SocialEcho 2.0 - AI social media copilot for teams and agents
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SocialEcho is an AI social media copilot for teams managing social campaigns across multiple brands, accounts, and channels.
See what’s trending, create content that resonates, optimize posts for every platform, publish from one workspace, manage every conversation, and track what drives engagement.
Built on official social APIs, SocialEcho gives AI agents like OpenClaw, Hermes, and custom automations a secure way to manage connected social accounts without brittle scraping or risky workarounds.


Replies
Lessie AI
I appreciate the emphasis on reliable and permissioned access. Social accounts are too important to automate carelessly.
SocialEcho 2.0
@libin_yao Absolutely, we see it the same way. Automation should make social workflows safer and more efficient, not create new risks. That’s why SocialEcho focuses on official API access, team permissions, approval flows, and controllable agent actions. Social accounts are business assets, so automation needs clear guardrails.
The platform-specific tone adaptation feature is the sleeper hit here. Repurposing a LinkedIn post for Twitter and Instagram manually is one of the most time-consuming parts of my week. If SocialEcho handles that intelligently while staying on-brand, you've just saved my team hours every single day.
SocialEcho 2.0
@ana_popescu2 That’s exactly the pain we’re trying to remove. Repurposing should not mean rewriting the same idea from scratch for every platform. SocialEcho keeps the core message and brand voice consistent, then adapts the format, tone, length, and structure for each channel. Really glad this use case resonates with you.
For smaller teams or solo operators managing multiple brands, what does the pricing model look like? Is it per seat, per connected account, or per AI-generated post volume? The use case seems clearly built for teams, but curious whether early-stage founders with multiple projects are in scope.
SocialEcho 2.0
@andrew_paul11 Thanks for bringing this up. In the current version, SocialEcho is priced by connected social accounts, not by seats or AI-generated post volume. The starter plan is only $10/month for 5 accounts, so it’s friendly for small teams, solo operators, and early-stage founders managing multiple brands or projects.
You can also add accounts flexibly and create different brand teams as you grow, without jumping into enterprise-level costs too early.
And you’re very welcome to try it out for free. We’re also running our anniversary campaign right now, with top-up bonuses up to $1888!!!
The AI rewriting workflow looks practical. Most teams don’t need more content — they need better adaptation and consistency.
SocialEcho 2.0
@antler_kaku Yes, 100%. More content is not always the answer. For many teams, the real challenge is turning the same core message into the right version for each platform, while keeping the brand voice consistent. That’s the workflow we want SocialEcho to make much easier.
Elser AI
This looks like it could reduce a lot of tool switching between calendar, native platform analytics, spreadsheets, and reports.
SocialEcho 2.0
@sarahjiang Yes, that’s a big part of the goal. Social media teams spend way too much time jumping between tools to plan, publish, check data, and build reports. SocialEcho brings those workflows into a single workspace, so teams can spend less time switching tabs and more time improving content and driving growth.
how customizable is the AI brand voice over time? can it actually learn from past campaigns and improve its tone accuracy?
SocialEcho 2.0
@colton_drake
Love this question because it’s exactly where brand voice gets interesting. You can customize it pretty deeply with brand profiles, tone guidelines, and custom prompts, so each brand doesn’t end up sounding the same.
Today, SocialEcho helps keep AI-generated content aligned with those settings, and teams can always review or tweak before publishing.
The “learn from past campaigns” part is definitely where we want to go next. We already track performance across platforms, and using those signals to make tone adaptation smarter over time is a direction we’re excited about.
Congrats on the launch! Is it possible to add guardrails/filter before AI engages on comments/DMs? By filter I mean NLP kind of filter, not some LLM based classification.
SocialEcho 2.0
@ashishkingdom Thank you, and yes, this is a really important point. Before AI replies to comments or DMs, teams can set guardrails so it doesn’t engage with everything by default.
SocialEcho supports more rule-based filters like keywords, intent, sentiment, comment type, and account or workflow conditions. Based on those filters, a comment or DM can be auto-replied to, sent to manual review, or ignored. The goal is to keep AI useful, but still predictable and controlled.
how does SocialEcho handle approval flows in larger organizations with strict compliance rules? is there a built in review system before anything gets published?
SocialEcho 2.0
@fletcher_oliver Yes, SocialEcho supports approval flows through role-based permissions. Teams can separate who can create, edit, review, and publish content, so larger organizations can keep publishing controlled before anything goes live.
How does SocialEcho handle content versioning across platforms? When a campaign post goes live on LinkedIn and then gets adapted for Instagram, can teams track both variations together under the same campaign umbrella or are they treated as separate, unlinked pieces of content?
SocialEcho 2.0
@carlos_leonardo1
Right now, platform-adapted posts are managed as separate posts for each channel. That gives teams more flexibility to fine-tune the LinkedIn, Instagram, X, or Reddit version based on how each platform works, instead of forcing everything into one rigid campaign structure.
That said, we definitely see the value of grouping those variations under one campaign view for easier tracking and comparison. It’s a very relevant workflow for multi-platform teams, and it’s something we’re considering as we continue improving SocialEcho.
Can SocialEcho integrate with external tools like CRMs or email marketing platforms? or is it designed to be a closed loop social ecosystem?
SocialEcho 2.0
@croft_benjamin It’s definitely not meant to be a closed loop. SocialEcho has an open API, so teams can connect it with external tools like CRMs, email marketing platforms, internal dashboards, or agent workflows through tools like n8n and OpenClaw.
The idea is to make social data and actions fit into your existing growth stack, not force everything to stay inside SocialEcho.