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Hey rebel solopreneurs 🦸♀️🦸♂️
Most solopreneurs post on LinkedIn when they feel inspired.
That's about twice a month.
The problem: the algorithm rewards consistency.
If a post only goes out when inspiration strikes, the audience never grows.
Posting twice a month doesn't build a following.
It just reminds people the account exists.
There's a way to fill an entire content calendar in 8 minutes.
🧩 You provide:
A topic or niche (e.g. "solopreneurs", "career coaches", "yoga teachers")
🍿 What you get:
First — 12 specific problems your audience is dealing with right now, in their own words
Then — 13 different post angles for the problem that hits hardest
Finally — 7 complete LinkedIn posts, written in 7 different copywriting frameworks, ready to edit and publish

⛳️ Here's the scenario
Taylor coaches mid-career professionals making their first move into freelance consulting.
He attracts clients through LinkedIn — posting about the real challenges of going solo.
He knew his audience cold.
He'd lived through every problem they faced.
But every Sunday night, he'd open a blank doc and spend an hour trying to figure out what to post that week.
Four half-finished drafts.
None of them felt right.
He closed the laptop at midnight with nothing published.
The next morning, he hit the gym early.
The guy on the treadmill next to him was reading something on his phone and grinning.
"Good content?" Taylor asked.
"Writing it, actually."
Turned out he ran a LinkedIn ghostwriting agency — 200 clients, 14 years in the business.
He glanced at Taylor's phone when Taylor explained the problem.
"You're starting from a blank page every time," he said.
"That's why it takes an hour and still feels wrong."
He wiped down his hands and pulled up his notes app.
"Nicolas Cole and Dickie Bush cracked this in Ship 30 for 30," he said.
"Three prompts. One topic becomes 91 posts. I use it every week."
❌ What Taylor had: "Four half-finished drafts. Different topics. No connecting idea. Nothing posted."
✅ What it became: "A list of 12 real problems. Thirteen ways to frame the sharpest one. Seven complete posts — different tones, different angles, ready to edit."
Same topic. Ninety-one directions to go.
"Three prompts to do all that?" Taylor said.
"One prompt, actually," the mentor said. "You chain the three steps inside a single session."
"First — find the real problems. Not what you think they care about. What they'd actually say to a friend."
"Second — any problem can be told 13 different ways. A story. A comparison. A shocking fact. Most people use the same angle every time and wonder why their posts stop working."
"Third — copywriting frameworks have been around for 100 years because they work. Give the AI a problem, an angle, and a framework. It writes the post. You edit the best one and publish."
He showed Taylor the prompt on his phone.
"Run this on Sunday morning," he said. "You'll have your whole week done before the gym closes."
Taylor opened his AI sidekick and got to work.
🎯 Step 1: Turn one topic into 91 ready-to-edit posts
⏱️ 8 minutes
This prompt runs three steps inside one session.
It finds your audience's real problems, frames the sharpest one in 13 different ways, then writes 7 complete LinkedIn posts using proven copywriting frameworks.
A LinkedIn copywriting framework is just a proven structure for writing persuasive content — think of it like a recipe for a post that actually gets people to stop and read.
Here's what it produces:
Here's what changed:
❌ Before: "Blank Sunday night. Four half-finished drafts. Nothing posted."
✅ After: "A full week of LinkedIn posts — each one a different angle on the same core problem. Hook, body, call to action. Done in 8 minutes. Taylor picked the PAS version, edited two lines, and scheduled it for Monday morning."
Here's the prompt that did that:
STEP 1 — Find the real problems
My topic: {e.g. solopreneurs, career coaches, freelance consultants}
List the top 12 challenges my audience deals with right now.
Use no more than 12 words for each. Write it the way they'd say it
to a friend — not how a consultant would say it.
Divide them into 4 groups of 3:
- 3 Fears
- 3 Frustrations
- 3 Wants
- 3 Aspirations
Be colloquial and plain. No jargon. These should sound like survey
answers or real conversations.
---
STEP 2 — Frame the best problem 13 different ways
From the list above, pick the single problem that would hit hardest
for my audience.
Tell me which one you picked and why in 2 sentences.
Now generate 2 post ideas for each of these 13 angles —
using only the problem you picked:
1. Ask a question
2. Make people think
3. Give one tip
4. Share a story
5. Provide an analogy
6. Give an example
7. Compare two things
8. Share an observation
9. Teach people how to do something
10. Break a belief
11. Share something against the grain
12. Point out today vs. future
13. Share an interesting or shocking fact
---
STEP 3 — Write 7 complete LinkedIn posts
From the 26 ideas above, pick the single angle most likely to perform
best for my specific audience.
Tell me which one you picked and why.
Now write 7 complete LinkedIn posts using that angle —
one for each of these frameworks:
- BAB (Before, After, Bridge)
- PAS (Problem, Agitate, Solve)
- AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action)
- QUEST (Question, Unique, Explain, Story, Tie-back)
- ACCA (Awareness, Comprehension, Conviction, Action)
- SLAP (Startling Fact, Link to Audience, Application, Punchline)
- BISCUIT (Brief, Interest, Story, Conclusion, Unique, Invitation, Target)
Write like a human talking to another human. Short sentences.
No emojis. No hashtags. No labels.
Plain language a 10-year-old would understand.
---
Finally — review all 7 posts and pick the single strongest one
for my specific audience.
Tell me which one you picked and explain in 2-3 sentences
why it will work best for them.
Taylor ran the prompt.
Eight minutes later he had 26 angles and 7 complete posts.
All from one problem his audience was actually dealing with.
He edited two lines in the PAS version and scheduled it for Monday morning.
(Wild, right? The whole Sunday night ritual — gone.)
🏆 Taylor's results
Before:
Blank doc every Sunday. An hour of staring. Nothing published.
Four half-finished drafts with no connecting idea between them
Posting twice a month — barely enough to stay visible
After:
26 post angles and 7 ready-to-edit posts from a single topic in 8 minutes
A full week of content scheduled before his second coffee
One system he runs every Sunday. Same 8 minutes. Never blank again.
Total time: 8 minutes. Not a Sunday night of regret.
His AI sidekick found the problems, picked the sharpest angle, and wrote 7 posts in 7 different voices.
Taylor picked the one that felt right, edited two lines, and hit schedule. BAM.
One prompt. One topic. Ninety-one directions to go.
The blank content calendar stops being a problem the moment there's a system behind it.
That's it, my fellow outliers!
Yours 'helping you automate the boring stuff' Vijay Peduru 🦸♂️
