
SocialEcho 2.0
AI social media copilot for teams and agents
600 followers
AI social media copilot for teams and agents
600 followers
SocialEcho is an AI social media copilot for teams running sophisticated campaigns across multiple brands.
Discover what’s trending, generate original on-brand content, adapt every post to each platform’s style, publish from one workspace, manage audience interactions and track what actually drives engagement.
Built on official APIs, SocialEcho also gives AI agents like OpenClaw, Hermes a secure, reliable way to manage connected social accounts without brittle scraping or risky workarounds.
This is the 2nd launch from SocialEcho 2.0. View more
SocialEcho 2.0
Launching today
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.








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Launch Team / Built With




SocialEcho 2.0
Hey Product Hunt — Samuel here, one of the makers behind SocialEcho 👋
Most social tools help you schedule posts. But the real pain we kept hearing from growth teams was bigger: keeping content, engagement, and reporting consistent across many brands, accounts, and platforms.
So we built SocialEcho — an AI social media copilot for teams running sophisticated campaigns across multiple brands, accounts, and channels.
With SocialEcho, teams can:
→ See what’s trending and create on-brand content
→ Adapt one post for every platform
→ Publish, measure, and improve from one workspace
→ Manage comments, messages, and mentions in one inbox
→ Give AI agents secure access to social workflows through official APIs
The part we care about most: SocialEcho is built on official social APIs — no browser bots, no cookie injection, and no risky workarounds.
We’re building this for growth teams, agencies, brand marketers, and AI agent builders who need social operations to be safer, more consistent, and more automated.
🎁 Product Hunt launch offer: get up to $1,888 in bonus credits during launch week.
Question for you:
Which part of social media ops would you trust an AI agent with first — content, publishing, engagement, or analytics?
Roasts and feature requests are welcome. We’ll be here all day.
@eexlkuang_se congrats on the launch team. Whats the usp vs buffer, publer etc?
SocialEcho 2.0
@zolani_matebese Thanks! Compared with Buffer or Publer, SocialEcho is less about basic scheduling and more about workflow automation. Our main USP is the open API layer, which can connect with agents and tools like OpenClaw or n8n for custom workflows and deeper integrations. We also focus on AI auto-replies for comments and DMs, post-level monitoring, and more affordable pricing for teams managing many accounts.
@eexlkuang_se when an AI agent adapts one post across platforms, how do you handle brand voice guardrails at the account level? Do you let users define voice per brand/account with shared templates or is that next on the roadmap?
Raycast
Is this you? Copying the same content to post across socials like X, Threads, and LinkedIn manually across three tabs?
Coz yeah, that's me. Still! 🤓
Which is why@eexlkuang_se built @SocialEcho 2.0: so your AI agent can do that, plus all the boring plumbing that maintaining a social presence requires these days: publish, monitor, analyze, and route social workflows across Facebook, Instagram, X, TikTok, YouTube, LinkedIn, Reddit, and more.
SocialEcho actually adapts your content to fit the audience expectations of each platform, so you can start with the message, and SocialEcho will tune the posted format to not stand out like a slop-stained sore thumb.
SocialEcho didn’t start as just “another social scheduler.” Instead, it grew out of tens of thousands of cross-border sellers and agencies managing many brands, accounts, and languages at once. So platform-specific adaptation is at its core.
I appreciate they’re using official social APIs rather than sketchy browser-bot/cookie hacks (which are increasingly brittle thanks to the kind of Cloudflare defenses Product Hunt and others are adopting). If you’re working with agents that need to handle social media, this is critical.
SocialEcho 2.0
@chrismessina Chris, this means a lot. Thank you! You captured exactly why we built SocialEcho the way we did. Social media work today is no longer just “schedule once and post everywhere.” Teams need platform-specific adaptation, multi-account workflows, monitoring, analytics, and reliable API-based execution.
And yes, official APIs are a big part of our approach. We want SocialEcho to be something teams and agents can actually build workflows on top of, not a fragile shortcut that breaks the moment platforms change their rules. Really appreciate the thoughtful support!
@chrismessina @eexlkuang_se The cross-platform adaptation is the part I'm most curious about. When you adapt one post for LinkedIn vs TikTok vs Reddit, is the AI rewriting from scratch bassed on platform norms, or is it more like applying a set of rules/templates per platform? And does it learn from past performance data to improve those adaptations over time?
SocialEcho 2.0
@chrismessina @haotian_wang5 Love this question. It gets right to how we think about adaptation. It’s a mix of both. SocialEcho starts from the core message, then adapts it based on platform norms like format, tone, length, structure, and CTA style. Users can also add brand voice, custom prompts, and platform-specific rules, so it’s not just AI rewriting blindly.
On the data side, we track content performance across different platforms, and our open API can connect with agents like OpenClaw to generate deeper insights. Using performance data to directly improve future content generation is a great direction, and it’s something we’re planning to bring into the product roadmap.
What does the integration layer look like beyond the social platforms themselves? Thinking about connections to tools teams already have CRMs like HubSpot or Salesforce for audience context, DAMs for creative assets, or project management tools like Notion and Asana for campaign briefs. How plugged-in is SocialEcho to the broader stack?
SocialEcho 2.0
@daniel_juan2 That’s exactly how we think about it too. SocialEcho is not meant to be a closed social tool. Beyond social platform connections, we provide open API capabilities so teams can plug SocialEcho into their broader stack, including CRMs, internal dashboards, agent workflows, or automation tools like n8n and OpenClaw.
For tools like HubSpot, Salesforce, DAMs, Notion, or Asana, the integration layer can be built through API-based workflows depending on the team’s setup. The goal is to let social publishing, engagement, monitoring, and analytics connect with the systems teams already use, instead of forcing everything to live inside SocialEcho.
This is interesting. What agent workflows are live today? Can they handle publishing, analytics, inbox triage, or all three?
SocialEcho 2.0
@ea_z The short answer is all three, but at different depths. SocialEcho already supports AI-assisted publishing, performance analytics, and comment/DM management. We’re starting with the workflows teams repeat every day, then making them more agent-friendly step by step.
Triforce Todos
SocialEcho 2.0
@abod_rehman Thanks! Great question. We handle this through brand profiles and customizable prompts. Teams can define each brand’s tone, positioning, content rules, and preferred style, so AI-generated or adapted content follows the right guidelines for that specific account or brand. The goal is not to make every post sound the same, but to keep each brand consistent while still adapting to different platforms and formats.
StoreClaw
This looks useful for team-based workflows. One question: how granular are the permission scopes? Can access be limited by account, platform, or specific workflow?
SocialEcho 2.0
@phoenixhu Great question. SocialEcho supports team roles and permission settings, so access can be managed by account and workflow. This helps teams control who can view, edit, approve, or publish across different brands and platforms.
Managing multiple brands on social is a real nightmare, btw does SocialEcho let one set different tone or voice guidelines per brand, or is it one config across all accounts?
SocialEcho 2.0
@boyuan_deng1 Totally agree. Multi-brand social management can get messy very quickly. SocialEcho supports brand profiles, so teams can define different tone, voice, positioning, and content guidelines for each brand. It is not limited to one shared config across all accounts. The idea is to help each brand stay consistent while still adapting content for different platforms and workflows.