You have the deal closed or the note drafted. The press release is done, or you have a memo and a few bullet points. Then comes the LinkedIn post, which should be quick but never is. You rewrite the same update three times to get the hook right, break lines so it reads well on mobile, and trim the tone so it sounds like you. This task cuts that loop. Marketing ~5 min to run Draft LinkedIn Post from Source Content Vic prompt Use Vic to draft a linkedin post about a 45,000 sf industrial lease at 1200 River Road using the press release text I paste below. Purpose Cuts drafting time from roughly 30 minutes to about 5 minutes while keeping the post consistent with your established LinkedIn voice. Inputs Topic Or Angle Required Website Content Url Optional File Content Optional Text Content Optional Youtube Url Optional Outputs A finished LinkedIn post formatted with hook, structure, line breaks, and hashtags, returned as plain text ready to publish. Time saved Cuts drafting time from roughly 30 minutes to about 5 minutes. How it works Give Vic your source material and a clear angle. The source can be a URL, a file, pasted text, or a YouTube link. The angle is the point of view for the post, such as a deal announcement, market take, or firm update. Run it with a single command: Use Vic to draft a linkedin post about a 45,000 sf industrial lease at 1200 River Road using the press release text I paste below. Vic reads the content and writes a complete LinkedIn feed post. It opens with a tight hook, lays out the body with clean line breaks, and adds hashtags that fit the post. The writing sticks to what you provide. No invented facts, no filler. The output is plain text, ready to copy and publish. This is not a generic summarizer. It follows a structure that works on LinkedIn. Short opening lines that earn the click. Clear numbers and deal details in the body. Clean spacing so it reads well on a phone. Hashtags that are relevant without looking spammy. For brokers, this means deal updates that land without reading like a press release. For principals and asset managers, it means market commentary that is tight and readable. For firm news, it keeps the voice consistent across posts even when different people provide the inputs. The time savings are real. Drafting a solid post often takes about 30 minutes once you include rewrites and formatting. This gets you to a finished draft in about five minutes. The bigger win is consistency. Your posts keep the same voice, structure, and formatting whether the source is a polished release or rough notes. A small but important detail is number formatting. Square footage, addresses, and deal specifics come through cleanly, which is where many posts lose credibility. Vic handles those details in the draft so you are not fixing them after the fact. There is still room for your judgment. If you want a sharper opinion, tweak the opening line. If a client should be named or omitted, adjust before posting. The heavy lifting is done, and you keep control of the final call. If you post regularly, this becomes part of your workflow. Close the loop on a deal, drop in the source content, run the command, and publish. No more staring at a blank LinkedIn composer.