vic reads the material and writes a complete LinkedIn feed post based on that content. Run it with a simple command like: "Use Vic to draft a LinkedIn post from the attached market report on industrial vacancy trends in the Southeast." The output is plain text, formatted for direct copy and paste into LinkedIn. You get a strong opening line, tight paragraphs with clean line breaks, and hashtags that fit the post. The writing stays tied to the source, so you are not guessing at numbers or stretching beyond what the material supports. This is for people who post often and care about consistency. Brokers, principals, and asset managers develop a recognizable voice over time. The task respects that. It focuses on natural CRE writing, clear number formatting, and a structure that reads well in the feed. The practical win is time. Drafting from scratch can take around 30 minutes once you include edits and formatting. This task cuts that to about five minutes while keeping the post aligned with your usual style and the original content. It also removes small, persistent friction. You do not have to think about spacing, where to break lines, or how many hashtags to include. You hand over the material and get back something ready to publish. There is still room for judgment. You can tweak the hook or swap a phrase to better match your voice. But you are editing a finished draft, not staring at a blank screen. If LinkedIn is part of the job, this kind of task adds up. You get consistent posts without the drafting drag, all based on work you already produce.