Original Reddit post

I write content for a private community and wanted a faster way to produce stuff that didn’t feel robotic. Here’s what I landed on after a lot of iteration: I voice-note the raw idea using a dictation tool (SaySo in my case — drops text wherever my cursor is, no copy-paste). Then I use a rough SCQA structure to shape it — situation, complication, question, answer. That gives OpenClaw enough scaffolding to generate something that actually has a point of view rather than generic filler. The output still needs editing but it’s like 70% of the way there from the first pass. Publish to a public channel, CTA at the end. First article I tried this on got 200+ adds in a few days. Probably lucky timing but I’ve repeated it a few times now with decent results. The key thing I figured out is that the voice input step matters more than I thought. When I type the brief I write in a very compressed, note-like way. When I speak it I naturally tell the actual story — why this matters, who it’s for, what the tension is. That context is what makes the output usable. submitted by /u/Frequent-Hunter7931

Originally posted by u/Frequent-Hunter7931 on r/ClaudeCode