Launching today

Bono AI
Talk Once. Publish Everywhere.
155 followers
Talk Once. Publish Everywhere.
155 followers
Meet Bono, your voice AI content strategist. Talk for 10 minutes, and Bono turns the conversation into a blog post, LinkedIn/X content, a newsletter, and more, all in your voice. No blank page, no prompts, no ghostwriters, no agencies.




Bono AI
Full disclosure, I'm one of the people building Bono. But I'm writing this as someone who now uses it every day and honestly can't go back.
I'm running a 16 part series about AI ready websites. The old routine was brutal. Write the piece, format it, schedule it, then repost the same thing across every channel by hand. Now I just talk. I record a quick thought or jump on a voice call, and it comes back as a clean draft that sounds like me, not like some generic AI. Then it pushes everything to my site, newsletter and socials from one place.
Here's one I published straight from it, so you can see the output and the branded page for yourself: https://moonion.heybono.ai/post/why-your-website-needs-to-be-ai-ready-what-we-learned-rebuilding-moonion-from-the-ground-up-IsgK6HHDYP
Two things still surprise me even though I know how it works inside. How fast it learns my voice, and the branded page with my own domain and analytics that respects privacy, no cookie banners, no creepy trackers. "Talk once, publish everywhere" turned out to be exactly how my week actually runs now.
If any of this sounds like your kind of workflow, come try it and see for yourself: https://heybono.ai
Congrats on the launch! The pivot story is a great one, going from a website builder to realizing the actual bottleneck was voice, not features, feels like a genuinely earned insight rather than a repositioning exercise.
Really like that you're tracking the human-vs-AI score per post instead of just claiming "sounds like you." The jump from ~65% to 80%+ by the third call is a much more convincing signal than most voice-to-content tools give.
For someone with a pretty flat/neutral speaking voice on calls (not much natural inflection or personality when talking out loud), does Bono still manage to find a distinct written voice, or does it need some expressiveness in the source conversation to have something to latch onto?
The "in your voice" part is the whole thing. Most AI writing tools flatten everyone into the same LinkedIn-guru cadence — talking instead of typing is the only way I've found to keep the actual person in the output. I build voice agents and see it constantly: people are far more themselves out loud than in a blank text box. Honest question: how do you handle the rambling? A 10-min talk is 80% throat-clearing — is Bono pulling the real signal or just transcribing it prettier? That's the hard part. Congrats on the launch 🚀
Talked it through my ideas for a post on remote team culture and the draft it spit out actually sounded like me, not a corporate template. Weirdly impressed by how it picked up on the casual tone I used while speaking.
Bono AI
Really glad it landed like that, that casual tone coming through is exactly what we're going for. Thanks for sharing!
Congrats on the launch @zeeshanrasool_ Listening to users ignoring features and focusing on the voice problem is a masterclass in product discovery, qq for X/Twitter content does it format the output into clean structured threads automatically or just single standalone posts?
Look super cool! One doubt: does it keep track of what you've already posted so you're not accidentally rewriting the same take from 6 weeks ago? for me that's always been the hard part, not the first post but staying non-repetitive over time.
the blank page problem is real but the harder problem is voice consistency across formats. a linkedin post and a newsletter have completely different tones and structures even when the underlying idea is the same. does bono adapt the format per platform or does it mostly repurpose the same content with light reformatting? that distinction is usually what separates tools people actually keep using from ones that feel like a shortcut the first time and generic after that.