Content Repurposing
The long piece is the expensive part. A research report takes three weeks. A webinar takes a month of coordination. Then it goes out once, gets a spike of traffic, and dies. Everyone knows the answer is to cut it into a dozen smaller things, and almost nobody does, because slicing a 4,000-word post into ten posts is tedious work that never beats the next deadline.
Skynet does the slicing. It reads the source, holds your past content in memory so it knows how you sound, and drafts the derivative assets — the LinkedIn posts, the newsletter section, the short-form scripts. You are editing, not starting from a blank page.
How it works
Point it at the source
Give the agent the artifact: a blog post, a transcript, a slide deck, a recorded demo. It reads the whole thing and identifies the distinct ideas inside it rather than just chopping it by paragraph.
Teach it your voice
Connect the places your published work already lives. Skynet builds unified memory from your blog, your newsletter archive, and your social history — so the drafts sound like your brand rather than like generic marketing copy.
Generate the set
Ask for what you actually need: five LinkedIn posts, one newsletter, three short scripts, a set of pull quotes. Each one is written for its channel, not copy-pasted between them.
Approve and schedule
Nothing publishes on its own. The agent proposes the batch, you cut the weak ones and edit the rest, and the approved pieces go out on the cadence you set.
Build it from a prompt
Describe the source and the outputs you want, once.
You get a month of content out of work you already did, and you spend your time choosing and sharpening rather than producing from nothing. The voice holds steady across every channel because every draft comes from the same memory instead of from whoever had time to write that day.